Court Opinion

ID: 2788288
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-03-23 07:05:22.792956+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:28:45.913107
License: Public Domain

STATE OF MICHIGAN

                           COURT OF APPEALS

ONEWEST BANK, FSB,                                                 UNPUBLISHED
                                                                   March 19, 2015
              Plaintiff-Appellant,

v                                                                  No. 320037
                                                                   Newaygo Circuit Court
DAVID C. JAUNESE, Personal Representative of                       LC No. 13-019908-CH
the ESTATE OF ANNA I. MADISON, and
BETINA A. MALHOTRA,

              Defendants-Appellees.

Before: M. J. KELLY, P.J., and MURPHY and HOEKSTRA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

       Plaintiff OneWest Bank, FSB (OneWest), appeals as of right the trial court’s order
granting summary disposition in favor of defendants. This lawsuit involves an alleged
scrivener’s error in a mortgage’s legal description of real property and an attempt by mortgage-
assignee OneWest to reform the mortgage based on mutual mistake long after foreclosure
proceedings relative to the mortgage had been concluded, including expiration of the redemption
period. We affirm.

        On February 22, 2008, Gloria Baldwin, signing as power of attorney, executed a fixed-
rate home equity conversion mortgage (hereafter reverse mortgage or mortgage) on behalf of
Donald and Anna Madison, husband and wife, in favor of mortgagee Financial Freedom Senior
Funding Corporation (FFSFC), securing up to a maximum amount of $300,240 relative to a
promissory note executed that same day. Donald Madison alone was the obligor on the
underlying note, which was also signed on his behalf by Baldwin as power of attorney.
According to a United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) settlement
statement, approximately $158,665 was disbursed at the closing. The legal description of the
collateral property was set forth in exhibit A that was attached to and incorporated by reference
in the reverse mortgage, and the property was described as follows:

             The land referred to in this instrument, situated in the Township of Barton,
       County of Newaygo, State of Michigan, is described as:

             South 1/2 of the Northwest 1/4 of the West 1/2 of the Northeast 1/4 of the
       Southwest 1/4, of Section 3, Township 16 North, Range 11 West.

                                               -1-
       The mortgage indicated that the address of the legally-described property was 14091
Chestnut Avenue in Reed City. This address correctly identified the location of the Madisons’
home. OneWest contends that the legal description was intended to have read, absent a
scrivener’s error, “South 1/2 of the Northwest 1/4, also West 1/2 of the Northeast 1/4 of the
Southwest 1/4, of Section 3, Township 16 North, Range 11 West.” (Emphasis added.) Focusing
more closely, according to OneWest, “Northwest 1/4 of the West 1/2” should have instead stated
“Northwest 1/4, also West 1/2” – the words “of the” were mistakenly used rather than the word
“also.” The real estate actually described in the mortgage was 2 ½ acres of vacant land owned
by the Madisons, instead of a 106-acre parcel owned by the Madisons and improved with a
house, barn, and an outbuilding, which OneWest argues was clearly the intended security for the
loan.1 The tax parcel number that was listed directly after the legal description in the exhibit to
the mortgage pertained to the full 106-acre parcel.

        Because the mortgage was guaranteed by HUD, a second mortgage in favor of HUD as
mortgagee was additionally executed, which mortgage also contained the same alleged
scrivener’s error. HUD is not involved in this litigation, nor has HUD sought to reform its
mortgage. As asserted in an affidavit executed by the president of the company that acted as
broker on the Madison loan, HUD requires reverse mortgage loans to be secured by property
improved with a residential structure; a reverse mortgage on vacant land is not permitted by
HUD. The broker’s president further averred that the Madisons’ property had been appraised for
purposes of the loan and mortgage and that it was the broker’s intent “that all 100 plus acres,
improved with the home and other structures be appraised as that was the property that was
intended by Madison to be mortgaged as support for his . . . loan.” Attached to the affidavit was
a November 2007 appraisal, valuing the Madisons’ property at $280,000 and containing pictures
of the home, barn, and outbuilding, with an in-depth analysis of the home’s features. The
broker’s president also averred that it was the broker’s intent that the 100 plus acres of land and
buildings thereon be used as collateral for the loan, not any vacant acreage. He concluded that
“[i]n reviewing the legal description . . ., there is clearly a scrivener[’]s error that results in a
small portion of vacant land being legally described . . ., instead of the 100 acre plus parcel as
contemplated by the parties to the original loan transaction.”

       An affidavit submitted by Gloria Baldwin, the person who executed the mortgage under a
power of attorney, essentially mimicked the averments made by the broker’s president; Baldwin
was of the understanding that the mortgage securing the loan encompassed over 100 acres of
land and the Madisons’ home. She averred:

              I have been advised that there was an error in the legal description in the
       Reverse Mortgage that resulted in a small portion of vacant land being legally
       described in the Mortgage, instead of the 100 acre plus parcel as contemplated by
       the parties to the original loan transaction. This is a mistake as it was always
       intended by me, in my capacity as Durable Power of Attorney for Donald

1
 The 2 ½ acres of vacant land were a small fraction of the 106 acres that comprised the
Madisons’ farmstead.

                                                -2-
       Madison and Anna Madison, that the entire 100 acre plus parcel, including all
       physical improvements, with the commonly known address of 14091 Chestnut
       Ave., Reed City, Michigan be the collateral for the Reverse Mortgage and be the
       legal description described in the Reverse Mortgage.

        On August 2, 2008, Donald Madison died, leaving behind his wife Anna, and defendant
David Jaunese was appointed personal representative of Mr. Madison’s estate. In December
2008, defendant Betina Malhotra, acting as guardian and conservator for Anna Madison who was
incapacitated and residing in a nursing home at that time, filed suit against Baldwin in the circuit
court, alleging that Baldwin was not related to the Madisons and was not well known to the
Madison family. Malhotra further alleged that Baldwin procured the powers of attorney through
fraud, undue influence, and duress. Malhotra additionally alleged that Baldwin unlawfully
depleted accounts held by the Madisons, that Baldwin unlawfully executed a quitclaim deed on
behalf of Anna in January 2008, deeding her interest in the Madisons’ home to Donald, that
Baldwin then unlawfully executed the reverse mortgage at issue here, and that Baldwin
unlawfully received the funds from the reverse-mortgage closing with FFSFC, converting them
to her own use. The complaint alleged breach of fiduciary duty and conversion, along with
requesting an accounting. While that suit remained pending, Anna Madison passed away in
March 2009. As reflected in an affidavit submitted in the instant litigation, Malhotra was the
Madisons’ granddaughter and sole heir.

        In October 2009, FFSFC assigned the mortgage, absent any changes to the legal
description contained in the mortgage, to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.
(MERS), as nominee for Financial Freedom Acquisition, LLC (FFA). The assignment
referenced the previously recorded mortgage, noting that the property was known as 14091
Chestnut Ave. The assignment was made without recourse, representation, or warranty with
respect to the property.

        On November 6, 2009, a stipulated order was entered in the probate court as to the estates
of Donald and Anna Madison, which authorized personal representative (PR) Jaunese to utilize
funds from a Chemical Bank account to pay off the reverse mortgage, and which released
Chemical Bank and Jaunese from any claims by Baldwin regarding the disbursement of funds
from Chemical Bank to Jaunese and Jaunese’s use of those funds to satisfy debts of the estates.
Ultimately, the estates and PR Jaunese were unable to pay off the loan/mortgage. The probate
court order also provided that any new issues or disputes that had arisen between Baldwin and
Malhotra or any claims that they might have against the decedents’ estates were to be joined with
the pending circuit court action brought by Malhotra against Baldwin. In Baldwin’s affidavit,
she averred that the proceeds from the reverse mortgage “were turned over to . . . Malhotra
pursuant to the Newaygo County Probate Court Order dated November 6, 2009.” Malhotra’s
circuit court action against Baldwin was later dismissed with prejudice in February 2010
pursuant to a stipulation. We note that Baldwin asserted in her affidavit that Malhotra was aware
as of December 2008 that the Madisons’ home and farm were encumbered by the reverse
mortgage.

        On January 13, 2010, PR Jaunese, on behalf of the estate of Donald Madison, quitclaimed
all of the estate’s interest in the Madisons’ property, correctly described, to the estate of Anna
Madison, for which Jaunese was also serving as personal representative. The quitclaim deed was

                                                -3-
recorded on January 14, 2010, with the Newaygo County Register of Deeds. In February 2010,
FFA initiated foreclosure by advertisement proceedings, MCL 600.3201 et seq. MCL 600.3201
provides, in part, that “[e]very mortgage of real estate, which contains a power of sale, upon
default being made in any condition of such mortgage, may be foreclosed by advertisement, in
the cases and in the manner specified in this chapter.” The reverse mortgage had included a
power-of-sale clause and provided that the lender could “require immediate payment in full of all
sums secured by this Security Instrument if . . . A Borrower dies and the Property is not the
principal residence of at least one surviving Borrower[.]” As reflected in an affidavit of
publication, see MCL 600.3208, notice of the foreclosure proceedings was published for four
successive weeks in February 2010 in a county newspaper. The legal description of the property
contained in the published notices was that of the 2 ½-acre parcel of vacant land.2 An affidavit
of posting, see MCL 600.3208, contained the same legal description as in the published notices,
and it reflected that a foreclosure notice had been posted on the premises located at 14091
Chestnut Avenue in Reed City. An affidavit of compliance with the foreclosure-by-
advertisement statutes was executed by FFA’s attorney, which affidavit contained the same legal
description as that in the mortgage, absent the error mentioned above that was contained in the
published and posted notices (see footnote 2). On March 5, 2010, an FFA attorney executed an
affidavit of abandonment, which averred that an inspection of the premises had occurred on
March 5, 2010, revealing that no “mortgagor or any persons claiming under the mortgagor were
presently occupying or intending to occupy the premises.” This affidavit was recorded on April
18, 2010.

        On July 30, 2010, prior to the scheduled sheriff’s sale, MERS, as nominee for FFA,
assigned MERS’s interest in the mortgage to FFA. This assignment contained the legal
description of the mortgage interest being assigned, and the description had not changed from
that contained in the original FFSFC mortgage; it described 2 ½ acres of vacant land. The
assignment of mortgage did list the correct address and tax parcel number for the Madisons’
property. On August 5, 2010, the MERS-to-FFA assignment of the mortgage was recorded. On
August 17, 2010, a sheriff’s sale was conducted on the foreclosure, and, according to the
sheriff’s deed, FFA purchased the land described in the deed, i.e., the same 2 ½-acre vacant
parcel described in the mortgage, for $275,223. The sheriff’s deed did provide that the described
property was “[m]ore commonly known as 14091 Chestnut Avenue.” And it did reference the
tax parcel number that was applicable to the full 106 acres of land. The sheriff’s deed was
recorded on August 26, 2010. An “affidavit declaring redemption designee” signed by FFA’s
counsel identified Orlans Associates, P.C. (Orlans), for purposes of any redemption efforts and a
redemption computation. This affidavit also referred to the 2 ½-acre vacant parcel. The affidavit
set the redemption expiration date as February 17, 2011, or within 30 days of the sale if the
property was considered abandoned, MCL 600.3241a, which was the case in light of the earlier
affidavit of abandonment.

2
  We note that the legal description in the published notices also contained an inaccurate
reference to the “Northwest 1/4” directly after the language at issue here, where the mortgage
referred to the “Northeast 1/4.”

                                               -4-
        On February 15, 2011, PR Jaunese, on behalf of the estate of Anna Madison, executed a
quitclaim deed conveying the Madisons’ property, correctly described, to sole heir Malhotra.
The quitclaim deed was recorded on February 16, 2011. On May 10, 2011, FFA’s attorney
executed an affidavit of scrivener’s error.3 The affidavit recited the history of the mortgage, the
alleged correct legal description of the mortgaged property, the assignments, the foreclosure
proceedings, and the sheriff’s sale, all as reflected in the public records. The affidavit concluded
that “it is apparent that the Incorrect Legal Description in the Sheriff’s Deed was a result of a
scrivener’s typographical error[.]” The affidavit of scrivener’s error was recorded on May 16,
2011. The affidavit was recorded long after the redemption period had expired, even if we
contemplated a six-month redemption period instead of the 30-day period that appeared to be
applicable.

         On November 30, 2011, an attorney for FFA and Orlans, the redemption designee,
executed an affidavit to expunge sheriff’s deed on mortgage sale. She averred that FFA was the
holder of the Madison mortgage. Counsel then set forth the legal description of the property
encumbered by the mortgage, which description encompassed the entire 106-acre parcel. The
affidavit proceeded to acknowledge the sheriff’s sale, but the affidavit provided that FFA would
“not rely on said foreclosure sale.” The final averment stated that FFA “wishe[d] this affidavit to
be recorded in order to correct record title and to show that the Sheriff’s Deed on Mortgage Sale
. . . is of no force or effect.” The affidavit to expunge sheriff’s deed on mortgage sale was
recorded on December 2, 2011. This was more than a year after the 30-day redemption period
had expired.

        On January 27, 2012, FFA assigned the ostensibly defunct mortgage to OneWest,
referencing the mortgage and an affidavit to correct legal description,4 followed by a legal
description that was consistent with the 106-acre parcel. The assignment also listed the correct
address and tax parcel number for the Madisons’ property. Again, at this point, the foreclosure
proceedings had been completed and the redemption period had elapsed, and no party had
instituted legal proceedings to vacate or set aside the foreclosure.

       On July 2, 2013, more than one year since the OneWest assignment and nearly three
years after the sheriff’s sale had been conducted, OneWest filed a complaint for reformation of
the mortgage and to quiet title to the property, MCL 600.2932. Anna Madison’s estate and
Malhotra were the named defendants. The complaint recited the chain of title and the history of
the mortgage as discussed above; however, it failed to make any mention of the foreclosure
proceedings. OneWest alleged that the mortgage contained an incomplete legal description,
which did not adequately describe the property that was intended by all parties to secure the loan.

3
  OneWest states in its appellate brief that the affidavit was executed after PR Jaunese and
Malhotra had been informed of the error in the sheriff’s deed; however, OneWest does not
provide a supporting document or transcript citation with respect to that claim.
4
  The lower court record does not contain a document titled “affidavit to correct legal
description.” The reference in the assignment of mortgage may have been alluding to the
affidavit of scrivener’s error or the affidavit to expunge the sheriff’s deed.

                                                -5-
OneWest asserted that FFSFC and the Madisons had intended for the mortgage to cover the
Madisons’ entire real property interest and that a scrivener’s error caused the faulty legal
description. OneWest requested the trial court to reform the mortgage accordingly and to
confirm OneWest’s superior interest in the property over the estates and Malhotra.

        PR Jaunese filed an answer on behalf of Anna Madison’s estate, which admitted that the
legal description in the mortgage was wrong, admitted that the Madisons and FFSFC intended
for the loan to be secured by the Madisons’ entire 106-acre parcel, including the structures
thereon, and admitted that a scrivener’s error had been made. We note that, by this time, neither
estate had a legal interest in the property given the conveyance to Malhotra in connection with
distribution of Anna Madison’s estate. Malhotra immediately filed a motion for summary
disposition, seeking to have OneWest’s complaint dismissed under MCR 2.116(C)(7) and (8).
Malhotra argued that the complaint failed to adequately set forth the elements of reformation and
failed to show the existence of a true mistake, let alone a mutual mistake, with respect to the
description of the collateral. She further contended that the mortgage and sheriff’s deed had
been unilaterally and perhaps fraudulently altered by the affidavits recorded by FFA after the
foreclosure proceedings were concluded, effectively leaving successor OneWest with unclean
hands, thereby precluding any entitlement to equitable relief. Malhotra further maintained that
the mortgage had been extinguished and fully satisfied pursuant to the foreclosure proceedings,
which were completed long ago and no longer legally subject to revision. She made an attendant
laches argument. Lastly, Malhotra argued that OneWest, having obtained its assigned interest
after the mortgage had been extinguished and the foreclosure proceedings finalized, including
expiration of the redemption period, lacked standing to have the mortgage reformed.

        OneWest responded to Malhotra’s motion for summary disposition and filed its own
motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10), arguing, on the basis of the evidence
discussed above, that there was no genuine issue of material fact and that, as a matter of law,
OneWest was entitled to reformation of the mortgage because of the scrivener’s error and was
also entitled to have title to the entire 106-acre parcel quieted in its favor. Malhotra filed a
response brief that essentially reiterated the earlier arguments made in her brief in support of her
motion for summary disposition. At the hearing on the competing motions for summary
disposition, the trial court noted that the only thing that OneWest had going for it was “some
type of an equitable argument,” where FFA “paid an awful lot of money for five acres.” The
trial court granted Malhotra’s motion for summary disposition and denied OneWest’s motion for
the reasons stated in Malhotra’s summary disposition briefs. The trial court also stated that
OneWest’s suit was simply too late and that “if we start fooling with foreclosed properties once a
sheriff’s deed has been issued in this state we’ll be lost, particularly when we’re looking at the
most recent problems with foreclosure where there’s millions of them[.]”

        After the trial court’s ruling from the bench, the parties could not agree to the substance
of an order enshrining the court’s ruling. At the hearing to settle the order, there was some
dispute regarding whether summary disposition should encompass Anna Madison’s estate in
light of the admissions by PR Jaunese in the answer and the estate’s failure to even seek
summary disposition. The trial court, noting that the estate’s interest was irrelevant at this point,
entered an order granting summary disposition in favor of both Anna Madison’s estate and
Malhotra on the basis of the authorities and reasons set forth in Malhotra’s briefs, her

                                                -6-
supporting affidavit, and the overall record in the case. The order also denied OneWest’s
motion for summary disposition.

        OneWest proceeded to file a motion for leave to file an amended complaint. The
proposed amended complaint added more in terms of the history of the case, including
allegations and information regarding the foreclosure proceedings, added a count seeking
reformation of the sheriff’s deed, added an equitable mortgage count, added an unjust
enrichment count, added a constructive trust/lien count, added a count seeking to set aside the
foreclosure sale and sheriff’s deed, and added a count requesting foreclosure of a corrected
mortgage or foreclosure of an equitable mortgage. The proposed amended complaint also added
FFA as a party plaintiff, given that the order granting summary disposition accepted Malhotra’s
argument that OneWest lacked standing. OneWest additionally filed an accompanying motion
for reconsideration of the trial court’s summary disposition ruling.

        The trial court held a hearing on both motions. The court indicated that it had
reexamined the case and was augmenting its prior ruling with a four-page statement that it read
from the bench. The trial court recited and traced the history of the case, beginning with the
execution of the reverse mortgage. We have examined that same history above, but the trial
court did additionally mention that “Malhotra apparently tried to pay off the mortgage debt, was
unsuccessful[,] and spent the money on other estate debts.” The trial court then indicated that,
based on the record, this case concerned a unilateral mistake by the lender, absent any fraud by
the Madisons, and not a mutual mistake, thereby precluding the desired equitable relief. The trial
court also found that the doctrine of laches barred the lawsuit and that the equities generally
favored Malhotra. For these reasons, the trial court denied the motion for leave to amend the
complaint and the motion for reconsideration.

        On appeal, OneWest first argues that the trial court erred in ruling that OneWest was not
entitled to equitable relief in the form of reformation of the mortgage. In support of its position,
OneWest maintains that the affidavit to expunge the sheriff’s deed on mortgage sale effectively
restored the mortgage such that its legal description could be reformed and corrected. In further
support, OneWest asserts that the affidavit to expunge had the effect of setting aside the
foreclosure sale and that foreclosure sales can generally be set aside once completed. OneWest
next contends that, in the context of the claim for reformation, the trial court erred by applying
the law governing unilateral mistake of fact, which requires a showing of fraud by the party who
was not mistaken, when OneWest’s reformation claim was actually predicated on mutual
mistake of fact. OneWest argues that there existed clear and convincing evidence establishing a
mutual mistake of fact as a matter of law. Next, OneWest maintains that the trial court erred in
applying the doctrine of laches in rejecting its cause of action to reform the mortgage. In
support, OneWest contends that the trial court cited no evidence that the delay in filing suit was
unexcused or unexplained or that revealed that Malhotra had been prejudiced by the delay, all as
necessary to apply the laches doctrine. Finally, OneWest argues, in the alternative, that the trial
court abused its discretion in denying its motion for leave to amend the complaint. In support of
its position, OneWest asserts that the proposed amendment addressed the supposed deficiencies
in the original complaint as identified by the trial court and that the amendment would not have
been futile.

                                                -7-
        This Court reviews de novo a trial court's ruling on a motion for summary disposition.
Elba Twp v Gratiot Co Drain Comm’r, 493 Mich 265, 277; 831 NW2d 204 (2013). We also
review de novo a trial court’s ruling on equitable matters or doctrines, such as reformation,
unclean hands, and laches. Blackhawk Dev Corp v Village of Dexter, 473 Mich 33, 40; 700
NW2d 364 (2005); Kaftan v Kaftan, 300 Mich App 661, 665; 834 NW2d 657 (2013); Knight v
Northpointe Bank, 300 Mich App 109, 113; 832 NW2d 439 (2013). Likewise, this Court
reviews de novo questions of law, including the proper construction of a contract such as a
mortgage, as well as the proper interpretation of a statute. Estes v Titus, 481 Mich 573, 578-579;
751 NW2d 493 (2008); Graves v American Acceptance Mtg Corp (On Rehearing), 469 Mich
608, 613; 677 NW2d 829 (2004); Archambo v Lawyers Title Ins Corp, 466 Mich 402, 408; 646
NW2d 170 (2002). We review for an abuse of discretion a trial court’s ruling on a motion for
leave to amend a pleading. Franchino v Franchino, 263 Mich App 172, 189; 687 NW2d 620
(2004).

        In granting summary disposition in favor of defendants, the trial court relied on the
reasons set forth in Malhotra’s summary disposition briefs, and the court’s subsequent ruling on
the motions to amend the complaint and for reconsideration was intended, as stated by the court,
to simply augment its earlier ruling. Malhotra had argued at summary disposition that
OneWest’s complaint should be dismissed because OneWest lacked standing and because
OneWest had unclean hands. Accordingly, because the trial court adopted these arguments by
reference in making its ruling, standing and unclean hands were two alternative and independent
grounds that supported summarily dismissing OneWest’s complaint. As gleaned from the
summarization above of OneWest’s appellate arguments, they do not include arguments
regarding standing and unclean hands, each of which could serve as a basis to dismiss a
complaint. Therefore, this briefing failure alone supports affirmance of the trial court’s ruling,
where OneWest fails to address all of the grounds relied on by the trial court in summarily
dismissing the case. See Derderian v Genesys Health Care Sys, 263 Mich App 364, 381; 689
NW2d 145 (2007) (When an appellant fails to dispute or challenge a reason given by a trial court
that in and of itself can support the trial court’s disposition of a case, this Court need not even
contemplate granting the relief sought by the appellant); see also Joerger v Gordon Food
Service, Inc, 224 Mich App 167, 175; 568 NW2d 365 (1997). Moreover, as explained below, we
conclude that, substantively speaking, OneWest indeed lacked standing and had unclean hands.

        Given Baldwin’s affidavit, the affidavit of the broker’s president, the admissions by Anna
Madison’s estate in the answer to OneWest’s complaint, the references in the mortgage to the
Madisons’ home address and the tax parcel number, which encompassed the entire farmstead,
the HUD requirements, the appraisal, the amount borrowed, the amount of the line of credit
available to the mortgagors, and the legal description of only 2 ½ acres of vacant land when the
Madisons owned 160 acres improved with structures, we believe that the inescapable conclusion
is that the parties to the mortgage operated under a mutual mistake of fact, i.e., that the legal
description in the mortgage secured the note to the full extent of the Madisons’ property. See
Ford Motor Co v City of Woodhaven, 475 Mich 425, 440-442; 716 NW2d 247 (2006); Casey v

                                                -8-
Auto-Owners Ins Co, 273 Mich App 388, 398; 729 NW2d 277 (2006).5 And such a mutual
mistake would ordinarily support reformation of the mortgage. See Scott v Grow, 301 Mich 226,
239-240; 3 NW2d 254 (1942); Johnson Family Ltd Partnership v White Pine Wireless, LLC, 281
Mich App 364, 371-372; 761 NW2d 353 (2008); Mate v Wolverine Mut Ins Co, 233 Mich App
14, 24; 592 NW2d 379 (1998). We are also of the opinion that the doctrine of laches did not
preclude OneWest’s equitable action, as Malhotra failed to establish the requisite prejudice. See
Attorney General v Powerpick Player’s Club of Mich, LLC, 287 Mich App 13, 51; 783 NW2d
515 (2010).6

       Nevertheless, and even assuming that an affiant can effectively set aside a sheriff’s deed
and foreclosure sale under MCL 565.451a by simply recording an affidavit of expungement,
OneWest’s lawsuit was still properly dismissed, as it lacked standing, as would FFA, even if
FFA had been made a party plaintiff by way of the proposed amended complaint.7

5
  This was not a case of a unilateral mistake; rather, there was a mutual mistake of fact regarding
the legal description of the property that was intended to secure the loan or line of equity.
Indeed, there was no evidence to the contrary regarding intent. There was an erroneous belief,
which was shared and relied on by the parties to the loan and mortgage, about a material fact –
the actual legal description of the Madisons’ property – that affected the substance of the loan
and mortgage transaction. Ford Motor Co, 475 Mich at 442. It is nonsensical to conclude, in the
context of a transaction extending credit well in excess of a quarter of a million dollars, that the
parties to the reverse mortgage intended that the promissory note be secured by a 2 ½-acre
vacant parcel erratically carved out of the 160 acres of land owned by the Madisons and to the
exclusion of their house.
6
  The only prejudice claimed by Malhotra in her appellate brief was that the delay in filing the
reformation suit “abolished Malhotra’s ability to obtain the testimony of her grandparents,
Donald and Anna Madison,” with respect to showing their intent at the time the mortgage was
executed. This argument of prejudice has absolutely no merit. Anna was already incapacitated
at that time, with Malhotra serving as her guardian and conservator, and both Anna and Donald
were long deceased by the time of the foreclosure proceedings in 2010 and the subsequent
discovery of the scrivener’s error in 2011, at which time the suit should have been pursued.
Thus, even had a reformation action been timely filed, Anna and Donald would not have been
available to testify.

7
  With respect to the expungement affidavit recorded under MCL 565.451a, MCL 565.453
provides that an “affidavit, whether recorded before or after the passage of this act, may be
received in evidence in any civil cause, in any court of this state and by any board or officer of
the state in any suit or proceeding affecting the real estate and shall be prima facie evidence of
the facts and circumstances therein contained.” (Emphasis added.) “Prima facie evidence” is
evidence that will sustain a judgment or establish a fact unless contradictory evidence is
produced; it “creates a presumption that may be rebutted by contradictory evidence.” Dep’t of
Environmental Quality v Worth Twp, 491 Mich 227, 239 n 25; 814 NW2d 646 (2012).

                                                -9-
        In Trademark Props of Mich, LLC v Fed Nat’l Mtg Ass’n, __ Mich App __; __ NW2d __,
issued November 18, 2014 (Docket No. 313296), slip op at 4, this Court discussed foreclosure by
advertisement and the impact on the underlying mortgage, stating in relevant part:

                Foreclosure of a mortgage containing a power of sale is permissible by
       advertisement provided the proceedings are instituted in accordance with the
       statute. A foreclosure of a mortgage extinguishes it and the purchaser becomes the
       owner of an equitable interest in the mortgaged premises which ripens into a legal
       title if not defeated by redemption as provided by law. Statutory foreclosures
       should not be set aside without some very good reasons therefor. A strong case of
       fraud, irregularity, or some peculiar exigency is required to set aside a statutory
       foreclosure sale.

                It is undisputed that the MERS mortgage was foreclosed by advertisement,
       that Fannie Mae purchased the property at a foreclosure sale and received a
       sheriff's deed for the property, and that the property was never redeemed.
       The foreclosure extinguished the MERS mortgage and, because the property was
       not redeemed, all rights, title, and interest in the property vested in Fannie Mae.
       [Citations, ellipsis, and quotation marks omitted; emphasis added.]

       Accordingly, as a starting point here, the reverse mortgage would have been deemed
extinguished after expiration of the redemption period, with FFA holding full legal title in regard
to the 2 ½ acres of land that it purchased at the foreclosure sale for $275,223. That said,
generally speaking, if fraud, accident, mistake, or some type of irregularity is established, it may
warrant setting aside a foreclosure sale. Senters v Ottawa Savings Bank, 443 Mich 45, 55-57;
503 NW2d 639 (1993); Kubicki v Mtg Electronic Registration Sys, 292 Mich App 287, 289; 807
NW2d 433 (2011); Sweet Air Investment, Inc v Kenney, 275 Mich App 492, 497; 739 NW2d 656
(2007); Freeman v Wozniak, 241 Mich App 633, 637-638; 617 NW2d 46 (2000). And as noted
above by the Trademark Props panel, “[a] strong case of fraud, irregularity, or some peculiar
exigency is required to set aside a statutory foreclosure sale.” Trademark Props, slip op at 4; see
also Sweet Air Investment, 275 Mich App at 497 (stating that the Michigan Supreme Court has
long held this position), citing, in part, Detroit Trust Co v Agozzinio, 280 Mich 402, 405-406;
273 NW 747 (1937), and Calaveras Timber Co v Mich Trust Co, 278 Mich 445, 450; 270 NW
743 (1936).

       However, within the past year, this Court issued Bryan v JPMorgan Chase Bank, 304
Mich App 708; 848 NW2d 482 (2014), which addressed the issue of standing in the context of an
attempt to set aside a foreclosure sale. In Bryan, the plaintiff mortgagor argued that, despite the

Therefore, even in the context of litigation, an affidavit recorded under MCL 565.451a cannot
conclusively establish a fact if challenged, yet OneWest appears to maintain that the mere
recording of such an affidavit can conclusively result in the setting aside of a sheriff’s deed and
foreclosure sale regardless of any competing or conflicting claim or contradictory argument.
Given that litigation arose here, it seems beyond reasonable dispute that under MCL 565.453, the
affidavit at most gave rise to a rebuttable presumption of expungement.

                                               -10-
expiration of the redemption period, “she still had standing to sue because of ‘fraud or
irregularity’ in the foreclosure process.” Id. at 711. This Court rejected the argument, ruling:

               Pursuant to MCL 600.3240, after a sheriff’s sale is completed, a
       mortgagor may redeem the property by paying the requisite amount within the
       prescribed time limit, which here was six months. “Unless the premises described
       in such deed shall be redeemed within the time limited for such redemption as
       hereinafter provided, such deed shall thereupon become operative, and shall vest
       in the grantee therein named, his heirs or assigns, all the right, title, and interest
       which the mortgagor had at the time of the execution of the mortgage, or at any
       time thereafter . . . .” MCL 600.3236. If a mortgagor fails to avail him or herself
       of the right of redemption, all the mortgagor’s rights in and to the property are
       extinguished. Piotrowski v State Land Office Bd, 302 Mich 179, 187; 4 NW2d
       514 (1942).

                We have reached this conclusion in a number of unpublished cases and,
       while unpublished cases are not precedentially binding, MCR 7.215(C)(1), we
       find the analysis and reasoning in each of the following cases to be compelling.
       Accordingly, we adopt their reasoning as our own. See Overton v Mtg Electronic
       Registration Sys, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued
       May 28, 2009 (Docket No. 284950), p 2 (“The law in Michigan does not allow an
       equitable extension of the period to redeem from a statutory foreclosure sale in
       connection with a mortgage foreclosed by advertisement and posting of notice in
       the absence of a clear showing of fraud, or irregularity. Once the redemption
       period expired, all of plaintiff’s rights in and title to the property were
       extinguished.”) (citation and quotation marks omitted); Hardwick v HSBC Bank
       USA, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued July 23,
       2013 (Docket No. 310191), p 2 (“Plaintiffs lost all interest in the subject property
       when the redemption period expired . . . . Moreover, it does not matter that
       plaintiffs actually filed this action one week before the redemption period ended.
       The filing of this action was insufficient to toll the redemption period. . . . Once
       the redemption period expired, all plaintiffs’ rights in the subject property were
       extinguished.”); BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP v Lundin, unpublished opinion
       per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued May 23, 2013 (Docket No. 309048),
       p 4 (“[O]nce the redemption period expired, [plaintiff’s] rights in and to the
       property were extinguished. . . . Because [plaintiff] had no interest in the subject
       matter of the controversy [by virtue of MCL 600.3236], he lacked standing to
       assert his claims challenging the foreclosure sale.”); Awad v Gen Motors
       Acceptance Corp, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued
       April 24, 2012 (Docket No. 302692), pp 5-6 (“Although she filed suit before
       expiration of the redemption period, [plaintiff] made no attempt to stay or
       otherwise challenge the foreclosure and redemption sale. Upon the expiration of
       the redemption period, all of [plaintiff’s] rights in and title to the property were
       extinguished, and she no longer had a legal cause of action to establish
       standing.”). We hold that by failing to redeem the property within the applicable
       time, plaintiff lost standing to bring her claim. [Bryan, 304 Mich App at 713-715
       (alterations in original).]

                                               -11-
        By analogy, the holder of any mortgage interest would likewise lack standing to set aside
a foreclosure sale, considering that the mortgagee’s mortgage interest, just as a mortgagor’s
property interest, has been extinguished by the time the redemption period expires. It is
important to appreciate that if a mortgagee were permitted to set aside a foreclosure sale after
expiration of the redemption period, doing so would also necessarily breathe new life into the
mortgagor’s extinguished property interest, resurrecting that property interest in direct conflict
with Bryan. Accordingly, based on the doctrine of standing as viewed by the Bryan panel, any
claims of fraud, mistake, irregularities, accident, or a peculiar exigency as a basis to set aside a
foreclosure sale cannot be pursued post-expiration of the redemption period, whether by a
mortgagor or a mortgagee. With respect to the affidavit of scrivener’s error and affidavit to
expunge sheriff’s deed, they were not recorded until after the redemption period had expired. It
is undisputed that no lawsuit or affidavit seeking to set aside the sheriff’s deed or foreclosure sale
was filed or recorded before the conclusion of the redemption period. If a lawsuit to set aside the
foreclosure sale could no longer be pursued by the time the affidavits were recorded, the
affidavits themselves certainly could no longer effectuate the setting aside of the foreclosure
sale.8 This rationale effectively disposes of OneWest’s reformation claim, as one cannot reform
a mortgage that no longer exists and OneWest lacks standing, as would FFA, to set aside the
foreclosure sale and resurrect the mortgage such that it could be reformed.

         Additionally, “[a] party seeking the aid of equity must come in with clean hands.”
McFerren v B & B Investment Group, 253 Mich App 517, 523; 655 NW2d 779 (2003). The
clean hands doctrine closes the door of equity to a party tainted with inequitableness or bad faith
with respect to the matter in which the party seeks relief. Id. at 523-524. The clean hands
doctrine is rooted in the historical concept that courts of equity are vehicles for enforcing the
requirements of conscience and good faith. Isbell v Brighton Area Schools, 199 Mich App 188,
190; 500 NW2d 748 (1993). Having unclean hands can bar a plaintiff from receiving equitable
relief, id., which would include reformation of a mortgage.

        Again, OneWest fails to present an argument on appeal challenging this aspect of the trial
court’s ruling. Moreover, we conclude that OneWest sought reformation with unclean hands. It
accepted the assignment of mortgage knowing of the scrivener’s error, constructively knowing of
the quitclaim deed conveying the entire parcel to Malhotra, and knowing that the foreclosure
proceedings had concluded, with expiration of the redemption period occurring more than a year
before the assignment absent any litigation to resolve conflicting interests. Thus, OneWest
bought or stepped into the mess with eyes wide open. Even then, OneWest delayed filing a
complaint for 18 months, and when it did file the complaint, OneWest failed to make any
mention of the foreclosure proceedings. Also, OneWest stood in the shoes of its predecessors,
and those predecessors failed to take due care in examining the legal descriptions and recorded
documents concerning the property when assigning and foreclosing on the mortgage. And we
question the appropriateness of FFA’s attempt to unilaterally alter the legal description in the

8
  Again, this is assuming that the recording of an affidavit in and of itself can generally void a
foreclosure, which we question, especially in the context of a situation where there are
conflicting interests and positions.

                                                -12-
mortgage by a self-serving affidavit, which OneWest would or should have been aware of when
it accepted the assignment. In sum, OneWest acted with unclean hands and was not entitled to
any equitable relief.

        Finally, we address OneWest’s argument regarding amendment of the complaint. When
a court grants summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10), the court must provide the
losing party with an opportunity to amend the party’s pleadings under MCR 2.118, except where
any amendment would be futile under the circumstances. Weymers v Khera, 454 Mich 639, 658;
563 NW2d 647 (1997), citing MCR 2.116(I)(5). Leave to amend a pleading must be freely given
when justice so demands, and a motion to amend should ordinarily be granted unless there exists
undue delay, bad faith or a dilatory motive, repeated failures to cure deficiencies with prior
amendments, undue and actual prejudice, or futility. Weymers, 454 Mich at 658-659.

       On appeal, the only substantive argument made by OneWest concerns the addition of a
count to set aside the foreclosure sale as proposed in the amended complaint. OneWest fails to
address any of the other additional counts (equitable mortgage, unjust enrichment, etc.) that it
had raised in the proposed amended complaint; therefore, we need not bother with considering
those causes of action in the context of whether amendment should have been allowed. With
respect to setting aside the foreclosure sale, we have substantively addressed and rejected that
claim in the context of the reformation action, so the issue is now essentially moot and any
amendment to specifically add that claim would be futile.

     Affirmed. Having fully prevailed on appeal, Malhotra is awarded taxable costs under
MCR 7.219.

                                                           /s/ Michael J. Kelly
                                                           /s/ William B. Murphy
                                                           /s/ Joel P. Hoekstra

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