Court Opinion

ID: 2764815
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-12-25 08:10:15.61759+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:25:20.744152
License: Public Domain

STATE OF MICHIGAN

                             COURT OF APPEALS

CITIMORTGAGE, INC.,                                                  UNPUBLISHED
                                                                     December 23, 2014
               Plaintiff-Appellant,

v                                                                    No. 317422
                                                                     Genesee Circuit Court
FMM BUSHNELL, L.L.C. and FMM                                         LC No. 12-098516-CH
BUSHNELL GREAT LAKES, L.L.C.,

               Defendants-Appellees,

and

DR. RAMOTSUMI M. MAKHENE and
VELYNDA R. MAKHENE,

               Defendants.

Before: O’CONNELL, P.J., and BORRELLO and GLEICHER, JJ.

O’CONNELL, P.J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).

        In this declaratory judgment action, I concur with the majority opinion that the trial court
clearly erred by determining that defendants, FMM Bushnell, LLC and FMM Bushnell Great
Lakes, LLC (collectively, the Bushnell defendants), were entitled to summary disposition. I also
agree with the majority opinion that, prior to the issuance of Citizens Bank’s second mortgage,
Citizens knew that its mortgage would be subordinate to the mortgage the Makhenes owed to
ABN-AMRO. Further, I agree that Citizens and its assignees, the Bushnell defendants, are not
bona fide purchasers for value of the Citizens mortgage. But I vehemently disagree with the
remedy suggested by the majority opinion. I would reverse the lower court judgment for the
Bushnell defendants and grant summary judgment for plaintiff.

         In the present case, Citizens discharged their second mortgage at the request of their
client, the Makhenes. The sole purpose of this discharge was to subordinate their loan to the
ABN-AMRO first mortgage. Once the ABN-AMRO mortgage was recorded, Citizens agreed to
refile its mortgage and resume its position as a second mortgage.

        Unfortunately, through a clerical error, Citizens’s second mortgage beat ABN-AMRO’s
first mortgage to the Register of Deeds office. Citizens then wisely assigned its mortgage to the

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Bushnell defendants. The Bushnell defendants now claim that they are good faith purchasers for
value and, since their mortgage was recorded first, they have priority over the ABN-AMRO
mortgage now held by plaintiff.

        The Bushnell defendants’ argument is meritless. They are not good faith purchasers.
“[A] later interest holder may take priority over a prior conveyed interest only if the later interest
holder takes in good faith.” Coventry Parkhomes Condo Ass’n v Fed Nat Mtg Ass’n, 298 Mich
App 252, 256; 827 NW2d 379 (2012) (quotation marks omitted). “[A]n assignee stands in the
shoes of the assignor, acquiring the same rights and being subject to the same defenses as the
assignor.” Id. at 256-257. If a property owner had notice of a prior unrecorded mortgage on the
property, the owner could not have been a good-faith purchaser under the race-notice statute.
Mich Nat’l Bank & Trust Co v Morren, 194 Mich App 407, 410; 487 NW2d 784 (1992).

        In this case, the Bushnell defendants stand in the shoes of Citizens. They are charged
with the knowledge that Citizens intended its mortgage to be subordinate to the ABN-AMRO
mortgage. The Bushnell defendants’ mortgage is not entitled to priority merely because it was
filed first, as the Bushnell defendants do not qualify as a good-faith purchaser for value.
Plaintiff, as the prior interest holder, has priority over the Bushnell defendants.

        Equity requires that we reverse the trial court with directions to enter judgment for
plaintiff; in this manner, all parties are placed back in the positions that they had originally
agreed to assume. Simply assigning a mortgage to a third party does not give the third party
(here, the Bushnell defendants) any greater rights than the assignor (here, Citizens).

       In conclusion, since it is crystal clear from this record that Citizens intended its mortgage
to be a second mortgage, I would reverse the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to the
Bushnell defendants and order the trial court to grant summary judgment to plaintiff.

                                                              /s/ Peter D. O’Connell

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