v.
Jill Jennings
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
JAMES TAMBS and TANYA TAMBS, UNPUBLISHED February 5, 2019 Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v No. 340498 Ogemaw Circuit Court JILL JENNINGS and TIM WELCH, LC No. 15-659579-CD
Defendants-Appellants.
Before: CAVANAGH, P.J., and MARKEY and LETICA, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Defendants appeal by right the trial court’s ruling following a bench trial that plaintiffs established their cause of action for claim and delivery. The trial court found that plaintiffs had not abandoned personal property that they left behind in their former house after foreclosure and eviction; therefore, defendants unlawfully retained the property when they refused to turn it over to plaintiffs. We conclude that plaintiffs have no cause of action for claim and delivery as a matter of law under the facts of this case. Accordingly, the action should have been dismissed whether on defendants’ motion for summary disposition or their motion for summary disposition brought at the close of plaintiffs’ proofs at trial. [1] The trial court erred in entering judgment in favor of plaintiffs. Thus, we reverse and remand for entry of judgment in favor of defendants.
There is no dispute that plaintiffs had notice of the foreclosure by advertisement, MCL 600.3201 et seq., and that plaintiffs failed to redeem the property during the redemption period.2 After the redemption period expired without the property’s being redeemed, title vested in the of this determination is that if the personal property was not abandoned, defendants must have been unlawfully detaining the property for purposes of the claim and delivery action.
[*2]“The essential elements of abandonment are an intention to relinquish the property and acts putting that intention into effect[.]” Van Slooten v Larsen, 410 Mich 21, 50; 299 NW2d 704 (1980). When real property has been vacated and physical assets are left behind or abandoned on the property, one who thereafter properly enters the property and maintains possession is not liable in an action for claim and delivery under MCL 600.2920. Sparling Plastic Indus, Inc v Sparling, 229 Mich App 704, 713-714; 583 NW2d 232 (1998).
We hold that the interest or right plaintiffs had in the personal property did not survive expiration of the redemption period, entry of the possession judgment, plaintiffs’ subsequent failure to remove the property by the date to vacate, at which time they left the house unlocked and vulnerable to theft, and plaintiffs’ additional failure later to appear at the scheduled December meeting without a timely excuse. Considering this series of events and failures, we conclude that as a matter of law, plaintiffs abandoned the personal property they left behind. The fact that plaintiffs had removed some of their personal property before the scheduled December meeting is of no significant consequence, as the sequence of events indicated that plaintiffs, in doing so, had removed all of the personal property that they wanted. Plaintiffs’ further efforts to obtain more of the personal property after abandonment had been established could not revive a claim that the personal property had not, in fact, been abandoned—once abandoned, it was too late to try to reclaim rights to the property.[4] Therefore, the trial court erred in denying defendants’ motions for summary disposition and involuntary dismissal: there was no genuine issue of material fact that an unlawful detention of the property had not occurred.5 Because there was no viable action for claim and delivery as a matter of law, we reverse the trial court’s ruling and remand for entry of judgment in favor of defendants. And even assuming that the case should not have been summarily or involuntarily dismissed, the trial court clearly erred in finding that plaintiffs had not abandoned the personal property under the circumstances presented.[6]
[*3]We have a final thought on this case. The foreclosure and the eviction action were pursued by the mortgage company, and the consent possession judgment was entered into by plaintiffs and the mortgage company. The mortgage company was still the owner of the property when the date to vacate passed. Only thereafter did defendants purchase the property from the mortgage company. Defendants obtained fee simple title at that time, buying a house that still had personal property inside. There was no transaction or conveyance of any kind between plaintiffs and defendants, nor was there a landlord-tenant relationship between the parties, especially given that plaintiffs had vacated the property by the time of purchase. Under these circumstances, we fail to see how defendants could possibly have unlawfully detained the personal property at issue.
We reverse and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction. Having fully prevailed on appeal, defendants are awarded taxable costs under MCR 7.219.
/s/ Mark J. Cavanagh /s/ Jane E. Markey /s/ Anica Letica
[*4]