Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. v. Church , 423 F. App'x 564 ( 2011 )


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  •                 NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 11a0332n.06
    Nos. 09-2513 / 10-1037
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC                                 )
    REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., as                      )
    nominee for InterBay Funding, LLC,                  )
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                         )   ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    )   STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
    v.                                                  )   WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
    )
    TAMMY CHURCH; CHARLES O.                            )
    DAVIS,                                              )
    )
    Defendants,                                  )                      FILED
    )                 May 18, 2011
    and                                                 )
    LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
    )
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                           )
    )
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Before: BATCHELDER, Chief Judge; ROGERS and SUTTON, Circuit Judges.
    SUTTON, Circuit Judge. It sometimes pays to check a map. The mortgage lender in this
    case did not, and as a result it recorded an interest in Tammy Church’s property in the wrong county.
    Luckily for the public fisc, the IRS, which also placed a lien on Church’s property, did not make the
    same mistake. When the lender realized what had happened, it sued, seeking in equity what it could
    not get in law—a declaration that it had the superior claim to the property. Equity does not save the
    lender in this instance, and we therefore affirm.
    Nos. 09-2513 / 10-1037
    Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. v. Church
    I.
    In March 2004, Tammy Church borrowed $330,000 from Argent Mortgage Company, which
    secured the loan with a mortgage on her property in Rapid City, Michigan. On August 2, 2006,
    Church took out another mortgage on the same property, this time with Mortgage Electronic
    Registration Systems (MERS), for $402,500. Church used the proceeds from the MERS loan to pay
    off the Argent loan as well as to satisfy a judgment lien and pay some delinquent taxes.
    On August 10, 2006, MERS recorded its interest in Church’s property with the Kalkaska
    County Register of Deeds. That was the wrong place to record the mortgage. The property lies in
    Antrim County. Meanwhile, Church’s federal tax delinquencies prompted the IRS to record five tax
    liens (totaling $465,373.18) on her property on August 28, 2006, and in April and May 2007. The
    IRS recorded the liens with the Antrim County Register of Deeds. That was the right place to record
    them.
    In October 2007, MERS realized its mistake and recorded the mortgage in Antrim County.
    In doing so, MERS discovered that the IRS claimed an interest, now a first-in-time interest, in the
    property.
    MERS filed this lawsuit in the Antrim County Circuit Court seeking a declaration that its
    claims were superior to those of the United States (and to those of Church and another defendant,
    neither of which is relevant to this appeal). MERS argued (1) that it had a priority interest in the
    property even though it recorded the interest later in time, or (2) that the doctrine of “equitable
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    Nos. 09-2513 / 10-1037
    Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. v. Church
    subrogation” in the alternative permitted it to jump ahead of the IRS in the priorities chain. The
    United States removed the case to federal court. See 28 U.S.C. § 1444.
    The district court rejected both arguments as a matter of law, granting summary judgment
    to the United States. On appeal, MERS raises only a claim of equitable subrogation.
    II.
    When it comes to federal tax liens, the relative priority of competing liens is a matter of
    federal law. See United States v. Craft, 
    535 U.S. 274
    , 278 (2002); Hensley v. Harbin, 
    196 F.3d 613
    ,
    615 (6th Cir. 1999). “[P]riority . . . is governed by the [federal] common-law principle that ‘the first
    in time is the first in right.’” United States ex rel. IRS v. McDermott, 
    507 U.S. 447
    , 449 (1993)
    (quoting United States v. City of New Britain, 
    374 U.S. 81
    , 85 (1954)). Here, the IRS lien has
    priority over the MERS lien because the government properly recorded its interest first, a conclusion
    MERS no longer disputes.
    Determining the order of priorities, however, does not settle this dispute. The federal rule
    has an exception that allows a junior creditor to step into the shoes of a senior one. “Where, under
    local law, one person is subrogated to the rights of another with respect to a lien or interest, such
    person shall be subrogated to such rights for purposes of any [tax] lien . . . .” 26 U.S.C. § 6323(i)(2).
    Subrogation rights turn on state law, here Michigan law, and in this instance MERS claims that the
    Michigan doctrine of “equitable subrogation” permits the company to substitute itself for the earlier-
    in-time priorities of Argent Mortgage Company, Church’s first lender.
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    Nos. 09-2513 / 10-1037
    Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. v. Church
    Equitable subrogation is “a legal fiction through which a person who pays a debt for which
    another is primarily responsible is substituted or subrogated to all the rights and remedies of the
    other.” Hartford Accident & Indem. Co. v. Used Car Factory, Inc., 
    600 N.W.2d 630
    , 632 (Mich.
    1999). Under Michigan law, the doctrine does not apply to “volunteer[s],” those who merely loan
    money with “no interests to protect” and do so “solely for the purpose of self aggrandizement.”
    Lentz v. Stoflet, 
    273 N.W. 763
    , 765 (Mich. 1937).
    In Ameriquest Mortgage Co. v. Alton, 
    731 N.W.2d 99
    , 107 (Mich. Ct. App. 2006), a
    homeowner used the proceeds from a second mortgage to pay off a previous one. The court held that
    the second lender, who “had no preexisting interest in the property and did not attempt to protect its
    interest in the property or to revive or obtain an assignment of the original mortgage,” could not
    invoke equitable subrogation. 
    Id. In the
    absence of any “legal or equitable duty” to the property
    owner, the court explained, the lender was a “mere volunteer.” Id.; see also Wash. Mut. Bank, F.A.
    v. ShoreBank Corp., 
    703 N.W.2d 486
    , 491 (Mich. Ct. App. 2005) (same).
    Lentz, Ameriquest and Washington Mutual govern this case. MERS “had no preexisting
    interest” in the Church property and no “legal or equitable duty” to Church that “compelled [it] to
    pay a debt for which another is primarily liable.” 
    Ameriquest, 731 N.W.2d at 106
    . It was only a
    “volunteer,” one that lent money to Church through a “generic refinancing transaction,” Wash. 
    Mut., 703 N.W.2d at 496
    , “solely for the purpose of” making money (i.e., solely for “self
    aggrandizement”), 
    Lentz, 273 N.W. at 765
    , without any requirement that Church pay off her existing
    debt. That Church decided to use the “proceeds of [MERS’s] mortgage . . . to pay off the
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    Nos. 09-2513 / 10-1037
    Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. v. Church
    indebtedness secured by the old mortgage” does not permit MERS to subrogate its interests to the
    earlier lender. Wash. 
    Mut., 703 N.W.2d at 491
    . MERS had the “liberty to elect whether [it] would
    or would not be bound” by an agreement with Church, which removes it from eligibility for equitable
    subrogation. 
    Id. MERS maintains
    that two Michigan Supreme Court cases point in the opposite direction.
    In Smith v. Sprague, the property owner “pleaded” with his former daughter-in-law to help him
    satisfy an existing mortgage in return for a promise to grant her a mortgage on the property. The
    owner died without keeping his promise. 
    222 N.W. 207
    , 207–08 (Mich. 1928). The Court invoked
    equitable subrogation, giving the woman rights to the property despite the lack of a preexisting
    interest. See 
    id. at 208.
    Yet that case is at least two steps removed from this one. Sprague had
    nothing to do with a “priority over intervening encumbrances. Rather, the Court used the
    subrogation doctrine to impose liability on the [property owner’s] widow.” Wash. 
    Mut., 703 N.W.2d at 494
    . And Sprague involved a promise from an owner to a relative, a fact pattern that implicates
    the kind of “equitable duty” from which equitable subrogation takes its name and that has nothing
    to do with the Church-MERS relationship and the arm’s-length transaction they consummated.
    The other case, Walker v. Bates, we acknowledge, appears to define the doctrine differently,
    as it held that a bank could subrogate when the borrower used the loan proceeds to pay off an earlier
    mortgage, even though the bank had no preexisting interest in the property. 
    222 N.W. 209
    , 210
    (Mich. 1928). But Walker no longer is good law. Nine years after Walker, the Michigan Supreme
    Court addressed a similar fact pattern and refused to apply subrogation in the absence of any
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    Nos. 09-2513 / 10-1037
    Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. v. Church
    “interests to protect.” 
    Lentz, 273 N.W. at 765
    ; Wash. 
    Mut., 703 N.W.2d at 490
    (“Lentz . . . reached
    the opposite result as Walker, despite a similarity in facts.”).
    One of the Justices in Lentz observed that “[t]he effect of [this] opinion . . . is to overrule
    
    Walker.” 273 N.W. at 765
    (Potter, J., concurring). And the Michigan Court of Appeals has seen it
    the same way ever since. That court has consistently treated Lentz as overruling Walker. See
    
    Ameriquest, 731 N.W.2d at 101
    –104; Wash. 
    Mut., 703 N.W.2d at 496
    (“Walker is not a precedent
    to be followed, but an accident to be avoided.”). MERS offers no reason to think the Michigan
    Supreme Court would follow Walker today.
    The “unique, and unusual facts” of this case, MERS Br. at 23, do not help MERS either. It
    is not clear why this mistake was “unique” or why it should be excused. If the law routinely
    protected lien holders who filed in the wrong county, that would go a long way to defeating the
    benefit of having a centralized lien-recording system in the first place.
    The cases also do not endorse this kind of leniency. Ameriquest refused to excuse the
    mortgage lender’s failure to discover intervening encumbrances on the property, even though the
    homeowner had defrauded the lender. 
    See 731 N.W.2d at 101
    , 108. After Ameriquest, it is hard to
    understand why Michigan would excuse a less sympathetic lender, one who was not defrauded but
    who simply recorded its lien in the wrong county.
    Everyone makes mistakes, to be sure. But it is difficult to find a basis in Michigan law for
    overlooking this one. MERS is not just a sophisticated party; its sophistication relates to this precise
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    Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. v. Church
    area of business and law—lending money and securing the loans with an interest in the borrowers’
    property. See Deutsche Bank Trust Co. Ams. v. Spot Realty, Inc., 
    714 N.W.2d 409
    , 414 (Mich. Ct.
    App. 2005) (“[T]he doctrine of equitable subrogation was never intended for the protection of
    sophisticated financial institutions that can cho[o]se the terms of their credit agreements.”). Nor was
    it a state secret that Church’s property was in Antrim County. MERS attached to its own pleadings
    a settlement statement completed the day the mortgage was executed (reflecting the MERS loan and
    Church’s payment of her debts) and a sheriff’s deed foreclosing Church’s property, both dated before
    MERS recorded its interest in the wrong county and both identifying Church’s property as part of
    Antrim County. “A court’s equitable power is not an unrestricted license for the court” to do what
    it wishes with the fact patterns that come before it. Devillers v. Auto Club Ins. Ass’n, 
    702 N.W.2d 539
    , 556 (Mich. 2005). There must be a legitimate explanation for invoking that power. There is
    none here.
    III.
    For these reasons, we affirm.
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