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Foster Swift Prevails at Michigan Supreme Court in Major Victory for County Treasurers

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Keith T. Brown
Foster Swift Municipal Law News E-blast
September 30, 2024

Foreclosure Sale SignThe Michigan Supreme Court denied leave to appeal the Court of Appeals’ published decision in favor of the Muskegon County Treasurer. In re Petition of Muskegon County Treasurer for Foreclosure (Muskegon County Treasurer v Beeman et al), ___ Mich App ___ (2023) (Docket No. 363764) (“Beeman”). The Beeman decision upholds as constitutional Section 78t of the Michigan General Property Tax Act (MCL 211.78t), which requires former owners of tax-foreclosed property to file a notice of intent to claim any remaining proceeds by July 1.

Section 78t was adopted by the Legislature in response to Rafaeli, LLC v Oakland Co, 505 Mich 429; 952 NW2d 434 (2020), which held that former owners of tax-foreclosed properties have a property interest in the surplus proceeds resulting from the tax-foreclosure sale. Section 78t creates a statutory process for former owners to claim those remaining proceeds, which includes filing Form 5743 with the foreclosing governmental unit by July 1 immediately following the foreclosure date. Many claimants who missed that deadline, however, argued that Section 78t and the July 1 deadline are unconstitutional and constitute a taking of property without just compensation. This resulted in litigation against counties in state and federal court.

Such was the case in Beeman: the former owners failed to timely file Form 5743 and then argued that the requirement itself was unconstitutional. The Court of Appeals disagreed with the former owners and held, among other things, that the July 1 deadline did not violate the former owners’ due process rights or the Takings Clause. The Court summarized its holding as follows:

As the Rafaeli Court recognized, a former property owner has a constitutional right to the monetary proceeds, if any, that exist after a foreclosure sale and satisfaction of tax debt and related costs. In response to Rafaeli, our Legislature enacted a statutory scheme by which such owners can enforce their constitutional rights, and, as explained, this scheme passes constitutional muster. Respondents failed to avail themselves of these statutory protections, and, as a result, they failed to enforce their constitutional rights. The failure is theirs, not petitioner’s or our Legislature’s.

Beeman was the first of numerous cases pending in the Michigan appellate courts involving the same legal issues. Because it is a published decision and the Michigan Supreme Court has now denied leave to appeal, it is binding on Michigan courts and the federal courts will likely give it great weight. The decision will prevent former owners from making this argument in circuit court, thus reducing litigation and allowing counties (or other foreclosing government units) to retain surplus proceeds that are not timely claimed by former owners as required by the statute.

Muskegon County was represented in this appeal by Laura J. Genovich, a shareholder in Foster Swift’s municipal group who is also chair of the firm’s appellate practice group, municipal attorney Keith Brown.