On March 4, 1986, plaintiff brought the instant action to have a foreclosure sale declared invalid. On June 5, 1986, the Washtenaw Circuit Court entered two orders, one dismissing plaintiffs action with prejudice and the other finding that an earlier order was not a final and appealable order. From those orders, plaintiff appeals as of right.
The facts are not in substantial dispute. Defendant Pittsfield Products, Inc., entered into a mortgage agreement with plaintiff Jackson Investment Corporation on May 22, 1984, enabling Jackson to purchase certain property owned by Pittsfield. On September 10, 1985, Pittsfield commenced foreclosure proceеdings and published a notice of foreclosure on September 10, 1985. While Jackson has at
On March 4, 1986, Jackson filed the instant complaint and sought an order to show cause why the foreclosure sale should not be vacated. The complaint was based on the fact that the sale had occurred five days before the four-weеk publication period had expired. The circuit court construed plaintiff’s motion as a motion for summary disposition and denied it. Thereafter, the court ruled that the sale was defective. However, the court refused to hold that the consequence of the defect was that the sale was void. Rather, the trial court held that the defect rendered the sale voidable. After examining the equities of the casе, the court found plaintiff guilty of laches for waiting until five
On appeal, plaintiff raises two issues: (1) whether the trial court erred in holding that the sale was voidable, rather than void; and (2) whether the trial court erred in its application of the doctrine of laches to bar relief.
MCL 600.3208; MSA 27A.3208 provides in part:
Notice that the mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the mortgaged premises, or somе part of them, shall be given by publishing the same for 4 successive weeks at least once in each week, in a newspaper published in the county where the premises included in the mortgage and intended to be sold, or some part of them, are situated.
Jackson contends that the case law of this state holds that a foreclosure sale which occurs before the expiration of the notice periоd is void and without effect. In support of this assertion, Jackson cites two cases. One of the two decisions is
Bacon v Kennedy,
The only question in this case is whether a statutory foreclosure is valid where the sale was made on а notice which, although published twelve times in separate weeks, provided for selling on a day less than twelve weeks from the first publication. The statute does not say that notice shall merely be published twelve times, once a week, but once a week "for twelve successive weeks.” The object of this was manifestly to give that full interval between the first notice and the sale. Such was the basis of the decision in Gantz v Toles,40 Mich 725 [1879]; and the same principlehas been applied in other cases, some of which were referred to on the argument.
As the court below so held, the judgment was correct and must be affirmed.
The Bacon case stands for the proposition that the forеclosure sale may not take place within seven days of the last required weekly published notice, i.e., when publication is required "for twelve successive weeks,” at least twelve full weeks or eighty-four days must pass from the date of the first notice before the sale can take place. In the instant case, the trial court followed the same reasoning when it held that the language of the current statute requiring publication "for four successive weeks at least once in each week” requires that at least twenty-eight days must transpire from the day of the initial notice until the date of sale. The issue of whether the sale may take place within seven days of the last required weekly published notice is distinct from the issue of what effect the defect should have. That issue was not raised in Bacon. Since the issue was not raised, the Court in Bacon did not decide whether the defect rendered the sale void or voidable. Even though the opinion suggests that the sale was not valid, that statement must be read and interpreted in light of the context in which it was decided.
Jackson also relies upon
Casey v
Goetzen,
The cases upon which plaintiff relies are not precedent. We hold that a defect in notice renders a foreclosure sale voidable. Our Supreme Court reached a similar result in
Fox v Jacobs,
MCL 600.3208; MSA 27A.3208 and MCL 600.3212; MSA 27A.3212 set forth thе requirements of notice. The failure to properly observe any of these requirements provides a host of poten
Jackson’s final argument is that the circuit court erred in applying the doctrine of laches to bar its rеquested relief.
Jackson is a business entity active in real estate transactions and was represented by counsel throughout the foreclosure process. Some time between September 10 and September 17, 1985, Jackson received actual notice that the foreclosure sale would be held on October 3, 1985. No complaint was lodged that the sale could not be held before October 8, 1985, until after the sale had been completed and the property sold to a third party. The instant complaint was not filed until five months of the six-month redemption period had passed. While defendant’s attorney asserts
Affirmed.
Notes
However, compare
Carpenter v Smith,
