                           STATE OF MICHIGAN

                           COURT OF APPEALS



In re THERESE M. CARDINAL TRUST and
MARVIN A. CARDINAL TRUST.


ROY C. HEBERT, Trustee of the THERESE M.                          UNPUBLISHED
CARDINAL TRUST and MARVIN A.                                      September 12, 2017
CARDINAL TRUST,

              Appellee,

v                                                                 No. 333620
                                                                  Ottawa Probate Court
PATRICIA GAIL POE,                                                LC No. 16-062516-TV

              Appellant.


In re ESTATE OF THERESE M. CARDINAL.


ROY C. HEBERT, Personal Representative of the
ESTATE OF THERESE M. CARDINAL,

              Appellee,

v                                                                 No. 333622
                                                                  Ottawa Probate Court
PATRICIA GAIL POE,                                                LC No. 15-062252-DE

              Appellant.


Before: TALBOT, C.J., and O’CONNELL and CAMERON, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

       Appellant Patricia Gail Poe filed a lis pendens and notice of lis pendens encumbering the
Therese M. Cardinal and Marvin A. Cardinal trusts in Docket No. 333620 and the Estate of
Therese M. Cardinal in Docket No. 333622. The probate court entered an order dismissing Poe’s


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lis pendens and notice of lis pendens and assessing actual attorney fees against Poe. Poe
appealed in both cases. We previously consolidated the appeals.1 We now affirm.

                       I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

       Therese and Marvin Cardinal married, had children, including Poe, and then passed
away. Each parent had a trust at the time of their death, named some of their children, including
Poe, as successor co-trustees, and named all of their living children as beneficiaries. However,
beneficiaries of each trust later signed a notice removing Poe as a co-trustee and nominating
appellee Roy C. Hebert as a replacement trustee. The probate court later entered an order noting
Poe’s removal and appointing Hebert as a trustee to both trusts.

       Therese also had a will at the time of her death. The trial court appointed Poe as the
personal representative. However, the trial court later removed Poe as the personal
representative and appointed Hebert as the successor personal representative.

       The Therese Trust contains real property located at 426 Macomb Avenue NW, Walker,
Michigan. Hebert asserts that the property is not an asset of the Marvin Trust or the estate. On
April 13, 2016, the Therese Trust sold the property.

        Poe subsequently filed a notice of lis pendens encumbering the property, the trusts case,
and the estate case. According to Hebert,2 Poe asserted that “the object of the subject suit is: title
clarification—‘quiet title’ ” and referred interested persons to her attorney for “further
particulars.”

         Hebert petitioned to dismiss and cancel Poe’s lis pendens and notice of lis pendens.
Significantly, Hebert argued that there was no pending litigation regarding the property, there
was no question regarding the property’s title requiring a quiet title action, the lis pendens filing
did not comply with MCL 565.25(1)(a)’s requirement to include a full and fair accounting of
facts and supporting documentation, and that Poe lacked a legal basis to file the lis pendens. In
response, Poe argued that she has an interest in the property because she is a beneficiary to the
Therese Trust, intends to seek ownership of the property once the trust is administered, and filed
the lis pendens to protect her interest in the title of the property.

        The probate court dismissed Poe’s lis pendens and notice of lis pendens with prejudice
because “the actual document recording was without lawful cause” and ordered Poe to notify the
register of deeds that the lis pendens had been cancelled, citing MCL 600.2725. Additionally,
the probate court assessed actual attorney fees against Poe pursuant to MCL 600.2907a.

                                         II. JURISDICTION



1
 In re Therese M. Cardinal Trust, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered July 15,
2016 (Docket Nos. 333620 and 333622).
2
    We cannot find the notice in the probate court record.


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         Hebert argues that this Court lacks jurisdiction over Poe’s appeals by right. We disagree.

         This Court has “jurisdiction of an appeal of right filed by an aggrieved party from” a
court order “from which appeal of right to the Court of Appeals has been established by . . . court
rule.” MCR 7.203(A)(2). MCR 5.801(A)(2)(j) provides that a “party or an interested person
aggrieved by a final order of the probate court may appeal as a matter of right” from “a final
order affecting the rights or interests of an interested person in a proceeding involving a decedent
estate, . . . an inter vivos trust or a trust created under a will,” including an order “encumbering
any of the assets of an estate or trust.”3 A lis pendens is an “instrument of encumbrance.” See
MCL 565.25(1). Therefore, Poe may appeal as of right from the probate court’s order to dismiss
a lis pendens, dismiss a notice of lis pendens, and cancel a lis pendens filed against the estate and
trusts.

                                   III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

       A probate court has discretion to order cancellation of a notice of lis pendens. See MCL
600.2725(2). “A probate court abuses its discretion when it chooses an outcome outside the
range of reasonable and principled outcomes.” In re Bibi Guardianship, 315 Mich App 323,
329; 890 NW2d 387 (2016) (quotations and citation omitted).

                                          IV. LIS PENDENS

      Poe argues that the probate court erred in dismissing or canceling the notice of lis
pendens. We disagree.

       A lis pendens and notice of lis pendens warn persons who deal with property, specifically
a purchaser of real estate, that the property is involved in litigation, notifies the persons of the
basis of the suit, and warns persons “ ‘that they are charged with notice of the rights of their
vendor’s antagonist and take subject to the judgment rendered in the litigation.’ ” Richards v
Tibaldi, 272 Mich App 522, 536; 726 NW2d 770 (2006), quoting Backowski v Solecki, 112 Mich
App 401, 412; 316 NW2d 434 (1982); See also Ligon v Detroit, 276 Mich App 120, 128; 739
NW2d 900 (2007); MCL 600.2701(1).

        Statutes set forth the requirements for perfecting a lis pendens, filing a notice of lis
pendens, and canceling the action. A recording of lis pendens is not perfected unless a “full and
fair accounting of the facts that support recording of the instrument of encumbrance and
supporting documentation, as available” “accompanied the instrument when it was delivered to
the register” of deeds. MCL 565.25(1)(a).4

         To render the filing of a complaint constructive notice to a purchaser of any real
         estate, the plaintiff shall file for record, with the register of deeds of the county in


3
  MCR 5.801 was amended effective June 21, 2017. The relevant portions of the prior version of
the rule are substantively identical.
4
    None of the exceptions to this rule articulated in MCL 565.25(2) apply.


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       which the lands to be affected by such constructive notice are situated, a notice of
       the pendency of such action, setting forth the title of the cause, and the general
       object thereof, together with a description of the lands to be affected thereby.
       [MCL 600.2701(1).]

MCL 600.2725(2) gives a probate court discretion to “direct that a notice of the pendency of an
action be canceled” “[i]f a plaintiff filing the notice” “does not commence or prosecute the action
in good faith.”

        The probate court did not abuse its discretion when it canceled Poe’s lis pendens and
notice of lis pendens pursuant to MCL 600.2725. Poe failed to support her lis pendens with a
full and fair accounting of the facts, provide documentation supporting her claim, and accurately
set forth the basis for her claim. She asserted that “the object of the subject suit is: title
clarification—‘quiet title.’ ” However, the property was not the subject of a quiet title action.
Poe and Hebert both asserted that the property is an asset of the Therese Trust. Further, neither
the trusts case nor the estate case involved the title of the property. Therefore, Poe did not
commence or prosecute the action in good faith, and the probate court’s order was not outside
the range of reasonable and principled outcomes.

       Additionally, Poe abandoned any argument that the probate court improperly awarded
attorney fees because she merely announced her position without rationalizing the basis of her
claim or citing supporting authority. See Peterson Novelties, Inc v Berkley, 259 Mich App 1, 14;
672 NW2d 351 (2003).

       We affirm.

                                                            /s/ Michael J. Talbot
                                                            /s/ Peter D. O’Connell
                                                            /s/ Thomas C. Cameron




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