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Bankruptcy: Case dismissed for failure to disclose claims

Holding that the trial court properly applied the doctrine of judicial estoppel and granted the defendants' emergency motion to dismiss the plaintiff's case for failure to disclose the claims in her Chapter 13 bankruptcy, the court affirmed the trial court's order. The court concluded that "plaintiff had sufficient information to suggest that she may have a possible cause of action against defendants." Her voluntary bankruptcy petition was attached to defendants' emergency motion. In her petition, "plaintiff made no mention of any potential or forthcoming lawsuit against defendants, and the petition asked about any assets or property that plaintiff might have." The petition was filed on 8/4/08, and plaintiff's bankruptcy proceedings were not dismissed until 11/3/09. In the interim, she filed this case. "Under the United States Bankruptcy Code, plaintiff was required to disclose any pending or potential lawsuits, as they are 'routinely recognized [as] . . . an asset that must be included under'" § 521(a)(1)(B)(i). This duty to disclose is a continuing one. Thus, she "was required to amend her bankruptcy petition once she knew of the potential lawsuit."

MICHIGAN REAL ESTATE 95: Property owners did not place a condition upon the delivery of the deed; rather, they delivered the deed to themselves.

When the delivery of a deed is contingent upon the happening of some future event, title to the subject property will not transfer to the grantee until the event has occurred. However, in this case A and J did not place a condition upon the delivery of the deed; rather, they delivered the deed to themselves, then deposited the deed with their attorney with the instruction to record the deed only upon the happening of a future event, thereby placing a condition only upon the recording of the deed.

MICHIGAN PROBATE 57: Brother granted permanent guardianship of siblings.

At a multiday hearing to address the extension of the guardianship, the eldest children, the mother’s relatives and friends, and school personnel testified regarding the mother’s care of the children, appellant’s treatment of and interaction with the children, and the eldest siblings’ role in aiding the mother to raise the children.

FAMILY LAW 88: The trial court found that the children did not have an established custodial environment with defendant because, before the separation, he did not have a large role in the children’s lives.

The trial court credited plaintiff’s testimony that, before the parties’ separation, defendant spent minimal time helping to care for the children, so its finding that the children would not have looked to defendant for guidance, discipline, the necessities of life, and parental comfort during that time was not against the great weight of the evidence.

REAL ESTATE 89: RM had not included any language in the deed providing that the property was a joint tenancy with full rights of survivorship, the property instead became a tenancy in common.

RM drafted the deed without seeking counsel and mistakenly believed that, if either she or FK died, the property would fully pass to the surviving tenant. FK’s will provided that if his wife predeceased him—which she did—the personal representative of his estate should sell any residual property that he owned and divide the cash proceeds equally among his surviving children.

FAMILY LAW 83: A trial court can terminate a parent’s rights and permit a stepparent to adopt a child.

A trial court has discretion to terminate a parent’s rights and permit a stepparent to adopt a child when the conditions of MCL 710.51(6) are met. MCL 710.51(6)(b) requires the petitioner to establish that the other parent had the ability to visit, contact, or communicate with the children, and substantially failed or neglected to do so for a period of two years.

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