Daniel Sutter v. U.S. National Bank ( 2012 )


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  •                    RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 12a0001p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    In re: DANIEL JOSEPH SUTTER; SHERYL LYNN X
    -
    Debtors. --
    SUTTER,
    _____________________________________ -
    No. 10-1656
    ,
    >
    -
    -
    DANIEL JOSEPH SUTTER; SHERYL LYNN
    Appellees, --
    SUTTER,
    -
    -
    -
    v.
    -
    -
    U.S. NATIONAL BANK; SAXON MORTGAGE
    SERVICES, INC.,                             -
    Appellants. -
    N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit.
    No. 09-11816—Anna Diggs Taylor, District Judge.
    Argued: October 12, 2011
    Decided and Filed: January 3, 2012
    Before: BATCHELDER, Chief Judge; SILER and COLE, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: David A. Lerner, PLUNKETT COONEY, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, for
    Appellants. Rex C. Anderson, Davison, Michigan, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: David
    A. Lerner, PLUNKETT COONEY, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, Hilary A. Ballentine,
    PLUNKETT COONEY, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellants. Rex C. Anderson, Davison,
    Michigan, for Appellees.
    1
    No. 10-1656           Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                            Page 2
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    COLE, Circuit Judge. Appellants U.S. National Bank and Saxon Mortgage
    Services, Inc., appeal the order of the district court overturning a judgment of the
    bankruptcy court granting them an equitable mortgage on property owned by Debtors
    Daniel and Sheryl Sutter. We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A. The World Wide Mortgage
    In September 1994, Daniel and Sheryl Sutter (“the Sutters”) bought a home in
    Lapeer, Michigan (“the Sutter property”). Beginning sometime in the mid to late 1990s,
    the Sutters experienced financial difficulties that ultimately resulted in the filing of a
    petition under Chapter 7 of the bankruptcy laws, followed by a grant of discharged
    issued by the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Michigan on January 30,
    2004.
    Prior to entry of the discharge, the Sutters attempted to refinance their existing
    mortgages on the subject property. Eventually, they came into contact with World Wide
    Financal Services, Inc. (“World Wide”), also known as LoanGiant.com.1 Following the
    entry of discharge, World Wide agreed to refinance the Sutters’ loan and mortgage
    obligations by issuing a new mortgage on their property, to be funded by New Century
    Mortgage Corporation. In order to facilitate a quick closing, the Sutters requested to
    close the refinancing transaction in California, where they would be visiting as part of
    1
    At the time, World Wide was a “sub-prime home mortgage lender [that had been] located in
    Southeastern Michigan since 1994. . . . In 2000, World Wide expanded its business to the
    Internet, with a presence as LoanGiant.com.” Aleynu, Inc. v. Universal Prop. Dev. & Acquisition Corp.,
    No. 1:07-cv-11707, 
    2008 WL 3252342
    at *2 (E.D. Mich. Aug. 5, 2008). On February 24, 2006,
    the Commissioner of Michigan’s Office of Financial and Insurance Services issued and entered a consent
    order finding that World Wide had violated prior consent orders, engaged in improper lending
    practices, and providing that World Wide “shall not enter into any new transactions to broker,
    lend, or service mortgage loans.”           See 2006 Consent Order at 2, 3, available at
    http://www.michigan.gov/documents/WorldWideFinancialConsentOrder_159502_7.pdf
    No. 10-1656        Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                    Page 3
    a previously scheduled vacation. World Wide agreed to this request, and arranged for
    a closing in Sacramento, California, on April 8, 2004.
    At the April 8 closing, the Sutters signed a note payable to World Wide in the
    amount of $78,000. The Sutters signed a number of additional documents in connection
    with their refinancing, but apparently did not sign a mortgage instrument. Nevertheless,
    New Century provided the funds to pay off the two existing mortgages on the Sutter
    property, as well as allowed the Sutters to pay off additional existing debts. At some
    point after the closing, World Wide and New Century assigned the mortgage instrument
    (“the World Wide mortgage”) to U.S. National Bank, with Saxon Mortgage Services,
    Inc. (“Saxon”) as the mortgage servicer (collectively “the Appellants”).
    B. Initial Proceedings in the Bankruptcy Court
    Within a few months of the closing, the Sutters began to fall behind on their
    payments on the World Wide mortgage.             When Appellants initiated foreclosure
    proceedings, the Sutters filed a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition on November 21, 2005.
    Saxon filed a proof of claim in the Sutters’ Chapter 13 case asserting a secured claim in
    the amount of $83,498.26, secured by the Sutter property. Attached to the proof of claim
    was the World Wide mortgage, notarized and ostensibly bearing the signatures of the
    Sutters. The certificate of acknowledgement on the World Wide mortgage states that
    “[t]he foregoing instrument was acknowledged before me [the notary] this April 8th,
    2004, by Daniel J. Sutter and Sheryl L. Sutter, his wife” in the State of Michigan, County
    of Oakland. The mortgage was recorded with the Lapeer County, Michigan, Register
    of Deeds on May 25, 2004.
    The Sutters filed an objection to the proof of claim, alleging that it should be
    disallowed because their signatures on the mortgage instrument were forged. In
    addition, the Sutters brought an adversary proceeding against the Appellants, asserting
    a variety of claims for relief under the Bankruptcy Code, other federal statutes, and
    Michigan law. Count I of the complaint sought the disallowance of the claim pursuant
    to 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(1). Count II, pleaded in the alternative to Count I, sought
    avoidance of the World Wide mortgage pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 544(a)(3) (the “strong-
    No. 10-1656         Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                     Page 4
    arm” provision). Both counts sought a judgment “extinguishing, expunging, and
    avoiding all claimed interest [of U.S. National Bank and Saxon] in the Debtor’s
    property.”
    At the April 24, 2007 hearing on the Sutters’ adversary proceding (“the April
    2007 hearing”), the bankruptcy court found as part of its findings of fact that “the debtors
    have established by the necessary burden of proof that the signatures on the mortgage
    before the Court are not theirs.” This determination was based on the uncontested fact
    that, while the certificate of acknowledgement states that the Sutters acknowledged their
    signatures on the mortgage in Michigan, the Sutters were in California on April 8, 2004,
    the date on which they supposedly signed it. The bankruptcy court concluded that those
    who acquire an interest under a forged instrument are in no better position as to title than
    if they had purchased with notice. Thus, the bankruptcy court granted summary
    judgment on Count I to the Sutters, disallowing Saxon’s claim.
    At the same hearing, the bankruptcy court also indicated that it would grant
    summary judgment to the Sutters on Count II. In addition, at the end of the hearing, the
    court raised the issue of whether an equitable mortgage should be imposed between
    Appellants and the Sutters. Although the court did not render a decision on the issue,
    it did instruct the trustee to “monitor the case very closely” and noted that the court
    “reserves the right if need be to address the equitable mortgage issue.” The trustee
    submitted a proposed order stating that the World Wide mortgage “is hereby avoided and
    preserved for the benefit of the bankruptcy estate pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 551.” The
    court ultimately signed the order tendered by the Chapter 13 trustee (“the July 2007
    Order”). Neither the Sutters, U.S. National Bank, nor Saxon appealed this order.
    Soon after the hearing, the Sutters filed an Amended Chapter 13 plan. The
    amended plan listed the Appellants’ claim as that of an unsecured creditor and the
    mortgage as void ab initio. On September 19, 2007, the Chapter 13 trustee filed a
    motion to sell the World Wide mortgage to Appellants for $30,000, relying on the
    provision in the July 2007 Order avoiding the World Wide mortgage for the benefit of
    the estate. The trustee also proposed, once the sale was completed, to abandon the Sutter
    No. 10-1656        Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                     Page 5
    property, presumably so Appellants could complete foreclosure proceedings on it. In
    return, Appellants agreed to waive any additional claims against the estate. The
    bankruptcy court granted the trustee’s motion to sell the World Wide mortgage on
    March 12, 2008, via a minute order.
    C. Appeals to the District Court
    The Sutters filed a notice of appeal to the District Court for the Eastern District
    of Michigan, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158 on March 7, 2008. In a memorandum opinion
    and order, the district court reversed the orders of the bankruptcy court and remanded
    for clarification. The district court relied on the finding of facts made by the bankruptcy
    court at the April 2007 hearing and concluded that the bankruptcy court made “an
    inference that the signatures had been forged.” Referencing Michigan law, the district
    court stated that “[w]here a deed is forged, those innocently acquiring interests under the
    forged deed are in no better position as to title than if they had purchased with notice.”
    The district court noted that the bankruptcy court had suggested, but did not definitively
    hold, that an equitable mortgage might exist on the Sutter property, and reversed and
    remanded for consideration of the equitable mortgage issue. This order was not
    appealed.
    On remand, after a hearing, the bankruptcy court imposed an equitable mortgage
    on the Sutter property. The court relied on the Sutters’ receipt of the benefits of the
    mortgage as the basis for imposing the equitable mortgage. The court also rejected the
    Sutters’ “unclean hands” argument on the theory that “[d]ebtors did not allege or prove
    that U.S. Bank or Saxon engaged in any improper conduct.”
    The Sutters appealed the bankruptcy court’s decision to the district court. The
    district court once again reversed the bankruptcy court, ruling that, because “no transfer
    ever occurred” as a result of the World Wide mortgage, the mortgage was void ab initio
    and there could be no equitable transfer of the interest to the trustee. This appeal
    followed.
    No. 10-1656         Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                    Page 6
    II. ANALYSIS
    Before us in this appeal is the district court’s judgment holding that an equitable
    mortgage does not exist on the Sutter property. The district court also found, in both this
    order and its previous order, that the World Wide mortgage was void under Michigan
    law. Legal conclusions made by the district court when functioning as an appellate court
    for bankruptcy decisions are reviewed de novo. McMillan v. LTV Steel, Inc., 
    555 F.3d 218
    , 225 (6th Cir. 2009); In re Batie, 
    995 F.2d 85
    , 88 (6th Cir. 1993). We directly
    review a bankruptcy court’s factual findings for clear error. 
    McMillan, 555 F.3d at 225
    .
    A. The Status of the Sutters’ Mortgage Was Properly Considered by the District Court
    As a threshold matter, Appellants argue that the district court should not have
    considered whether the mortgage was void under Michigan law, because the bankruptcy
    court entered an order providing that the mortgage was avoided and preserved for the
    benefit of the bankruptcy estate pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 551; it did not hold that the
    mortgage was void as a matter of law. This claim is unavailing for several reasons.
    First, Appellants are incorrect that the Sutters sought only to avoid the mortgage
    in their original filing. The Sutters did seek to avoid the mortgage for the benefit of the
    estate in Count II of their challenge to the claim, but Count II was pleaded in the
    alternative to their primary argument in Count I. In Count I, the Sutters alleged “[t]hat
    under applicable state law a forged mortgage will not pass title rights to anyone,
    including the mortgagee, subsequent assignees or bona fide purchasers” and requested
    that the court:
    extinguish[], expung[e], and avoid[] all claimed interest in the debtors’
    property and further order a $100/day penalty for each day that the
    Debtors’ property remains encumbered by the invalid lien beyond the
    date to be determined by the court in which the Appellant is ordered to
    remove its lien from the public records containing it therein.
    While the Sutters did not use the specific phrase “void ab initio,” there is no question
    that Count I sought to have the mortgage declared void pursuant to Michigan law.
    No. 10-1656         Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                      Page 7
    Appellants further argue that the Sutters waived this issue by not appealing the
    July 2007 order. That order granted relief to the Sutters on both Counts I and II of their
    complaint. Appellants argue that because all subsequent rulings of the bankruptcy court
    were based on the mortgage being avoided pursuant to Count II, the July 2007 Order
    actually held that the World Wide mortgage was not void and instead avoided in favor
    of the estate. By failing to appeal the July 2007 Order, Appellants argue the Sutters
    waived any argument that the World Wide was mortgage was void. This is an
    unreasonable interpretation of the July 2007 order. The order clearly grants the relief the
    Sutters were requesting in Count I. When later orders of the bankruptcy court construed
    the Sutters’ mortgage as avoided, rather than voided, the Sutters filed timely appeals of
    those decisions. The Sutters preserved their claims for appeal.
    In any event, before us is the decision of the district court concluding that no
    equitable mortgage arose on the Sutter property. There is no question that the district
    court considered whether the mortgage was void in issuing both of its rulings in this
    case, and thus both the legal conclusion and factual findings of the district court are
    before us. Even construing Appellants’ argument as a challenge to the district court’s
    consideration of the status of the World Wide mortgage, the Appellants’ claim fails.
    Appellants forfeited any objections to consideration of whether the mortgage is void by
    failing to appeal the first order of the district court. The district court clearly ruled that
    the mortgage was void when it remanded the case back to the bankruptcy court. To the
    extent that this was an improper consideration by the district court, the Appellants should
    have appealed that ruling to this court. Failure to do so bars later attempts to raise the
    issue. JGR, Inc. v. Thomasville Furniture Indus., Inc., 
    550 F.3d 529
    , 532 (6th Cir. 2008)
    (“The law-of-the case doctrine bars challenges to a decision made at a previous stage of
    litigation which could have been challenged in a prior appeal, but were not.”) (quoting
    United States v. Adesida, 
    129 F.3d 846
    , 850 (6th Cir. 1997)).
    No. 10-1656         Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                     Page 8
    B. The World Wide Mortgage is Void Ab Initio
    The district court’s conclusion that the World Wide mortgage was void ab initio
    was based on the bankruptcy court’s factual findings that the Sutters did not sign the
    World Wide mortgage and that their signatures had been forged. The bankruptcy court
    held that “[t]he Court is well satisfied the debtors have established the necessary burden
    of proof that the signatures on the mortgage before the Court are not theirs.” The court
    based its findings on the fact that the World Wide mortgage indicates that the Sutters
    signed the document in Michigan on April 8th, 2004, when it is undisputed that they
    were in California on that date. While the Appellants have offered various theories
    during the course of this litigation for this discrepency, they have offered no evidence
    to support any scenario other than forgery by World Wide or its agents. Counsel for
    Appellants conceded at oral argument in this appeal that the mortgage was forged, and
    Appellants also noted that a claim has been filed against the bond of the notary who
    attested to the alleged signatures of the Sutters. Accordingly, the district court’s factual
    finding that the World Wide mortgage was forged is not clearly erroneous.
    The district court also held that, under Michigan law, a forged mortgage is void
    ab initio. In Horvath v. National Mortgage Co., the plaintiffs challenged a deed that
    bore their signatures, on the theory that they had been led to believe they were signing
    power of attorney documents, not a deed. 
    213 N.W. 202
    , 202-03 (Mich. 1927). After
    determining that there was no “distinction between the act of simulating a signature and
    procuring the signature [by trickery],” the Michigan Supreme Court concluded that the
    deed in question was 
    void. 213 N.W. at 204
    . The Court made clear that “[t]here can be
    no such thing as a bona fide holder under a forgery, whose good faith gives him any
    rights against the party whose name has been forged or his heirs.” 
    Id. (quoting Austin
    v. Dean, 
    40 Mich. 386
    (Mich. 1879)). As a result, the deed and subsequent transactions
    based on the deed “are void and should be set aside . . . .” 
    Id. More recent
    Michigan
    cases have confirmed this principle and emphasized that parties that take possession of
    interests granted by the forged instrument, even if they do so innocently, have no rights
    under the forged document. Special Property VI v. Woodruff, 
    730 N.W.2d 753
    , 756
    No. 10-1656         Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                    Page 9
    (Mich. Ct. App. 2007); VanderWall v. Midkiff, 
    421 N.W. 263
    , 270 (Mich. Ct. App.
    1988). Mortgages are treated in the same manner as deeds under Michigan law, and
    equally grant no interests to the holder of a forged mortgage. La Prad v. Sherwood, 
    44 N.W. 943
    , 944 (Mich. 1890).
    Therefore, the district court was correct in holding that the World Wide mortgage
    on the Sutters’ property was void ab initio.
    C. An Equitable Mortgage Cannot Be Imposed on the Sutter Property
    Even though the World Wide mortgage was void, the trustee’s proposed plan to
    sell the mortgage back to Appellants likely could be salvaged if an equitable mortgage
    exists on the property. An equitable mortgage is generally imposed when one party
    intended to grant a secured interest but the instrument actually transferred the property
    in total to the other party. See Townsend v. Chase Manhattan Mortg. Corp., 
    657 N.W.2d 741
    , 744 n.1 (Mich. Ct. App. 2002) (discussing the normal uses of equitable mortgages).
    Michigan law is clear that equitable mortgages are appropriate in circumstances where
    the underlying mortgage is void, particularly when one party received the benefits of the
    mortgage. See Fair v. Moody, No. 278906, 
    2008 WL 5382648
    (Mich. Ct. App. Dec. 23,
    2008) (holding that an equitable mortgage can exist where there are allegations of forged
    mortgage instruments); In re Estate of Moukalled, 
    714 N.W.2d 400
    , 407-09 (Mich. Ct.
    App. 2006) (granting an equitable mortgage where a land contract, which purported to
    give a security interest in real property, was invalid under the Uniform Commercial
    Code).
    Nevertheless, the district court correctly found that an equitable mortgage should
    not be imposed in this case. Michigan courts abide by the standard maxim that one “who
    comes into equity must come with clean hands. . . .” Rose v. National Auction Group,
    Inc., 
    646 N.W.2d 455
    , 461 (Mich. 2002) (quoting 2 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, ch.
    I, § 397, p. 90 (1941)). The Michigan Supreme Court has emphasized that unclean
    hands jurisprudence is:
    No. 10-1656        Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                  Page 10
    a self-imposed ordinance that closes the doors of a court of equity to one
    tainted with inequitableness or bad faith relative to the matter in which
    he seeks relief, however improper may have been the behavior of the
    Appellant. That doctrine is rooted in the historical concept of the court
    of equity as a vehicle for affirmatively enforcing the requirements of
    conscience and good faith. This presupposes a refusal on its part to be
    the abettor of iniquity.
    
    Rose, 646 N.W.2d at 461
    (quoting Stachnik v. Winkel, 
    230 N.W.2d 529
    , 532 (Mich.
    1975) (emphasis in the original) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted)). The
    clean hands doctrine applies to actions involving the resolution of claims on real
    property. McFerren v. B & B Investment Group, 
    655 N.W.2d 779
    , 783 (Mich. Ct. App.
    2002). When a party is assigned a contract such as a mortgage, the party stands in the
    place of the original party for equitable purposes, and is subject to all of the same
    equitable defenses to which the originating party would be subject. Burkhardt v. Bailey,
    
    680 N.W.2d 453
    , 462 (Mich. Ct. App. 2004). This is true whether or not the assignee
    has notice of the existence of the defense. McKenna v. Kirkwood, 
    15 N.W. 898
    , 898-99
    (Mich. 1883). This principle extends to a defense that the mortgage is forged.
    Waterbury v. Andrews, 
    34 N.W. 575
    , 578 (Mich. 1887).
    When U.S. National Bank took ownership of the mortgage from World Wide,
    they inherited the mortgage subject to all equitable defenses that the Sutters would have
    against World Wide. Thus, to determine whether Appellants have unclean hands, we
    look not to U.S. Bank’s actions, but to the actions of World Wide. As we have noted,
    the district court found that at some point during the period of time when World Wide
    had possession of the mortgage instrument, World Wide or its agents forged the Sutters’
    signatures. Neither World Wide, nor by extension Appellants, may seek an equitable
    remedy that would protect them from the consequences of their own improper conduct.
    See Society of Good Neighbors v. Van Antwerp, 
    36 N.W.2d 308
    , 310 (Mich. 1949) (“He
    who hath committed iniquity shall not have equity . . . ”). The consequence of the
    forgery of the Sutters’ mortgage is that the mortgage is void ab initio. Appellants may
    not receive an equitable remedy to eliminate that consequence.
    No. 10-1656        Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                   Page 11
    Appellants cite Richardson v. Richardson and Fair v. Moody as Michigan
    authority for applying an equitable mortgage despite allegations of misconduct regarding
    the purported mortgage on the property. Those cases are distinguishable on their facts,
    as they both involve scenarios where there is no doubt that the original mortgagee was
    a innocent actor. Richardson involved a claim that a son convinced his illiterate mother
    to place her mark on a mortgage document without telling her what she was signing.
    There was no claim that the bank participated in this deception, and thus the bank was
    entitled to equitable relief. 
    Richardson, 253 N.W. at 266
    . In Fair, LaSalle Bank and the
    other mortgage institutions were arguably the only party with clean hands in the complex
    series of transactions leading up to the mortgage. See 
    2008 WL 5382648
    at *10 (“First,
    we do not find any basis to conclude that BNC, MERS, or LaSalle had unclean hands
    such that an equitable mortgage should be denied.”). None of the Michigan cases
    involve improper activity by the mortgagee, the party that is the beneficiary of the
    equitable mortgage.
    Likewise, our decision in Schram v. Burt is not controlling. 
    111 F.2d 557
    (6th
    Cir. 1940). Schram involved a forgery of a woman’s signature on a mortgage, carried
    out by her husband and the teller at the 
    bank. 111 F.2d at 559
    . When the wife attempted
    to void the mortgage after the death of her husband, the court acknowledged the forged
    mortgage as invalid but imposed an equitable mortgage, relying on the fact that she had
    benefitted from the proceeds of the mortgage loan. 
    Id. at 562.
    Schram does not address Michigan’s unclean hands jurisprudence with regard
    to the bank’s role in the forgery, despite the fact that the case arose in Michigan.
    Presumably this is because the actions of the teller could not be attributed to the bank
    because the teller had no authority to notarize any signatures, and thus the bank could
    not be held liable for the actions of the teller. 
    Id. at 564.
    Nevertheless, a federal court
    is obligated to look to state law to determine a party’s legal and equitable rights to
    property, unless there is a federal interest at issue. In re Bergman, 
    467 F.3d 536
    , 538
    (6th Cir. 2006). To the extent that Schram is in conflict with Michigan case law
    regarding unclean hands, we are obligated to follow the Michigan cases. In addition,
    No. 10-1656        Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                 Page 12
    Schram focuses on the rule that a married couple are “one person” for legal purposes,
    and is thus “subject to all the equities of creditors of the co-ownership” when the
    property is a tenancy by the entireties. 
    Schram, 111 F.2d at 561
    . Thus, the court
    concluded that the wife is implicated by the husband’s participation in the forgery. No
    similar scenario is present here. See also 
    Townsend, 657 N.W.2d at 744
    (distinguishing
    Schram from the facts of its case on both the agency and attribution elements in
    declining to grant an equitable mortgage).
    Similarly, cases from other jurisdictions that have applied equitable mortgages
    to similar factual scenarios are inconsistent with Michigan equity jurisprudence. In In
    re Cox, the bankruptcy court held that an equitable mortgage could be imposed where
    the purported mortgage was forged because the homeowners expressed that they would
    have signed the document if it had been presented to them. 
    408 B.R. 407
    , 414 (Bankr.
    D. Kan. 2009). From this, the court reasoned, the home-owners did not suffer any harm
    from the forgery, and thus would have no basis for opposing the imposition of an
    equitable remedy. “The clean hands doctrine is not properly invoked where the
    objectionable act does not affect the equitable relations between the parties.” 
    Cox, 408 B.R. at 418
    (citing Brooks v. Weik, 
    219 P. 528
    , 532 (Kan. 1923)). The bankruptcy court
    cited a Wisconsin state court case, Security Pacific Nat’l Bank v. Ginkowski, 
    410 N.W.2d 589
    (Wis. Ct. App. 1987), that similarly held that homeowners suffered no harm from
    a forgery where they intended to enter into a mortgage. 
    Id. at 416.
    Whether or not it is true that homeowners such as the Sutters are not harmed by
    a forged mortgage, the analysis in Cox is inconsistent with the Michigan Supreme
    Court’s approach to the unclean hands doctrine as articulated in Rose. In Rose, a
    landowner, Rose, entered into a contract with an auction house to auction a piece of
    property, subject to Rose’s right to withdraw the property prior to the 
    auction. 646 N.W.2d at 457-58
    . Prior to the auction, Rose sought to withdraw the property out of
    concerns about the limited number of bidders. 
    Id. at 458.
    To reassure Rose, the auction
    house promised that it would seed the auction with “shill bidders” to create a back-door
    method of returning the property to Rose. 
    Id. Rose agreed,
    but the auction house failed
    No. 10-1656        Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                   Page 13
    to properly implement the scheme, and the property was sold at a price far below the
    amount Rose sought. 
    Id. at 459.
    Rose brought an action seeking to void the transfer of
    property under an equitable theory, citing fraudulent misrepresentations and breach of
    fiduciary duties on the part of the auction house. 
    Id. The Michigan
    Supreme Court concluded that unclean hands barred Rose from
    seeking equitable relief against the auction house, regardless of the merits of Rose’s
    fraud and breach of fiduciary duty claims. 
    Rose, 646 N.W.2d at 460-461
    . In reaching
    this conclusion, the Court did not analyze whether the party seeking to assert an unclean
    hands defense, the auction house, suffered any harm from the inequitable conduct of
    Rose. If they had, the Court could not have reached the result it did, because it is clear
    that the auction house did not suffer any harm from the inequitable conduct. After all,
    the auction house suggested and participated in the same scheme. It would be
    incongrous for the Michigan Supreme Court to allow an unclean hands defense where
    a party affirmatively participated in and benefited from inequitable conduct, but to
    foreclose a defense to a party that was simply unharmed by the conduct. As we are
    bound to follow the directions of the Michigan Supreme Court, we conclude that whether
    the Sutters were harmed by the forgery is irrelevant to whether an equitable mortgage
    can be imposed on the Sutter property, and cases saying otherwise are not applicable
    here.
    Finally, Appellants argue that the balance of equities supports finding an
    equitable mortgage on the Sutter property. At the heart of this argument is the concern,
    expressed by the bankruptcy court at the April 2007 hearing, that the Sutters will receive
    a windfall in the form of a “free house,” particularly as it is undisputed that the Sutters
    intended to grant a mortgage interest to World Wide. In the Appellants’ view, the
    Sutters have exploited the bankruptcy process on two occasions to free themselves of
    otherwise valid obligations. Even if we were to consider a balance of the equities, the
    result would be the same. The fact that the Sutters have sought relief under the
    Bankruptcy Code twice is not, in itself, inequitable conduct that would justify imposing
    an equitable mortgage. Moreover, the Sutters have not receive and cannot receive a
    No. 10-1656             Sutter, et al. v. U.S. National Bank, et al.                                Page 14
    bankruptcy discharge and remain liable for the now-unsecured note that was validly
    signed in California.2 If the Sutters cannot meet their obligations under that note, we are
    aware of no bar to Appellants’ bringing a debt collection action against the Sutters to
    collect on their claims, and they would potentially have access to remedies of a judgment
    lien creditor as to the Sutter property to collect the debt. It is far from certain that the
    Sutters will get a “free house” as the end result of this process.
    III.
    The district court correctly held that no mortgage, equitable or otherwise, exists
    on the Sutters’ property. Therefore, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
    2
    The Sutters’ Chapter 13 case, which initiated this appeal, was converted to a Chapter 7 action
    in December 2009. In April 2010, the Sutters were denied a Chapter 7 discharge based on their prior
    Chapter 7 discharge within an eight-year period. See 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(8). In July 2011, the Chapter 7
    trustee abandoned the assets of the Sutters’ estate and filed a no distribution report, leading to the closing
    of the Chapter 7 case in August 2011 without a discharge. Thus, although the Sutters did not complete the
    payments under their plan, they also did not receive a discharge. Furthermore, the bankruptcy court and
    the parties, including the Sutters at oral argument, have acknowledged that the obligations of the Sutters
    under the note signed in 2004 are valid and will continue, regardless of our holding on the equitable
    mortgage question.