Gaylord Development West v. Township of Livingston

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 2017
Docket329506
StatusUnpublished

This text of Gaylord Development West v. Township of Livingston (Gaylord Development West v. Township of Livingston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaylord Development West v. Township of Livingston, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

GAYLORD DEVELOPMENT WEST, UNPUBLISHED January 10, 2017 Petitioner-Appellant,

v No. 329506 Tax Tribunal TOWNSHIP OF LIVINGSTON, LC No. 15-004000-TT

Defendant-Appellee.

EDGEWOOD HOLDINGS, L.L.C.,

Petitioner-Appellant,

v No. 329509 Tax Tribunal CITY OF GAYLORD, LC No. 15-003999-TT

Petitioner-Appellee,

v No. 329510 Tax Tribunal CITY OF GAYLORD, LC No. 15-003998-TT

Before: WILDER, P.J., and BORRELLO and GLEICHER, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

A commercial taxpayer aggrieved by a property tax assessment may seek relief in the Michigan Tax Tribunal by “filing a written petition on or before May 31 of the tax year involved.” MCL 205.735a(6). Under the Tax Tribunal rules, a petition must contain specific

-1- information and conform to a structure dictated by the MTT. The petitioners in these consolidated cases, represented by the same counsel, filed single-sentence documents in the MTT claiming “appeal[s]” from decisions of Boards of Review. The MTT rejected these filings by way of “Notice[s] of No Action.”

Petitioners later filed amended petitions that conformed to the Tax Tribunal Rules, but the MTT dismissed them as untimely. Petitioners assert that their original filings qualified as timely “petitions” and that the MTT erred by rejecting them. We hold that the MTT clerk did not abuse her discretion by refusing to accept petitioners’ defective initial filings, and affirm.

I

Petitioners Edgewood Holdings, L.L.C. and Gaylord Development West are the owners of commercial properties in the City of Gaylord and Livingston Township, respectively. Both petitioners retained attorney David Delaney to appeal three different taxable value determinations made by local tax authorities. The filings were dated May 27, 2015 (Gaylord West) and May 28, 2015 (Edgewood). In all three cases, Delaney filed a single sentence “claim of appeal” in the Small Claims Division of the MTT. But for the names of the involved parties, the claims were identically worded. The document filed on behalf of petitioner Gaylord Development West stated:

CLAIM OF APPEAL

Petitioner, Gaylord Development West, claims an appeal from the May 2015 Livingston Township Board of Review Denial.

On June 3, 2015, the MTT clerk mailed Delaney a “Notice of No Action” in each case. The notice stated in relevant part:

TAKE NOTICE:

You have filed an Appeal Letter with no filing fee. You were, however, were [sic] required to file a Petition and may have been required to pay a fee for the filing of that Petition to initiate an Appeal with the Tribunal. See Michigan Complied [sic] Law Section (“MCL”) 205.735a and Tax Tribunal Rule (“TTR”) 219.

If you are filing an Appeal in the Entire Tribunal, there are no Petition Forms for such Appeals. Rather, you are required to create a Petition, as provided by TTR 221 and 227.

If you are filing an Appeal in the Small Claims Division, Petition Forms are available on the Tribunal’s web site at www.michigan.gov/taxtrib. You must utilize the Small Claims Petition Form for the issue being appealed (i.e., Valuation or Poverty Appeal, Denial of Exemption for Principal Residence/Qualified Agricultural Appeal, etc.) or submit a Petition that is in substantial compliance with the Small Claims Petition Form for the issue being appealed. See TTR 277.

-2- * * *

Because you did not file a Petition with appropriate filing fee, your Appeal is not properly pending. If you want to initiate an Appeal, you need to submit a Petition with appropriate filing fee by the statutory deadline for the filing of that Petition. See MCL 205.735a. If the Petition with appropriate filing fee is submitted after that date, your Petition will be considered untimely. Tribunal filing fees for Entire Tribunal petitions and motions are governed by TTR 217 and Small Claims petitions and motions are governed by TTR 267. See also TTR 219, 225, 261, and 277. The rules and a summary of the fees can be found on the Tribunal’s website at www.michigan.gov/taxtrib. [Emphasis added.]

On June 11, 2015, Delaney filed in each case a “Reply to Notice of No Action,” contending that MCL 205.735 and MCL 205.735a “govern when ‘jurisdiction’ is ‘invoked’ in the Tax Tribunal,” and that these statutes require only the filing of a “written petition.” In at least 10 prior cases, Delaney asserted, he had filed exactly the same “claim of appeal” and had later filed a conforming petition and the necessary fee. Delaney summarized, “Petitioner’s . . . Claims of Appeal were timely filed in compliance with MCL 205.735a to invoke the jurisdiction of the Tribunal. The Tribunal Rules, when read together with MCL 205.735a, do not provide for the filing of property tax appeal petition [sic] and fees with the appeal to invoke jurisdiction.”

On July 1, 2015, Delaney filed conforming petitions in all three cases and remitted a filing fee. On July 30, Tribunal Judge Steven Lasher issued an “Order Dismissing Case” in each of the three appeals, stating that “Petitioner’s ‘Claim of Appeal’ was not a petition,” as “Petitioner did not use a petition form made available by the Tribunal and the claim was not in a written form that was in substantial compliance with the Tribunal’s form.” Judge Lasher acknowledged that “[a]lthough the Tribunal may have accepted such claims or, more appropriately, letters in the past, said practice was contrary to statute and the statute controls[.]” The MTT had amended its Rules of Practice and Procedure in 2013, Judge Lasher continued, “to clarify or correct that process and those amendments were widely-publicized.” Judge Lasher concluded that given these facts, “the Tribunal has no authority over Petitioner’s assessment appeal.” He judged the July petitions untimely and ruled that the MTT lacked any “equitable powers” that would permit it “to waive statutory requirements or filing deadlines.”

Delaney filed three motions for reconsideration, again asserting that MCL 205.735a required only a “petition” to invoke the MTT’s jurisdiction and that the claims of appeal he had filed qualified as petitions. Judge Lasher denied the motions for reconsideration, reiterating that “the filing of a petition is required to invoke the Tribunal’s authority.” The Tax Tribunal Act, MCL 205.701 et seq., does not define the term “petition,” Judge Lasher admitted, but Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed), does. The two definitions set forth in Black’s, Judge Lasher stated, are: “ ‘[a] formal written request presented to a court or other official body,’ ” and “ ‘[i]n some states, the first pleading in a lawsuit.’ ” Id. at 1329 (alteration by MTT). A “pleading,” in turn, is defined as “ ‘[a] formal document in which a party to a legal proceeding . . . sets forth or responds to allegations, claims, denials, or defenses.’ ” Id. (brackets by MTT). Judge Lasher rejected Delaney’s argument that his “claims of appeal” constituted “petitions,” reasoning that they “failed to properly place the Tribunal and Respondent on notice of the purported claims and

-3- the assessment or assessments at issue.” Delaney’s conforming petitions were untimely, Judge Lasher emphasized, and the MTT had not erred in dismissing the cases.

Delaney now appeals.

II

Our ability to review MTT decisions is generally quite limited. President Inn Props, LLC v Grand Rapids, 291 Mich App 625, 630; 806 NW2d 342 (2011). We may determine “whether the tribunal committed an error of law or adopted a wrong legal principle.” Mich Milk Producers, Ass’n v Dep’t of Treasury, 242 Mich App 486, 490; 618 NW2d 917 (2000).

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Bluebook (online)
Gaylord Development West v. Township of Livingston, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaylord-development-west-v-township-of-livingston-michctapp-2017.