Golden Rockies Inc v. City of Utica

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 12, 2023
Docket363685
StatusUnpublished

This text of Golden Rockies Inc v. City of Utica (Golden Rockies Inc v. City of Utica) 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
Golden Rockies Inc v. City of Utica, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

GOLDEN ROCKIES, INC., UNPUBLISHED October 12, 2023 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 363685 Macomb Circuit Court CITY OF UTICA and CITY OF UTICA CITY LC No. 2021-001061-CZ COUNCIL,

Defendants-Appellees,

and

MK GROUP MI, LLC, doing business as JOYOLOGY,

Intervening Defendant.

Before: MURRAY, P.J., and O’BRIEN and SWARTZLE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff, Golden Rockies, Inc., appeals as of right the trial court’s opinion and order denying its motion for partial summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10), and granting summary disposition in favor of defendants, the city of Utica and the Utica City Council (collectively “the City”), and intervening defendant MK Group MI, LLC, doing business as Joyology, pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10). We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff filed an application to acquire a license to become a medical marihuana provisioning center in the city of Utica, but was not one of the two applicants approved for a license. After its application was denied, plaintiff filed this action challenging the City’s marihuana business ordinance. Plaintiff alleged that the ordinance was not properly enacted and that various provisions of the ordinance violated the Michigan Regulation and Taxation of Marihuana Act (MRTMA), MCL 333.27951 et seq.

-1- Plaintiff alleged that in December 2019, an initiative for enactment of a marihuana business ordinance was presented to the Utica city clerk to allow for the operation of a limited number of marihuana businesses. Plaintiff alleged that the initiative petition complied with the requirements of § 11.2 of the Utica city charter because it contained the valid signatures of at least 10 percent of the number of active voters registered at the last city or general election preceding the filing of the initiative. Plaintiff further alleged that under the city charter, the city clerk was required to present the initiative to the city council at its next regular meeting, and that the city council could either (1) adopt the ordinance as presented or (2) submit the proposal to the City’s electors, but neither option was followed.

The city council ultimately adopted a marihuana business ordinance at a meeting on January 27, 2020. Plaintiff alleges that this ordinance was not properly enacted because changes were made to the initiative before it was submitted to the city council, and the ordinance as presented in the initiative was never submitted to either the city council or the City’s electors. It is undisputed, however, that plaintiff never challenged the validity of the ordinance on this basis when it was presented to and adopted by the city council, or while plaintiff’s license application under the adopted ordinance was being considered.

Section 14-612(a) of the marihuana business ordinance as adopted provides that the city could authorize no more than two medical marihuana provisioning centers, with one to be located on the west side of Van Dyke Avenue, south of Hall Road, with “a buffer of at least 700 feet between facilities as measured from the nearest point of property line to property line.” Section 14-612(b) provides that “the city shall authorize no more than two marihuana retailer licenses in the city which shall co-locate with the location of a licensed medical marihuana provisioning center.” An applicant who wished to operate a marihuana provisioning center or apply for a marihuana retailer license was required to file an application with the city clerk. Under § 14- 615(b), once a completed application was received, the city clerk was to forward a copy of the application to the fire chief, the building inspector, the city planner, and the city treasurer. Under § 14-615(f)(1)-(9), the city clerk was responsible, “with the assistance of legal advice from the city attorney,” to “assess, evaluate, score and rank all applications for licenses to operate a medical marihuana provisioning center, [or] marihuana retailer” on the basis of the scoring rubric set forth in the ordinance. The scoring and ranking information is then forwarded to the city council, which is charged with awarding the licenses as set forth in the ordinance. See § 14-615(h)(1)-(4).

On June 22, 2020, the city awarded the two licenses for a marihuana provisioning center to First Property Holdings, LLC, doing business as Rize, and to MK Group MI. Although plaintiff had received a higher score than MK Group MI, it was not awarded a license because its business location was within 700 feet of First Property Holdings’ location and First Property Holdings was the higher-scoring applicant.

Plaintiff filed an administrative appeal of the denial of its license application with the city clerk on July 6, 2020. In that appeal, plaintiff argued for the first time that the City’s marihuana business ordinance was not properly enacted because the adopted ordinance differed from the ordinance as presented with the initiative petition. The City claimed that the ordinance as presented with the initiative petition was not submitted to the city council because it was determined that the petition did not contain the required number of valid signatures. The City further claimed that the city attorney thereafter worked with Christopher Aiello and Aaron Geyer,

-2- both of whom were affiliated with plaintiff, to draft a similar ordinance, which Aiello and Geyer both approved and which was duly submitted to and adopted by the city council.

On April 23, 2021, plaintiff filed this action against the city of Utica and the Utica City Council. As relevant to this appeal, Count 2 of plaintiff’s complaint alleged that the City’s marihuana business ordinance was enacted in violation of the city charter because it differed from the ordinance as presented in the initiative petition; Count 3 alleged violation of procedural and substantive due process; Count 4 requested a writ of mandamus vacating the two previously awarded licenses and ordering the city council to either adopt the initiative as presented or submit it to the voting public; and Count 5 alleged a violation of the MRTMA. MK Group MI was later permitted to intervene as a defendant.

Eventually, plaintiff, the City, and MK Group MI all filed motions for summary disposition. In plaintiff’s motion, it argued that the City’s marihuana business ordinance was invalid because it was not approved by the city council as presented in the initiative petition or submitted to the electors. Plaintiff also claimed that the requirement of a 700-foot buffer between locations was invalid under and preempted by the MRTMA. Plaintiff further argued that the scoring criteria in the ordinance violated the MRTMA.

In the City’s motion, it argued that the ordinance as presented in the initiative was never submitted to the city council because the petition lacked the requisite number of valid signatures. Regardless, according to the City, after the initiative was submitted, plaintiff’s representatives, Aiello and Geyer, worked with the city attorney to revise the proposed ordinance, and Aiello and Geyer approved the revised version of the ordinance before it was duly submitted to and adopted by the city council.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Golden Rockies Inc v. City of Utica, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-rockies-inc-v-city-of-utica-michctapp-2023.