Janey Grier v. State Tax Commission

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 23, 2024
Docket365849
StatusUnpublished

This text of Janey Grier v. State Tax Commission (Janey Grier v. State Tax Commission) 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
Janey Grier v. State Tax Commission, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

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

JANEY GRIER, UNPUBLISHED May 23, 2024 Appellant,

v No. 365849 Tuscola Circuit Court STATE TAX COMMISSION, LC No. 2022-032174-AA

Appellee.

Before: MALDONADO, P.J., and PATEL and N. P. HOOD, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Janey Grier appeals by leave granted1 the order affirming the State Tax Commission’s (STC) determination that the subject property should be classified as residential real for the 2022 tax year. Judicial review of a property classification decision from the STC is limited to determining whether the STC’s decision was authorized by law, Const 1963, art 6, § 28, and neither the circuit court nor this Court may review the evidentiary support for the STC’s property classification decision. CVS Caremark v State Tax Comm, 306 Mich App 58, 61-62; 856 NW2d 79 (2014). We find that the circuit court applied the correct standard of review and reached the proper conclusion. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This real property classification dispute involves two contiguous parcels of real property in Koylton Township: (1) parcel number 79-016-007-000-0200-00, which is 40 acres (parcel 0200), and (2) parcel number 79-016-007-000-0400-00, which is 41.13 acres (parcel 0400) (collectively, “the subject property”). Grier purchased the parcels in August 2021 in an arm’s length transaction. The subject property was classified as residential real when it was purchased.

1 Grier v State Tax Commission, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered July 24, 2023, (Docket No. 365849).

-1- Grier contends that the primary use of the subject property for the 2022 tax year was agricultural and thus it should be reclassified as agricultural real. According to Grier, there are approximately 63 acres of mature maple trees scattered across the subject property that are “suitable for maple sap harvesting” and there are younger maple trees that will be suitable for maple sap harvesting at some time in the future. Grier maintains that there are 30 acres on the 0200 parcel that include “significant numbers of maple trees” and “will also support rotational pasturing for cattle and swine.” But, at the time of her petition to the STC, she was still “in the process of setting up the infrastructure necessary to support swine and cattle on [the subject property] to properly house and care for them.” In addition, the 0400 parcel contains “approximately 30 fruit producing apple trees [that were] planted by the former owners . . . .” Grier maintains that approximately seven acres across the subject property “will be dedicated fruit orchard.” There is a six-acre lake on the 0400 parcel, nine acres of wetlands on the 0200 parcel, and scattered “seasonal ponding” on both parcels.

In March 2022, Grier filed petitions with Koylton Township’s March board of review requesting it to reclassify each parcel of the subject property as agricultural real for the 2022 tax year.2 The board of review denied both petitions.

Grier appealed the board of review’s decision to the STC. Grier maintained that she was “actively engaged in ‘agricultural operations’ on [the subject] property since the purchase date on August 16, 2021, as defined by MCL 211.34c.” In support of her position, Grier referenced a “Chronological List of Events/Tasks” that listed activities from the purchase date through June 16, 2022, a “Farm Management Plan, Spring 2022,” and documents for purchases of various equipment from September 2021 to May 2022.3 Grier argued that the subject property met the “agricultural” definition:

As specified in the definition of “Agricultural operations,” we are farming in all its branches, including cultivating soil in preparation for agricultural and horticultural commodities per MCL 211.34c(ii)(A) and (B). For example, we are preparing our land for the addition of livestock[,] swine, cattle, and poultry, as well as fruit orchards[,] apples, cherries, and blueberries through activities such as clearing excess vegetation from planting sites, creating and improving existing trails to gain access to maples, pruning apple trees, removing fallen/dead limbs on and around maples trees, and inventorying maples trees using geo location software, and planning gravity collection routes for lines and central collection points for sap. In addition, we are performing practices on our farm incident to, or in conjunction with, farming operations. MCL 211.34c(ii)(G). Such as, improving the driveway and trails to access the maple trees. Additionally, we are clearing the site for our permit approved agricultural building (to store livestock feed, fertilizer, machinery, etc., per MCL 211.34c(iii)(B) to [sic] maintaining livestock, and orchards) and

2 Grier also challenged the subject property’s annual valuation, but that is the subject of a separate appeal pending before this Court, Grier v Township of Koylton, Court of Appeals Docket No. 366221. 3 All but one of the purchases was made in 2022.

-2- spraying fruit trees as protection from disease and pests. As well as purchasing supplies and equipment to prepare for and support these farming activities. Furthermore, we are actively working on “projects” as risk mitigation measures such as, maintaining fences, MCL 211.34c(iii)(A), fencing off stagnant ponds that pose a disease risk, MCL 211.34c[(]iii[)](B) and installing new fencing around the property.

Grier asserted that the significant number of maple trees on each parcel met the definition of agricultural operations. Grier claimed that she intended to collect sap from the maple trees annually, but weather and site conditions directly impacted her sap collection in 2022. While she stated that she “manually harvested approximately 120 gallons of maple sap and processed approximately 2.5 gallons of maple syrup” in 2022, she admitted that she “did not sell syrup as we did not feel it was up to our quality standards.”

Grier further maintained that, in the fall of 2022, she intended “to sell the apples from the existing trees . . . as well as plant and manage additional fruit trees commercially, which also meets the description of an agricultural operation.” Grier asserted that the subject property was purchased to farm and she completed various tasks to prepare for farming the property, including registering her “farm business, Shady Maple Hills Farm, LLC with the State of Michigan[,] develop[ing] and publish[ing] a farm management plan, join[ing] the Veterans Farmer Coalition and other farm groups, [and] devot[ing] countless hours researching and implementing best practices in each of branches of farming we are pursuing.” Relying on the definition of “farmland” set forth in MCL 324.36101 in the Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act, Grier asserted, “[E]ach of our parcels are 40 or more acres, in 1 ownership, with 51% or more of the land area devoted to agricultural use (maple trees, fruit orchards, rotational pasture, etc.). We are well over the 51% of the land devoted to agriculture use as we have 63 of our approximately 81 acres devoted to maple trees alone, and therefore met the state’s definition of farmland.”

The farm management plan included with Grier’s appeal to the STC states that “[t]he objectives for the landowner are to improve the agricultural use by enhancing the value, productivity, and profitability of the existing maple trees and apple orchards, conduct silva pasture farming activities, (including poultry, swine, cattle, as well as various fruit orchards) while also improving the quality of habitat for variety woodland wildlife species, by increasing the diversity and health of cover and food available on the property.

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Bluebook (online)
Janey Grier v. State Tax Commission, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janey-grier-v-state-tax-commission-michctapp-2024.