Wayne County Board of Commissioners v. Wayne County Airport Authority

658 N.W.2d 804, 253 Mich. App. 144
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 2002
DocketDocket 241521, 242406
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 658 N.W.2d 804 (Wayne County Board of Commissioners v. Wayne County Airport Authority) 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
Wayne County Board of Commissioners v. Wayne County Airport Authority, 658 N.W.2d 804, 253 Mich. App. 144 (Mich. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Hood, P.J.

Plaintiffs, who commenced this original action 1 pursuant to 2002 PA 90 (MCL 259.108 et seq.) 2 *149 and MCR 7.206, seek declaratory and injunctive relief in the context of their constitutional challenge to Act 90. Plaintiffs object to the transfer by Act 90 of operational jurisdiction of two airports from Wayne County to a statutorily created airport authority. Defendant Raymond Wojtowicz, the Wayne County Treasurer, filed a cross-complaint seeking in part a declaration regarding the procedures for the transfer of money and assets pursuant to Act 90. This Court directed the parties to file cross-motions for summary disposition.

We hold that plaintiffs’ Headlee violation claim regarding the requirement of Act 90 that a county continue to employ airport employees who choose not to transfer to the airport authority is not ripe for adjudication and thus do not decide this issue. Plaintiffs may raise this claim in future litigation should the number of airport employees who choose not to transfer prove to be more than de minimis. With regard to plaintiffs’ claim that the employee pensions constitute an unfunded new activity under Headlee, we observe that under Act 90, subsection 117(l)(d), the airport authority assumes, and is responsible for paying, the pensions. Finally, we hold that plaintiffs have not met their burden of demonstrating that Act 90 is unconstitutional as alleged in the remaining counts of their amended complaint. Accordingly, we grant summary disposition in favor of defendants and *150 dismiss plaintiffs’ claims, except for the Headlee claim relating to the transferring employees, with prejudice.

i

HISTORY

Signed by the Governor in March of 2002, Act 90 amended the Michigan Aeronautics Code, adding chapter via, “the public airport authority act,” MCL 259.108 to 259.125c. In part, Act 90 created an airport authority to manage and oversee the Detroit Metropolitan Airport (Metro Airport) and Willow Run Airport. 3 Plaintiffs initiated the instant action against defendants 4 to preclude that authority from managing the airports.

Appearing as plaintiffs are the Wayne County Board of Commissioners and four individual commissioners, 5 as well as the County of Wayne. The Board of Commissioners (hereafter the commission) is the legislative body of Wayne County. Wayne County was *151 organized as a charter county pursuant to the state constitution, Const 1963, art 7, § 2, and pursuant to statute, MCL 45.1. The Wayne County Home Rule Charter, adopted in November of 1981 and effective in 1983, sets forth the powers of the commission. Under the charter, the commission has the authority to, among other things, adopt resolutions, appropriate funds, levy taxes, authorize borrowing, approve county contracts, approve appointments made by the county executive, override a veto of the county executive by a % majority, approve rules of county departments, and exercise powers granted by law to other counties unless expressly prohibited. 6

In 1927, 1927 PA 182 gave Wayne County the authority to acquire land for Metro Airport, which was established in 1928. Before the enactment of Act 90, the county operated Metro Airport under the authority of the Michigan Aeronautics Code, MCL 259.1 et seq 7 Plaintiffs note that the value of the property and assets of Metro Airport and Willow Run Airport exceeds $2.1 billion and the annual revenue exceeds $200 million. 8

In the 1990s, allegations of mismanagement of Metro Airport arose. In 1999, the state Legislature created a five-member joint committee 9 to investigate the *152 mismanagement. In October of 2001, the committee 10 issued a 200-page report 11 identifying general problems, which included improper procedures for airport contracts, 12 auditing discrepancies, 13 a management culture with questionable ethical conduct, 14 and difficulties with the airport police. 15

As a result of that report, the Michigan Legislature introduced bills to address the mismanagement issues. Before that legislation was passed, the county executive, the Governor, and business leaders reportedly agreed on the creation of a new authority to operate the airport. 16 Apparently, that agreement *153 culminated in Senate Bill 690 which, in turn, was adopted by the Legislature as Act 90. 17

ACT 90

Act 90 adds a chapter, the “public airport authority act,” to the Michigan Aeronautics Code. As indicated in the revised title of the act, Act 90 provides for the incorporation of “public airport authorities” (paas) and provides for the transfer of airport management to paas. Paas automatically will be created for only “qualified airports,” which are those with ten million or more enplanements 18 in a twelve-month period, 19 Act 90, subsection 109(n). A local government with airports that are not “qualified,” may declare an intention to incorporate a paa, subsection 110(3). 20 A paa will be considered a public agency of the local government: “Except as otherwise provided under this chapter, an authority created under or pursuant to this section shall be a political subdivision and instrumentality of the local government that owns the air *154 port and shall be considered a public agency of the local government for purposes of state and federal law,” subsection 110(1). 21 A paa also appoints the airport manager, subsection 110(1).

A paa, in turn, is governed by a board that consists of seven members, subsections 109(d), (e). The Governor appoints two board members, the executive officer of the local government (in this case, the Wayne County Executive) appoints four members and the local government that owns the airport (in this case, the commission) appoints the final board member, subsection 111(2).

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Bluebook (online)
658 N.W.2d 804, 253 Mich. App. 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wayne-county-board-of-commissioners-v-wayne-county-airport-authority-michctapp-2002.