Wolf v. City of Detroit

786 N.W.2d 620, 287 Mich. App. 184
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 21, 2010
DocketDocket 279853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 786 N.W.2d 620 (Wolf v. City of Detroit) 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
Wolf v. City of Detroit, 786 N.W.2d 620, 287 Mich. App. 184 (Mich. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

*187 PER CURIAM.

In this original action, 1 plaintiff, Laurence G. Wolf, doing business as Laurence Wolf Properties (Wolf), seeks a declaration that a new solid waste inspection fee charged by the city of Detroit to the owners of certain commercial and industrial properties constitutes a disguised tax. Wolf asserts that if the new solid waste inspection fee is a disguised tax, then it violates § 31 2 of the Michigan Constitution’s Headlee Amendment 3 because the city imposed the tax without a vote of its electorate. Applying the criteria that the Michigan Supreme Court established in Bolt v City of Lansing; 4 we conclude that the inspection charge is a valid regulatory fee, not a disguised tax.

I. BASIC FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. THE CREATION AND IMPLEMENTATION OF THE NEW SOLID WASTE INSPECTION FEE

Chapter 22 of the Detroit City Code governs all aspects of the handling of solid waste generated at all residential and commercial property within the city, as well as blight prevention. Its provisions, as stated in § 22-2-1, are intended to provide “a sanitary and satisfactory method of storage, preparation, collection, transport, disposal and placement of municipal solid waste, and for the maintenance of public and private property in a clean, orderly, and sanitary condition to ensure the peace, health, safety, and welfare of the People of the City of Detroit.” The code prohibits “any person” other than the employees of the city’s Department of Public Works or private waste collectors li *188 censed by the city from removing solid waste from private and commercial properties within the city. Although the code charges the Department of Public Works with the overall responsibility for solid waste collection and disposal within the city, a reorganization plan that the Detroit City Council approved in 2002 reassigns the inspectors responsible for enforcing the provisions of Chapter 22 of the Detroit City Code from the Department of Public Works to the city’s Department of Environmental Affairs. Thus, the Department of Public Works is to verify which property owners receive solid waste collection services from the city. But the Department of Environmental Affairs carries out the inspections.

Before the June 30, 2006 enactment of the ordinance at issue, 5 the city collected a three-mill tax levied on commercial businesses and apartment buildings containing more than five units to finance a portion of its solid waste collection, disposal, and inspection operations. This millage generated $8 million in revenue. The city discontinued its reliance on the three-mill tax with the 2007-2008 fiscal year budget. It did so, according to the city, because it “could not continue to provide free residential trash services paid for solely by taxes and by an even greater amount of general fund monies, and fully fund other essential services ... .” The city replaced the revenues generated by the three-mill tax with revenues from the commercial solid waste collection and disposal funds generated by a $300 annual fee for the Department of Public Works’ residential trash collection service for each residence, and by the new solid waste inspection fee that is at issue in this case.

To implement the switch from the millage-generated revenue to the fee-generated revenue, the *189 Detroit City Council passed Ordinance 18-06 on June 30, 2006. This ordinance amended various ordinances within Chapter 22 of the Detroit City Code. Specifically, § 22-2-56 of the Detroit City Code authorized the new solid waste inspection fee and provided, in pertinent part:

(c) From time to time, the Director of the Department of Public Works with the approval of City Council, may develop a schedule of fees for services including, but not limited to, inspections to ensure compliance with this section and for other services provided, exclusive of the rates charged for regular collection of commercial solid waste.

The purpose of this fee was to “ensure proper solid waste removal services exist.”

At the time of the revenue source switch, the city estimated that the new solid waste inspection fee, in conjunction with the updated commercial waste collection and disposal charges, would generate $12.5 million in revenue for the city. With the revenue generated from the $300 annual residential trash collection fee, the new solid waste inspection fee, and the commercial solid waste charges, the city projected that it would collect approximately $74 million. This would, the city projected, save the city’s general fund approximately $47 million.

The Detroit City Counsel later amended § 22-2-56(c), with the passage of Ordinance 23-07 to add the phrase “and industrial site solid waste” to the end of subsection (c). The purpose of these amendments was to authorize the city to impose an inspection fee for the inspection of commercial and industrial properties “to make sure they have made arrangements for trash disposal service, whether it is a private contractor or the City.” Another purpose was to ensure that *190 “every business has an appropriate level of [solid waste collection] service” based on the amount of solid waste generated onsite.

On May 10, 2007, Pamela C. Scales, then budget director for the city, submitted a proposed schedule to the Detroit City Council of commercial solid waste inspections fees to be imposed pursuant to § 22-2-56(c). Scales proposed that the city charge an annual inspection fee of $250 to commercial properties of 10,000 or less square feet, $500 to commercial properties between 10,001 and 49,999 square feet, and $1,000 to commercial properties 50,000 or more square feet. The rates were varied to reflect the “additional effort involved in inspecting businesses of various size and type.” According to Scales,

[t]he schedule ... had been developed th[r]ough meetings of a committee comprised of myself and personnel from the DP\7 the Budget Department, the Finance Department’s Treasury and Assessor divisions, and the Law Department. During that process, the City had not had the full opportunity to determine the all [sic] activity that would be required by the new and pro-active inspection program that the City sought to implement as of July 1, 2007, nor the costs of doing so.

Accordingly, these fee amounts reflected mere estimates of the costs of performing the inspections. The Detroit City Council approved Scales’ proposed fee schedule on May 23, 2007.

Following the City Council’s approval of the proposed fee schedule, and upon advice of legal counsel, Scales undertook a cost analysis in an effort to forecast the costs to be incurred in association with the inspections. She prepared a series of costs analyses between May 25, 2007, and June 26, 2007. Those analyses purportedly reflect the direct and indirect personnel and overhead

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
786 N.W.2d 620, 287 Mich. App. 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-city-of-detroit-michctapp-2010.