STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
ROBERT CHRISTIANS and BETH UNPUBLISHED
CHRISTIANS, October 20, 2016
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
V No. 327519
Mackinac Circuit Court
TOWNSHIP OF CLARK, LC No. 2014-007681-CZ
Defendant-Appellee.
Before: MARKEY, P.J., and MURPHY and RONAYNE KRAUSE, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Plaintiffs appeal as of right from the circuit court’s order upholding the constitutionality
of defendant’s zoning ordinance. We affirm.
According to the facts to which the parties stipulated for purposes of the litigation in the
circuit court, plaintiffs own a single lakefront lot comprising two residential structures, only one
of which is insulated to enable year-round habitation. Since acquiring their property in 1998,
plaintiffs have occasionally offered one or both structures for short-term rentals. Plaintiffs’ lot is
zoned for single-family residential usage, as set forth in defendant’s zoning ordinance. In
December 2013, defendant investigated plaintiffs’ short-term rental practices, concluded that
renting both structures simultaneously constituted a resort use allowed only with a special land
use permit, and advised plaintiffs to request such a permit. However, defendant’s zoning board
of appeals interpreted the zoning ordinance as allowing special use permits for resort activities
only for purposes of expanding existing resorts, and denied plaintiffs’ application on the ground
that their operations had no existing recognition as a resort.
Plaintiffs appealed to the circuit court, challenging the decision below on the ground that,
as applied to them, it resulted from application of unconstitutionally vague or ambiguous
language in the zoning ordinance.
The circuit court determined that plaintiffs’ arguments concerned not so much the
definitions of certain terms used in the ordinance as “the application of the Ordinance itself to the
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facts.” The court noted that resorts existed in the single-family residential district, but that the
special use permits required for that usage were now allowed for only expansions of existing
resorts,1 and concluded, “The Plaintiffs were never classified as a resort prior to 2013 so, under
the clear language of the Ordinance, they would not qualify now for any consideration under a
Special Use Permit. The Court, therefore, must find that the Ordinance is not vague in its
application to these facts.”
MCL 125.3606(1) authorizes a party aggrieved by a decision of a zoning board of
appeals to appeal to the circuit court, and directs the circuit court in reviewing the decision to
determine if it complies with applicable law, follows from proper procedure, is supported by
competent, material, and substantial evidence on the record, and constitutes a reasonable exercise
of discretion. This Court in turn reviews de novo the circuit court’s determination regarding the
findings of the zoning board of appeals to determine if the circuit court applied correct legal
principles and whether it misapprehended or grossly misapplied the substantial-evidence test to
the zoning authority’s factual findings. Hughes v Almena Twp, 284 Mich App 50, 60; 771
NW2d 453 (2009).
A challenge to the validity of an ordinance predicated on vagueness invokes constitu-
tional principles of due process. See John’s Corvette Care, Inc v Dearborn, 204 Mich App 616,
617; 516 NW2d 527 (1994). See also US Const, Am XIV, § 1; Const 1963, art 1, § 17. A
statute may be challenged for vagueness on the grounds that that it does not provide fair notice of
the conduct proscribed, or that it is so indefinite that it invites arbitrary or discriminatory
enforcement. See Hill v Colorado, 530 US 703, 732; 120 S Ct 2480; 147 L Ed 2d 597 (2000).
In the context of zoning ordinances, “an ‘as applied’ challenge alleges a present infringement or
denial of a specific right or of a particular injury in process of actual execution.” Paragon Props
Co v Novi, 452 Mich 568, 576; 550 NW2d 772 (1996).
The subject ordinance’s provisions for the single-family residential classification begin
with a statement of intent:
This district is composed of medium density single-family residential
areas primarily in the towns and villages, where medium density single family
residential development has occurred, or appears likely to occur. The regulations
for this district are designed to protect and stabilize the essential characteristics of
these areas and to promote and encourage a suitable and safe environment for
family life. To these ends, development is restricted to medium density single
family residential use, where adequate facilities and services will be provided. In
addition, certain tourist oriented commercial enterprises and multiple family
developments are permitted. [2013 Clark Twp Zoning Ordinance, art 10.5.3.1.]
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Plaintiffs have not placed at issue whether defendant’s zoning board of appeals erred in holding
that a special land use permit for a resort may be granted for only the expansion of an existing
resort.
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From this statement, plaintiffs identify “certain tourist oriented commercial enterprises
and multiple family developments are permitted” as a prime example of ambiguous language
leaving the landowner to guess, or the municipality arbitrarily to determine, exactly what is
permitted or forbidden. However, we conclude that the circuit court correctly recognized that the
unambiguous provisions of the zoning ordinance cover the issue presented in this as-applied
challenge, which obviated the need to consider application of any ambiguous language.
Again, plaintiffs’ lot consists of their main cottage, which is set up for year-round
habitation, plus what has been variously called a guesthouse, guest cottage, or an accessory
building, which is not insulated for year-round use.
Article 5.2.22 of the zoning ordinance defines “dwelling unit” as “[a] building or portion
thereof arranged, built, or designed for permanent occupancy by not more than one family for
living purposes and having cooking and sanitary facilities.” “Permanent dwelling” is defined as
“[a] dwelling wherein the part(ies) are living for a period of more than 180 days out of the year,
although not necessarily in one straight period of time.” 2013 Clark Twp Zoning Ordinance, art
5.2.54. That plaintiffs’ main cottage is a dwelling unit is not in dispute. However, as plaintiffs
acknowledge, their guesthouse does not qualify as a dwelling unit because its lack of insulation
renders it ill-suited for permanent or year-round occupancy.
Plaintiffs recognize that their guesthouse in fact comes under the definition of “accessory
building,” which according to the ordinance is “a supplementary building or structure on the
same parcel as the main building, which is naturally and normally incidental, clearly subordinate,
and devoted exclusively to the principal use on the same parcel.” 2013 Clark Twp Zoning
Ordinance, art 5.2.1. Similarly, “accessory use” is defined as “use of land naturally and normally
incidental, clearly subordinate, and devoted exclusively to the principal use of the same parcel on
which the principal use is located.” 2013 Clark Twp Zoning Ordinance, art 5.2.3.
This case arose from defendant’s objections to plaintiffs’ practice of occasionally renting
simultaneously their two structures to two different families, as inconsistent with the intent
behind the single-family residential district to promote and preserve single-family residential use.
Defendant’s zoning officer’s letter to plaintiffs setting forth the objections reported that there
were “complaints that the property is being rented for short term or ‘resort’ use,” advised that the
zoning ordinance defined “resort” as “[a] group of attached or detached dwellings . . . containing
guest rooms which are provided for transient of short or long duration,” and that the ordinance
permitted resorts in the single-family residential district only as special land uses.
Plaintiffs protest that they were set up to fail when advised to seek a special use permit
for operation of a resort, because a resort is defined as a group of dwellings, and their lot consists
of just one dwelling plus one accessory building. That plaintiffs did not obtain satisfaction from
the permitting process, however, did not result from any ambiguity in the definition of
“dwelling,” “accessory building,” or “resort.” Defendant objected to rentals to multiple families,
which it characterized as resort operations, in a single-family residential district, which led
plaintiffs to seek the special use permit required for such operations. Defendant’s objection was
to the simultaneous rentals to two families, not to plaintiffs’ guesthouse’s failure to satisfy the
definition of “dwelling unit” and thus the combination’s failure to satisfy the definition of
“resort.” Whether plaintiffs should have recognized that their attempt to obtain the permit was
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futile from the start, given that their lot consisted of a dwelling and an accessory building, not
any combination of dwellings, and thus, as before, their rentals did not qualify for recognition as
resort operations, is beside the point.
Plaintiffs argue that they challenged the decision of the zoning board of appeals not on
the ground that there was some error in recognizing that plaintiffs’ activities had never been
recognized as resort operations, but rather only insofar as plaintiffs were led to seek a special use
permit, thus claim the status of resort operators, in order to continue their practice of renting their
main cottage and guesthouse simultaneously to unassociated families in the first instance.
Accordingly, they argue that the circuit court erred in affirming a decision not itself challenged
while declining to reach the arguments that are the crux of the case.
The circuit court did not in fact wholly disregard plaintiffs’ invitation to review various
provisions in the ordinance for vagueness or ambiguity, but rather answered that invitation
conscientiously. The court agreed that some of the terminology in the subject ordinance lent
itself to objections over vagueness, but reiterated that, because plaintiffs’ property was not
among those in the single-family residential district classified as a resort, plaintiffs were not
entitled to the special use permit they sought for that reason, and that “the language that the . . .
Planning Commission relied on in its denial of the Plaintiffs’ request . . . is not ambiguous.” The
court elaborated:
The Plaintiffs . . . claim that certain definitions and terms involved in the
Ordinance such as “resort,” “dwelling,” “permanent occupancy and dwelling,”
“group,” “property owner,” and “tourist oriented commercial enterprises,” lend
themselves to confusion, rendering an individual from being on notice of what is
what when it comes to understanding the Ordinance. This argument is not
without merit . . . However, under these facts what is inescapable is that
regardless of the prior use of the Plaintiffs’ property, it was never classified as a
resort, unlike other properties in the same [single-family residential] District.
This Court cannot travel a path to unravel the circumstances that led to any
properties prior classification, but must deal with the facts at hand.
The circuit court properly refrained from expanding its scope of review beyond the
decision of the zoning board of appeals, or otherwise endeavoring to substitute its judgment for
that of the board. See C & W Homes, Inc v Livonia Zoning Bd of Appeals, 25 Mich App 272,
274; 181 NW2d 286 (1970) (“We may not substitute our judgment for that of the board.”). To
persuade the circuit court, or this Court, in this as-applied case to undertake searching
constitutional review for vagueness of any of the language of the subject zoning ordinance,
plaintiffs would have to start by presenting a decision of the zoning board of appeals that might
have constituted an exercise of arbitrary or discriminatory enforcement resulting from its
application of vague terms. See Hill, 530 US at 732. Because the decision under review did not
call for the zoning board of appeals to apply any vague language from the governing ordinance,
in reviewing the decision the circuit court properly elected not to “travel a path to unravel the
circumstances that led to any properties prior classification.”
Plaintiffs characterize the result below as unreasonable insofar as it disallows a rental
arrangement that itself results in two different families on their property while allowing one
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resulting in two families if one occupies the main cottage and the other occupies the guesthouse
as the guests of family occupying the main cottage. Plaintiffs suggest that those two situations
present a distinction without a difference, but we disagree. The distinction between two
unassociated families, and one family hosting another, has significant bearing on whether the
arrangement reasonably reflects the single-family residential purpose of the zoning district. A
single family on the lot obviously comports with the single-family residential aspiration of the
district, and continues to emanate single-family residential character even if hosting a second
family in a companion guesthouse in a way that the presence of a second, unassociated family
does not. Guests, by definition, are present at the invitation of the host, their rights on the lot
thus being derivative of those of the host. The host-guest relationship thus substantially mirrors
that between the dwelling unit, as a “[a] building . . . designed for permanent occupancy by not
more than one family for living purposes,” and the guesthouse as the latter’s accessory, relating
to the dwelling unit as an entity “clearly subordinate, and devoted exclusively to the principal use
on the same parcel.” In contrast, the presence of two unassociated families constitutes no
extension of single-family living, but rather a plain departure from it.
For these reasons, the circuit court correctly affirmed the decision of defendant’s zoning
board of appeals.
Affirmed.
/s/ Jane E. Markey
/s/ William B. Murphy
/s/ Amy Ronayne Krause
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