STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
SOLO CUP OPERATING CORPORATION, UNPUBLISHED
December 20, 2016
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v No. 327766
Court of Claims
DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY, LC No. 14-000014-MT
Defendant-Appellee.
SOLO CUP OPERATING CORPORATION,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v No. 332891
Court of Claims
DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY, LC No. 15-000121-MT
Defendant-Appellee.
Before: M. J. KELLY, P.J., and O’CONNELL and BECKERING, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
These consolidated tax cases involve the Michigan business tax (MBT) liability of
plaintiff Solo Cup Operating Corporation, an out-of-state corporation, for the 2009 through 2011
tax years. In Docket No. 327766 regarding the 2009 tax year, plaintiff appeals the Court of
Claims’ opinion and order granting summary disposition to defendant Department of Treasury
under MCR 2.116(C)(4) (lack of subject matter jurisdiction). In Docket No. 332891 pertaining
to the 2009 through 2011 tax years, plaintiff appeals the Court of Claims’ final judgment
granting partial summary disposition for defendant under MCR 2.116(I)(1) (pleadings compel
judgment as a matter of law). We affirm.
I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
For the tax years at issue in both appeals, plaintiff timely filed its MBT returns electing to
use a three-factor apportionment formula to calculate its tax base under Article IV of the
Multistate Tax Compact (Compact), as incorporated into Michigan law under then-existing MCL
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205.581. Defendant disallowed plaintiff’s election of this methodology in each of these tax years
based on MCL 208.1301 of the Michigan Business Tax Act (MBTA), which mandated use of a
sales-factor apportionment formula.1
Litigation between the parties ensued and, in the interim, the Michigan Supreme Court
decided IBM v Dep’t of Treasury, 496 Mich 642, 657-659; 852 NW2d 865 (2014), in which the
Court held that the MBTA did not repeal the Compact’s three-factor apportionment formula and
that out-of-state taxpayers, like plaintiff, were eligible to use the formula for the 2008 through
2011 tax years. Shortly thereafter, the Legislature passed 2014 PA 282 (PA 282), which
retroactively repealed the Compact and required all MBT taxpayers to apportion their tax base
using the MBTA’s sales-factor apportionment formula beginning January 1, 2008. 2014 PA 282.
This Court upheld PA 282 against multiple constitutional challenges in Gillette Commercial
Operations North America & Subsidiaries v Dep’t of Treasury, 312 Mich App 394; 878 NW2d
891 (2015). Notwithstanding the Gillette Court’s holding, plaintiff’s substantive claims for a
refund in Docket No. 332891 are predicated on the purported unconstitutionality of PA 282.
Plaintiff’s appeal in Docket No. 327766 is predicated on an alleged error in the determination
that the court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction regarding the 2009 tax year.
A. DOCKET NO. 327766
For the 2009 tax year, plaintiff timely filed its Michigan Business Tax (MBT) return,
reflecting an overpayment of $58,676 and requesting that this amount be carried forward to the
next tax year. This overpayment resulted from plaintiff’s use of the Compact’s three-factor
apportionment formula.
As noted, defendant rejected plaintiff’s apportionment method and issued to plaintiff an
MBT Annual Return Notice of Additional Tax Due (hereinafter, Initial Notice) for the 2009 tax
year, assessing plaintiff an additional MBT tax liability of $52,248, including interest and
1
Articles III(1) and IV of the Compact allowed a business to elect to apportion income using an
equally-weighted, three-factor apportionment formula based on a business’s sales, property, and
payroll. See Gillette Commercial Operations North America & Subsidiaries v Dep’t of
Treasury, 312 Mich App 394, 402; 878 NW2d 891 (2015). Effective January 1, 2008, the
Legislature enacted the MBTA, MCL 208.1101 et seq., which provided that “each tax base
established under this act shall be apportioned in accordance with this chapter.” MCL
208.1301(1) (emphasis added). MCL 208.1301(2) of the MBTA provided for an apportionment
formula based solely on a sales factor and made no mention of the three-factor apportionment
formula. Effective May 26, 2011, the Legislature amended the Compact’s election provision,
MCL 205.581, art III and IV, to require, beginning January 1, 2011, taxpayers subject to the
MBTA “to apportion and allocate in accordance with the provisions of [the MBTA] and shall not
apportion or allocate in accordance with article IV [of the Compact].” 2011 PA 40 (PA 40). As
a result of the enactment of the MBTA and PA 40, a legal question existed whether the
Legislature had intended for the MBTA to repeal the Compact’s election provision or whether,
for tax years before May 2011, taxpayers could still utilize the Compact’s election.
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penalties. Plaintiff submitted a Letter of Disagreement in response to the Initial Notice, but its
response was untimely. Consequently, defendant issued to plaintiff an Intent to Assess Bill for
Taxes Due, to which plaintiff did not respond. Ultimately, defendant issued to plaintiff a Final
Bill For Taxes Due (hereinafter Final Assessment) in November 2012. Plaintiff did not appeal
the decision to the Court of Claims until over a year later in January 2014, after it had received
defendant’s October 2013 response to plaintiff’s Letter of Disagreement. In its complaint,
plaintiff alleged that it had “timely filed an MBT return for the Year in Issue, reflecting an
overpayment of MBT in the amount of $58,676 and requesting that such overpayment be carried
forward to the next tax period.”
Defendant answered plaintiff’s complaint and moved for summary disposition under
MCR 2.116(C)(4), alleging that the Court of Claims lacked subject-matter jurisdiction. The
Court of Claims agreed, finding that plaintiff failed to file its claim of appeal within 90 days of
the Final Assessment and pay the tax under protest before appeal, which the court concluded was
required by MCL 205.22(1) and (2). The Court of Claims’ opinion and order, issued February
18, 2015, however, did not have the opportunity to consider a new MBT Annual Return Notice
of Additional Tax Due (hereinafter Superseding Notice) and Final Bill for Taxes Due Corrected
(hereinafter Corrected Final Assessment) for the 2009 tax year, which defendant had issued to
plaintiff three days before the court issued its opinion and order.
B. DOCKET NO. 332891
Plaintiff paid under protest the amount due under the 2009 Superseding Notice and
Corrected Final Assessment, as well as the amounts due under the final assessments for the 2010
and 2011 tax years. As in 2009, plaintiff had elected to apportion its Michigan income using the
three-factor apportionment formula under Article IV of the Compact and defendant had denied
plaintiff’s election of this methodology for both the 2010 and 2011 tax years.
In May 2015, plaintiff filed a three-count complaint for a refund regarding its MBT
liability for the 2009 through 2011 tax years, specifically challenging the 2009 Corrected Final
Assessment that plaintiff had not challenged in the prior litigation. Count I alleged that
defendant’s rejection of plaintiff’s election of the three-factor apportionment formula violated
the Compact and Michigan law; Count II alleged that defendant’s denial of the same violated the
Contracts Clause and Due Process Clause of the United States and Michigan Constitutions and
the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution; and Count III requested abatement of
penalties for the years in issue.
In June 2015, the Court of Claims sua sponte granted defendant partial summary
disposition as to Counts I and II under MCR 2.116(I)(1). The court reasoned that PA 282, in
which the Legislature retroactively repealed the Compact and which the Court of Claims had
previously held withstood constitutional challenge, applies and negated plaintiff’s claim for
relief. After granting plaintiff partial relief as to its abatement of penalties claim, the Court of
Claims entered a final judgment that plaintiff now appeals only as to Counts I and II.
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II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court reviews a summary disposition motion under MCR 2.116(C)(4) and (I)(1) de
novo. Toaz v Dep’t of Treasury, 280 Mich App 457, 459; 760 NW2d 325 (2008); Sobiecki v
Dep’t of Corrections, 271 Mich App 139, 141; 721 NW2d 229 (2006). Judgment under MCR
2.116(C)(4) is proper if the court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction over the matter at issue.
Further, a court shall render judgment without delay under MCR 2.116(I)(1) “[i]f the pleadings
show that a party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, or if the affidavits or other proofs
show that there is no genuine issue of material fact . . . .” However, “appellate courts will sua
sponte refuse to hear cases that they do not have the power to decide, including cases that are
moot[.]” People v Richmond, 486 Mich 29, 35; 782 NW2d 187 (2010). Whether a case is moot
is a question this Court reviews de novo. See Thomas M Cooley Law Sch v Doe 1, 300 Mich
App 245, 254; 833 NW2d 331 (2013).
III. DOCKET NO. 327766
In Docket No. 327766, plaintiff argues that the original 2009 Final Assessment is “no
longer legally effective” because defendant’s Superseding Notice and Corrected Final
Assessment rescinded the Final Assessment. It follows, according to plaintiff, that the Final
Assessment “cannot possibly act as a bar to this action[.]”
We agree with plaintiff that the Final Assessment at issue in Docket No. 327766 is
legally void. In February 2015, before the Court of Claims issued its opinion and order in this
case, but apparently unbeknownst to the court, plaintiff received a Superseding Notice indicating
that “[t]his notice supersedes prior [MBT] notifications for [the 2009 tax year]” (emphasis
added). The notice further indicated that the Final Assessment would be corrected to reflect the
changes. Plaintiff also received a Corrected Final Assessment that was backdated to the date of
the original Final Assessment, reflecting the alleged correct amount due. Thus, the Superseding
Notice and the Corrected Final Assessment dictate that the original Final Assessment is no
longer legally operative.
We disagree with plaintiff’s assertion, however, that the rescission of the original Final
Assessment grants the Court of Claims subject-matter jurisdiction over the dispute filed in
Docket No. 327766. “[T]his Court does not reach moot questions or declare principles or rules
of law that have no practical legal effect in the case before it.” Richmond, 486 Mich at 34
(quotation marks and citation omitted). “[A] moot case is one which seeks to get a judgment on
a pretended controversy, when in reality there is none, . . . or a judgment upon some matter
which, when rendered, for any reason, cannot have any practical legal effect upon a then existing
controversy.” Id. at 34-35 (quotation marks and citation omitted).
Here, as a result of the Superseding Notice and Corrected Final Assessment, plaintiff’s
challenge in Docket No. 327766 to the original Final Assessment is essentially a challenge to a
now non-existent tax assessment that effectively denied plaintiff’s claim for a refund. Because
the Final Assessment is void, there is no controversy to resolve regarding the propriety of that
assessment and no relief to be had from its (now void) imposition. We will not resolve a dispute
that does not rest upon existing facts; when an event occurs that makes it impossible to grant the
relief requested, the issue is moot. Gen Motors Corp v Dep’t of Treasury, 290 Mich App 355,
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386; 803 NW2d 698 (2010). We conclude that this matter is moot and non-justiciable. Given
that this appeal is moot, we do not consider whether the Court of Claims erred by dismissing this
case for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. As noted below, however, plaintiff’s substantive
appellate issues are preserved for purposes of appeal in Docket No. 332891, associated with the
Superseding Notice and Corrected Final Assessment.
IV. DOCKET NO. 332891
In Docket No. 332891, plaintiff argues that the Court of Claims erred by dismissing its
constitutional claims as to the 2009 through 2011 tax years under MCR 2.116(I)(1). Plaintiff
concedes that this Court considered and rejected its arguments in Gillette, 312 Mich App at 407-
447. Indeed, the Gillette Court concluded that the Compact was not a binding interstate contract
and, therefore, PA 282’s retroactive repeal of the Compact did not violate the Contract Clause
and further, that the retroactive repeal of the Compact did not: (1) violate due process because
taxpayers have no vested interest in the continuation of the tax laws and the Legislature had a
legitimate purpose in enacting PA 282; (2) violate the Commerce Clause because PA 282 is not
facially discriminatory and no discriminatory purpose or effect is inherent in PA 282; (3) violate
the Separation of Powers Clause because PA 282 did not overrule a judgment of a court; or (4)
violate various constitutional provisions of the Michigan Constitution pertaining to the
legislative process. Gillette, 312 Mich App at 409-410, 414, 431-433, 428, 444-447.
Notwithstanding that Gillette is binding precedent, plaintiff argues that Gillette was wrongly
decided and asks this Court to issue a decision disagreeing with Gillette so that a conflict panel
may be convened. MCR 7.215(J)(2) and (3). For the reasons that follow, we decline to do so.
A. THE COMPACT AS A CONTRACT
Plaintiff first argues that Gillette wrongly concluded that the Compact is not a binding
contract, maintaining that this conclusion is contrary to United States Steel Corp v Multistate Tax
Comm’n, 434 US 452; 98 S Ct 799; 54 L Ed 2d 682 (1978), and makes Michigan an outlier with
respect to the status of the Compact as a contract. Plaintiff further maintains that Gillette is
wrong because the Legislature’s enactment of the Compact evinces an intent to be bound by its
provisions.
While it is a general principle of Michigan jurisprudence that one legislature may not
bind another, the Legislature may in certain limited circumstances contractually bind a
subsequent legislature. In re Request for Advisory Opinion Regarding Constitutionality of 2011
PA 38, 490 Mich 295, 319-320; 806 NW2d 603 (2011). This authority is subject to strict
limitations and courts will not construe laws as contracts by implication because to do so would
be to severely limit the Legislature’s sovereign authority to enact laws in the future. Id. at 320.
Consequently, a “strong presumption [exists in Michigan law] that statutes do not create
contractual rights.” Studier v Mich Pub Sch Employees Retirement Bd, 472 Mich 642, 661; 698
NW2d 350 (2005). The proponent of the legislative creation of a contract must establish that the
statutory language is plain and “susceptible of no other reasonable construction than that the
Legislature intended to be bound to a contract.” In re Request for Advisory Opinion Regarding
Constitutionality of 2011 PA 38, 490 Mich at 320-321 (quotation marks and citation omitted).
“That is, [b]efore a statute, particularly one relating to taxation, should be held to be irrepealable
or not subject to amendment, an intent not to repeal or amend must be so directly and
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unmistakably expressed as to leave no reason for doubt. Otherwise the intent is not plainly
expressed.” Id. at 321 (quotation marks and citation omitted). Relatedly, Const 1963, art 9, § 2
provides, “The power of taxation shall never be surrendered, suspended or contracted away.”
The Gillette panel squarely rejected plaintiff’s claim that the Compact is a contract,
stating:
There are no words in the Compact, as adopted by the Legislature under
1969 PA 343, that indicate that the state intended to be bound to the Compact,
and specifically to Article III(1). Therefore, the presumption must be that the
state did not surrender its legislative power to require use of a particular
apportionment formula. Such interpretation comports with the Supreme Court’s
recognition of “the basic principle[] that the States have wide latitude in the
selection of apportionment formulas . . . .” Moorman [Mfg Co v Bair], 437 US
[267,] 274[; 98 S Ct 2340; 57 L Ed 2d 197 (1978)]. This interpretation is also
consistent with the Court’s recent acknowledgement that states “do not easily
cede their sovereign powers . . . .” Tarrant [Regional Water Dist v Herrmann],
[569 US ___, ___;] 133 S Ct [2120,] 2132[; 186 L Ed 2d 153 (2013)]. Because
there is no clear indication under MCL 205.581 that the state contracted away its
ability to either select an apportionment formula that differs from the Compact, or
to repeal the Compact altogether, the Court concludes that no contractual
obligation was created by enactment of 1969 PA 343 that would prohibit the
enactment of [2014] PA 282. [Gillette, 312 Mich App at 409-410 (emphasis
added).]
We agree with the Gillette panel’s analysis. Nothing in former MCL 205.581,
demonstrates an intent to create a binding contract that is so unmistakable as to leave no other
reasonable construction. There is no express statutory language providing for the execution of a
written contract on behalf of the State, nor did the Legislature covenant not to amend the
legislation. See Studier, 472 Mich at 662-663.
Plaintiff, however, relies on the first sentence of former MCL 205.581, which states that
the Compact “is enacted into law and entered into with all jurisdictions legally joining therein.”
Plaintiff asserts that the phrase “entered into” would be mere surplusage if the Compact is not
interpreted to be a contract. However, the phrase “entered into” in no way expresses the creation
of a promise on behalf of a member state, including terms of mutual assent, mutual obligation,
and consideration, as contracts are traditionally understood in the law. Moreover, the terms of
the Compact itself suggest that it is not, in fact, a binding contract. Mainly, former MCL
205.581, art X(2), provides that a member state may withdraw from the compact at any time.
Because the State could exercise, in its sole discretion, when to withdraw from the compact, any
of its supposed “obligations” under the Compact were illusory. See Restatement Contracts, 2d, §
77, comment a, p 195 (“Illusory promises. Words of promise which by their terms make
performance entirely optional with the ‘promisor’ do not constitute a promise.”).
In further support of its decision that the Compact is not a binding agreement on the
State, Gillette applied the “three classic indicia of a binding interstate compact,” finding that the
Compact was not a “binding interstate compact” because it did not create a regulatory body, did
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not require reciprocal action to obtain benefits, and could be modified unilaterally by member
states. Gillette, 312 Mich App at 410-414. Plaintiff also challenges this reasoning, arguing that
this holding is contrary to US Steel Corp, 434 US 452, in which the Court allegedly held that the
Compact is a “binding interstate compact.” However, contrary to plaintiff’s assertion, US Steel
Corp did not conclude that the Compact is a binding contractual agreement. In fact, its analysis
suggests otherwise, as Gillette recognized when it quoted the language from US Steel Corp. “
‘each State retains complete freedom [under the Compact] to adopt or reject the rules and
regulations of the Commission.’ ” Gillette, 312 Mich App at 412, quoting US Steel Corp, 434
US at 473 (emphasis added in Gillette). Indeed, the focus of the decision in United States Steel
was whether the Compact violated the Compact Clause2 of the United States Constitution by
elevating states’ powers to the detriment of federal supremacy, not whether the Compact formed
a contractually binding agreement between member states. To the extent US Steel referred to the
Compact as a “compact,” it never characterized it as a binding agreement or as a contract, as that
term is understood under traditional principles of contract law.
Relatedly, plaintiff’s claim that Gillette’s conclusion that the Compact is a non-binding
agreement makes Michigan an outlier is not supportable. Member states have enacted legislation
that deviates from the Compact, effectively altering its terms while remaining members. See,
e.g., Minn Stat 290.191; Or Rev Stat 314.650; Idaho Code 63-3027(i); Tex Tax Code Ann
171.106(a); Col Rev Stat 24-60-1301 & 1308; Utah Code Ann 59-7-311. Moreover, members
have supported the interpretation that the Compact is not, in fact, a binding contract. IBM, 496
Mich at 682 n 7 (2014) (MCCORMACK, J., dissenting) (“It bears emphasizing that Compact
members have not only refrained from bringing legal action against one another for deviating
from Articles III and IV, they have endorsed the Commissioner’s interpretation of the Compact .
. . [as a non-] binding contract.”). Moreover, Michigan is not the only jurisdiction to have
concluded that the Compact does not form a binding contract. See Kimberly-Clark Corp v
Comm’r of Revenue, 880 NW2d 844 (Minn, 2016); Health Net, Inc v Dep’t of Revenue, 22 OTR
128 (Or TC, 2015).
Finally, plaintiff argues that defendant violated former MCL 205.581, art X(2), of the
Compact, which provides that “[a]ny party state may withdraw from this compact by enacting a
statute repealing the same. No withdrawal shall affect any liability already incurred by or
chargeable to a party state prior to the time of such withdrawal.” According to plaintiff, this
provision prohibits retroactive withdrawal from the Compact. Plaintiff explains that because the
Compact is a binding contract, the State is prohibited under Article X(2) from retroactively
repealing the Compact. It follows, according to plaintiff, that PA 282 irreconcilably conflicts
with the Compact by retroactively repealing it and PA 282 is, thus, unlawful. This argument is
based on two erroneous assumptions.
2
The Compact Clause of Art I, § 10, cl 3 of the United States Constitution provides: “No State
shall, without the Consent of Congress, . . .enter into any Agreement or Compact with another
State, or with a foreign Power . . . .”
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First, plaintiff assumes that the Compact is a contract and that the State, therefore, is
bound by its provisions. As we have already explained, the Compact does not form a binding
contractual agreement. Therefore, even assuming former MCL 205.581, art X, prohibited
retroactive repeal of the Compact, the State cannot be said to have violated former MCL
205.581, art X, because, absent a binding contractual obligation, the alleged “prohibition” is
merely aspirational.
Second, plaintiff presumes that the second sentence of former MCL 205.581, art X(2),
prohibits retroactive repeal. However, the second sentence relating to liabilities already incurred
by or chargeable to a party state is a statement describing a limited consequence of the
unconditional right to withdraw from the Compact. It does not expressly prohibit a member state
from retroactively repealing the Compact. And, when read in context of the entire Compact, the
second sentence refers to liabilities or charges owed to the Commission that have already been
incurred by members states, not to taxpayers’ liabilities or claims for a refund. See former MCL
205.581, art VI(4), (requiring member states to appropriate funds to the commission for its
budget), and art VIII(2) (granting the commission authority to charge member states for the
performance of an audit).3 Consequently, article X(2) does not prohibit retroactive repeal of the
Compact. Gillette correctly concluded that the Compact is not a binding contract.
B. CONTRACT CLAUSE
Plaintiff next claims that PA 282 violates the Contract Clause of the United States and
Michigan Constitutions. “The United States Constitution provides that ‘[n]o State shall . . . pass
any . . . Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts . . .,’ US Const, art I, § 10, cl 1, while our
state Constitution similarly provides that ‘[n]o . . . law impairing the obligation of contract shall
be enacted,’ Const 1963, art 1, § 10.” Gillette, 312 Mich App at 407. The Contract Clause has
not been interpreted as an absolute bar against the impairment of contracts, but instead prohibits
laws that “operate[] as a substantial impairment of a contractual relationship.” Allied Structural
Steel Co v Spannaus, 438 US 234, 244; 98 S Ct 2716; 57 L Ed 2d 727 (1978). This inquiry
involves a three-part analysis: “whether there is a contractual relationship, whether a change in
law impairs that contractual relationship, and whether the impairment is substantial.” General
Motors Corp v Romein, 503 US 181, 186; 112 S Ct 1105; 117 L Ed 2d 328 (1992). If the
impairment is deemed substantial, then it must be the result of a legitimate public purpose that is
carried out by reasonable means. Blue Cross & Blue Shield v Milliken, 422 Mich 1, 21-22; 367
NW2d 1 (1985).
In Gillette, the Court found that because the Compact did not form a contract, there can
be no violation of the Contract Clause. Gillette, 312 Mich App at 410. The Court then found
that even if the Compact did form a contract, no substantial impairment of the alleged contract
3
Even if “already incurred liabilities” could be construed to include amounts the State owed
taxpayers before legislative withdrawal so as to prohibit retroactive withdrawal, the effect of
such a conclusion would be immaterial. This is because the Compact is not a binding contract
and, thus, the State is not bound by the terms of the Compact.
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occurred because PA 282 did not interfere with “plaintiff’s reasonably expected contractual
benefits.” Id. at 413-414. The Court stated:
Given the fact that these taxpayers have no vested interest in the continuation of a
tax law, and that tax law is one of the more highly regulated areas in the law, it is
difficult to see what reasonable expectation was actually interfered with. See,
e.g., All Star, Inc v Georgia Atlanta Amusements, LLC, 332 Ga App 1, 9; 770
SE2d 22 (2015), and cases cited therein. This is particularly so when considering
Treasury’s position on this issue over the past five years or so. [Gillette, 312
Mich App at 414.]
Plaintiff first argues that Gillette erred by concluding that the Compact is not a contract,
referring to its previous argument. However, we have already concluded that Gillette correctly
concluded that the Compact is not a contract. Plaintiff also suggests that Gillette’s Contract
Clause analysis was erroneous because “protecting the public fisc” is not a legitimate reason for
a substantial impairment of contract. However, the Gillette Court did not predicate its Contract
Clause analysis on this reasoning. Instead, it found that even assuming the Compact formed a
contract, PA 282’s repeal of the Compact was not a substantial impairment because taxpayers
have no vested interest in the continuation of tax laws. Gillette, 312 Mich App at 413-414.
Plaintiff does not expressly address this rationale of the Gillette opinion and does not otherwise
explain why Gillette’s analysis is wrong. “It is not sufficient for a party simply to announce a
position or assert an error and then leave it up to this Court to discover and rationalize the basis
for his claims, or unravel and elaborate for him his arguments, and then search for authority
either to sustain or reject his position.” Innovation Ventures, LLC v Liquid Mfg, LLC, 499 Mich
491, 518; __ NW2d __ (2016) (quotation marks and citation omitted). Plaintiff has failed to
show that Gillette’s Contract Clause analysis is erroneous.
C. DUE PROCESS CLAUSE
Plaintiff next argues that the retroactive repeal of the Compact violates the Due Process
Clauses of the United States and Michigan Constitutions. The Fourteenth Amendment of the
United States Constitution and Const 1963, art 1, § 17 guarantee that no state shall deprive any
person of “life, liberty or property, without due process of law.” Taxpayers do not have a vested
right in the tax laws that is protected by due process. Gen Motors Corp v Dep’t of Treasury, 290
Mich App at 370-371. This is because the Due Process Clause protects actual property rights,
such as those in which legal or equitable title is vested; a taxpayer has no vested property right in
tax laws or their continuance. Id. Nonetheless, retroactive tax legislation must meet the rational
basis test to satisfy due process: the legislation must serve a legitimate purpose and be furthered
by a rational means. Id. at 371-372; United States v Carlton, 512 US 26, 30-31, 33; 114 S Ct
2018; 129 L Ed 2d 22 (1994). “A legislature’s action to mend a leak in the public treasury or tax
revenue—whether created by poor drafting of legislation in the first instance or by a judicial
decision—with retroactive legislation has almost universally been recognized as ‘rationally
related to a legitimate legislative purpose.’ ” Gen Motors Corp, 290 Mich App at 373, quoting
Carlton, 512 US at 35. However, the period of retroactivity is relevant to whether the means
employed are rational to meet the legitimate purpose. See Carlton, 512 US at 32-33.
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Relying on United States Supreme Court precedent, as well as cases from the Michigan
Supreme Court and this Court, Gillette, 312 Mich App at 414-421, concluded that taxpayers have
no vested rights in the tax laws or continuance of the tax laws protected by the Due Process
Clause. In support, the Court recognized that vested rights are legal rights to the enjoyment of
property, and not a mere expectation in the continuance of a law. Id. at 419, 421. Therefore, the
Court held that the plaintiffs had no vested interest protected by Due Process in the continuation
of the Compact. Id. at 421. The Court further found that the Legislature had a legitimate
purpose in enacting PA 282: to correct a misinterpretation4 of the prior statute and to eliminate
revenue loss that would stem from that misinterpretation. Id. at 421-422. The panel also found
that the period of retroactivity was comparable to the periods of retroactivity for other legislation
that had been upheld, id. at 420 (noting that a five and seven-year period had been upheld), and
specifically rejected plaintiff’s “bait and switch” argument, id. at 424-425, i.e., the argument that
“Michigan engaged in a ‘bait and switch’ by enticing foreign companies to engage in commerce
in Michigan by providing the three-factor apportionment formula and then retroactively taking
away this apportionment method,” id. at 424.
Again, plaintiff does not, for the most part, explain why it thinks the Gillette decision was
wrongly decided, but merely parrots back arguments that Gillette already rejected or makes
arguments without connecting them to Gillette. It is not this Court’s role to develop or provide
the rationale for an appellant’s arguments on appeal. Innovation Ventures, LLC, 499 Mich at
518. To the extent that plaintiff does make arguments specifically challenging the Gillette
panel’s rationale, we are unpersuaded that Gillette’s reasoning was wrong.
Plaintiff, for example, argues that Gillette wrongly concluded that PA 282’s repeal of the
Compact served a legitimate purpose to protect state revenues. According to plaintiff, the
protection of state revenues is not a valid legitimate purpose because the retention of unlawfully
collected taxes is not legitimate and is “constitutionally incomplete and short-sighted.” Plaintiff
cites no authority in support of this contention and we deem this claim abandoned. Innovation
Ventures, LLC, 499 Mich at 518.5
Plaintiff also challenges Gillette’s conclusion that PA 282’s six-and–a-half-year period of
retroactivity is modest. Plaintiff explains that United States Supreme Court precedent indicates
that a retroactive period of six years is unlawful, noting that the periods of retroactivity
considered by the Court ranged from five months to two years. Plaintiff misses, however, that
4
I.e., our Supreme Court’s holding in IBM, 496 Mich at 659, that 2011 PA 40 created a window
wherein certain taxpayers could still use the three-factor apportionment option available under
Article IV of the Compact. Gillette, 312 Mich App at 406.
5
In any case, we note that plaintiff’s claim ignores that the Legislature’s purpose was multi-
faceted and not simply to protect revenues, but to also correct a misinterpretation of the law that
would have led to the loss of revenue. Gillette cites United States Supreme Court precedent in
support of its conclusion that legislative action is legitimate if it seeks to both correct a
misinterpretation of a statute and eliminate a revenue loss stemming from that misinterpretation.
See Gillette, 312 Mich App at 422, citing Carlton, 512 US at 32.
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the Supreme Court has never articulated a bright line rule in this regard—just because the
periods the Court considered reasonable were shorter than the period in the instant case does not
mean that a longer period cannot pass constitutional muster. Plaintiff also says that Gillette erred
by relying on Gen Motors Corp and GMAC LLC v Dep’t of Treasury, 286 Mich App 365; 781
NW2d 310 (2009), in which retroactive tax legislation periods of five and seven years were
upheld, because those cases did not involve settled expectations based on a binding interstate
compact. See Gen Motors Corp, 290 Mich App at 376-377; GMAC, 286 Mich App at 378. This
distinction is inapposite; contrary to plaintiff’s wish, the Compact is not a binding contract and it
gave plaintiff no settled expectations.
Finally, plaintiff claims that the Gillette holding guts the Due Process Clause leaving “no
due process protections for taxpayers from retroactive legislation.” Plaintiff warns that this
result will stem from the Court’s recognition that the taxpayers’ due process claim must fail
because taxpayers have no vested rights in a tax refund based on the continuance of tax laws.
This argument ignores that Gillette’s holding was not based solely on such a conclusion. Rather,
Gillette recognized, and applied, the test of due process for retroactive tax legislation: the
legislation must be enacted for a legitimate legislative purpose and be furthered by a rational
means. This is the same test applied in Carlton, 512 US at 33, which also recognized that
taxpayers have no vested right in the tax laws. Thus, plaintiff’s warning is unfounded and
Gillette is not, contrary to plaintiff’s assertion, directly at odds with the United States Supreme
Court’s decision in Carlton. Plaintiff has not demonstrated that Gillette’s due process analysis is
wrong.
D. COMMERCE CLAUSE
Plaintiff next claims that PA 282 violates the Commerce Clause of the United States
Constitution because it facially discriminates against interstate commerce. Gillette reached the
opposite conclusion, holding that PA 282 did not violate the Commerce Clause because it was
facially neutral and did not otherwise have a discriminatory purpose or effect. Gillette, 312 Mich
App at 431-432. It noted:
The United States Supreme Court . . . has established a four-
pronged test to determine whether a state tax violates the Commerce
Clause. Complete Auto Transit, Inc v Brady, 430 US 274, 279; 97 S Ct
1076; 51 L Ed 2d 326 (1977). A state tax will withstand scrutiny under a
Commerce Clause challenge and will be held to be constitutionally valid
under the four-pronged test articulated in Complete Auto provided that the
tax: (1) is applied to an activity having a substantial nexus with the taxing
state, (2) is fairly apportioned, (3) does not discriminate against interstate
commerce, and (4) is fairly related to the services provided by the state.
[Caterpillar, Inc v Dep’t of Treasury, 440 Mich 400, 415; 488 NW2d 182
(1992).]
Only the third prong is challenged in this case; plaintiffs contend that 2014
PA 282 discriminates against interstate commerce. “A tax violates the third prong
of the Complete Auto test if it is facially discriminatory, has a discriminatory
purpose, or has the effect of unduly burdening interstate commerce.” Caterpillar,
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440 Mich at 422, citing Amerada Hess Corp v NJ Dep’t of Treasury, 490 US 66,
75; 109 S Ct 1617; 104 L Ed 2d 58 (1989). [Gillette, 312 Mich App at 430-431.]
Under this test, Gillette found that PA 282 (1) is not facially discriminatory because it does not,
“on its face, create any classification based on a taxpayer’s state of origin or the location of
commerce[;]” (2) does not have a discriminatory purpose because “there is no evidence of a
legislative intent to give a benefit to local industry that is denied to out-of-state businesses[;]”
and (3) does not have a discriminatory effect because it “precludes both instate and out-of-state
taxpayers from electing the three-factor apportionment formula previously available under the
Compact.” Gillette, 312 Mich App at 431-433.
First, regarding Gillette’s conclusion that PA 282 is facially neutral, plaintiff does not
specifically explain why it thinks Gillette’s reasoning is wrong. Again, “[i]t is not sufficient for
a party simply to announce a position or assert an error and then leave it up to this Court to
discover and rationalize the basis for his claims, or unravel and elaborate for him his arguments,
and then search for authority either to sustain or reject his position.” Innovation Ventures, LLC,
499 Mich at 518 (quotation marks and citation). Plaintiff’s claim is abandoned.6 Id.
Second, regarding Gillette’s holding that PA 282 does not have a discriminatory purpose
or effect, the panel rejected the same arguments that plaintiff now raises on appeal and plaintiff
fails to develop cogent and compelling reasons why the Gillette decision was in error. Gillette,
312 Mich App at 432. For example, Gillette rejected the taxpayers’ assertions that the
statements of a legislator show a discriminatory purpose because such statements are not
evidence of legislative intent. Like the taxpayers in Gillette, plaintiff does not cite any law that
legislators’ media comments are relevant to establishing legislative intent. See id. Plaintiff also
attacks Gillette for allegedly failing to consider that PA 282 solely disadvantages out-of-state
taxpayers. Gillette, however, did not ignore this argument. Rather, the Court, relying on United
States Supreme Court precedent, recognized that any effect on out-of-state taxpayers was not
inherent in PA 282 itself, but a consequence of different formulas used by different states.
Gillette, 312 Mich App at 433-434. Plaintiff does not explain why this reasoning is wrong and
its claim in this regard is also abandoned. Innovation Ventures, LLC, 499 Mich at 518. Plaintiff
has failed to demonstrate that Gillette’s Commerce Clause analysis is erroneous.
6
Putting aside plaintiff’s failure to develop this argument, we note that plaintiff’s position that
defendant admitted that PA 282 is facially discriminatory in a motion in IBM does not support
that the law is facially discriminatory. The State’s admission that upholding the Compact “ ‘may
significantly impact the manner in which out of state businesses pay taxes to the State[,]’ ” is not
an admission of a facially discriminatory law. This is because this “impact” cannot be gleaned
from the face of the law and defendant was apparently referencing a consequence of the
Compact’s repeal.
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E. SEPARATION OF POWERS
Plaintiff also argues that PA 282 violates the Separation of Powers Clause of the
Michigan Constitution, Const 1963, art 4, § 1. The Separation of Powers Clause provides: “The
powers of government are divided into three branches: legislative, executive and judicial. No
person exercising powers of one branch shall exercise powers properly belonging to another
branch except as expressly provided in this constitution.” Const 1963, art IV, § 1. Under this
clause,
the legislative branch makes the laws, the executive branch executes them, and
the judicial branch interprets and applies them in cases properly before the courts.
Kyser v Kasson Twp, 486 Mich 514, 535; 786 NW2d 543 (2010). More recently,
our Supreme Court further explained that “[t]he true meaning [of the doctrine] is
that the whole power of one of these departments should not be exercised by the
same hands which possess the whole power of either of the other departments;
and that such exercise of the whole would subvert the principles of a free
Constitution. Makowski v Governor, 495 Mich 465, 482; 852 NW2d 61 (2014).
[Okrie v State, 306 Mich App 445, 454; 857 NW2d 254 (2014).]
Further, it is well-established that “ ‘the Legislature may not reverse a judicial decision or repeal
a final judgment, Wylie v Grand Rapids City Comm, 293 Mich 571, 582; 292 NW 668 (1940),’ ”
but it may “amend a law that it believes the judiciary has wrongly interpreted,” Gen Motors
Corp, 290 Mich App at 373 (citation omitted).
In Gillette, the Court recognized that the Separation of Powers Clause precluded the
Legislature from reversing a judicial decision or “repealing a final judgment,” but that the
Legislature could “cure the judicial misinterpretation of a statute.” Gillette, 312 Mich App at
426-427. Because PA 282 did not reverse a judicial decision or repeal a final judgment, the
Court held that PA 282 did not violate separation of powers principles. Id. at 430.
Once again, plaintiff does not specifically connect its separation of powers arguments to
the Gillette Court’s reasoning and it makes no attempt to explain why it thinks that Court’s
reasoning is wrong. It is not incumbent on this Court to develop plaintiff’s arguments on appeal
and we may deem this argument abandoned. Innovation Ventures, LLC, 499 Mich at 518.
Notwithstanding the deficiency of plaintiff’s briefing, we note that Gillette rejected the
very same arguments and authorities that plaintiff relies on and plaintiff does not provide
additional reasons why Gillette’s reliance on these authorities is wrong. Plaintiff, for example,
asserts that PA 282 violated the separation of powers doctrine by declaring the intent of a prior
legislature, relying on the fact that composition of the Legislature that enacted PA 282 in 2014 is
different than the 2007 Legislature, citing Bd of Educ Isle Twp v Presque Isle Co Bd of Educ,
364 Mich 605, 612; 111 NW2d 853 (1961). Gillette rejected this very same argument and
authority. Gillette, 312 Mich App at 428. Plaintiff also asserts that PA 282 violates the
separation of powers principle because it reversed IBM. Again, Gillette rejected this argument,
stating as follows:
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There are several reasons why the Legislature did not violate the Separation of
Powers Clause by retroactively repealing the Compact to January 1, 2008, thereby
obviating the IBM Court's legal conclusions. First, 2014 PA 282 did not reverse a
judicial decision or repeal a final judgment. In IBM, 496 Mich at 645, 658–659,
662; 852 N.W.2d 865 (opinion by VIVIANO, J.), the lead opinion held that 2007
PA 36 did not implicitly repeal the Compact's election provision. 2014 PA 282
did not overturn that judicial interpretation of the 2007 law. Instead, the
Legislature created a new law, not interpreted by the IBM Court, that explicitly
repealed the Compact provisions effective January 1, 2008, to further what the
Legislature understood to have been its original intent when it enacted 2007 PA
36. This did not impinge on the judiciary’s role of interpreting the law but instead
corrected a mistake that was made clear by the holding in IBM. That is, the
Legislature in 2014 PA 282 explicitly repealed the Compact provisions after the
holding in IBM revealed that the Compact election provision had not been
implicitly repealed by the enactment of 2007 PA 36. Although 2014 PA 282 may
have rendered moot the effect of the judicial interpretation in IBM, this did not
overturn that Court’s judgment and did not violate the Separation of Powers
Clause. [Id. at 428.]
Plaintiff’s conclusory assertion that PA 282 reversed a judicial decision (IBM) is thus a distortion
of the well-established rule that Gillette relied on because PA 282 did not actually reverse a
judicial decision. Gillette’s separation of powers analysis is not erroneous.
F. LEGISLATIVE PROCESS REQUIREMENTS
Plaintiff raises three constitutional challenges related to the legislative process that
resulted in PA 282. Originally introduced in February 2013, SB 156, which led to the repeal of
the Compact, did not refer to the Compact, but referenced the repeal or amendment of various
provisions of the MBTA pertaining to the calculation of taxpayers’ tax bases. The bill lingered
in both the Senate and House, being sent to various committees. Then, after the release of IBM
in July 2014, the House, on September 9, 2014, adopted substitute H-1, which added enacting
language that retroactively repealed the Compact. Specifically, the language “to repeal acts and
parts of acts” was added to SB 156’s enacting language, which was in reference to the
Compact’s repeal. The Senate concurred with H-1 on September 10th and SB 156 was approved
by the Governor on September 11, 2014, taking immediate effect as PA 282.
Plaintiff raises three constitutional challenges to this legislative process under Mich
Const 1963, art IV, §§ 24 and 26. The former, known as the Title-Object Clause, provides:
No law shall embrace more than one object, which shall be expressed in
its title. No bill shall be altered or amended on its passage through either house so
as to change its original purpose as determined by its total content and not alone
by its title. [Mich Const 1963, art IV, § 24.]
Three types of challenges may be raised under this clause, only two of which are relevant here: a
“title-body” challenge and a “change of purpose” challenge. Plaintiff also raises a challenge
under the Five-Day Rule Clause, which states in relevant part:
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No bill shall be passed or become a law at any regular session of the
legislature until it has been printed or reproduced and in the possession of each
house for at least five days. [Mich Const 1963, art IV, § 26.]
1. TITLE-BODY CHALLENGE
Plaintiff alleges that PA 282 violates the title-body rule because PA 282 makes no
reference to the Compact and the phrase “to repeal acts and parts of acts” is “insufficient as a
matter of law.” Regarding a title-body challenge, this Court has stated:
The title of an act must express the general purpose or object of the act. However,
the title of an act is not required to serve as an index to all of the provisions of the
act. Instead, the test is whether the title gives the Legislature and the public fair
notice of the challenged provision. The fair-notice requirement is violated only
where the subjects [of the title and body] are so diverse in nature that they have no
necessary connection . . . . [People v Bosca, 310 Mich App 1, 83; 871 NW2d 307
(2015) (quotation marks and citation omitted)]
The Gillette panel applied these rules and directly rejected the arguments plaintiff now
raises:
Again, the title of 2014 PA 282 expresses the general purpose or object of
amending the MBT Act and refers to the repeal of acts or parts of acts. Although
the title does not use the word “Compact,” the title need not be an index of all of
the act’s provisions. City of Livonia [v Dep’t of Social Servs], 423 Mich [466,]
501[; 378 NW2d 466 (1985)]. The repeal of the Compact is germane, auxiliary,
or incidental to the amendment of the MBT Act because the elimination of the
Compact’s election provision is pertinent to the proper method of apportionment
of the MBT tax base. The subjects are not so diverse in nature that they lack a
necessary connection, and neither the legislators nor the public were deprived of
notice of the challenged provision. See also Mooahesh [v Dep’t of Treasury], 195
Mich App [551,] at 569[; 492 NW2d 246 (1992)] (“Despite [1988 PA 516’s]
failure to state explicitly in the title that the Lottery Act exemption was being
repealed, we are able to declare that the subjects are not so diverse as to have ‘no
necessary connection.’ ”). [Gillette, 312 Mich App at 444 (emphasis added to
indicate analysis rejecting plaintiff’s arguments in the instant appeal).]
Plaintiff does not make any argument explaining why this analysis is wrong and merely repeats
the same arguments that Gillette already considered and rejected. Without any explanation as to
why Gillette is wrong in this regard, plaintiff has not demonstrated that it is entitled to a conflict
panel and has abandoned this claim. Innovation Ventures, LLC, 499 Mich at 518. In any case,
we agree with Gillette that the title of PA 282 gave the public sufficient notice that laws relating
to the MBTA would be affected by the new law. It is not necessary that the title of an act
specifically mention the Compact’s repeal. Mooahesh, 195 Mich App at 569.
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2. CHANGE OF PURPOSE CHALLENGE
Plaintiff’s change-of-purpose challenge asserts that the repeal of the Compact is only
tangentially related to SB 156, as that bill as originally drafted merely sought to amend the
MBTA. When addressing a change-of-purpose challenge, “[t]he test for determining if an
amendment or substitute changes a purpose of the bill is whether the subject matter of the
amendment or substitute is germane to the original purpose.” People v Kevorkian, 447 Mich
436, 461; 527 NW2d 714 (1994) (opinion by CAVANAGH, C.J., AND BRICKLEY AND GRIFFEN, JJ.).
Applying this test, the Gillette panel rejected plaintiff’s change of purpose challenge:
With respect to 2014 PA 282, both the original and amended bill
contained provisions related to the MBT tax base. The original purpose of SB
156 was to amend the MBT Act in various ways, including by enacting
amendments concerning the gross-receipts tax base under the MBT. The change
implemented by substitute H-1, as enrolled as 2014 PA 282, did not introduce an
entirely new and different subject matter. Instead, it amended or extended the
basic purpose of the original bill by retaining the original amendments and adding
other provisions, including language retroactively repealing the Compact
provisions and expressing legislative intent concerning the use of the single-factor
apportionment formula and the elimination of the Compact’s election provision.
This was germane to the original purpose of amending the MBT Act because, as
discussed, the elimination of the Compact’s election provision was pertinent to
the proper method of apportionment under the MBT Act. Therefore, the repeal of
the Compact was sufficiently interconnected with the MBT Act that it fell within
the basic purpose of the original bill. This was a far cry from the introduction of
an entirely new and different subject matter, as in Toth v Callaghan, 995 F Supp
2d 774, 778 (ED Mich, 2014), where a bill that began by allowing emergency
managers to reject, modify, or terminate collective bargaining agreements ended
up being passed as a bill that excluded graduate student research assistants from
the definition of “public employee.” [Gillette, 312 Mich App at 445-446
(emphasis added).]
Once again, plaintiff has failed to explain why it thinks Gillette’s reasoning was wrong
and merely repeats arguments that Gillette already rejected. Like the taxpayers in Gillette,
plaintiff has simply characterized SB 156 and H-1 as having two entirely different and unrelated
purposes and wishes that the Gillette panel had agreed. However, in our view, Gillette correctly
determined that no change-of-purpose violation occurred: repeal of the Compact is intimately
related to the original purpose of SB 156, as each sought to make changes in the way that a
taxpayer’s tax base is calculated. Plaintiff has not cited any authority that would compel us to
reach a different conclusion.
3. FIVE-DAY RULE CHALLENGE
Finally, plaintiff says that passage of SB 156 violated the five-day rule because the
amended bill did not remain in either house for the required five days. As noted, the five-day
rule requires that the bill remain in each house for five days before passage. With respect to the
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five-day challenge, the Court in Gillette measured this five-day period from the date that SB 156
was originally before the Legislature, not from the date that the bill was amended by substitute
H-1. The Court stated:
The legislative record establishes that SB 156 was before each house for at
least five days. And as discussed earlier, there was no change of the original
bill’s purpose. Accordingly, no violation of the Five-Day Rule occurred.
[Gillette, 312 Mich App at 447.]
Certainly, SB 156, as amended by substitute H-1, was not before each house five days
before enactment. Substitute H-1 was presented in the house and adopted the same day; the next
day, H-1 was approved by the Senate; and, the following day, the Governor signed SB 156 into
law, taking immediate effect as PA 282. That the substitute did not remain in each house for five
days, however, is immaterial because substitute H-1 was germane to the original purpose of SB
156, the latter of which was introduced in February 2013 and remained in each house well over
five days. The five-day rule is not violated if a substitute bill, which was not in each house for
five days, is for the same purpose and germane to the original bill that was in each house for the
requisite number of days. See United States Gypsum Co v State Dep’t of Revenue, 363 Mich
548, 553, 556; 110 NW2d 698 (1961). Plaintiff has failed to show that Gillette was wrongly
decided on this issue.
G. CONCLUSION
In sum, having reviewed plaintiff’s arguments in light of the analysis in Gillette, we are
of the opinion that Gillette correctly determined that the Compact is not a binding contract and
that PA 282 did not violate any of the constitutional provisions on which plaintiff relies.
Plaintiff makes no cogent arguments why this Court’s decision in Gillette was wrongly decided
to persuade us otherwise. Accordingly, we decline to issue a decision disagreeing with Gillette.
Plaintiff’s challenges related to the retroactive repeal of the Compact were rejected in Gillette
and we reject them here as well. The Court of Claims did not err by dismissing Counts I and II
of plaintiff’s complaint in Docket No. 332891.
Affirmed.
/s/ Michael J. Kelly
/s/ Peter D. O’Connell
/s/ Jane M. Beckering
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