STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
NICOLA BINNS, JAYNE CARVER, SUSAN UNPUBLISHED
MCDONALD, GOAT YARD, LLC, and END OF November 6, 2018
THE ROAD MINISTRIES, LLC,
Plaintiffs,
v No. 337609
Original Action
CITY OF DETROIT, CITY OF DETROIT (Headlee Amendment)
WATER AND SEWAGE DEPARTMENT,
DETROIT BOARD OF WATER
COMMISSIONERS, and GREAT LAKES
WATER AUTHORITY,
Defendants.
DETROIT ALLIANCE AGAINST THE RAIN
TAX, DETROIT IRON & METAL COMPANY,
AMERICAN IRON & METAL COMPANY,
MCNICHOLS SCRAP IRON & METAL
COMPANY, MONIER KHALIL LIVING
TRUST, and BAGLEY PROPERTIES, LLC,
Plaintiffs,
v No. 339176
Original Action
CITY OF DETROIT, DETROIT WATER AND (Headlee Amendment)
SEWAGE DEPARTMENT, and DETROIT
BOARD OF WATER COMMISSIONERS,
Defendants.
Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and MURPHY and BOONSTRA, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
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In Docket No. 337609, plaintiffs, Nicola Binns, Jayne Carver, Susan McDonald, Goat
Yard, LLC, and End of the Road Ministries, LLC (referred to collectively as the Binns
plaintiffs), filed this original action under Const 1963, art 9, §§ 25-34, popularly known as the
Headlee Amendment. 1 In Docket No. 339176, plaintiffs, Detroit Alliance Against the Rain Tax
(DAART), Detroit Iron & Metal Company, American Iron & Metal Company, McNichols Scrap
Iron & Metal Company, the Monier Khalil Living Trust, and Bagley Properties, LLC (referred to
collectively as the DAART plaintiffs), 2 likewise filed an original action under the Headlee
Amendment. This Court consolidated these original actions. Detroit Alliance Against the Rain
Tax v Detroit, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered October 24, 2017 (Docket No.
339176). In accordance with MCR 7.206(E)(3)(b), we now deny plaintiffs’ requests for relief.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In both cases, plaintiffs, 3 all of whom are property owners in the city of Detroit or, in the
case of DAART, an unincorporated voluntary association of property owners in the city of
Detroit, allege that a drainage charge assessed by the city of Detroit and its agencies, the Detroit
Water and Sewage Department (DWSD) and the Detroit Board of Water Commissioners (BWC)
1
The Headlee Amendment “grants this Court original jurisdiction to hear and decide Headlee
Amendment claims[.]” City of Riverview v Michigan, 292 Mich App 516, 520; 808 NW2d 532
(2011); see also Const 1963, art 9, § 32 (“Any taxpayer of the state shall have standing to bring
suit in the Michigan State Court of Appeals to enforce the provisions of Sections 25 through 31,
inclusive, of this Article . . . .”); MCL 600.308a(1) (“An action under section 32 of article 9 of
the state constitution of 1963 may be commenced in the court of appeals, or in the circuit court in
the county in which venue is proper, at the option of the party commencing the action.”).
2
The original plaintiffs other than DAART in Docket No. 339176 were Galilee Missionary
Baptist Church, Danto Furniture Company, Central Avenue Auto Parts, and Judith Sale, but
pursuant to a stipulation of the parties, those plaintiffs were dismissed, and the other plaintiffs
identified above were substituted into the case “as DAART Representative and Named Plaintiffs
in place of the dismissed parties.” Detroit Alliance Against the Rain Tax v Detroit, unpublished
order of the Court of Appeals, entered March 27, 2018 (Docket No. 339176). We also note that
on May 31, 2018, a stipulation was filed in the DAART case to add Belmont Shopping Center,
LLC, as an additional representative plaintiff. We deny this request as moot in light of our
conclusion in this opinion that plaintiffs are not entitled to relief in these cases. See B P 7 v
Bureau of State Lottery, 231 Mich App 356, 359; 586 NW2d 117 (1998) (“As a general rule, an
appellate court will not decide moot issues. A case is moot when it presents only abstract
questions of law that do not rest upon existing facts or rights. An issue is deemed moot when an
event occurs that renders it impossible for a reviewing court to grant relief.”) (citations omitted).
3
We will use the general term “plaintiffs” when referring collectively to both the Binns plaintiffs
and the DAART plaintiffs.
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(referred to collectively as the Detroit defendants), 4 constitutes a tax for which voter approval
has not been obtained as required by the Headlee Amendment. In each case, the Detroit
defendants seek dismissal or a judgment in their favor on multiple grounds, including: this Court
lacks subject-matter jurisdiction because plaintiffs’ actions are preempted by federal regulations;
plaintiffs have failed to state a claim because the drainage charge was preauthorized by the
Detroit Charter and is thus exempt from the strictures of the Headlee Amendment; and the
drainage charge constitutes a user fee, rather than a tax, and is thus not subject to the Headlee
Amendment.
The pertinent facts concerning the Detroit drainage charge are derived by the parties
largely from documents published by the Detroit defendants. As with many older cities, Detroit
has a combined sewer system, meaning that storm water runoff flows into the same pipes as
unsanitary wastewater, i.e., sewage. Every year, billions of gallons of storm water flow into
Detroit’s combined sewer system from impervious surfaces, i.e., hard surfaces that limit the
ability of storm water to soak into the ground. Impervious surfaces include roofs, driveways,
parking lots, and compacted gravel and soil. This storm water is contaminated with dirt and
debris. The combined sewage is treated at Detroit’s wastewater treatment plant (WTP) and
combined sewer overflow (CSO) facilities before being released back into the environment.
Federal and state regulations have required the DWSD to invest more than $1 billion in CSO
control facilities in order to prevent untreated CSOs from spilling into Michigan waterways. The
DWSD has instituted drainage charges that pay for capital, operations, and maintenance costs for
the WTP, CSO control facilities, and combined sewer system components. 5
As of January 2016, the DWSD no longer provides services to wholesale suburban
customers; that function is now performed by defendant, the Great Lakes Water Authority
(GLWA). The GLWA is a regional water, sewer, and storm water authority established through
a September 9, 2014 memorandum of understanding (MOU) executed between the city of
Detroit, Oakland County, Wayne County, Macomb County, and the state of Michigan, pursuant
to 1955 PA 233. United States v Detroit, unpublished order of the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Michigan, entered December 15, 2015 (Docket No. 77-71100), p 1.
Under the MOU, the GLWA operates, controls, and improves the regional water and sewage
assets owned by the city of Detroit – which were previously operated by the DWSD – under
lease agreements for an initial term of 40 years, and the city of Detroit continues to manage and
operate its own local water and sewer infrastructure. Id. at 1-2. In short, the city of Detroit and
its agencies continue to manage the supply of water, drainage, and sewage services to retail
customers of the city of Detroit. Id. at 4. Pursuant to a December 15, 2015 order entered in a
4
The city of Detroit is a municipal corporation that, through the DWSD, provides water, sewer,
and drainage services to its customers. The BWC is a seven-member board whose members are
appointed by the Detroit Mayor; the BWC oversees the DWSD.
5
There is no plan to separate Detroit’s sewer system. The DWSD explains: “Detroit’s combined
sewer system includes nearly 3,000 miles of sewer collection piping. The costs to effectively
separate the sewer system would be highly cost prohibitive. While selective sewer separation
may be an option in some parts of the City, widespread implementation is not anticipated.”
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decades-old federal lawsuit concerning efforts to ensure the city of Detroit’s compliance with
federal requirements pertaining to its combined sewer system, 6 the city of Detroit’s BWC must
establish retail rates for the city’s water, drainage, and sewer services, in order to satisfy revenue
requirements established by the GLWA for water, sewer, and drainage services in addition to the
expenses of operating the city of Detroit’s local water and sewer infrastructure. Id. The city of
Detroit is authorized by the federal district court’s order to continue or modify its customary
practices regarding the establishment of rates for water, sewage, and drainage charges. Id. The
federal district court’s order further provides, in part:
The [BWC] shall continue to exercise its existing authority under the City Charter
to assess drainage fees, charges, or assessments to the users of the City’s local
water and combined sewer and drainage infrastructure because these charges are
necessary and critical to ensure that the City is able to comply with (i) its
regulatory requirements under NPDES [National Pollutant Discharge Elimination
System 7] Permit No. MI0022802 to treat and dispose of the City’s combined
sewage overflows and (ii) its obligations under the Clean Water Act. The City
may set these drainage charges based, in part, on the impervious area of each
parcel of land assessed a drainage charge, or on some other legally acceptable
method for assessing the charge, in order to provide each user with a transparent
and equitable method for calculating the drainage charge associated with
managing, operating and improving the combined sewer and drainage
infrastructure respectively allocable to each user. [Id. at 5-6.]
DWSD customers have been paying some form of a drainage charge as part of their water
and sewer bills since 1975. Effective beginning in October 2016, the DWSD revised or updated
its method of calculating the drainage charge for property owners in Detroit. 8 On the basis of
flyover views and aerial photography conducted in 2015 to determine impervious areas, as well
as city assessor data, the DWSD identified 22,000 parcels that had not previously been charged
for drainage, including parcels that did not have a water account and thus were not in the DWSD
billing system. The DWSD determined that these parcels, except those owned by faith-based
institutions, would be charged $750 per impervious acre beginning in October 2016. 9 All
customers would be charged on the basis of impervious surface area by 2018. In particular, the
new impervious surface rate would apply to industrial properties beginning in January 2017,
commercial properties in April 2017, tax-exempt properties (other than faith-based) in June
2017, residential properties in October 2017, and faith-based properties in January 2018.
6
Some of the procedural history concerning this federal litigation, which commenced in 1977, is
recounted in Detroit v Michigan, 803 F2d 1411, 1412-1413 (CA 6, 1986).
7
The NPDES is “a federal permit program designed to regulate the discharge of polluting
effluents.” Int’l Paper Co v Ouellette, 479 US 481, 489; 107 S Ct 805; 93 L Ed 2d 883 (1987).
8
Detroit ordinances set forth the authority of the Detroit defendants to levy such charges. See
Detroit Ordinances, §§ 56-3-2 and 56-3-12.
9
This amount was later lowered in varying degrees as part of a phase-in plan discussed later.
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Transition credits would apply for two fiscal years. The DWSD adopted its phased-in approach
to the updated drainage charge in order to afford customers time to prepare for the new rate and
to avoid overwhelming the DWSD billing system. The DWSD has asserted that it possesses
various options if a customer refuses to pay the drainage charge, including termination of water
service for the property, the imposition of a lien on the property, a legal action to recover unpaid
fees, and the suspension or revocation of a license to do business in the city of Detroit.
No drainage charge will be imposed for parcels containing fewer than .02 impervious
acres because that is the margin of error from flyover views. Further, if a property owner
verifies that storm water runoff flows directly into the Detroit River or the Rouge River and that
the parcel is disconnected from the DWSD system, there is no charge. The DWSD provides
procedures whereby customers may dispute the measurement of the impervious acreage for a
parcel or may seek an adjustment in billing on the basis of a modification to the impervious
surface area or the direct discharge of surface waters to one of the above-mentioned rivers. The
DWSD provided the following explanation in a publication: “By simply reducing the impervious
cover on a property, customers reduce the amount of storm water leaving their property and thus
reduce their drainage charge. Examples of impervious cover reduction include removal of
asphalt or concrete parking spaces and replacing the impervious cover.” The DWSD also
permits drainage credits of up to 80% for customers who use green infrastructure systems or
practices that reduce the amount of storm water flowing from the property into the DWSD’s
combined sewer system. “Green infrastructure examples include disconnecting downspouts, rain
gardens, bioretention practices, installing permeable pavement, green roof designs, detention and
subsurface detention and other practices that manage storm water volume.”
The DWSD indicated that its drainage revenue requirement would exceed $151 million
for fiscal year 2017, including more than $125 million in operation and implementation costs as
well as drainage credits. The DWSD’s expense for debt service is $59.8 million; this expense is
comprised essentially of a GLWA-held mortgage payment for facilities that are in place to
address wet weather flows. The DWSD notes that “[t]his debt service expense relates to both
municipal bond issues and to state revolving fund loans.” Bad debt in the form of uncollectible
bills must be recovered from the DWSD’s other remaining customers. In compliance with
federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations to prevent excessive pollution into
waterways, the DWSD invested more than $1 billion in CSO control facilities. “The cost was
financed almost entirely through bonds which are being repaid by the drainage fee. Direct CSO
costs have two components: $25.7 million for annual CSO bond debt, and $6.2 million in annual
operating costs specific to the control facilities.” The DWSD expects the rate of the drainage
charge to decrease by 32% through fiscal year 2019.
The DWSD does not charge the city of Detroit itself a drainage fee for storm water
flowing from city streets into the combined sewer system. The DWSD explains: “City streets,
which are lower than parcels, are part of the conveyance infrastructure for facilitating the flow of
storm water from Detroit properties into the catch basins, then into the combined sewer system,
and then finally terminating at the [WTP].” However, “[c]ity owned parcels will not be
characterized as conveyance. This term only applies to city streets, i.e., areas common to all that
serve as storm water conveyance.”
-5-
Effective in April 2017, and applied retroactively to October 2016, the DWSD has
revised its drainage charge policy to provide transition credits for properties that were not
previously billed for drainage services or that were previously billed on the basis of meter size
and are now converted to the drainage rate based on impervious area. Under this revised policy,
full implementation of the uniform impervious area based drainage charge is to be phased in over
five years. Further, residential parcels received an automatic credit of 25% to reflect the flow
characteristics of such parcels. The DWSD also indicated that it would provide a property owner
with up to 50% of the cost, with a maximum payment of $50,000, for eligible green storm water
infrastructure measures installed and maintained by the property owner.
In Docket No. 337609, the Binns plaintiffs commenced this original action under the
Headlee Amendment by filing a complaint on March 27, 2017, and filed a first amended
complaint one day later. The Binns plaintiffs asserted that the Detroit drainage charge
constitutes a disguised tax for which voter approval has not been obtained as purportedly
required by the Headlee Amendment. The Binns plaintiffs requested “declaratory relief that the
‘drainage charge’ is a tax, injunctive relief to stop the unconstitutional collection of this tax, and
monetary relief in the form of return of tax payments, costs, and attorney fees.” The Binns
plaintiffs sought to pursue this action as representatives of a proposed class consisting of all
persons who have been charged the drainage fee and who own property in Detroit.
On May 2, 2017, the Detroit defendants filed an answer and affirmative defenses to the
Binns plaintiffs’ complaint. The Detroit defendants sought dismissal of the complaint, a finding
of no cause of action, or denial of the Binns plaintiffs’ requested relief. The Detroit defendants
asserted numerous affirmative defenses, including: this Court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction
because the Binns plaintiffs’ claims are preempted by federal law, regulations, or orders
mandating assessment of the drainage charge; the Binns plaintiffs have failed to state a claim
because the drainage charge was authorized by the Detroit Charter before the Headlee
Amendment was ratified such that voter approval is not required under the Headlee Amendment;
the Binns plaintiffs’ claims are barred by the Revenue Bond Act of 1933, MCL 141.101 et seq.;
and the drainage charge constitutes a valid user fee, rather than a tax that is subject to the
Headlee Amendment.
On May 3, 2017, the Binns plaintiffs filed a motion for a preliminary injunction to
preclude assessment or enforcement of the drainage charge until it is approved by voters. The
Detroit defendants filed an answer opposing the Binns plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary
injunction. On June 20, 2017, this Court entered an order denying the Binns plaintiffs’ motion
for a preliminary injunction. Binns v Detroit, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered
June 20, 2017 (Docket No. 337609).
On June 26, 2017, the Binns plaintiffs filed a motion for class certification. On June 29,
2017, the Detroit defendants filed a motion seeking permission to extend the due date for
responding to the Binns plaintiffs’ motion for class certification to 90 days after this Court rules
on the Detroit defendants’ request for peremptory dismissal of plaintiffs’ claim; the Detroit
defendants asserted that the Binns plaintiffs’ motion for class certification was premature
because the Detroit defendants’ request for peremptory dismissal of plaintiffs’ complaint on
multiple grounds was still pending and because discovery had not yet occurred in this case. The
Binns plaintiffs filed an answer to the Detroit defendants’ motion for extension of the due date
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for responding to the Binns plaintiffs’ motion for class certification; the Binns plaintiffs noted
that there was no properly filed motion to dismiss pending and that the Detroit defendants had
not requested discovery when the Binns plaintiffs filed the class certification motion.
On August 4, 2017, the Binns plaintiffs filed a request for entry of default against the
GLWA, which had been named as a defendant in the Binns plaintiffs’ action but had not yet filed
a pleading or otherwise asserted a defense. On August 10, 2017, an attorney filed a notice of
appearance on behalf of the GLWA. On the same date, the GLWA filed a motion to strike or set
aside the request for default and for leave to answer or otherwise respond to the Binns plaintiffs’
first amended complaint. The GLWA stated that it had not been served with the Binns plaintiffs’
original complaint and that no proof of service had been filed regarding the first amended
complaint, although the GLWA acknowledged that the first amended complaint had been
delivered to the offices of the GLWA on June 26, 2017, and that a courtesy copy of the first
amended complaint had been previously provided to the GLWA sometime in the spring of 2017.
The GLWA stated that the request for default was not notarized or supported by affidavit. The
GLWA has not received any notice that the Clerk of this Court has entered a default, and the
Binns plaintiffs have not moved for the entry of a default judgment. Further, the GLWA stated
that it possesses a meritorious defense. The GLWA does not set storm water rates for properties
located in Detroit, the properties owned by the Binns plaintiffs are located in Detroit, and the
purported class that the Binns plaintiffs seek to represent consists of persons who own property
in Detroit. The GLWA does not operate the combined sewer system in Detroit.
On August 23, 2017, this Court entered an order in the Binns plaintiffs’ case stating as
follows:
The Court DIRECTS the parties to file supplemental briefs within 28 days
of the date of this order addressing the following:
(1) Does the pre-existing authority exemption of the Headlee Amendment,
Const 1963, art 9, § 31 (no voter approval for taxes is needed if the taxes were
“authorized by law or charter” when the amendment was ratified in 1978), apply
in light of the fact that the City’s charter had been revised/replaced twice since
1974, with the City’s actual authority for levying the at-issue drainage charge
deriving from the latest 2012 charter? See Streat v Vermilya, 268 Mich 1, 5; 255
NW 604 (1934) (stating that an adopted new charter “will entirely supersede the
former charter”).
(2) Applying the factors articulated in Bolt v City of Lansing, 459 Mich
152; 587 NW2d 264 (1998), use documentary evidence to support your position
that the drainage charge is either a tax or a fee.
The motions that have been filed remain pending. [Binns v Detroit,
unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered August 23, 2017 (Docket No.
337609).]
The parties subsequently filed supplemental briefs in accordance with this Court’s order.
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Meanwhile, on July 11, 2017, the DAART plaintiffs commenced their original action
under the Headlee Amendment by filing a complaint. Like the Binns plaintiffs, the DAART
plaintiffs asserted that the drainage charge constituted a tax such that the imposition of the
drainage charge without the approval of the voters constituted a Headlee Amendment violation.
The DAART plaintiffs requested certification as a class action. The DAART plaintiffs asked for
a declaration that the drainage charge is a tax that is void because it has not been approved by
voters as required by the Headlee Amendment, a refund of all drainage charges collected since
October 1, 2016, the dissolution of any DWSD liens against properties for an owner’s failure to
pay the drainage charge, and an award of costs and attorney fees. 10
On August 29, 2017, the Detroit defendants filed an answer and affirmative defenses in
the DAART case. The Detroit defendants requested peremptory dismissal of the complaint or a
finding of no cause of action. The Detroit defendants asserted the same pertinent affirmative
defenses as summarized above in connection with the Binns case.
On September 28, 2017, the DAART plaintiffs filed a motion to consolidate the DAART
case with the Binns case. On October 5, 2017, the Detroit defendants filed a response indicating
that they did not oppose consolidation in general but suggesting that the DAART plaintiffs had
improperly delayed seeking consolidation until after the submission of supplemental briefs in the
Binns case in order to obtain an unfair advantage in briefing. On October 24, 2017, this Court
entered an order granting the motion to consolidate and directing the parties to file supplemental
briefs addressing the questions set forth in this Court’s August 23, 2017 order in the Binns case.
Detroit Alliance Against the Rain Tax v Detroit, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals,
entered October 24, 2017 (Docket No. 339176). The parties in the DAART case filed
supplemental briefs in accordance with this Court’s order.
Meanwhile, on October 9, 2017, the DAART plaintiffs filed a motion for class
certification. On October 16, 2017, the Detroit defendants filed a motion for an extension of
time to respond to the DAART plaintiffs’ class certification motion, for essentially the same
reasons they sought such an extension in the Binns case.
On January 5, 2018, a motion for leave to file an amici-curiae brief was filed by entities
that own commercial property in Detroit; those entities are Trappers Properties, LLC, Atheneum
Hotel Corporation, Helicon Development, LLC, Pegasus Greektown, LLC, PF Investments,
LLC, and Foreman Properties, LLC. On February 13, 2018, this Court granted the motion for
leave to file an amici-curiae brief. Detroit Alliance Against the Rain Tax v Detroit, unpublished
order of the Court of Appeals, entered February 13, 2018 (Docket No. 339176). The amici-
curiae brief was subsequently filed in this Court. The Detroit defendants and the DAART
plaintiffs filed briefs responding to the amici-curiae brief. 11
10
The DAART plaintiffs sued only the Detroit defendants; the GLWA was not named as a
defendant in the DAART plaintiffs’ action.
11
Amici curiae filed a motion for leave to participate in oral argument. That motion is denied as
moot in light of our disposition of these cases without oral argument pursuant to MCR
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II. WHETHER THE DRAINAGE CHARGE IS A USER FEE OR A TAX
Plaintiffs argue that the drainage charge constitutes a tax that is subject to the Headlee
Amendment, while the Detroit defendants contend that the drainage charge constitutes a valid
user fee that is not subject to the Headlee Amendment. We agree with the Detroit defendants.
Whether the drainage charge constitutes a tax or a user fee is a question of law that this
Court reviews de novo. Bolt, 459 Mich at 158. Plaintiffs have the burden of establishing the
unconstitutionality of the drainage charge. Jackson Co v City of Jackson, 302 Mich App 90, 98;
836 NW2d 903 (2013).
We are deciding these cases without oral argument pursuant to MCR 7.206(E)(3)(b).
Referral to a judicial circuit pursuant to MCR 7.206(E)(3)(d) for discovery or fact-finding is not
necessary in these cases. As explained earlier, this Court’s order directing supplemental briefing
instructed the parties to use documentary evidence to support their respective positions regarding
whether the drainage charge is a tax or a user fee. The parties thereafter filed supplemental
briefs, and plaintiffs in both cases submitted extensive documentary evidence. Plaintiffs in
neither case have suggested that there is a need for referral to a judicial circuit for discovery or
fact-finding proceedings. In fact, the DAART plaintiffs have specifically stated that the case can
be decided as a matter of law on the basis of the factual background provided by the pleadings,
briefs, and exhibits submitted to this Court, without referral to a judicial circuit for discovery.
We conclude that the record is sufficiently complete for this Court to rule as a matter of law.
The relevant provision of the Headlee Amendment, Const 1963, art 9, § 31, states as
follows:
Units of Local Government are hereby prohibited from levying any tax not
authorized by law or charter when this section is ratified or from increasing the
rate of an existing tax above that rate authorized by law or charter when this
section is ratified, without the approval of a majority of the qualified electors of
that unit of Local Government voting thereon. . . .
“An application of § 31 is triggered by the levying of a tax.” Jackson Co, 302 Mich App at 98,
citing Bolt, 459 Mich at 158-159. The levying of a new tax without voter approval violates § 31.
Jackson Co, 302 Mich App at 99, citing Bolt, 459 Mich at 158. However, a charge that
constitutes a user fee is not subject to the Headlee Amendment. Jackson Co, 302 Mich App at
99, citing Bolt, 459 Mich at 159.
“There is no bright-line test for distinguishing between a valid user fee and a tax that
violates the Headlee Amendment.” Bolt, 459 Mich at 160. In general, “a fee is exchanged for a
service rendered or a benefit conferred, and some reasonable relationship exists between the
amount of the fee and the value of the service or benefit. A tax, on the other hand, is designed to
7.206(E)(3)(b). See generally, B P 7 v Bureau of State Lottery, 231 Mich App 356, 359; 586
NW2d 117 (1998).
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raise revenue.” Id. at 161 (quotation marks and citations omitted). In Bolt, our Supreme Court
identified three key criteria to use in distinguishing between a user fee and a tax: (1) a user fee
serves a regulatory purpose rather than a revenue-raising purpose; (2) a user fee is proportionate
to the necessary costs of the service; and (3) a user fee is voluntary in that property owners are
able to refuse or limit their use of the service. Id. at 161-162. “These criteria are not to be
considered in isolation, but rather in their totality, such that a weakness in one area would not
necessarily mandate a finding that the charge is not a fee.” Wheeler v Shelby Charter Twp, 265
Mich App 657, 665; 697 NW2d 180 (2005) (brackets, quotation marks, and citations omitted).
In Bolt, 459 Mich at 154, our Supreme Court held that the city of Lansing’s storm water
service charge was a tax for which voter approval was required under the Headlee Amendment,
and because the city of Lansing did not obtain voter approval, the storm water service charge
was unconstitutional and thus void. The pertinent facts of Bolt are as follows. The city of
Lansing decided to separate the remaining portion of its combined sanitary and storm sewer
systems; approximately 75% of the property owners were already served by a separated storm
and sewer system. Id. at 154-155, 155 n 3. The cost of this project was $176 million over 30
years. Id. at 155. In order to fund the storm water share of this project, the city of Lansing
created a storm water enterprise fund and imposed the storm water service charge on each parcel
of real property, using a formula to estimate each parcel’s storm water runoff. Id. The storm
water enterprise fund replaced funding previously provided “by general fund revenues secured
through property and income taxes.” Id. at 155 n 4. Estimated storm water runoff was
calculated by equivalent hydraulic area (EHA), which was based on “the amount of pervious and
impervious areas within the parcel multiplied by the runoff factors applicable to each.” Id. at
155-156. However, a flat rate was charged for residential parcels of two acres or less. Id. at 156.
Our Supreme Court noted in Bolt that approximately 63% of the cost of the project was
for capital expenditures. Id. at 163. “This constitutes an investment in infrastructure as opposed
to a fee designed simply to defray the costs of a regulatory activity.” Id. Our Supreme Court
quoted with approval the analysis of the dissenting Court of Appeals judge on that point:
No effort has been made to allocate even that portion of the capital costs
that will have a useful life in excess of thirty years to the general fund. This is an
investment in infrastructure that will substantially outlast the current “mortgage”
that the storm water charge requires property owners to amortize. At the end of
thirty years, property owners will have fully paid for a tangible asset that will
serve the city for many years thereafter. Accordingly, the “fee” is not structured
to simply defray the costs of a “regulatory” activity, but rather to fund a public
improvement designed to provide a long-term benefit to the city and all its
citizens. The revenue to be derived from the charge is clearly in excess of the
direct and indirect costs of actually using the storm water system over the next
thirty years and, being thus disproportionate to the costs of the services provided
and the benefits rendered, constitutes a tax.
I do not believe that the capital investment component of a true fee may be
designed to amortize such an expense, and to enable the city to fully recoup its
investment, in a period significantly shorter than the actual useful service life of
the particular public improvement. This fundamental principle of basic
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accountancy guides public utility regulators, as well as tax assessors. It ought to
apply equally here.
This is not to say that a city can never implement a storm water or sewer
charge without running afoul of art 9, § 31. A proper fee must reflect the
bestowal of a corresponding benefit on the person paying the charge, which
benefit is not generally shared by other members of society. Where the charge for
either storm or sanitary sewers reflects the actual costs of use, metered with
relative precision in accordance with available technology, including some capital
investment component, sewerage may properly be viewed as a utility service for
which usage-based charges are permissible, and not as a disguised tax. [Id. at
163-165 (brackets and citations omitted).]
Our Supreme Court in Bolt further stated that the first two factors for determining
whether a charge constitutes a user fee were not satisfied because “the charges imposed do not
correspond to the benefits conferred.” Id. at 165. The Court noted that approximately 75% “of
the property owners in the city were already served by a separated storm and sanitary sewer
system.” Id. Many of those property owners had already “paid for such separation through
special assessments.” Id. Yet they were “charged the same amount for storm water service as
the [25%] of the property owners who will enjoy the full benefits of the new construction.” Id.
“The appeal process and available credits do not make the charge proportionate to the necessary
costs of the service because there is no credit for the [75%] of the property owners who are
already served by a separated sewer system.” Id. at 165 n 15. “[T]he charge applies to all
property owners, rather than only to those who actually benefit. A true ‘fee,’ however, is not
designed to confer benefits on the general public, but rather to benefit the particular person on
whom it is imposed.” Id. at 165. In short, “the lack of correspondence between the charges and
the benefit conferred demonstrates that the city has failed to differentiate any particularized
benefits to property owners from the general benefits conferred on the public.” Id. at 166. This
conclusion was buttressed by the fact that the acknowledged goal of the storm water service
charge was to address environmental concerns regarding water quality. Id.
Further supporting the conclusion in Bolt that the first two factors were not satisfied was
the absence of a significant element of regulation. Id. Only the amount of rainfall shed from a
parcel as surface runoff was regulated; there was no consideration of “the presence of pollutants
on each parcel that contaminate such runoff and contribute to the need for treatment before
discharge into navigable waters.” Id. at 166-167. Nor was there any effort “to distinguish
between those responsible for greater and lesser levels of runoff[,]” and street rights of way were
excluded from the charge. Id. at 167. “Moreover, there is no end-of-pipe treatment for the storm
water runoff. Rather, the storm water is discharged into the river untreated.” Id.
The third factor – voluntariness – was also unsatisfied in Bolt. Id. A tax is compulsory
by law, whereas user fees are compulsory only “for those who use the service, have the ability to
choose how much of the service to use, and whether to use it at all.” Id. (quotation marks and
citation omitted). The charge in Bolt was “effectively compulsory. The property owner has no
choice whether to use the service and is unable to control the extent to which the service is
used.” Id. at 167-168. Suggesting that a property owner may control the amount of the charge
by building less on the property is not “a legitimate method for controlling the amount of the fee
-11-
because it is tantamount to requiring property owners to relinquish their rights of ownership to
their property by declining to build on the property.” Id. at 168.
Finally, the Bolt Court noted additional factors that were not dispositive but that further
supported the conclusion that the storm water service charge was a tax. Id. The storm water
enterprise fund replaced a portion of a program that was previously funded by general fund
revenues from income and property taxes. Id. Also, a lien could be placed on property for
failing to pay the storm water service charge. Id. “While ordinarily the fact that a lien may be
imposed does not transform an otherwise proper fee into a tax, this fact buttresses the conclusion
that the charge is a tax in the present case, where the charges imposed are disproportionate to the
costs of operating the system and to the value of the benefit conferred, and the charge lacks an
element of volition.” Id. That the storm water charge was billed through the city assessor’s
office and the bill was sent with property tax statements was also significant. Id. at 168-169.
This Court applied the Bolt test to a similar storm water charge in Jackson Co. In
Jackson Co, 302 Mich App at 93, the city of Jackson “created a storm water utility and imposed
a storm water management charge on all property owners within the city to generate revenue to
pay for the services provided by the utility, which include, among others, street sweeping, catch
basin cleaning, and leaf pickup and mulching.” In so doing, the city of Jackson “shift[ed] the
method of funding certain preexisting government activities from tax revenues to a utility
charge[.]” Id. This Court held that “the city’s storm water management charge is a tax, the
imposition of which violates the Headlee Amendment because the city did not submit [the
ordinance creating the charge] to a vote of the qualified electors of the city.” Id.
The pertinent facts of Jackson Co are as follows. The city of Jackson maintained
separate storm water and waste water systems. Id. at 94. The city of Jackson historically funded
the operation of the storm water management system through general and street funds, including
ad valorem property taxes, gasoline taxes, and vehicle registration fees. Id. In 2011, however,
the city of Jackson adopted an ordinance funding the storm water management program through
a storm water management charge imposed on each parcel of real property in the city. Id. at 95.
The charge was computed through a formula developed to roughly estimate the amount of storm
water runoff from each parcel. Id. In particular, the EHA was used to estimate the amount of
storm water running off each parcel on the basis of the impervious and pervious surface areas of
each parcel. Id. at 95-96. For residential parcels of two acres or less, a flat rate was used in lieu
of individual measurements. Id. at 96. A property owner could receive credits for actions taken
to reduce storm water runoff. Id. at 97. An administrative appeal was available to challenge the
estimate of impervious area or the amount of credit awarded against the charge. Id.
Applying the Bolt factors, this Court in Jackson Co stated that the storm water charge
served dual purposes. Id. at 105. A regulatory purpose was furthered by financing the protection
of local waterways from solid pollutants carried in storm water discharged from properties, and a
general revenue-raising purpose was served by shifting the funding of preexisting government
activities from declining general and street fund revenues to a storm water charge. Id. “This
latter method of revenue generation raises revenue for general public purposes by augmenting
the city’s general and street funds in an amount equal to the revenue previously used to fund the
activities . . . now . . . assigned to the storm water utility.” Id. at 106. This Court concluded that
“the minimal regulatory purpose served by the ordinance and the related management charge is
-12-
convincingly outweighed by the revenue-raising purpose of the ordinance.” Id. The ordinance
“contain[ed] few provisions of regulation and no provisions that truly regulate the discharge of
storm and surface water runoff, with the exception of the provision that allows for credits against
the management charge for the use of city-approved storm water best management practices.”
Id. Like in Bolt, the ordinance in Jackson Co “fail[ed] to require either the city or the property
owner to identify, monitor, and treat contaminated storm and surface water runoff and allow[ed]
untreated storm water to be discharged into the Grand River.” Id. This constituted a regulatory
weakness akin to that of the city of Lansing ordinance deemed unconstitutional in Bolt.
Further, there was evidence in Jackson Co that “the desire to protect the city’s general
and street funds from the costs of operating and maintaining the existing storm water
management system constituted the most significant motivation for adopting the ordinance and
management fee.” Id. at 106-107. The city of Jackson admitted “that budgetary pressures,
including declining general fund revenue, necessitated the tapping of new sources of funding for
the maintenance of the storm water system.” Id. at 107. This Court thus concluded that there
was “an overriding revenue-generating purpose that outweighs the minimal regulatory purpose
of the charge and, therefore, that the charge is a tax, not a utility user fee.” Id.
In addition, “the lack of a correspondence between the charge imposed and any
particularized benefit conferred by the charge supports a conclusion that the charge is a tax and
not a utility user fee.” Id. at 108. This Court could not “identify any particularized benefit the
charge confers on the property owners that is not also conferred upon the general public.” Id.
The city of Jackson indicated that the storm water charge helped to protect public health and
safety, reduce the likelihood of flooding, reduce land erosion, and prevent sewer overflows. Id.
But this Court held that addressing such concerns “benefit[s] not only the property owners
subject to the management charge, but also everyone in the city in roughly equal measure, as
well as” persons operating motor vehicles in the city and persons who use the Grand River
downriver from the city. Id. at 109. “This lack of a correspondence between the management
charge and a particularized benefit conferred to the parcels supports our conclusion that the
management charge is a tax.” Id.
With respect to the proportionality of the storm water charge, this Court noted that
“residential parcels measuring two acres or less are charged a flat rate based on the average EHA
of all single family parcels, and not on the individual measurements of each parcel’s impervious
and pervious areas.” Id. at 110. Single-family residential parcels comprised 83% of the parcels
within the city. Id. By contrast, residential parcels in excess of two acres, as well as
commercial, industrial, and institutional parcels of all sizes, were charged on the basis of
individual measurements of each parcel’s impervious and pervious areas. Id.
This method of apportioning the management charges among all urban properties
emphasizes administrative convenience and ease of measurement and, thereby,
suggests an absence of a close proportional relationship between the amount of
runoff attributable to a particular parcel and the management charge, as does the
fact that the method of calculating the charge fails to consider property
characteristics relevant to runoff generation, such as a parcel’s location in
reference to storm gutters and drains and soil grade. This lack of proportionality
is further demonstrated by the fact that the charge generates sufficient revenue to
-13-
allow the city to maintain a working capital reserve of 25 to 30 percent of the
storm water utility’s total expenses. Although maintaining a capital reserve is a
common practice amongst rate-based public utilities that provides a degree of
fiscal stability to utilities, those reserves are funded by true user fees closely
calibrated to the actual use of the service or a price paid for a commodity. The
management charge at issue in these cases in not such a fee. For these reasons,
the actual use of the storm water sewer system by each parcel is not accounted for
with the requisite level of precision necessary to support a conclusion that the
charge is proportionate to the costs of the services provided. [Id. at 110-111
(citation omitted).]
This Court further concluded that the storm water charge was effectively compulsory. Id.
at 11. Although property owners could receive credits for actions taken to reduce runoff, there
was no guarantee that all property owners would receive a 100% credit. Id. Allowing a 100%
credit for all property owners would undermine the purpose of the storm water charge, which
was to generate funding for the water management system. Id. Also, to obtain credits, property
owners must pay for improvements to their respective properties. Id. at 111-112. “In other
words, property owners have no means by which to escape the financial demands of the
ordinance.” Id. at 112. Delinquency in payment of the charge may result in discontinuation of
water service, and past-due charges could be collected through the imposition of a lien and the
filing of a civil action, further demonstrating an absence of volition. Id. The lack of volition
supported the conclusion that the storm water charge was a tax. Id.
The application of the Bolt criteria to the facts of the present case leads to the conclusion
that the city of Detroit’s drainage charge is a user fee rather than a tax and that the charge is
therefore not subject to the Headlee Amendment. With respect to the first factor, the drainage
charge serves a regulatory purpose rather than a revenue-raising purpose. Again, “a fee is
exchanged for a service rendered or a benefit conferred, and some reasonable relationship exists
between the amount of the fee and the value of the service or benefit. A tax, on the other hand, is
designed to raise revenue.” Bolt, 459 Mich at 161 (quotation marks and citations omitted).
Here, a service is rendered in the form of removal and treatment of storm water runoff. The
present case differs from Bolt and Jackson Co in that, unlike the separated storm water and sewer
systems being created and maintained respectively in Bolt and Jackson Co, the city of Detroit has
a combined sewer system, meaning that storm water runoff flows into the same pipes as
unsanitary wastewater, i.e., sewage, and there is no plan to separate Detroit’s sewer system
because it would be cost prohibitive to do so. The combined sewage is treated at Detroit’s WTP
and CSO facilities before being released back into the environment. Federal and state
regulations have required the DWSD to invest more than $1 billion in CSO control facilities in
order to prevent untreated CSOs from spilling into Michigan waterways. As noted in Detroit v
Michigan, 803 F2d 1411, 1421 (CA 6, 1986), the city of Detroit has been legally required since
1977 to render full secondary treatment to storm water flows. The DWSD has instituted the
present drainage charge to pay for capital, operations, and maintenance costs for the WTP, CSO
control facilities, and combined sewer system components. Therefore, unlike in Bolt and
Jackson Co, in which storm water was allowed to be released back into the environment
untreated, Bolt, 459 Mich at 167; Jackson Co, 302 Mich App at 106, the DWSD provides full
treatment to the combined sewage comprised of storm water and unsanitary waste water, as
-14-
required by federal regulations and orders. This indicates the existence of a significant
regulatory component in the present cases that was absent in Bolt and Jackson Co.
This federally mandated treatment of combined sewage that includes storm water runoff
constitutes the provision of a service. This conclusion is supported by the persuasive analysis of
a federal appellate court addressing Detroit’s combined sewer system in the context of a claim
under the Revenue Bond Act of 1933. 12 In Detroit, 803 F2d at 1418, the federal appellate court
held that “the treatment of storm water runoff from [the Wayne County Road Commission’s
(WCRC)] roads within the City of Detroit constitutes a ‘service rendered’ within the meaning of
the Michigan Revenue Bond Act of 1933.” The court reasoned that a municipality has a right “to
charge those who use a municipality’s sewer system for the disposal or treatment of storm water
runoff.” Id. at 1419. “[A] municipality, acting pursuant to a proper delegation of authority, may
charge those who use or otherwise benefit from its sewer system, even though such use or
benefit is based upon the disposal or treatment of storm water running into the municipality’s
sewers.” Id. at 1420. The court determined that the “WCRC receives a benefit from the disposal
and treatment of the storm water running off WCRC’s roads and into the City of Detroit’s sewer
system, and as such, we believe that this is a ‘service rendered’ within the meaning of the
Revenue Bond Act of 1933.” Id.
Plainly, WCRC is benefitted by being relieved from the dangers and damages
which may be occasioned by flooding from storm waters and which might, in the
absence of drainage into the DWSD’s sewer system, result in liability, or at least
in damage to WCRC’s roads. . . . Obviously, no one is responsible for this flow.
The fact remains, however, that this water has to go somewhere, especially if
WCRC is to keep its roads in reasonable repair and, for at least some of this
water, WCRC has obtained drainage by tapping into the DWSD sewer system.
[Id. at 1420-1421.]
The federal appellate court further reasoned:
The storm water which constitutes the runoff from WCRC’s roads may
have come from God or nature in the first place, just as all water entering the
DWSD’s sewer system must have at one time or another. Nevertheless, the refuse
or foreign matter that water accumulates as it courses through WCRC’s roads
must now be subjected by law to primary and secondary treatment to the extent
such runoff enters Detroit’s sewage treatment system. And to that extent, at least,
WCRC is a user of the facility provided by DWSD. [Id. at 1421.]
Accordingly, the court held that “[t]he drainage and treatment of storm water from WCRC’s
roads into the City of Detroit’s sewer system constitutes a ‘service rendered’ within the meaning
of section 18 of the Revenue Bond Act of 1933.” Id. (citation omitted).
12
The opinions of lower federal courts are not binding but may be considered as persuasive.
Abela v Gen Motors Corp, 469 Mich 603, 607; 677 NW2d 325 (2004).
-15-
Likewise, in the present cases, a service is provided to property owners by virtue of the
drainage and treatment of storm water that enters Detroit’s combined sewer system from the
property owners’ parcels. The regulatory weakness identified in Bolt and Jackson Co concerning
the release of untreated storm water back into the environment is not present in the instant cases.
Further, there is an adequate correspondence in the present cases between the charges
imposed and the benefits conferred. A lack of correspondence was found to exist in Bolt because
approximately 75% of the property owners in the city of Lansing were already served by a
separate storm and sanitary sewer system, many of those property owners had already paid
special assessments to fund such separation, and yet those property owners were “charged the
same amount for storm water service as the [25%] of the property owners who will enjoy the full
benefits of the new construction.” Bolt, 459 Mich at 165. No such disparity exists here. The
drainage charge is not being imposed to provide a service that benefits only some property
owners. Rather, the charge is used to fund capital, operations, and maintenance costs for
facilities treating all of the storm water entering Detroit’s combined sewage system. And for the
reasons discussed below in connection with the proportionality factor, the city of Detroit’s
method of assessing the drainage charge assures a higher degree of precision between the service
provided and the benefits conferred than did the charges at issue in Bolt and Jackson Co. 13
Further distinguishing the present cases from Bolt and Jackson Co is the absence of any
evidence of a revenue-generating purpose that outweighs the regulatory purpose of the drainage
charge. “While a fee must serve a primary regulatory purpose, it can also raise money as long as
it is in support of the underlying regulatory purpose.” Graham v Kochville Twp, 236 Mich App
141, 151; 599 NW2d 793 (1999). In Bolt, 459 Mich at 168, our Supreme Court noted that the
storm water enterprise fund replaced a portion of a program that was previously funded by
general fund revenues from income and property taxes. Similarly, in Jackson Co, 302 Mich App
at 105, the city of Jackson shifted the funding of preexisting government activities from
declining general and street fund revenues to a storm water charge. This Court concluded that
the revenue-raising purpose convincingly outweighed the minimal regulatory purpose of the
charge. Id. at 106-107. The city of Jackson had admitted “that budgetary pressures, including
declining general fund revenue, necessitated the tapping of new sources of funding for the
maintenance of the storm water system.” Id. at 107. No such evidence or admission exists here.
There is no indication that the city of Detroit has adopted the drainage charge to fund activities
previously funded by general fund revenues, let alone that any such motivation outweighs the
regulatory purpose of the drainage charge. 14 Although the version of the drainage charge being
challenged in these cases was adopted effective in October 2016, a drainage charge had already
existed in Detroit in one form or another for many decades before that. 15 Marcus D. Hudson, the
13
This Court has noted that the first two Bolt factors are closely related and may be analyzed
together. Graham v Kochville Twp, 236 Mich App 141, 151; 599 NW2d 793 (1999).
14
And the regulatory purpose here is far from minimal because, unlike in Bolt and Jackson Co,
the storm water is required to be treated before being released back into the environment.
15
DWSD customers have been paying some form of a drainage charge as part of their water and
sewer bills since 1975, although it appears that a federally acceptable user charge system was not
-16-
chief financial officer of the DWSD from August 2015 to August 2017, has averred without
contradiction that “[t]he [c]ity has never used general fund expenses to pay for the costs of its
combined sewer system treatment and disposal services.” The DAART plaintiffs present
argument essentially speculating that the drainage charge is being used to replace revenue
purportedly lost as a result of the city of Detroit’s bankruptcy and the formation of the GLWA,
but the DAART plaintiffs have presented no evidence to support such a hypothesis.
Accordingly, the lack of evidence of a significant revenue-generating purpose that outweighs the
regulatory purpose leads to the conclusion that the drainage charge at issue primarily serves a
regulatory purpose.
Next, the fact that the drainage charge is used in part to service debt incurred to pay for
federally required capital investments does not by itself require the conclusion that the drainage
charge constitutes a tax. See Bolt, 459 Mich at 164-165 (“Where the charge for either storm or
sanitary sewers reflects the actual costs of use, metered with relative precision in accordance
with available technology, including some capital investment component, sewerage may properly
be viewed as a utility service for which usage-based charges are permissible, and not as a
disguised tax.”) (emphasis added; citation omitted); Jackson Co, 302 Mich App at 111 (noting
that “maintaining a capital reserve is a common practice among rate-based utilities that provides
a degree of fiscal stability to utilities[]” but that such capital reserves must be “closely calibrated
to the actual use of the service or a price paid for a commodity[]”). “[W]hile a utility fee must be
reasonably proportionate to the direct and indirect costs of providing the service for which the
fee is charged, mathematic precision is not required.” Trahey v City of Inskter, 311 Mich App
582, 597; 876 NW2d 582 (2015), citing Jackson Co, 302 Mich App at 109. It is also beyond
question that a utility’s costs may properly include a debt component. In particular, this Court
has recognized that timely payment of a water and sewer department’s debt is necessary for that
department’s continued operation and thus constitutes part of the actual cost of providing service.
Trahey, 311 Mich App at 597. Further, a municipal utility’s rates are presumed to be reasonable,
id. at 594, citing Novi v Detroit, 433 Mich 414, 428; 446 NW2d 118 (1989), and the burden is on
the plaintiff to present evidence overcoming the presumption of reasonableness, Trahey, 311
Mich App at 594, citing Novi, 433 Mich at 432-433, and Jackson Co, 302 Mich App at 109; see
also Wheeler, 265 Mich App at 665-666 (“This Court presumes the amount of the fee to be
reasonable, unless the contrary appears on the face of the law itself or is established by proper
evidence[.]”). “Courts of law are ill-equipped to deal with the complex, technical processes
required to evaluate the various cost factors and various methods of weighing those factors
required in rate-making.” Novi, 433 Mich at 430.
Plaintiffs have presented no basis to conclude that the amount of the drainage charge in
the instant cases is unreasonable merely because it is used in part to service debt incurred to
finance capital improvements. It is true that in Bolt, our Supreme Court, in finding that the
charge at issue was a tax, noted in relevant part that the charge was being used to fund “an
investment in infrastructure that will substantially outlast the current ‘mortgage’ that the storm
in place until 1980 pursuant to a consent judgment entered as part of federal litigation regarding
the Detroit sewage system. See Detroit, 803 F2d at 1412-1413.
-17-
water charge requires property owners to amortize.” Bolt, 459 Mich at 164 (citation omitted). In
Bolt, 459 Mich at 155, 165, however, the city of Lansing was using the storm water service
charge to fund the costs over 30 years of a major project that would separate the remaining
portion of the city’s combined sewer system and that would benefit only 25% of the property
owners. Here, the city of Detroit uses the drainage charge in part to service debt incurred to
finance federally mandated capital investments in the combined sewage system for the benefit of
all property owners. 16 The city of Detroit’s drainage charge is not used to fund future expenses
for large-scale capital improvements; it is instead used to amortize present debt costs incurred to
pay for capital improvements in conformance with accepted accounting principles. 17 This
payment method is consistent with the “fundamental principle of basic accountancy” identified
in Bolt, 459 Mich at 164, that “ratepayers are charged for the amortization expense when it
occurs and, therefore, rates coincide with the expense and are not retroactive[,]” id., quoting
Ass’n of Businesses Advocating Tariff Equity v Pub Serv Comm, 208 Mich App 248, 261; 527
NW2d 533 (1994). It thus appears that the capital expenses here were amortized in accordance
with basic accounting principles and that the drainage charge is not a means of paying future
expenses required to fund large-scale infrastructure improvements.
Turning to the second Bolt factor, the drainage charge is reasonably proportionate to the
necessary costs of service. The charge is calculated on the basis of aerial photography as well as
city assessor data to determine the amount of impervious area on each parcel. 18 No drainage
16
The DWSD indicated that its drainage revenue requirement would exceed $151 million for
fiscal year 2017, including more than $125 million in operation and implementation costs as well
as drainage credits. The DWSD’s expense for debt service is $59.8 million; this expense is
comprised essentially of a GLWA-held mortgage payment for facilities that are in place to
address wet weather flows. The DWSD notes that “[t]his debt service expense relates to both
municipal bond issues and to state revolving fund loans.” In compliance with EPA regulations to
prevent excessive pollution into waterways, the DWSD invested more than $1 billion in CSO
control facilities. The DWSD explains: “The cost was financed almost entirely through bonds
which are being repaid by the drainage fee. Direct CSO costs have two components: $25.7
million for annual CSO bond debt, and $6.2 million in annual operating costs specific to the
control facilities.” The DWSD expects the rate of the drainage charge to decrease by 32%
through fiscal year 2019.
17
In particular, Hudson’s affidavit avers, in relevant part:
The City’s drainage fee does not pay for large-scale capital improvements
in the future. Rather, the fee covers costs of debt incurred to fund these capital
improvements – costs that are properly amortized in accordance with
governmental accounting principles. The fee only contemplates costs for
necessary repairs to maintain infrastructure (which are included among GLWA’s
allocated costs).
18
The DWSD has indicated that it plans to update its 2015 aerial data with flyover imagery
obtained in 2018.
-18-
charge will be imposed for parcels containing fewer than .02 impervious acres because that is the
margin of error from flyover views. Further, if a property owner verifies that storm water runoff
flows directly into the Detroit River or the Rouge River and that the parcel is disconnected from
the DWSD system, there is no charge. The DWSD provides procedures whereby customers may
dispute the measurement of the impervious acreage for a parcel or may seek an adjustment in
billing on the basis of a modification to the impervious surface area or the direct discharge of
surface waters to one of the above-mentioned rivers. The DWSD also permits drainage credits
of up to 80% for customers who use green infrastructure systems or practices that reduce the
amount of storm water flowing from the property into the DWSD’s combined sewer system.
The Detroit defendants have provided studies and manuals supporting the conclusion that a
parcel’s impervious area may be used as a way to measure or estimate the volume of storm water
runoff from a parcel of property. 19 This supports the conclusion that the amount of the charge is
reasonably related to the costs of regulation. This Court is not required to determine whether
that relationship is mathematically precise. See Jackson Co, 302 Mich App at 109, citing
Graham, 236 Mich App at 154-155. The fact that parcels discharging storm water directly to a
river or containing fewer than .02 acres of impervious surface are exempt reflects that the city
has undertaken reasonable efforts to ensure that only parcels which discharge water into the
combined sewer system are subject to the charge. Moreover, the individual measurements that
are taken of each parcel further distinguishes the instant cases from Bolt and Jackson Co, in
which flat rates were used for residential parcels of two acres or less. See Bolt, 459 Mich at 156;
Jackson Co, 302 Mich App at 96. Also, Hudson’s affidavit states that for the fiscal year ending
on June 30, 2016, the cash on hand was 5.4% of total receipts, which constituted approximately
115 days of operating expenses, less than the industry standard of 250 days. 20 This indicates that
the city was not collecting more than it needed to operate the system.
The DAART plaintiffs and amici curiae suggest that the drainage charge is
disproportionate because of the gradual phase-in of the new charge for various customers over
five years. The DAART plaintiffs and amici curiae fail to establish that the use of a phase-in
period, which is by definition temporary, is pertinent to determining the overall essence or
character of a charge as a user fee or a tax. In an affidavit, Palencia Mobley, PE, the DWSD’s
deputy director and chief engineer, explained the rationale for the phase-in period as follows:
5. DWSD ultimately decided to phase-in the uniform drainage rate as a
way to mitigate the rate shock that was being experienced by all customers
transitioning to the impervious acreage rate. Rate shock occurs when a customer
experiences a rate increase that is much higher than the customer’s previous rate.
19
In addition, federal regulations permit the consideration of a user’s land area as a means to
distribute costs in the context of a user charge system. See 40 CFR 35.2140(e)(2)(ii).
20
Hudson explained that cash on hand is critical to address unforeseen events such as
“emergencies, unexpected drops in demand, seasonal expenditures (e.g. building cash in the
winter to pay for large summer costs), and settlement of potential legal claims like flood claims.”
It also is essential “to improving the City’s borrowing rate, since all of the ratings agencies
consider cash-on-hand as a bellwether for organizational health.”
-19-
Rate shock can lead to customers not paying their bills (which causes an increase
in future bad debt expense).
6. For example, before DWSD decided to phase-in the drainage rate for
new-to-world customers, 59.4% of its billings to these customers for the full
amount of the drainage rate remained outstanding. After the implementation of
the phase-in, the total percentage of outstanding billings decreased to 9.2%.
Indeed, it is well understood in the context of utility ratemaking that a phase-in period is a
permissible administrative mechanism to ensure a gradual and orderly transition to a uniform
rate in order to avoid rate shock. See, e.g., Citizens Action Coalition of Indiana, Inc v Northern
Indiana Pub Serv Co, 76 NE3d 144, 153 (Ind App, 2017) (referring to the use of “gradualism” to
“moderate any rate shock”) (quotation marks and citation omitted); 21 Watergate East, Inc v Pub
Serv Comm of Dist of Columbia, 665 A2d 943, 949 (DC, 1995) (describing a “policy of
gradualism in the setting of utility rates, which dictates that utility customers generally should
not be subjected to dramatic fluctuations in their rate payments[]”). Great deference is owed to
the exercise of legislatively authorized ratemaking authority by municipal utility entities such as
the DWSD. See Novi, 433 Mich at 425-426, 428, 430. The DAART plaintiffs and amici curiae
have failed to establish that the phase-in period adopted here falls outside the DWSD’s
ratemaking authority or affects the overall character of the drainage charge.
Further, the drainage charge is not rendered disproportionate by the DWSD’s failure to
charge the city of Detroit itself a drainage fee for storm water flowing from city streets into the
combined sewer system. Plaintiffs have presented no evidence to dispute the DWSD’s
explanation that “[c]ity streets, which are lower than parcels, are part of the conveyance
infrastructure for facilitating the flow of storm water from Detroit properties into the catch
basins, then into the combined sewer system, and then finally terminating at the [WTP].” See
Detroit, 803 F2d at 1416 (the city of Detroit’s failure to charge itself a drainage fee was not
relevant to the city’s claim against the WCRC for treatment of storm water running off the
WCRC’s roads within the city). Further, it is notable that city-owned parcels, as opposed to city
streets, are not characterized by the DWSD as part of the conveyance infrastructure. Overall, the
drainage charge is reasonably proportionate to the necessary costs of service.
Turning to the third factor, the drainage charge in the instant cases is effectively
compulsory rather than voluntary. Property owners who have .02 or more impervious acres and
whose storm water does not discharge directly into a river have essentially no control over
whether to use the drainage service and pay the drainage charge. Although a green infrastructure
credit system is available, it permits a credit only of up to 80% of the drainage charge. See
Jackson Co, 302 Mich App at 111 (noting that the city of Jackson’s credit system did not
guarantee property owners would receive a 100% credit and finding the city’s charge effectively
compulsory). Moreover, property owners must either pay the drainage charge or pay at least
21
Although not binding on this Court, the decisions of the courts of other states may be
considered persuasive. See K & K Constr, Inc v Dep’t of Environmental Quality, 267 Mich App
523, 559 n 38; 705 NW2d 365 (2005).
-20-
some of the costs for making the green infrastructure improvements required to obtain a credit,
thus making it impossible for property owners to escape the financial demands of the drainage
charge. See id. at 111-112 (noting that property owners could not escape the financial demands
of the city of Jackson ordinance because the property owners must either pay the charges
assessed or pay for improvements to their respective properties). Although property owners are
free to reduce the impervious areas on their properties, this is not “a legitimate method for
controlling the amount of the fee because it is tantamount to requiring property owners to
relinquish their rights of ownership to their property by declining to build on the property.” Bolt,
459 Mich at 168. It is also notable that if a customer refuses to pay the drainage charge, the
DWSD may terminate water service for the property, impose a lien on the property, commence a
legal action to recover unpaid fees, and suspend or revoke a license to do business in the city of
Detroit, which further indicates the effectively compulsory nature of the drainage charge. See
Jackson Co, 302 Mich App at 112 (stating that the compulsory nature of the charge was
demonstrated in part by the fact that delinquent payments could result in the discontinuation of
water service, the imposition of a lien, and the filing of a civil action to collect past-due charges).
Overall, we determine that the application of the Bolt factors leads to the conclusion that
the drainage charge in the present cases is a permissible user fee rather than a tax. The Bolt
“criteria are not to be considered in isolation, but rather in their totality, such that a weakness in
one area would not necessarily mandate a finding that the charge is not a fee.” Wheeler, 265
Mich App at 665 (quotation marks and citation omitted). As discussed, the first two Bolt factors
indicate that the drainage charge is a user fee because it serves a regulatory purpose and is
proportionate to the necessary costs of the service. See Bolt, 459 Mich at 161-162. Although
our analysis under the third Bolt factor indicates that the drainage charge is effectively
compulsory rather than voluntary, “the lack of volition does not render a charge a tax,
particularly where the other criteria indicate the challenged charge is a user fee and not a tax.”
Wheeler, 265 Mich App at 666. Because the application of the first two Bolt criteria clearly
demonstrates that the drainage charge is a proper user fee rather than a tax, the effectively
compulsory nature of the drainage charge does not render the drainage charge a tax for the
purpose of the Headlee Amendment. See id. at 667. Therefore, the drainage charge is a
permissible user fee that is not subject to the Headlee Amendment. 22
22
The DAART plaintiffs’ discussion in their supplemental brief criticizing a settlement
agreement reached in another Headlee Amendment lawsuit challenging the city of Detroit’s
drainage charge, Mich Warehousing Group, LLC v Detroit, Wayne Circuit Court Case No. 15-
010165-CZ, has no relevance to the determination whether the drainage charge is a user fee or a
tax. Moreover, the present cases are original actions and not appeals from any order issued in
Mich Warehousing. The DAART plaintiffs may not use their original action here to collaterally
attack any order entered in a separate case. See People v Howard, 212 Mich App 366, 369; 538
NW2d 44 (1995) (“[A] collateral attack occurs whenever a challenge is made to a judgment in
any manner other than through a direct appeal.”); SS Aircraft Co v Piper Aircraft Corp, 159
Mich App 389, 393; 406 NW2d 304 (1987) (“The decision of a court having jurisdiction is final
when not appealed and cannot be collaterally attacked.”).
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Given our resolution of the above issue, we need not address the other issues raised and
discussed in the parties’ original and supplemental briefs.
For the foregoing reasons, we deny plaintiffs’ requests for relief. MCR 7.206(E)(3)(b). 23
/s/ Michael J. Riordan
/s/ William B. Murphy
/s/ Mark T. Boonstra
23
In light of our decision to deny plaintiffs’ requests for relief, plaintiffs’ respective motions for
class certification are denied because plaintiffs lack a cause of action. See Zine v Chrysler Corp,
236 Mich App 261, 287; 600 NW2d 384 (1999) (holding that “[a] plaintiff who cannot maintain
the cause of action as an individual is not qualified to represent the proposed class[]” and that
because the plaintiff in Zine lacked a cause of action, he could not serve as a representative of the
proposed class, making it proper to deny his motion for class certification on that basis alone),
citing McGill v Auto Ass’n of Mich, 207 Mich App 402, 408; 526 NW2d 12 (1994) (finding no
error in the refusal to certify the plaintiffs’ proposed class and explaining that “[b]ecause
plaintiffs cannot maintain their individual causes of action, they are unqualified to represent the
purported class[]”). The Detroit defendants’ motions seeking an extension of the due dates for
responding to plaintiffs’ respective motions for class certification are denied as moot. See
generally, B P 7 v Bureau of State Lottery, 231 Mich App 356, 359; 586 NW2d 117 (1998).
Further, the Binns plaintiffs’ request for entry of default against the GLWA is denied
because the request is not properly supported by an affidavit or otherwise. The “default request,
affidavit, and entry” form filed by the Binns plaintiffs contained the signature of the Binns
plaintiffs’ attorney in the “request and affidavit” section of the form, but the document was not
notarized, the Binns plaintiffs offered no other support for their request, and no default has been
entered by the Clerk of this Court in the “default entry” section of the form. See MCR
2.603(A)(1) (“If a party against whom a judgment for affirmative relief is sought has failed to
plead or otherwise defend as provided by these rules, and that fact is made to appear by affidavit
or otherwise, the clerk must enter the default of that party.”) (emphasis added); Sherry v East
Suburban Football League, 292 Mich App 23, 31; 807 NW2d 859 (2011) (“[A]n affidavit
lacking notarization is invalid[.]”), citing Detroit Leasing Co v Detroit, 269 Mich App 233, 236;
713 NW2d 269 (2005) (“[A] document that is not notarized is not a ‘valid affidavit.’ ”). Finally,
the GLWA’s motion to strike or set aside the Binns plaintiffs’ request for default and for leave to
answer or otherwise respond is denied as moot. See generally, B P 7, 231 Mich App at 359.
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