If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
PETERSEN FINANCIAL, LLC, UNPUBLISHED
April 22, 2021
Plaintiff-Appellant,
V No. 350208
Kent Circuit Court
CITY OF KENTWOOD and KENT COUNTY LC No. 16-011820-CH
TREASURER,
Defendants-Appellees.
Before: MURRAY, C.J., and MARKEY and LETICA, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
This case involves the issue whether Petersen Financial, LLC (Petersen), as the purchaser
of property following a tax foreclosure, became liable for the previous owner’s obligations
connected to public improvements benefiting the property or whether those obligations were
extinguished by the judgment of foreclosure. Petersen filed the current action seeking a
declaratory judgment that any obligations had been extinguished by the foreclosure judgment. In
2017, the trial court granted summary disposition to defendants City of Kentwood (the City) and
Kent County Treasurer (the Treasurer), primarily on the basis that Petersen’s claims fell within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the Michigan Tax Tribunal. Petersen appealed, and this Court reversed
the trial court’s jurisdictional ruling and remanded for further proceedings. See Petersen Fin LLC
v City of Kentwood, 326 Mich App 433; 928 NW2d 245 (2018). On remand, the parties filed
cross-motions for summary disposition, and the trial court again granted summary disposition in
favor of defendants, this time under MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (I)(2). Briefly stated, the trial court
concluded that the obligation still at issue on remand involved “future installments” of a “special
assessment,” which survived foreclosure under MCL 211.78k(5)(c) of the General Property Tax
Act (GPTA), MCL 211.1 et seq. Petersen appeals by right.
On appeal, we hold that although the City levied a “special assessment” through adoption
of a resolution, efforts to extend the term for payment of this assessment were invalid;
consequently, the special assessment was extinguished by the foreclosure because there were no
“future installments” owing at the time of foreclosure. We also conclude that postforeclosure
efforts to revive the extinguished assessment either by contract or resolution were void.
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Accordingly, we reverse the grant of summary disposition to defendants and remand the case for
entry of judgment in Petersen’s favor, thereby removing the liens on the property.
I. FACTS
In our previous decision, we summarized the basic facts of this case as follows:
This case concerns real property located within the city. Starting in 2004,
the city and the property owner, along with others, entered into various special
assessment agreements relative to several infrastructure improvements that were to
benefit the property for purposes of a planned unit development. These agreements,
which were recorded and involved the property owner making installment
payments to the city, indicated that the contractual obligations contained therein
constituted covenants that ran with the land and bound all successors in title. The
city commission adopted multiple resolutions associated with the agreements and
prepared and confirmed special assessment rolls for the improvements. Eventually,
the property owner failed to pay the special assessments, a tax foreclosure action
was commenced, a judgment of foreclosure was entered, the property owner failed
to redeem the property or appeal the judgment, and title vested absolutely in the
county treasurer as the foreclosing governmental unit. Subsequently, at a tax
foreclosure sale, the county treasurer conveyed the property to [Petersen] pursuant
to a quitclaim deed. [Petersen Fin, 326 Mich App at 437.]
Procedurally, in 2016 Petersen filed the current action seeking declaratory judgment to the
effect that certain assessments had been extinguished by the foreclosure judgment and that
Petersen owned the property free and clear of any obligations. Relevant to the current appeal, in
Count II of the complaint, Petersen specifically challenged the continued existence and validity of
a voluntary special-assessment/development agreement (VSADA) and related resolutions. In
Count IV of the complaint, Petersen challenged the validity of an amendment to the VSADA (the
amended VSADA) and related resolutions.1 Monetarily, the outstanding obligation on the special
assessment challenged by Petersen totaled $403,620. Later, Petersen also added Count V, a claim
for a refund in the amount of $23,421.13, which Petersen asserted it had paid toward the
assessment.
Following an appeal to this Court and remand for further proceedings regarding Counts II
and IV, the parties filed cross-motions for summary disposition; the trial court denied Petersen’s
motion for summary disposition while granting summary disposition to defendants under MCR
2.116(C)(8) and (I)(2). The trial court concluded that the City levied a valid special assessment
and that future installments remained owing as a result of an extension of the payment terms.
Accordingly, the trial court ruled that the assessment obligation survived foreclosure under
MCL 211.78k(5)(c). Additionally, the trial court rejected Petersen’s arguments that the amended
VSADA, signed after the foreclosure judgment was entered but before the foreclosure sale, was
1
In our previous decision, we concluded that Petersen was entitled to judgment on Counts I and
III of the complaint, which concerned two other assessments. See Petersen Fin, 326 Mich App
at 447.
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void as against public policy and for lack of consideration. In short, the trial court determined that
the special assessment remained a valid encumbrance on the property. Petersen now appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
On appeal, Petersen argues that the trial court erred by denying its motion for summary
disposition and granting summary disposition in favor of defendants. According to Petersen, the
obligation in this case did not survive foreclosure under MCL 211.78k(5)(c) because there was no
“special assessment,” merely a contractual agreement. And even if there were a special
assessment, Petersen asserts that there were no “future installments” because efforts to extend the
final deadline for payment of the special assessment were invalid, and the special assessment was,
therefore, past due at the time of the foreclosure judgment. On the basis of its assertion that the
obligation was extinguished, Petersen also argues that postforeclosure efforts—while the property
was owned by the Treasurer—to contractually revive the assessment were void as against public
policy and for lack of consideration. Petersen asks that we remand for entry of judgment in its
favor, removing any liens from the property and ordering a monetary refund to Petersen.
In contrast, defendants contend that the trial court’s decision should be affirmed.
According to defendants, the City levied a valid special assessment that survived foreclosure under
MCL 211.78k(5)(c). Alternatively, defendants make the unpreserved argument that the obligation
survived foreclosure as a “private deed restriction” under MCL 211.78k(5)(e). In either case,
defendants assert that the obligation survived foreclosure and that a postforeclosure contract
between the City and the Treasurer, as well as an additional resolution adopted by the City, were
valid and enforceable. As an alternative basis to affirm, which was raised but not decided below,
defendants also maintain that contractual waiver provisions preclude Petersen’s challenges of the
assessment.
A. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
We review de novo a trial court’s ruling on a motion for summary disposition. Alan
Custom Homes, Inc v Krol, 256 Mich App 505, 507; 667 NW2d 379 (2003). This Court also
reviews de novo legal questions involving statutory interpretation, the construction of a contract,
and the interpretation of a municipal resolution. 46th Circuit Trial Court v Crawford Co, 476
Mich 131, 140; 719 NW2d 553 (2006).
B. OVERVIEW OF THE GPTA
Under the GPTA, a governmental unit may seize and sell real property to “satisfy the
unpaid delinquent real-property taxes as well as any interest, penalties, and fees associated with
the foreclosure and sale of [the property].” Rafaeli, LLC v Oakland Co, 505 Mich 429, 474; 952
NW2d 434 (2020); see also MCL 211.78a(1). In this context, the term “taxes” also includes
“unpaid special assessments or other assessments that are due and payable up to and including the
date of the foreclosure hearing . . . .” MCL 211.78a(1). Briefly stated, under the GPTA’s tax-
foreclosure process, “tax-delinquent properties are forfeited to the county treasurers; foreclosed on
after a judicial foreclosure hearing; and, if not timely redeemed, sold at a public auction.” Rafaeli,
LLC, 505 Mich at 442.
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At issue in this case is the effect of a foreclosure on encumbrances to the property, such as
a special assessment. When seeking foreclosure, the foreclosing governmental unit must file a
petition of foreclosure in circuit court, requesting “that a judgment be entered vesting absolute title
to each parcel of property in the foreclosing governmental unit, without right of redemption.”
MCL 211.78h(1). See also Rafaeli, LLC, 505 Mich at 445. After filing of the petition and a
judicial foreclosure hearing, a judgment of foreclosure must be entered by March 30. Rafaeli,
LLC, 505 Mich at 445. “Unless the delinquent taxes, interest, penalties, and fees are paid on or
before March 31, fee simple title to the property vests absolutely in the foreclosing governmental
unit without any further redemption rights available to the delinquent taxpayer.” Id. (citations
omitted). “Thereafter, the foreclosing governmental unit’s title to the property is not subject to
any recorded or unrecorded lien.” Id. (citation omitted).
In more detail, MCL 211.78k sets forth the requirements of a judgment of foreclosure and
generally proclaims that title vests in the foreclosing governmental unit:
(5) The circuit court shall enter final judgment on a petition for foreclosure
filed under section 78h at any time after the hearing under this section but not later
than the March 30 immediately succeeding the hearing with the judgment effective
on the March 31 immediately succeeding the hearing for uncontested cases or 10
days after the conclusion of the hearing for contested cases. All redemption rights
to the property expire on the March 31 immediately succeeding the entry of a
judgment foreclosing the property under this section, or in a contested case 21 days
after the entry of a judgment foreclosing the property under this section. The circuit
court’s judgment must specify all of the following:
* * *
(b) That fee simple title to property foreclosed by the judgment will vest
absolutely in the foreclosing governmental unit, except as otherwise provided in
subdivisions (c) and (e), without any further rights of redemption, if all forfeited
delinquent taxes, interest, penalties, and fees, which delinquent taxes, interest,
penalties, and fees may be reduced by the foreclosing governmental unit in
accordance with section 78g(8), are not paid on or before the March 31 immediately
succeeding the entry of a judgment foreclosing the property under this section, or
in a contested case within 21 days of the entry of a judgment foreclosing the
property under this section.
(c) That all liens against the property, including any lien for unpaid taxes
or special assessments, except future installments of special assessments and liens
recorded by this state or the foreclosing governmental unit under the natural
resources and environmental protection act, 1994 PA 451, MCL 324.101 to
324.90106, are extinguished, if all forfeited delinquent taxes, interest, penalties,
and fees are not paid on or before the March 31 immediately succeeding the entry
of a judgment foreclosing the property under this section, or in a contested case
within 21 days of the entry of a judgment foreclosing the property under this
section.
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(d) That, except as otherwise provided in subdivisions (c) and (e), the
foreclosing governmental unit has good and marketable fee simple title to the
property, if all forfeited delinquent taxes, interest, penalties, and fees are not paid
on or before the March 31 immediately succeeding the entry of a judgment
foreclosing the property under this section, or in a contested case within 21 days of
the entry of a judgment foreclosing the property under this section.
(e) That all existing recorded and unrecorded interests in that property are
extinguished, except a visible or recorded easement or right-of-way, private deed
restrictions, interests of a lessee or an assignee of an interest of a lessee under a
recorded oil or gas lease, interests in oil or gas in that property that are owned by a
person other than the owner of the surface that have been preserved as provided in
section 1(3) of 1963 PA 42, MCL 554.291, interests in property assessable as
personal property under section 8(g), or restrictions or other governmental interests
imposed under the natural resources and environmental protection act, 1994 PA
451, MCL 324.101 to 324.90106, if all forfeited delinquent taxes, interest,
penalties, and fees are not paid on or before the March 31 immediately succeeding
the entry of a judgment foreclosing the property under this section, or in a contested
case within 21 days of the entry of a judgment foreclosing the property under this
section.
* * *
(6) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (5)(c) and (e), fee simple
title to property set forth in a petition for foreclosure filed under section 78h on
which forfeited delinquent taxes, interest, penalties, and fees are not paid on or
before the March 31 immediately succeeding the entry of a judgment foreclosing
the property under this section, or in a contested case within 21 days of the entry of
a judgment foreclosing the property under this section, will vest absolutely in the
foreclosing governmental unit, and the foreclosing governmental unit will have
absolute title to the property . . . . The foreclosing governmental unit’s title is not
subject to any recorded or unrecorded lien and must not be stayed or held invalid
except as provided in subsection (7) or (9). [Emphasis added.]
“After foreclosure, and assuming the state, city, village, township, or county where the
property is located does not purchase the property, the GPTA provides for one or more auction
sales beginning on the third Tuesday in July immediately succeeding the entry of the judgment of
foreclosure.” Rafaeli, LLC, 505 Mich at 446 (citation omitted).
C. PREFORECLOSURE OBLIGATIONS
In this case, the property at issue was seized under the GPTA, and a judgment of foreclosure
was entered for the satisfaction of all taxes, including special assessments due and payable up to
the date of the foreclosure hearing. See MCL 211.78h; see also MCL 211.78a(1). Under
MCL 211.78k(6), fee simple title vested absolutely in the Treasurer at the time of foreclosure,
extinguishing all liens and existing interests in the property except as provided in MCL
211.78k(5)(c) and (e). As relevant to the arguments on appeal, MCL 211.78k(5)(c) and (e) provide
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that “future installments of special assessments” and “private deed restrictions” are not
extinguished by foreclosure. In light of these exceptions, the parties dispute whether Petersen, as
the purchaser of the property at auction following foreclosure, became liable for the previous
property owner’s assessment obligation. There are three documents—(1) the VSADA, (2)
Resolution 96-04, and (3) Resolution 50-14—relevant to this initial question whether there was a
preforeclosure obligation relative to the property that survived foreclosure under MCL 211.78k.
1. THE VSADA
The first document, the VSADA, is a contract, and as a contract rather than a special
assessment, the VSADA did not survive foreclosure under MCL 211.78k(5)(c), which only creates
an exception for (1) future installments of (2) a special assessment.
The term “special assessment” refers to “a levy upon property within a specified district.
Although it resembles a tax, a special assessment is not a tax.” Kadzban v City of Grandville, 442
Mich 495, 500; 502 NW2d 299 (1993). Unlike a tax to raise revenue for general governmental
purposes, “a special assessment can be seen as remunerative; it is a specific levy designed to
recover the costs of improvements that confer local and peculiar benefits upon property within a
defined area.” Id. Special assessments may be levied as permitted by statute, municipal charter,
and applicable ordinances. Wikman v City of Novi, 413 Mich 617, 636-637; 322 NW2d 103 (1982).
See also MCL 117.4d(1)(a). “They may be collected at the same time and in the same manner as
other property taxes. If unpaid, they may become a lien on the property like other property taxes,
or may be collected by an action against the owner of the property.” Wikman, 413 Mich at 635.
Considering the definition of “special assessment” and the manner in which it must be
levied, it is clear that the VSADA is simply a contract between the City and the previous property
owners. It is not a special assessment levied in accordance with the statutes, municipal charter, and
ordinances that govern special assessments in Kentwood. On appeal, in disputing the assertion
that foreclosure extinguished the VSADA under MCL 211.78k(5)(c), defendants emphasize that
contracts between a governmental entity and a property owner regarding payment for
improvements to the property are valid and enforceable. See Grosse Ile Twp v New York Indemnity
Co, 260 Mich 643, 646; 245 NW 791 (1932). Certainly such a contract may be valid and
enforceable. See id. Nonetheless, it does not follow that a contractual obligation to pay for
property improvements constitutes a “special assessment,” i.e., a levy upon property within a
specified district to recover costs for improvements benefiting the property as permitted by statute,
municipal charter, and applicable ordinances. See Kadzban, 442 Mich at 500; Wikman, 413 Mich
at 636-637. To survive foreclosure under MCL 211.78k(5)(c), the obligation in question must be
a “special assessment.” Because the VSADA was not a special assessment, it did not survive
foreclosure under MCL 211.78k(5)(c)’s exception for future installments of a special assessment.
Alternatively, defendants argue that the VSADA constituted a “private deed restriction”
that survived foreclosure under MCL 211.78k(5)(e). The VSADA contained a provision
indicating that it would be recorded with the Register of Deeds and that the obligations under the
VSADA were “covenants that run with the land” and “bind all successors in title.” Relying on
Lakes of the North Ass’n v TWIGA Ltd Partnership, 241 Mich App 91; 614 NW2d 682 (2000),
defendants contend that the VSADA’s creation of an assessment as a covenant that ran with the
land amounted to a private deed restriction that survived foreclosure under MCL 211.78k(5)(e).
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This argument is, however, unpreserved. See In re Application of Int’l Transmission Co, 304 Mich
App 561, 566-567; 847 NW2d 684 (2014).2 Further, although defendants offer the conclusory
assertion on appeal that covenants running with the land were created by the VSADA, defendants
fail to address the requirements for establishing covenants that run with the land. 3 By failing to
brief the merits of the issue, defendants have abandoned the claim that the VSADA constituted a
covenant running with the land that survived foreclosure as a private deed restriction under MCL
211.78k(5)(e). See Prince v MacDonald, 237 Mich App 186, 197; 602 NW2d 834 (1999).
Moreover, defendants’ argument lacks merit. As stated in MCL 211.78k(5)(e), “all
existing recorded and unrecorded interests in th[e] property are extinguished, except . . . private
deed restrictions” and other exceptions not relevant to this case. In general, “[a] deed restriction
represents a contract between the buyer and the seller of property.” Bloomfield Estates
Improvement Ass’n, Inc v City of Birmingham, 479 Mich 206, 212; 737 NW2d 670 (2007). In
Lakes of the North, 241 Mich App at 93-94, 100, this Court more specifically concluded that for
purposes of MCL 211.78k(5)(e),4 private deed restrictions encompassed a maintenance assessment
2
In a footnote in a summary disposition brief, defendants made a cursory reference to
MCL 211.78k(5)(e), stating, “Although Petersen’s complaint focuses on future installments of
special assessments, the City preserves the right to enforce any other obligation set forth in the
VSADA or Amendment because such properly recorded private deed restrictions are not
extinguished by foreclosure. MCL 211.78k[5](e).” Although purporting to have preserved the
issue, defendants did not develop an argument related to MCL 211.78k(5)(e), and defendants did
not ask the trial court for a ruling on this question. As a result, the trial court did not address or
decide the issue. On these facts, defendants’ perfunctory citation of MCL 211.78k(5)(e) was
insufficient to preserve defendants’ arguments regarding the statutory provision. See Int’l
Transmission Co, 304 Mich App at 566-567 (finding that “cursory reference” to an issue in the
footnote of a trial brief without “actually” making an argument was insufficient to preserve issue
for appeal).
3
This Court has explained:
The essentials of such a covenant (i.e., a covenant running with the land)
have been stated to be that the grantor and grantee must have intended that the
covenant run with the land; the covenant must affect or concern the land with which
it runs; and there must be privity of estate between the party claiming the benefit
and the party who rests under the burden. [Greenspan v Rehberg, 56 Mich App
310, 320-321; 224 NW2d 67 (1974) (quotation marks and citation omitted).]
4
Much of the analysis in Lakes of the North, 241 Mich App at 96-100, involved former MCL
211.67, which governed the case and provided that “encumbrances” on property were extinguished
by foreclosure. The GPTA, however, had been recently amended, replacing MCL 211.67 with
MCL 211.78k, and the Court in Lakes of the North decided to also take note of the “private deed
restriction” language in MCL 211.78k(5)(e). The comments on private deed restrictions were thus
obiter dicta. See Wold Architects & Engineers v Strat, 474 Mich 223, 232 n 3; 713 NW2d 750
(2006) (“Statements and comments in an opinion concerning some rule of law or legal proposition
not necessarily involved nor essential to determination of the case in hand, are, however
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established by a developer pursuant to a restrictive covenant that was recorded when the developer
owned all of the lots in the subdivision. Given the panel’s conclusion that the assessment
constituted a private deed restriction, this Court determined that the obligation to pay prospective
maintenance assessments survived foreclosure. Lakes of the North, 241 Mich App at 99-100. We
note that the covenant in Lakes of the North specifically provided that “ ‘[t]he developer being the
owner of all the properties hereby covenants and each subsequent owner by acceptance of a land
contract and/or a deed therefor, whether or not it shall be expressed in any such deed or contract
is deemed to covenant and agree to pay to the Association . . . .’ ” Id. at 94.
Analogizing the special assessment here to the maintenance assessment in Lakes of the
North, defendants argue that the obligation to pay the special assessment, as stated in the VSADA,
constituted a covenant, i.e., a private deed restriction, that survived foreclosure under MCL
211.78k(5)(e). Simply put, we conclude that the VSADA did not constitute or include a private
deed restriction. The VSADA was a contract, effectively containing a condition precedent to the
developers’ obligation to perform, which condition did occur by way of resolution, with a public
entity as one of the parties to the contract and absent any entanglement with or connection to a
deed. There was no document of conveyance associated with the VSADA, unlike in Lakes of the
North where the maintenance-assessment covenants arose and became enforceable upon the
purchase of real property by land contract or deed. The dicta in Lakes of the North provides no
aid to defendants’ position.
2. RESOLUTION 96-04
Although the VSADA did not create an assessment, the City Commission established a
special assessment with the adoption of Resolution 96-04. Chapter X of the Kentwood City
Charter authorized the City Commission to enact special assessments for public improvements,
and Chapter 50 of the Kentwood City Ordinances (KCO) provided the procedures for levying a
special assessment by resolution of the City Commission. In keeping with this authority, the City
Commission adopted Resolution 96-04 to recover the costs for public improvements that conferred
a peculiar benefit on the properties in the Ravines special-assessment district. See Kadzban, 442
Mich at 500. Resolution 96-04 established the special-assessment-district roll, set the amount and
terms of the special assessment, and apportioned the special assessment among the parcels in the
special-assessment district. In short, acting within its authority as provided by law, the City
Commission adopted Resolution 96-04. In so doing, it levied a special assessment.
A special assessment is presumed to be valid. See Kane v Williamstown Twp, 301 Mich
App 582, 586; 836 NW2d 868 (2013). And Petersen offered nothing in the trial court, or on appeal,
to overcome this presumption or to demonstrate that Resolution 96-04 was invalid. In particular,
Petersen mainly challenges the validity of the assessment on the basis that the obligation created
by Resolution 96-04 could not actually be a special assessment because the City and the developers
first entered into a contract—the VSADA—regarding the proposed improvements. But Petersen
offers no authority for the proposition that the City cannot enter into a contract and also enact a
valid special assessment. Clearly, the City has the authority to enter into contracts, see Grosse Ile
illuminating, but obiter dicta and lack the force of an adjudication.”) (quotation marks and citations
omitted).
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Twp, 260 Mich at 646, and the City also has the power to levy special assessments, see Wikman,
413 Mich at 636-637. Caselaw also demonstrates that a special assessment created by resolution
is not invalid simply because there also exists a contract relating to the same improvements
encompassed by the special assessment. See, e.g., Thayer Lumber Co v Muskegon, 157 Mich 424,
430-432; 122 NW 189 (1909) (finding a reassessment involving a resolution that specifically
referred to a contract to be valid). In sum, there is no merit to Petersen’s assertion that in light of
the VSADA, Resolution 96-04 somehow created only a contractual obligation rather than a special
assessment.5
Instead, Resolution 96-04 created a “special assessment,” and whether this obligation
survived foreclosure under MCL 211.78k(5)(c) requires a determination whether there remained
“future installments” of the special assessment. Relevant to this “future installment” question,
Resolution 96-04 set a 10-year term for the special assessment. Annual interest-only payments
were due beginning in September 2005, and the final balloon payment, including principal and
interest, was due in September 2014. The foreclosure in this case occurred in March 2015, which
was after the final payment set by Resolution 96-04 came due. If Resolution 96-04 controlled the
time for payment of the special assessment, it is clear that there was no “future installment” for
purposes of MCL 211.78k(5)(c) because the assessment came due in full in September 2014,
before the March 2015 foreclosure.
3. RESOLUTION 50-14
In our view, the pivotal question in this case is whether the City properly adopted
Resolution 50-14, which purported to extend the final payment deadline from September 2014 to
September 2015. The City Commission adopted Resolution 50-14 in July 2014, before the final
payment came due in September 2014 and before the foreclosure in March 2015. Accordingly, if
Resolution 50-14 validly extended the payment deadline to September 2015, then at the time of
the foreclosure in March 2015 there remained a “future installment” on the special assessment.
The City Commission’s authority relating to special assessments is defined by statute,
ordinance, and city charter. See Wikman, 413 Mich at 636-637; see also Whitney v Common
Council of the Village of Hudson, 69 Mich 189, 197; 37 NW 184 (1888) (“That the action of the
common council must be within the power conferred; and when the mode is prescribed, either by
charter or ordinance, that mode constitutes the measure of the power.”). As noted, the Kentwood
City Charter and KCO authorized the City Commission to adopt resolutions to levy special
assessments. The procedures provided for a hearing, review of the assessment roll and changes
thereto by the City Commission, and, ultimately, confirmation of the assessment roll. See KCO,
5
In challenging the special assessment created by Resolution 96-04, Petersen, relying on an
opinion from the Office of the Attorney General, OAG, 2001-2002, No. 7110 (June 17, 2002), also
makes a cursory argument that the resolution could not have established a special assessment
because special assessments are not recorded and the VSADA was recorded. In making this
argument, Petersen again conflates the VSADA and Resolution 96-04. Even if a special
assessment cannot be recorded, there is no indication that Resolution 96-04 was recorded. The
existence and recording of the VSADA does not alter the validity of the special assessment created
by Resolution 96-04.
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Chapter 50. Notably, following the City Commission’s review and any changes to the assessment
roll that the Commission might make, KCO, § 50.10 provided for the City Commission’s
examination and confirmation of the assessment roll, providing as follows:
The city commission shall meet at the time and place designated for the
review of such special assessment roll, and at such meeting, or a proper
adjournment thereof, shall consider all objections thereto submitted in writing. The
city commission may correct such roll as to any special assessment or description
of any lot or parcel of land or other errors appearing therein, or it may by resolution
annul such assessment roll and direct that new proceedings be instituted. The same
proceedings shall be followed in the making of the new roll as in the making of the
original roll. If, after hearing all objections and making a record of such changes
as the city commission deems justified, the city commission determines that it is
satisfied with the special assessment roll and that assessments are in proportion to
benefits received, it shall thereupon pass a resolution reciting such determinations,
confirming such roll, placing it on file in the office of the clerk and directing the
clerk to attach his warrant to a certified copy thereof within ten days, therein
commanding the assessor to spread, and the treasurer to collect, the various sums
and amounts appearing thereon as directed by the city commission. Such roll shall
have the date of confirmation endorsed thereon and shall, from that date, be final
and conclusive for the purpose of the improvement to which it applies, subject only
to adjustment to conform to the actual cost of the improvement, as provided in
section 50-14. [Emphasis added.]
As discussed, a valid special assessment was created by Resolution 96-04. Under KCO,
§ 50.10, once confirmed by the City Commission, the special assessment established by Resolution
96-04 became “final and conclusive” for purposes of the improvements related to the property in
question. Once an assessment becomes final, a taxing authority, like a taxpayer, must abide by the
rules and procedures applicable for challenging the assessment. See Detroit Edison Co v Detroit,
297 Mich 583, 591; 298 NW 290 (1941) (“Any action attacking the assessment, whether by the
taxpayer, the taxing authorities, or the State tax commission, must be seasonably taken.”). But in
this case, defendants have not identified any legal basis for altering the payment terms of the
assessment.
We note that the KCO makes provision for reassessment of or adjustments to a special
assessment in particular circumstances, but none of the circumstances applied to the special
assessment created by Resolution 96-04. For example, under KCO, § 50.14, adjustments can be
made to increase an assessment or issue refunds if, after completion of the improvements, it is
determined that the actual costs differed from the amount of the special assessment. But this
provision did not apply to Resolution 50-14, which did not alter the amount of the special
assessment to conform to actual costs. Alternatively, KCO, § 50.10 allows for the correction of
errors or the annulment of the roll before confirmation of the roll; it does not provide for alterations
after the assessment becomes final and conclusive. Finally, KCO, § 50.16 allows for “a new
assessment” if the City Commission deems a special assessment “invalid or defective for any
reason whatsoever” or if a court finds the assessment to be “illegal for any reason whatsoever.”
But even when KCO, § 50.16 applies, it requires that “[a]ll proceedings on such reassessment and
for the collection thereof shall be made in the manner as provided for the original assessment.”
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The procedures for confirming a special assessment roll were not followed when adopting
Resolution 50-14. To the contrary, Resolution 50-14 provided that it was made “[w]ithout re-
confirming” the special assessment roll. In short, the KCO and City Charter, while generally
authorizing the City Commission to establish a special assessment, did not provide authority for
the City Commission’s adoption of Resolution 50-14 to amend the terms of the special assessment
once it became “final and conclusive” under KCO, § 50.10.6 Cf. Hudson Motor Car Co v Detroit,
282 Mich 69, 81; 275 NW 770 (1937) (“After the tax rolls have been passed upon by local boards
of review and are properly certified by them, no change may be made therein by the local board
of review of by any local assessing officer.”).
Rather than identify a statute or a provision in the City Charter or KCO that would have
supported the City Commission’s adoption of Resolution 50-14, the City argues on appeal that the
VSADA authorized Resolution 50-14 because the VSADA indicated that the City Commission
had discretion to set the terms of the special assessment. But, as discussed, the City Commission’s
authority to establish the special assessment did not derive from contract; rather, the power derived
from statute, the municipal charter, and applicable ordinances. See Wikman, 413 Mich at 636-637.
Indeed, the VSADA expressly acknowledged that “consistent with” the City’s ordinances, the
special assessment would be “determined by resolution of the City Commission in its discretion,”
and the VSADA did not purport to alter that discretion. In other words, the VSADA did not
provide any independent authority for Resolution 50-14; instead, it merely recognized that the City
Commission could exercise its discretion “consistent with” the City’s ordinances. The fact
remains that statutes, the City Charter, and the KCO governed the lawfulness of Resolution 50-14,
and defendants have not advanced an argument under those authorities to justify the modification
of the special assessment’s terms after the special assessment became final and conclusive.
In sum, absent a legal basis for the adoption of Resolution 50-14, defendants’ arguments
that the City Commission legally extended the term of the special assessment lack merit. Without
the extension in Resolution 50-14, the special assessment validly created by Resolution 96-04
came due in September 2014. Accordingly, all installments of the special assessment were due
and payable before the foreclosure in March 2015. See MCL 211.78a(1). Thus, because there
was no “future installment” of a “special assessment” owing at the time of foreclosure, the
assessment did not survive foreclosure under MCL 211.78k(5)(c). The special assessment was
extinguished, and the property passed to the Treasurer free from any assessment obligation. See
MCL 211.75k(5).
6
Under the GPTA, in specified circumstances, to avoid foreclosure, a foreclosing governmental
unit may enter into a payment plan or a foreclosure agreement. See generally MCL 211.78q. But
it does not appear that Resolution 50-14 constituted a plan under MCL 211.78q. And defendants
do not even refer to MCL 211.78q, let alone present an argument under the statute. Indeed, it
appears that MCL 211.78q would have been the appropriate statute to invoke for purposes of
altering the assessment payment plan for the financially distressed developers. Defendants have
not otherwise identified, nor are we aware of, any statutory authority that would have permitted
the City Commission to modify the special assessment after confirmation of the assessment roll.
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D. POSTFORECLOSURE OBLIGATIONS
Following the foreclosure and while the Treasurer held title to the property, the City and
the Treasurer entered into the amended VSADA, which sought to further extend the payment term
for the now-extinguished special assessment to 2024. In addition, the City also adopted Resolution
31-15,7 which likewise sought to extend the payment deadline on the assessment to 2024. Given
the extinguishment of the special assessment, Petersen argues on appeal that the amended VSADA
was void as against public policy and for lack of consideration. We agree and further conclude
that Resolution 31-15 was invalid.
It is a “bedrock principle of American contract law that parties are free to contract as they
see fit, and the courts are to enforce the agreement as written absent some highly unusual
circumstance, such as a contract in violation of law or public policy.” Wilkie v Auto-Owners Ins
Co, 469 Mich 41, 51; 664 NW2d 776 (2003).
[T]he determination of Michigan’s public policy is not merely the equivalent of the
personal preferences of a majority of this Court; rather, such a policy must
ultimately be clearly rooted in the law. In ascertaining the parameters of our public
policy, [the Court] must look to policies that, in fact, have been adopted by the
public through our various legal processes, and are reflected in our state and federal
constitutions, our statutes, and the common law. [Rory v Continental Ins Co, 473
Mich 457, 470-471; 703 NW2d 23 (2005) (quotation marks and citations omitted).]
To warrant invalidating a contract, the public policy must be “explicit,” “well defined[,] and
dominant.” Terrien v Zwit, 467 Mich 56, 67-68; 648 NW2d 602 (2002) (quotation marks and
citation omitted).
In this case, the GPTA as well as judicial decisions determining the effect of a tax
foreclosure provide very definite rules that special assessments, except for future installments, are
extinguished by foreclosure and that, once extinguished, the obligations cannot be revived by the
taxing authority following foreclosure. To begin with, the fact that special assessments, except
future installments, are extinguished by foreclosure is expressly stated in MCL 211.78k(5)(c). The
GPTA also provides that as a result of foreclosure, fee simple title to the property vests
“absolutely” in the foreclosing governmental unit, free from any recorded or unrecorded lien.
MCL 211.78k(6). The foreclosure judgment encompasses “the forfeited unpaid delinquent taxes,
interest, penalties, and fees due on each parcel of property,” including “unpaid special assessments
or other assessments that are due and payable up to and including the date of the foreclosure
hearing.” MCL 211.78k(5)(a); MCL 211.78a(1). Following foreclosure, the property may be sold
by auction, and the proceeds are placed in an account for distribution by the foreclosing
governmental unit in a manner provided by the GPTA, with the first priority being “to reimburse
the delinquent tax revolving fund for the full amount of unpaid taxes, interest, and fees owed on
the property.” Rafaeli, LLC, 505 Mich at 446-447. In other words, the statutory scheme provides
7
Resolution 31-15 does not appear to be part of the lower court record. Nevertheless, because it
involves a public record, we may take judicial notice of it. See Johnson v Dep’t of Natural
Resources, 310 Mich App 635, 649; 873 NW2d 842 (2015); MRE 201 and 202.
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for the extinguishment of a special assessment, and the taxing authority’s sole means to recoup
any portion of the delinquent assessment is provided for through reimbursement from the sale
proceeds, not by again encumbering the property with an extinguished obligation.
The Legislature is empowered to set the terms for tax-foreclosure sales. See Baker v State
Land Office Bd, 294 Mich 587, 602; 293 NW 763 (1940). And, as stated in MCL 211.78(1), by
enacting the tax-foreclosure procedures set forth in the GPTA, the Legislature recognized “a
continuing need to strengthen and revitalize the economy of this state and its municipalities by
encouraging the efficient and expeditious return to productive use of property returned for
delinquent taxes.” The Michigan Supreme Court has similarly explained that foreclosure and sale
for delinquent taxes serve “to secure a portion of the unpaid taxes, rather than nothing, and to
restore lands to a taxpaying basis, instead of supinely allowing them to accumulate tax
delinquencies with no hope of ever recovering them.” See Baker, 294 Mich at 606. In this context,
“the purpose for canceling past due taxes, assessments, and liens against foreclosed property is to
attract prospective buyers and ultimately restore the property to the tax rolls.” Lakes of the North,
241 Mich App at 98 (quotation marks and citation omitted). With regard to extinguished
obligations, we note that it is the taxing unit that must bear any loss associated with cancellation
of past-due taxes, assessments, and liens. Wayne Co Chief Executive v Mayor of Detroit, 211 Mich
App 243, 244; 535 NW2d 199 (1995).
Notably, it is well settled by caselaw that once a special assessment has been extinguished
by foreclosure, a governmental entity lacks the power to revive it. See Wood v Village of
Rockwood, 328 Mich 507, 512; 44 NW2d 163 (1950); Clark v Royal Oak, 325 Mich 298, 310; 38
NW2d 413 (1949); Keefe v Drain Comm’r of Oakland Co, 306 Mich 503, 511-512; 11 NW2d 220
(1943), aff’d 322 US 393 (1944); Muni Investors Ass’n v Birmingham, 298 Mich 314, 325; 299
NW 90 (1941), aff’d 316 US 153 (1942). As recognized by the Michigan Supreme Court, to allow
reassessment following foreclosure would defeat the purpose of the “remedial” tax-foreclosure
legislation, and it “would once again give rise to the vicious circle of assessment based upon
inflated valuation; refusal or inability of the owner to pay; followed by a sale of the premises
pursuant to the State’s sovereign power of enforcing the collection of taxes.” Muni Investors, 298
Mich at 325. Indeed, the possibility of restoring foreclosed property “to the tax rolls would be
considerably lessened because prospective buyers might well hesitate to assume such an
obligation.” Keefe, 306 Mich at 512. For these reasons, to effectuate the “obvious intent and
purpose of the legislature to relieve owners from the weight of accumulated obligations,” Muni
Investors, 298 Mich at 325, as a result of a tax foreclosure, the property is “freed of the possibility
of further assessments for benefits to the land by public improvements made prior to the
[foreclosing governmental unit’s] acquiring title,” Clark, 325 Mich at 310.
In this case, recognizing that the special assessment created by Resolution 96-04 was
extinguished by foreclosure under MCL 211.78k(5)(c), it follows that the amended VSADA
effectively sought to extend or revive an extinguished assessment. But because the City cannot
legally revive an extinguished assessment, see Clark, 325 Mich at 310, the amended VSADA must
be declared void as against public policy. That is, by entering into a contract to extend the terms
of an extinguished special assessment, the City violated the Legislature’s mandate for the
extinguishment of special assessments under MCL 211.78k(5)(c). The City in effect sought to
contravene decisions from the Michigan Supreme Court expressly recognizing that an
extinguished assessment may not be revived following foreclosure. The legal reality at this
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juncture is that the extinguished special assessment could not lawfully be revived by any means.
The City’s attempt to contract for the unlawful revival of an extinguished special assessment was
therefore void as a violation of public policy. See Rory, 473 Mich at 470-471.
In arguing to the contrary, defendants make several arguments. First, they assert that there
was no violation of public policy because the special assessment in fact survived foreclosure under
MCL 211.78k(5)(c). This argument lacks merit for the reasons already discussed. Second,
defendants note that in addition to the amended VSADA, the City Commission adopted Resolution
31-15 in June 2015. Like the amended VSADA, Resolution 31-15 extended the term of the special
assessment through September 2024. Resolution 31-15, however, does not aid defendants’
position because the special assessment did not survive foreclosure and the fact remains that the
City could not reassess the property. See Clark, 325 Mich at 310, and cases therein. Third,
defendants emphasize that the City is a home-rule city with generally broad powers to contract and
adopt resolutions regarding municipal concerns. That may be, but the City’s powers are
constitutionally limited by laws enacted by the Legislature. 8 See Wayne Co Chief Executive, 211
Mich App at 245, citing Const 1963, art 7, §§ 21-22. In other words, the fact that one of the
contracting parties is a home-rule city does not excuse the parties from adhering to the laws of this
state, nor does it allow the City to enter into contracts in violation of public policy. Instead, as a
contract to revive an extinguished special assessment contrary to the directives and public policy
embodied in the GPTA, the amended VSADA was void. See Rory, 473 Mich at 470-471.
E. WAIVERS
On appeal, defendants also assert that the trial court’s decision should be affirmed because,
regardless of the merits of Petersen’s arguments, Petersen may not challenge the validity of the
special assessment at this time because both the VSADA and amended VSADA contained waiver
provisions in which the property owners agreed to waive challenges to the special assessment. We
disagree.
Relevant to defendants’ arguments, the VSADA provided:
The Owner represents, covenants, and agrees that the property will benefit
and be enhanced in value by at least the amount to be specially assessed . . . . The
Owner hereby releases, waives, and relinquishes, on behalf of itself, its successors,
and assigns any claims it may have against the City, its officers or employees based
on or arising out of the nature of the special assessment proceedings provided for
herein, any defects in notice or other procedure associated with the special
assessments, or whether the owner contracted infrastructure improvements
proportionately increase (relative to the amount of the special assessment) the value
of the 44th LLC Property.
8
Indeed, the amended VSADA in fact recognized that the power to extend the special assessment
would be exercised “consistent with” the KCO.
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Elsewhere, the VSADA stated: “The City’s willingness to proceed with the establishment of a
special assessment district is in reliance on the Owner’s request for the same and agreement to
waive any challenges to the special assessment and special assessment roll.”
Even if we set aside the question whether the VSADA survived foreclosure (or whether
the amended VSADA was void), defendants’ reliance on the waiver provisions is misplaced in
light of this Court’s decision in Petersen regarding the nature of Petersen’s claims at issue in this
case. This Court observed that the case fundamentally involves “a legal question regarding the
effect of a tax foreclosure judgment on overdue special assessment installment payments; it is a
pure issue of statutory construction.” Petersen Fin LLC, 326 Mich App at 444. In other words:
[Petersen] is not challenging the factual basis or the amount of the underlying
assessments arising from the special assessment agreements; rather, [Petersen]
takes issue with the continuing enforceability of the assessments, at least in regard
to outstanding past due installments, in light of the tax foreclosure, arguing that past
debt was extinguished by the judgment of foreclosure. [Id. at 445-446.]
Resolution of that issue required “construction of the GPTA and the law of tax foreclosure, which
has nothing to do with the factual underpinnings of the special assessment.” Id. at 446.
In Petersen, we discussed the nature of Petersen’s claims and concluded that the case was
not within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal. Id. at 436. But, given what is covered
by the contractual waiver provisions, this same reasoning supports the conclusion that Petersen’s
challenges did not fall within the ambit of the contractual waiver provisions. This is so because
Petersen’s claims did not involve a challenge to the special-assessment terms or amounts; rather,
they pertained to the continued enforceability of the special assessment under MCL 211.78k(5)(c)
in light of the foreclosure. Such arguments were not claims regarding notice or special-assessment
procedures, the amount of the assessment, or the benefit the property received from the
improvements. Instead, they were assertions that MCL 211.78k(5)(c) extinguished the special
assessment. As written, the waiver provisions did not encompass claims under MCL
211.78k(5)(c). Indeed, in our view, an attempt to contractually prevent extinguishment of a special
assessment contrary to MCL 211.78k(5)(c) would be considered void as against public policy. See
Rory, 473 Mich at 470-471. Defendants’ waiver arguments lack merit.
F. REFUND REQUEST
Finally, Petersen asserts that the trial court erred by failing to order a refund in the amount
of $23,421.13 which Petersen had paid toward the assessment. The trial court did not substantively
reach this issue on its merits in light of the court’s ruling that the special assessment survived
foreclosure. We conclude that the appropriate course of action is to have the trial court address
the issue in the first instance, now in the context of a judgment entered in Petersen’s favor and that
extinguishes the assessment.
III. CONCLUSION
In sum, although the City levied a valid special assessment with the passage of Resolution
96-04, its attempts to extend the payment deadline were invalid, and there was no legitimate future
installment of a special assessment owing at the time of foreclosure. Accordingly, the special
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assessment was extinguished by foreclosure under MCL 211.78k(5)(c), and once extinguished, the
assessment could not be revived by contract or resolution. The trial court, therefore, erred by
concluding that the special assessment survived foreclosure. As a result, we reverse the grant of
summary disposition to defendants as well as the denial of summary disposition to Petersen with
respect to the continued existence of a special assessment. We remand for entry of judgment in
Petersen’s favor, thereby removing any liens or encumbrances on the property related to the special
assessment.9 On remand, the trial court shall also entertain Petersen’s request for a refund.
We reverse and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain
jurisdiction. As the prevailing party, Petersen may tax costs pursuant to MCR 7.219.
/s/ Christopher M. Murray
/s/ Jane E. Markey
/s/ Anica Letica
9
Given our resolution of these issues, we find it unnecessary to address Petersen’s remaining
arguments regarding summary disposition and law of the case.
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