In these consolidated cases, the Court is asked to interpret and adjudge the constitutionality of 1978 PA 392.1 Plaintiffs are domestic and foreign corporations seeking refunds of corporate franchise fee deficiencies paid by them for various tax years preceding 1975, under former 1921 PA 85, commonly referred to as the franchise fee act.2
Act 392 is a legislative attempt to validate retroactively the Treasury Department’s consistent refusal to grant the requested refunds. The Court of Appeals panels in each of these consolidated cases held that Act 392 has denied plaintiffs equal protection of the law.
I
The controversy in these cases emanates from *587this Court’s decisions in Borden, Inc v Dep’t of Treasury, 391 Mich 495; 218 NW2d 667 (1974), and Clark Equipment Co v Dep’t of Treasury, 394 Mich 396; 230 NW2d 548 (1975). In Borden, an equally divided Court affirmed the decision of the Court of Appeals, holding that once the Department of Treasury computed a corporation’s franchise fee upon the basis of the corporation’s annual report, it exhausted its authority under the franchise fee act. The Court specifically held that the department had no authority either to conduct field audits of a corporation’s books or to recompute a corporation’s franchise fee if the department subsequently obtained, from whatever source, information about the corporation’s affairs that it regarded as more accurate. The Court rested its holding upon the historical fact that, as originally enacted, the franchise fee was merely a licensing measure rather than a revenue-raising tax. When the fee was subsequently transformed into a major source of revenue, the statutory procedures for collecting it nevertheless remained unchanged.3 The Court declined to permit the Department of Treasury to augment these existing procedures without legislative authorization. Although Borden *588was decided by an equally divided Court, Justice Levin’s opinion for affirmance in Borden was subsequently expressly adopted by a majority of the Court in Clark Equipment, supra, p 399.
The legislative response to the Borden and Clark decisions was the passage of 1975 PA 13, amending §§9 and 10 of the franchise fee act. MCL 450.309-450.310; MSA 21.210-21.210(1). These amendments, in pertinent part, authorized the division to audit corporations subject to the franchise fee and provided a four-year limitations period within which deficiencies could be assessed. However, in International Business Machines Corp v Dep’t of Treasury, 75 Mich App 604; 255 NW2d 702 (1977), lv den 401 Mich 816 (1977), the Court held that 1975 PA 13 would be given prospective effect only, finding no indication in the act of any legislative intent to make the act retroactive. Therefore, for those tax years preceding the passage of 1975 PA 13, the rule of Borden and Clark Equipment remained controlling. Acquiescing in these decisions only in part, the division cancelled or rescinded those deficiencies which remained unpaid, but refused to grant refunds to those corporate taxpayers who had paid their assessments and later sought repayment. Relying upon Borden and Clark Equipment, two Court of Appeals panels subsequently affirmed judgments awarding corporate litigants refunds of deficiencies paid by them following unauthorized audits and recomputations. St Clair-Macomb Consumers Cooperative, Inc v Dep’t of Treasury, 78 Mich App 287; 259 NW2d 462 (1977), lv den 402 Mich 869 (1978); Giffels Associates, Inc v Dep’t of Treasury, 81 Mich App 730; 265 NW2d 809 (1978), lv den 403 Mich 808 (1978). Faced with a potential loss to the state treasury of up to $35 million in taxpayer refund *589actions,4 the Treasury Department again sought remedial legislation. The Legislature responded with the passage of 1978 PA 392, the subject of these appeals.
II
In various tax years preceding 1975, plaintiffs were issued deficiency assessments following unauthorized audits and recomputations. Plaintiffs were among those corporate taxpayers who first paid their deficiencies and subsequently filed refund requests with the Franchise Fee Division. The division denied the requests, prompting plaintiffs to file suit. Plaintiffs in Armco Steel first filed suit either in the Michigan Tax Tribunal or the Michigan Court of Claims, or both. Later, however, they filed the instant action in the Ingham Circuit Court5 seeking a declaratory judgment concerning the interpretation and constitutionality of 1978 PA 392. The circuit court held that 1978 PA 392 constituted a denial of equal protection as to those plaintiffs who timely requested refunds for tax years prior to 1975. The Court of Appeals affirmed. 111 Mich App 426; 315 NW2d 158 (1981). We granted leave to appeal. 417 Mich 886 (1983).
Plaintiffs in Great Scott filed an action for refund in the Michigan Tax Tribunal. Although the tribunal declined to order a refund, the Court of Appeals reversed, also holding that 1978 PA 392 *590unconstitutionally denied plaintiffs equal protection of the law. 113 Mich App 679; 318 NW2d 537 (1982). Again, we granted leave to appeal. 417 Mich 887 (1983).
Ill
The circumstances prompting the institution of these suits is not disputed. The division admits that following the decision in IBM, holding that 1975 PA 13 would be given prospective effect only, it refused to rescind deficiency assessments which remained unpaid, but carried out a considered policy to refuse refunds to corporate taxpayers who had requested them. Moreover, it appears that even after the enactment of 1978 PA 392, the division continued its disparate treatment of these two groups of taxpayers. In at least one instance of which we have been made aware, plaintiff Upjohn Company filed a written request with the division for a refund in 1974, even before Clark Equipment was decided. However, no response was received from the division until 1978, after Act 392 had passed, when Upjohn’s request for a refund was denied on the basis of the new act. By contrast, in an order of redetermination issued to another corporate taxpayer, not a party to this litigation, deficiencies which had been assessed for the tax year 1974 and which remained unpaid were rescinded on the basis of the Borden and Clark Equipment decisions, notwithstanding the fact that this redetermination was made two months after the date of the letter to Upjohn Company, and four months following the effective date of Act 392.
Again, these facts are not disputed by the division. It contends instead that a lawful tax need not be refunded simply because its levy and collection *591were irregular; that plaintiffs have paid only what was legally owed by them under the franchise fee act; and that since the Legislature was empowered to validate retroactively anything which it initially had the power to authorize, the passage of Act 392 terminated plaintiffs’ rights to refunds. The division argues that plaintiffs were simply "caught” through the division’s use of unauthorized audits, and were asked to pay only what was legally required of all corporate taxpayers under the franchise fee act. They should not now be heard to complain.
We think these arguments fail to address adequately plaintiffs’ challenge to the constitutionality of Act 392. Plaintiffs have alleged that the act, as applied to them, violates the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution, and the Equal Protection and Uniformity of Taxation Clauses of the Michigan Constitution. US Const, Am XIV; Const 1963, art 1, § 2, and art 9, § 3. This Court has held that the rights provided under the Michigan Constitution are coextensive with those provided under the United States Constitution. Fox v Employment Security Comm, 379 Mich 579, 588; 153 NW2d 644 (1967); Wolodzko v Wayne Circuit Judge, 382 Mich 528, 534; 170 NW2d 9 (1969). In Allied Stores of Ohio v Bowers, 358 US 522, 527; 79 S Ct 437; 3 L Ed 2d 480 (1959), the United States Supreme Court stated:
"[TJhere is a point beyond which the State cannot go without violating the Equal Protection Clause. The State must proceed upon a rational basis and may not resort to a classification that is palpably arbitrary. The rule has often been stated to be that the classification 'must rest upon some ground of difference having a fair and substantial relation to the object of the legislation.’ ”
*592These principles are equally applicable to cases involving taxing statutes. In Beauty Built Construction Corp v City of Warren, 375 Mich 229; 134 NW2d 214 (1965), the City of Warren imposed a special water tax fee upon all new homes in response to the unexpected growth that was burdening the city’s water and sewage system. Existing buildings were exempt from the tax. This classification in the city’s ordinance between existing buildings and new homes was held to violate the Equal Protection Clauses of both the United States and Michigan Constitutions:
"This Court has repeatedly held that classification of objects to which a municipal ordinance may be made applicable must be based on natural distinguishing characteristics and must bear a reasonable relation to the object of the ordinance. * * *
"Where an ordinance fails to include and affect alike all persons of the same class, and extends immunities or privileges to one part and denies them to others of like kind by unreasonable or arbitrary classification, the same is contrary to the equal protection guarantees of the State and Federal Constitutions.” Beauty Built Construction Co, supra, pp 235-236. (Emphasis in original.)
Similarly, under the Uniformity of Taxation Clause of the Michigan Constitution, the controlling principle is one of equal treatment of similarly situated taxpayers. Avis Rent-A-Car System, Inc v City of Romulus, 65 Mich App 119, 128-129; 237 NW2d 209 (1975), aff'd 400 Mich 337; 254 NW2d 555 (1977). As a practical matter, in cases involving taxing statutes, there is no discernible difference between the Equal Protection and Uniformity of Taxation Clauses. Some rational basis for a disputed classification must be shown to exist.
*593The division has failed to suggest any persuasive rational basis justifying its disparate treatment of those corporate taxpayers who paid their deficiency assessments following unauthorized audits and recomputations, and those who did not. Its reasoning that plaintiffs have no basis for complaint because they have paid only what was legally due under the franchise fee act is flawed in two respects. First, it is inappropriate to compare plaintiffs to corporate taxpayers who may have correctly determined their own franchise fee liability in the first instance. It was the Legislature who provided for a self-assessment scheme under the franchise fee act. The relevant class to be considered in analyzing plaintiffs’ equal protection challenge is that group of corporate taxpayers who were unlawfully assessed deficiencies following unauthorized audits and recomputations. Second, the deficiency assessments which plaintiffs paid were no more legally due under the law than those deficiency assessments which were rescinded by the division pursuant to Borden and Clark, supra. Therefore, even if it is true that plaintiffs have paid only that which was legally due, it is a non sequitur to then conclude that plaintiffs have not been denied equal protection of the law. In Sioux City Bridge Co v Dakota County, Nebraska, 260 US 441; 43 S Ct 190; 67 L Ed 340 (1923), the United States Supreme Court addressed a situation wherein plaintiff claimed that, while its property had been assessed at 100% of its true value in conformity with the relevant state tax statute, other real property in the county had been assessed at only 55% of its value. The Nebraska Supreme Court had held that plaintiff’s only remedy was to have the property of others which was assessed below its true value raised, rather than to have its own property, assessed at its true value, *594reduced. The United States Supreme Court reversed:
"The dilemma presented by a case where one or a few of a class of taxpayers are assessed at 100 per cent of the value of their property, in accord with a constitutional or statutory requirement, and the rest of the class are intentionally assessed at a much lower percentage, in violation of the law, has been often dealt with by the courts, and there has been a conflict of view as to what should be done. There is no doubt, however, of the view taken of such cases by the Federal courts in the. enforcement of the uniformity clauses of state statutes and constitutions, and of the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. * * * The conclusion in these and other Federal authorities is that such a result as that reached by the supreme court of Nebraska is to deny the injured taxpayer any remedy at all, because it is utterly impossible for him, by any judicial proceeding, to secure an increase in the assessment of the great mass of under assessed property in the taxing district. This court holds that the right of the taxpayer whose property alone is taxed at 100 per cent of its true value is to have his assessment reduced to the percentage of that value at which others are taxed, even though this is a departure from the requirement of statute. The conclusion is based on the principle that where it is impossible to secure both the standards of true value, and the uniformity and equality required by law, the latter requirement is to be preferred as the just and ultimate purpose of the law. In substance and effect, the decision of the Nebraska supreme court in this case upholds the violation of the 14th Amendment to the injury of the Bridge Company. We must, therefore, reverse its judgment.” Sioux City, 260 US 446-447. (Emphasis added.)
Although Sioux City is factually dissimilar to the instant cases, the broader proposition for which it stands is clearly apposite. When faced, as in this case, with a choice between securing that which is due under the law and upholding the *595constitutional requirements of uniformity and equality, the latter is to be preferred "as the just and ultimate purpose of the law”.
Under the franchise fee act, corporate taxpayers were provided with two procedural remedies by which they could challenge the division’s determination of their franchise fee liability. Under § 9 of the act, MCL 450.309; MSA 21.210, a corporate taxpayer could petition the division for a redeter-mination of its liability, and withhold payment of the fee pending the division’s decision. Under § 10, MCL 450.310; MSA 21.210(1), corporations were permitted to follow the procedures used by plaintiffs in these cases. Following payment of their fees as determined by the division, corporations were given three years within which to file a written petition for a refund. Under this legislative scheme, it is apparent that corporate taxpayers choosing either procedural remedy were to be treated equally. Nevertheless, taxpayers who refused to pay their deficiency assessments before obtaining a redetermination as provided in § 9, or still worse, taxpayers who refused to pay without pursuing even this statutory remedy, have consistently been excused from payment by the division, while those corporate taxpayers who chose the alternative remedy provided by the Legislature in § 10 have been just as consistently denied the refunds they have requested in their petitions to the division. Each of these taxpayers, however, was subject to the division’s power, or lack thereof, under the franchise fee act. The only distinction existing between them is that one group paid their deficiencies while the other group did not. This is not a natural distinguishing characteristic which bears a reasonable relationship to the object of the classification. Beauty Built Construction Corp, supra, p 235. The distinction has become important *596only because of the division’s disparate treatment of these two groups. Although not determinative of our decision in this matter, case law in other jurisdictions has held it unconstitutional to benefit or prefer those who do not pay their taxes promptly over those who do.6 That, of course, is the precise effect of the fashion in which Act 392 has been applied to the plaintiffs in these cases.
While it is undisputed, therefore, that the Legislature can validate retroactively anything that it could have originally authorized, it is not empowered to validate the division’s persistent discrimination between two groups of taxpayers who are in reality but one class.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals in each of these consolidated cases is affirmed.
Williams, C.J., and Kavanagh, Levin, Brick-ley, and Boyle, JJ., concurred with Ryan, J.MCL 450.321; MSA 21.213(1):
"All audits performed by or at the direction of the department of treasury for the purpose of determining liability for a corporate franchise fee levied pursuant to former Act No. 85 of the Public Acts of 1921, and all payments received and refunds made on the basis of those audits before the repeal of former Act No. 85 of the Public Acts of 1921 are declared to be valid and to have been in fulfillment of the legislative purpose to provide for fair administration and enforcement of that act.”
MCL 450.301 et seq.; MSA 21.201 et seq.
This act was called the fees, taxes and charges act. It was repealed effective May 14, 1977 by 1975 PA 230, contemporaneously with the enactment of the Single Business Tax Act, 1975 PA 228, MCL 208.1 et seq.; MSA 7.558(1) et seq. It was provided in 1975 PA 230, however, that the act would extend beyond its repeal date to the extent necessary for enforcement and collection of franchise fees due prior to its repeal.
As originally enacted, the franchise fee act specified the minimum ($50) and maximum ($10,000) fees that could be imposed. In 1951, however, amendments to the act increased the rate at which the fee would be computed and eliminated the maximum amount of the fee that could be assessed, converting the act into a major revenue-raising measure. Notwithstanding this transformation, the Legislature did not add to or alter the collection powers of the Corporation and Securities Commission, which was then responsible for administration of the act. Notably absent was the statutory authorization to utilize audits in determining the correct fees and a limitations period beyond which deficiencies could not be assessed. Then, by the Executive Organization Act of 1965, 1965 PA 380, § 90, MCL 16.190; MSA 3.29(90), responsibility for the administration of the franchise fee act was transferred from the commission to the Department of Treasury. Thereafter, armed with the Treasury Department’s facilities for investigation and collection of taxes, the Franchise Fee Division began auditing corporations subject to its tax and recomputing their fees in 1966.
Although the state treasury faced a loss of up to $35 million at the time Act 392 was passed, the statute of limitations would now bar many refund actions that were originally included within this estimate. Therefore, refund actions pending currently involve less than $2.5 million.
Plaintiffs also sought and were granted a writ of superintending control holding in abeyance the cases previously filed in the Tax Tribunal and Court of Claims. The order granting the writ was the subject of an earlier interlocutory appeal by the division. That dispute has not been pursued in this appeal.
Snow’s Mobile Homes, Inc v Morgan, 80 Wash 2d 283, 287; 494 P2d 216 (1972); Perk v City of Euclid, 17 Ohio St 2d 4, 7; 244 NE2d 475 (1969); State ex rel Tharel v Bd of County Comm’rs of Creek County, 188 Okla 184, 192; 107 P2d 542 (1940); Richey v Wells, 123 Fla 284, 290; 166 So 817 (1936); Simpson v Warren, 106 Fla 688, 691; 143 So 602 (1932), reh den 106 Fla 691; 144 So 324 (1932); State ex rel Matteson v Luecke, 194 Minn 246, 251; 260 NW 206 (1935).