(dissenting). The question is one of statutory construction under the Tax Tribunal Act and is whether the "exclusive and original” jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal encompasses the subject matter of this action which was commenced in the circuit court.
We would hold that the Tax Tribunal does not have jurisdiction. A special assessment levied by the City of Novi on the authority of the home-rule cities act is not a decision made "under property tax laws”.
I
The Wikmans and others commenced this action against Novi and its treasurer in circuit court to set aside and restrain collection of a special assessment. They claimed that the proposed improvement would confer no special benefit on the as*656sessed property owners beyond the benefit to other property owners in Novi.1
After a trial with an advisory jury, the circuit court agreed with the Wikmans and the other plaintiffs. The court found that there was no special benefit.2 The special assessments were declared *657void and collection was enjoined. The jurisdictional question was not raised in the circuit court.
The Court of Appeals concluded that the matter is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal and the circuit court is without jurisdiction.3 The judgment of the circuit court was vacated and the cause was remanded to the Tax Tribunal with a direction4 that it waive the expira*658tion of the 30-day time limit for filing a petition with the Tax Tribunal.5
This Court affirms the decision of the Court of Appeals.
A
The principal issue presented by this appeal is indeed whether this action can be maintained in equity in the circuit court.
Both the plaintiffs and the defendants have proceeded on the assumption that the Tax Tribunal has exclusive jurisdiction under the Tax Tribunal Act unless an equitable action may be excepted.
This Court concludes that this action cannot be maintained in equity. Assuming that the Tax Tribunal has jurisdiction, we would be inclined to agree (see part IX below) on the ground that the Wikmans and the other plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that an appeal to the Tax Tribunal is a substantively or procedurally inadequate remedy justifying equitable intervention in the instant cause.
The opinion of the Court, in remanding this cause to the Tax Tribunal, seemingly decides the question, the answer to which was assumed by the *659parties and, as stressed in the opinion of the Court, not briefed, of whether the Tax Tribunal has jurisdiction absent a basis for equitable intervention. This Court declares that the Tax Tribunal has "exclusive jurisdiction over this proceeding”6 challenging a special assessment levied on the authority of the home-rule cities act.
For reasons stated in part VIII, the Court cannot properly decide or appear to decide that jurisdictional question on the concessions of the parties to this litigation. The proper course would be to order further briefing and argument before deciding or appearing to decide the question.
B
The jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal is limited to decisions made under "property tax laws”. The term "property tax laws” appears in three places in the Tax Tribunal Act, twice in § 31 and once in §53:
—Section 31 provides that the Tax Tribunal has "exclusive and original jurisdiction” of decisions "relating to assessment, valuation, rates, special assessments, allocation, or equalization, under property tax laws” and of proceedings for refund or determination of "a tax under the property tax laws”.7 (Emphasis supplied.)_
*660—Section 53 provides for an appeal as of right to the Court of Appeals, subject to the provisions of Const 1963, art 6, §28, and provides that, "for purposes” of that constitutional provision, the Tax "[TJribunal is the final agency for the administration of property tax laws”.8 (Emphasis supplied.)
The view expressed in this dissenting opinion is that the Tax Tribunal does not have jurisdiction to review a decision levying a special assessment because a decision levying a special assessment is not made under the "property tax laws”. The limiting term "property tax laws” describes that body of statutory law which had been and continues to be administered by the State Tax Commission:
—The purpose of the Legislature in enacting the Tax Tribunal Act was to transfer the appellate jurisdiction of the State Tax Commission to the Tax Tribunal and to eliminate the alternative remedy in the circuit court. It was not part of the legislative purpose to transfer to the Tax Tribunal jurisdiction of subject matter which had not formerly been a matter of state supervision and the business of the State Tax Commission.
—The legislative purpose is expressed in the language of the Tax Tribunal Act. The act limits the Tax Tribunal’s jurisdiction to decisions made under "property tax laws”, the laws subject to *661administration by the State Tax Commission. Special assessments are not levied under The General Property Tax Act or other laws or provisions of law providing for the state tax on real and personal property (the "property tax laws”), which are subject to state administrative supervision by the State Tax Commission, but under separate legislation such as the home-rule cities act and the Drain Code authorizing the establishment of and providing for the powers of local units of government.9
—The Tax Tribunal Act eliminates the circuit court remedy where a person had been able to proceed either before "the state tax commission or the circuit court”.10 Persons seeking to challenge a special assessment levy had not theretofore been able to proceed either before the "state tax commission or the circuit court”, but only in the circuit court.11
—The Tax Tribunal Act was not directed to problems which had arisen in the establishment of special assessment districts and in the levying of special assessments by local governmental authorities which appeared to call for supervision at the state level of local governmental decisions to finance public improvements by special assessment but rather was enacted because the State Tax Commission had ceased to be an appropriate place to lodge administrative appellate jurisdiction respecting the state ad valorem property tax, and the dual remedy in the circuit court in property tax appeals had ceased to serve a useful purpose.12
*662—While special assessments are, to be sure, authorized by state enabling legislation and are based on and subject to state law — as is all local governmental activity — the Legislature has not subjected to state supervision local governmental decisions to finance a public improvement by creating a special assessment district and levying a special assessment. The Legislature, consistent with the general policy of not supervising local governmental activities at the state level,13 has not authorized the State Tax Commission or any other state agency to exercise administrative supervision of or to review on appeal decisions of a home-rule city, of a drain commissioner, or of other local governmental authorities respecting local improvements and their financing through special assessments.14
C
The General Property Tax Act and supplemental laws compiled in the chapter on real and personal property taxation contain a number of provisions concerning special assessments.15 These provisions concern in the main16 the collection of *663special assessments and the sale of property which has been specially assessed for nonpayment of the special assessment. Cities, drain commissioners and other governmental authorities levying a special assessment may and generally do utilize the established machinery for the collection of ad valorem property taxes to collect a special assessment. Special assessments are ordinarily billed by the ad valorem tax collector together with the ad valorem tax on real property. While cities, drain commissioners and other local governmental authorities empowered to levy special assessments are not subject to the jurisdiction of the State Tax Commission, the tax collector is subject to the jurisdiction of the State Tax Commission.17
Although the State Tax Commission did not and does not have jurisdiction to supervise or review decisions of local governmental authorities to finance a public improvement by establishing a special assessment district and levying a special assessment, its jurisdiction, both before the enactment of the Tax Tribunal Act and now, extends to supervision of a tax collector who is required to collect special assessments under the property tax laws.18
Consistent with the legislative intent that whatever was formerly the appellate business of the State Tax Commission would become the appellate business of the Tax Tribunal, the Tax Tribunal Act provides for the transfer to the Tax Tribunal of the appellate jurisdiction of the State Tax Commission to review decisions concerning "special assessments * * * under property tax laws”.
*664The appellate jurisdiction of the State Tax Commission to review decisions concerning "special assessments * * * under property tax laws” was limited to decisions concerning the collection of special assessments and did not extend to, and the transferred jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal does not extend to, whether property subjected to a special assessment was specially benefited, the meritorious issue litigated in the instant case and which dominates litigation respecting special assessments.
In sum:
—The Tax Tribunal has exclusive and original jurisdiction of decisions relating to the collection of "special assessments * * * under property tax laws” (which decisions are also subject to administration by the State Tax Commission), but not over decisions levying special assessments under the home-rule cities act, the Drain Code, or other laws or provisions of law conferring on local units of government the authority to finance public improvements by establishing special assessment districts and levying special assessments, decisions not subject to supervision by the State Tax Commission;
—The circuit court continues to have jurisdiction over an action challenging a special assessment on the ground that the property proposed to be specially assessed was not specially- benefited. Before enactment of the Tax Tribunal Act, such an action could not have been brought either before "the state tax commission or the circuit court”, but only in the circuit court.
*665D
In adhering today to the position adopted a few years ago by the Court of Appeals in a conclusory opinion,19 this Court, by enlarging both the opportunity for litigation and the scope of review ("independent, original and de novo” under the Tax Tribunal Act),20 impairs the capacity of cities, drain commissioners and other local governmental authorities to finance public improvements with special assessments (see part VI below) and involves the state, through the Tax Tribunal, in matters with which the state has not heretofore concerned itself.21
The business of the Tax Tribunal (as originally constituted, before jurisdiction over other state taxes theretofore within the jurisdiction of the Board of Tax Appeals was conferred upon it) is, as this Court decided in Emmet County v State Tax Comm, 397 Mich 550, 555; 244 NW2d 909 (1976), limited to providing a means of review of decisions formerly "heard by the State Tax Commission as an appellate body”.22 In so deciding, this Court grasped the essence of the Tax Tribunal Act. Today the Court does not see that thread, but words without lineage.
II
In construing a statute, a court is obliged to effectuate the legislative purpose. A literal meaning may therefore give way to a meaning not wholly consistent with the language used which *666appears from context or history or other substantial evidence of legislative purpose.
If it were to appear that the Legislature did not intend to modify or limit the words "special assessments” by the term "property tax laws” or that "property tax laws” is not a term of art which has a fixed meaning in the constitution23 and that it means simply a law or provision of law providing for a governmental exaction in respect to property,24 we would be obliged to give effect to the legislative purpose however imprecise or misleading the language chosen to express such a purpose.
It does not, however, appear from context or history, and no legislative materials or other evidence has been presented, that in using the term "property tax laws” the Legislature did not intend to modify the words "special assessments” or that it did not adopt the meaning of "property tax laws” as that term is used in article 6, § 28 of the constitution.
The business of the State Tax Commission, both now and before the enactment of the Tax Tribunal Act, consisted of the administration of a body of statutory law described in article 6, § 28 of the constitution and in the Tax Tribunal Act as the "property tax laws”.25
The Tax Tribunal’s "exclusive and original” jurisdiction (its subsequently conferred jurisdiction in respect to other state taxes is not exclusive)26 is *667coextensive with the continuing jurisdiction of the State Tax Commission in the administration of the property tax laws.
A
The term "property tax laws” appears twice in Tax Tribunal Act § 31, concerning jurisdiction, and also (see B below) in § 53, concerning appellate review.
The Tax Tribunal Act, § 31, provides that the Tax Tribunal has exclusive and original jurisdiction to review a decision relating to "special assessments * * * under property tax laws”.27 The term "property tax laws”, thus, modifies and limits the term "special assessments”. The Tax Tribunal’s jurisdiction extends only to decisions relating to special assessments made under property tax laws and does not extend to decisions relating to special assessments made under laws or provisions of law that are not property tax laws.
The second part of the jurisdictional statement, also set forth in § 31, concerns "[a] proceeding for refund or redetermination of a tax under the property tax laws”.28 Because plaintiffs do not seek either a refund or redetermination but rather bring an action, in equity, seeking to set aside altogether and to restrain collection of any part of a special assessment, the majority29 and we agree that only the first part of the §31 jurisdictional statement, quoted in the preceding paragraph, is involved in the instant case.
*668B
Section 53 of the Tax Tribunal Act establishes the scope of judicial review of decisions of the Tax Tribunal. It designates "for purposes” of Const 1963, art 6, §28, the Tax Tribunal as "the final agency for the administration of property tax laws”. (Emphasis supplied.)30
Section 28 of article 6 of the constitution limits the scope of judicial review of an appeal from "any final agency provided for the administration of property tax laws”. (Emphasis supplied.)31
This clause was added to § 28 on the floor of the Constitutional Convention in response to concern expressed by delegates that appeals to the courts from the State Tax Commission would delay the collection of ad valorem property taxes.32
*670Before its revision by the committee on style and drafting, the clause, as adopted on the floor, in terms barred appeals to a court from a decision of the ’’state tax commission fixing value * * * for property tax purposes”.33 Thus, indisputably, the "final agency” which the delegates to the Constitutional Convention had in mind was the State Tax Commission.
The committee on style and drafting recommended the substitution of the present language of § 28 for the language approved on the floor:
(i) "final agency provided for the administration of property tax laws” for "State Tax Commission”, and
(ii) "from any decision relating to valuation or allocation” for "a decision” "fixing the value of described property for property tax purposes or determining an appeal from a decision of the *671county tax allocation board”. (Emphasis supplied.)34
The recommendations of the committee on style and drafting respecting § 28 were considered, together with the committee’s recommendations concerning a number of other sections of the constitution, and were accepted without further floor discussion.35
A "property tax law” is thus, at least for purposes of § 28 of article 6 of the constitution, a law subject to administration by the State Tax Commission.36 The laws subject to administration by *672the State Tax Commission, then and even now after the establishment of the Tax Tribunal, are laws providing for the levying and collection of ad valorem property taxes. Then and now the State Tax Commission has had no authority to supervise (to "administer”) the levying of or to review on appeal a decision of a local governmental authority to finance a public improvement by levying a special assessment.
The Legislature, in designating, in § 53 of the Tax Tribunal Act, the Tax Tribunal as "the final agency for the administration of property tax laws”, in express implementation ("for purposes”) of the constitutional limitation set forth in § 28 of article 6, necessarily incorporated the meaning of that term as used in the constitution. The Legislature therefore comprehended by the term "property tax laws”, at least in § 53, the functions of the State Tax Commission and the statutes and provisions of law which had been subject to the State Tax Commission’s jurisdiction.
It has been said that "[t]he connotation of a term in one portion of an Act may often be clarified by reference to its use in others.” United States v Cooper Corp, 312 US 600, 606; 61 S Ct 742; 85 L Ed 1071 (1941). This suggests that the sense in which the Legislature used the term "property tax laws” in § 53 (designating the Tax Tribunal as the "final agency”) connotes the meaning of that term in § 31 (establishing the Tax Tribunal’s jurisdiction).
The Legislature, in using the same phrase, "property tax laws”, in both §§ 31 and 53 of the *673Tax Tribunal Act,37 manifested a purpose to limit the jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal to the appellate jurisdiction formerly exercised by the "final agency” — the State Tax Commission — "provided for the administration of property tax laws”.
The term "property tax laws”, in § 31 of the Tax Tribunal Act, as in § 53 of that act, rooted as it is in the constitution, means laws and provisions of law concerning ad valorem property taxes.
C
We do not argue, as put forth in the opinion of the Court, that "because” valuation and allocation are matters "under the property tax laws” that special assessments are not.38 The argument is rather that the framers of the constitution used the words "property tax laws” to describe the body of law administered by the State Tax Commission, that the Legislature, in using those words in one section (§ 53) of the Tax Tribunal Act in the very sense in which the framers of the constitution used those words and in another section (§ 31) of the Tax Tribunal Act to describe its jurisdiction had in mind one and the same body of law, the laws formerly and still administered by the State Tax Commission.
Because "property tax laws”, subject to administration by the State Tax Commission, are all laws concerning ad valorem taxes, it is possible to explain what is meant by "property tax laws” by saying, as we have said in this opinion, that property tax laws are laws levying ad valorem taxes (taxes assessed on the value of real or personal *674property) or, more descriptively, ad valorem property tax laws. Or one may explain, as we have also said, that they are the laws then and now administered by the State Tax Commission.
Either explanation can be challenged with the empty argument that "if the Legislature had meant” to limit property tax laws to ad valorem property tax laws or to the business of the State Tax Commission "it would have used” those words.39
Whenever one attempts to explain what a word means another word must be used. Whenever a court construes language and explains what words mean, it necessarily uses words other than the words being construed, as does the opinion of the Court in this case.40 The alternative is to say, and all too frequently one does read arguments by lawyers and judicial opinions which say no more than, the word being construed means the word being construed: "property tax laws” means "property tax laws”. If one wishes to convey meaning, however, one must say that "property tax laws” means X or does not mean or include Y or does mean and include Z. The threadbare argument "if the Legislature had meant, it would have” should be exorcized._
*675D
To say that because the words "special assessments” appear in § 31, the context of the Tax Tribunal Act suggests or that the Legislature "must have” had in mind a broader purpose or intended that a broader meaning be ascribed to "property tax laws” would be wholly circular and would deprive the term "property tax laws” of meaning as a modifier of "special assessments”.
The context of the Tax Tribunal Act — the language of the act other than the language being construed — does not suggest a broader purpose for § 31 than providing for review of decisions relating to ad valorem property taxes.41 No language in other sections of the Tax Tribunal Act suggests that the Legislature used the term "property tax laws” in different senses in §§ 31 and 5342 or used *676the terms "property”, "property taxes” or "taxes” in different senses where those terms appear.43
The opinion of the Court acknowledges that "property tax laws” are words of limitation. The opinion does not specifically define the term property tax laws, but the import of the opinion is discernible.
The opinion says that "the phrase [property tax laws] distinguishes between the special assessments involved in this case and other special assessments not levied under property tax laws”.44 Putting aside that the examples suggested by the opinion of possible special assessments which would not be subject to Tax Tribunal jurisdiction are, to say the least, tenuous,45 the "distinction” *677says no more than the words being construed serve to permit a distinction between this case and other cases. But the opinion fails to state the distinction.
The "distinction” drawn in the opinion of the Court ignores that the . Legislature was not talking about special assessments alone but also about "assessments, valuation, rates” and "allocation and equalization” under "property tax laws”.46
"Allocation and equalization” are concepts peculiar to ad valorem property taxes. Because "allocation or equalization” arise only under the property tax laws, the Court could not say that "the phrase [property tax laws] distinguishes between” "allocation or equalization” arising under the property tax laws and "allocation or equalization” not arising under property tax laws.
"Property tax laws” is a common denominator of and pertains to all the words being modified: assessment, valuation, rates, special assessments, allocation, and equalization. Manifestly, in speaking of property tax laws in the clause "assessment, *678valuation, rates, special assessments, allocation, or equalization, under property tax laws”, the Legislature meant that body of statutory law pertinent to allocation and equalization and, as well, to assessment, valuation, rates and special assessments. That body of law is The General Property Tax Act, providing for the levying and collection of the ad valorem state tax on real and personal property, pursuant to which body of law special assessments, not levied under that body of law, may be collected.
E
The opinion of the Court defines "property tax laws” generically and does not recognize the phrase as a term of art which is rooted in the constitutional and statutory history of the state. One can isolate each word in the term "property tax laws” and make an argument that the term means any governmental exaction or perhaps even a non-governmental exaction authorized by government47 levied on or in respect to "property”. Any governmentally authorized exaction can be regarded as a "tax”. The governmental authorization would be the "law”. The exaction is bound to be levied on or in respect to48 and be payable out of "property”. So defined, the words "property tax laws” cease to have meaning as words of limitation.
The corporation franchise tax law levies a value-based (ad valorem) tax measured by the book *679value of a corporation’s property.49 The intangibles tax law levies a value-based tax measured by the par value of securities that are not income producing.50 The use tax is measured by the selling price of tangible personal property.51 Defining property tax laws as simply laws imposing taxes on property would bring within the Tax Tribunal’s § 31 jurisdiction the corporation franchise, intangible and use taxes although it is clear that the Legislature did not intend that they be covered by § 31. These and other state taxes were not within the Tax Tribunal’s "exclusive and original” § 31 jurisdiction, and are within the Tax Tribunal’s jurisdiction by virtue of the provisions of § 79 of the Tax *680Tribunal Act and the 1976 and 1980 amendments.52
Defining "property tax laws” as any law authorizing a tax on property would also support the conclusion that the income tax is a tax on property. Indeed, it is because the United States Supreme Court so declared that the Sixteenth Amendment was submitted to the states. In Pollock v Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co, 157 US 429; 15 S Ct 673; 39 L Ed 759 (1895), the United States Supreme Court held that an act of Congress levying an income tax was unconstitutional insofar as it levied a tax on the rents or income of real estate because such a tax is a "direct tax”:53
"[I]t is admitted that a tax on real estate is a direct tax. Unless, therefore, a tax upon rents or income issuing out of lands is intrinsically so different from a tax on the land itself that it belongs to a wholly different class of taxes, such taxes must be regarded as falling within the same category as a tax on real estate eo nomine. ”
F
The opinion of the Court states that the "phrase [property tax laws] distinguishes special assessments that are under the taxing power and that *681relate to real property from other types of special assessments”.54
Special assessments have indeed been sometimes denominated as "taxes”, and it has been said that the constitutional source of the legislative authority to provide for the levying of a special assessment is the "taxing power”. This Court, in the Detroit Paving Cases in the 1860’s, faced with the claim that a special assessment was a taking in violation of the Eminent Domain Clause, said, with some difficulty in opinions which failed to command a majority,55 that the source of the legislative authority to provide for special assessments was the taxing power:
"This involves the question, whether the money attempted to be raised by means of the assessment to defray the expenses of improving a public street, is sought to be taken by virtue of the right of eminent domain, or in the exercise of the sovereign power of taxation.” Williams v Mayor and City of Detroit, 2 Mich 560, 566 (1853). (Emphasis in original.)
Faced with the same question today, the Court *682might, in light of its subsequent decision in Graham v Saginaw, 317 Mich 427, 431; 27 NW2d 42 (1947), and having in mind its statements regarding the source of the authority to impose drain taxes and special assessments,56 locate in the police power the constitutional authority to provide for the levying of a special assessment.
Conceding, arguendo, however, that the constitutional source of the Legislature’s authority to enact laws concerning special assessments in the taxing power, it does not follow that all laws enacted under the taxing power are property tax laws or even that every law enacted under the taxing power in respect to real and personal property is a property tax law. Conceding that the constitutional source of the Legislature’s authority is the "taxing power”, the constructional issue (the meaning of "property tax laws”) under the Tax Tribunal Act remains.
In Graham, the Court held that a special assessment is not a "tax”57 within the meaning of the 15-mill constitutional limitation respecting "taxes assessed against property” (emphasis supplied).58 Thus, at least for the purposes of the 15-mill limitation, a special assessment is not a "property tax”. In light of Graham, this Court cannot prop*683erly say that in the phrase "property tax laws” the word "tax” means a governmental exaction, that a special assessment for local improvements is a governmental exaction, that "property” refers to real or personal (as distinguished from intangible) property, and that a law authorizing such an exaction is a property tax law.
By 1963 and 1974, when the present constitution and the Tax Tribunal Act were drafted, it was clear,59 whatever the constitutional source of the *684Legislature’s authority, that a special assessment is not a tax on property, and that laws authorizing special assessments for local improvements are not property tax laws.
The "property tax”, as clearly appears from the language adopted on the floor of the constitutional convention ("property tax purposes”),60 is the tax requiring "valuation” and subject to "allocation”, concepts which are, again, peculiar to the ad valorem tax on real and personal property. The "property tax” is not every governmental exaction in respect to property, or even every governmental exaction in respect to real or personal property, but only the ad valorem tax on real and personal property.
"Property tax laws” is a term of art and not a collection of words to which the Court is justified in giving its own meaning. Those words have a fixed meaning, and that fixed meaning is those tax laws administered by the State Tax Commission which are the ad valorem real and personal property tax laws.
The Legislature did not use the term "property *685tax laws” in different senses in § 53, concerning appellate review, and § 31, concerning jurisdiction.
G
The opinion of the Court ignores that the words "property tax laws” refers to a body of law still subject to administration by the State Tax Commission.
The opinion fails to take into account that if the provisions of the home-rule cities act empowering a city to levy a special assessment is a property tax law for purposes of Tax Tribunal jurisdiction so too is it a property tax law for purposes of the continuing jurisdiction of the State Tax Commission. The State Tax Commission may thus, after today, have jurisdiction to supervise city and other local governmental units, in respect to special assessments in much the same manner as local ad valorem tax assessors are supervised.
The opinion also fails to take into account that, applying the same reasoning to the Drain Code, the Tax Tribunal may now exercise quasi-judicial review of special assessments levied pursuant to the Drain Code61 and the State Tax Commission *686may now be said to have the power and responsibility to supervise county drain commissioners in the administration of the provisions of the Drain Code concerning drain taxes and special assessments.
The Court, in declaring that a law authorizing a local special assessment is enacted under the taxing power, states that a special assessment authorized under the police power would not be subject to Tax Tribunal jurisdiction.62
Because this case arises under the home-rule cities act and not the Drain Code, an effort will, no *687doubt, be made on the bases of the distinction drawn by the Court between the taxing and police power and its earlier pronouncements on the source of the authority to provide for drain taxes and assessments, to except special assessments under the Drain Code from Tax Tribunal jurisdiction. The Court will then be called upon to reconsider the reasoning and language of the opinion of the Court filed today and whether to adhere to it or find a basis for withdrawing from it.
H
The opinion of the Court states that an argument set forth in this opinion is analogous to arguing that because Great Danes and Dachshunds are dogs, a Pekinese is not a dog.63 The premise that all three are dogs is a matter of common knowledge; there is, therefore, no constructional issue. Here there is. "That dog”, Sam Rayburn would say, "won’t hunt”; if the question were which dogs hunt and which dogs don’t, we could be faced with a constructional issue.
The question here is what governmental exactions are within the jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal and which are not. Unless all governmental exactions are levied under property tax laws and were intended to be subject to Tax Tribunal jurisdiction, there must be some governmental exactions which are not property taxes although there cannot be dogs who are not dogs.
We know that all governmental exactions are not subject to Tax Tribunal jurisdiction, if for no other reason than because it took the 1976 and 1980 amendments to confer jurisdiction over other state taxes on the Tax Tribunal.64
*688I
The history of legislation in respect to state and local taxes and assessments persuasively suggests —concededly that history does not require the conclusion — that the Tax Tribunal has not been vested in only this one instance with jurisdiction of a local assessment.
The Legislature conferred on the Tax Tribunal and its predecessors, the State Tax Commission (and its predecessors) and the Board of Tax Appeals (and its predecessors), the authority to review the levying of state taxes.65
While real and personal property tax assessment and review is at the local level and today all revenues are collected and expended locally,66 the state levied and received revenue from the property tax at the time the predecessors of the Tax Tribunal were established.67 Ad valorem property *689taxes are state taxes subject to statewide administration, while special assessments are local exactions not subject to statewide administration.
Although no portion of the property tax is now remitted to the state, the state is still concerned with the proper administration of the property tax. School aid and other revenue sharing are based in substantial part on state equalized value.68 The property tax is still subject to statewide *690administration and it is a state tax.
The additional jurisdiction granted to the Tax Tribunal as a result of the 1976 and 1980 amendments69 extends only to state taxes such as the state income and sales taxes formerly subject to appeal to the Board of Tax Appeals.70
*691There has been no corresponding legislative activity regarding local taxes or assessments. The 1976 amendment to the Tax Tribunal Act did not provide that appeals from adverse determinations in regard to the application of the City Income Tax Act71 or the City Utility Users Tax Act72 would *692be to or "only before” the Tax Tribunal.73 Nor has the Legislature provided for judicial review by the Tax Tribunal of local excise taxes.74
This history, showing that all the statutes identiñed by the 1976 and 1980 amendments concern state taxes and that the business of the Tax Tribunal and its predecessors is and was state taxes, indicates that the Tax Tribunal, like its predecessors, has been charged only with reviewing decisions relating to state taxes, not decisions levying local taxes or assessments.
We do not argue, as set forth in the opinion of the Court, that the jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal does not include special assessments "because its predecessors did not review special assessments”. The argument is rather that the Legislature has never provided a means of review by a state administrative tribunal of any tax or assessment other than a state tax or assessment and that suggests, although it does not require, that the Tax Tribunal Act should not, for this and other substantial reasons, be construed as providing in this one instance only a means of administrative review at the state level of a decision to levy a local tax or assessment, absent a clearer statement or evidence of a purpose to do so.
We agree that the Legislature could constitutionally subject local taxes and special assessments to Tax Tribunal or other state administrative .agency jurisdiction. We contend only that the Legislature has not done so._
*693J
The opinion of the Court states that channeling special assessment appeals to an "administrative agency instead of the circuit court is consistent with similar actions in other contexts”.75 The opinion does not identify those contexts, although there is a hint that recognizing jurisdiction in the Tax Tribunal will reduce the burden on the circuit courts76 and that an administrative tribunal may know more about this sort of business than a court.77
The argument that "consolidation will foster standardization and equality in the levying of special assessments”78 assumes that there were problems resulting from a lack of standardization, that there was inequality from county to county in drain assessments and from city to city in special assessments, and that the Legislature was therefore moved to intervene and to provide a remedy.
The argument also assumes that standardization and equality in special assessment are desirable. Some communities have the wherewithal to finance local public improvements with general tax dollars, in whole or in part, while others are *694more dependent on special assessments as a means of financing. A state administrative tribunal empowered to review local governmental decisions to finance through special assessments will find itself confronted with evidence that in other communities "similar” improvements have been financed with general tax dollars which, it will be asserted, indicates that the improvements in suit do not specially benefit property owners in the special assessment district. The Tax Tribunal will be reminded of the legislative purpose, enunciated by this Court, of "foster[ing] standardization and equality in the levying of special assessments”.
The Tax Tribunal will be called upon to confront the tension between the constitutional provision limiting ad valorem assessments to 50% of true cash value79 and the constitutional limitation barring a special assessment unless there is a special benefit.80 Especially where the community faces a declining property tax base, the Tax Tribunal will find it precariously difficult to hold to the constitutional line on both the issue of ad valorem property tax value and the issue whether a special benefit will accrue from construction of the public improvement proposed to be financed by special assessment.
K
At the time the Tax Tribunal Act was enacted, the established practice to contest a special assessment was an equitable action in the circuit court to set aside the assessment and to restrain collection.81
*695Subsequent to the enactment of the Tax Tribunal Act and as part of a revision of the enabling acts for villages82 and fourth-class cities,83 the Legislature, in 1974, prescribed the timing and procedure for actions instituted "for the purpose of contesting or enjoining the collection” of a special assessment.84 (Emphasis supplied.)
*696This provision for equitable actions challenging special assessments — the established means of contesting a special assessment — is not merely a reenactment of prior language. There was no counterpart to the added language in the village85 and fourth-class city86 enabling acts before the revision, nor is there a counterpart in other enabling acts.87
This language, added less than a year after the enactment of the Tax Tribunal Act, indicates a legislative understanding that contests of special assessments were still properly brought, as equitable actions, in the courts.88
*697L
Construing "property tax laws” to mean laws concerning ad valorem property taxes is consistent with a prior decision of this Court. This Court has said that the Legislature intended to give the Tax Tribunal jurisdiction over matters formerly "heard by the State Tax Commission as an appellate body.” (Emphasis in original.) Emmet County v State Tax Comm, 397 Mich 555.
In Emmet County, this Court considered the same jurisdictional provision, § 31, of the Tax Tribunal Act that is now an issue. Section 31 confers on the Tax Tribunal jurisdiction to review a final decision relating to "equalization, under property tax laws”.
While a literal reading would indicate that the Tax Tribunal has jurisdiction over all final decisions relating to equalization, this Court concluded that the provision was intended to give the Tax Tribunal jurisdiction over only intracounty equalization decisions and not, in addition, intercounty equalization decisions.
This Court considered the historical difference between intracounty and intercounty equalization proceedings, the apparent legislative intent to give the Tax Tribunal jurisdiction over matters formerly heard by the State Tax Commission as an appellate body, and the lack of any prior provision for administrative review of intercounty equalization decisions. This Court said that since there had not theretofore been administrative review of intercounty equalization decisions the Tax Tribunal was confined to reviewing intracounty equalization.
So, too, here we should construe the § 31 language giving the Tax Tribunal jurisdiction to review a final decision relating to "special assess*698ments * * * under property tax laws” in light of the historical treatment of actions challenging special assessments — which were maintained in the circuit court and not before the State Tax Commission — and the legislative intent to give the tribunal jurisdiction over matters formerly "heard by the State Tax Commission as an appellate body.”89
The effort, in the opinion of the Court, to distinguish Emmet County on the ground that there it was proposed to insert an "additional level of review in the process, thereby endangering the [state tax] commission’s ability to function within the time limits established for the collection of taxes”90 is not persuasive. The Court today does precisely that: it inserts a new level of administrative review in the special assessment process. The levying of a special assessment was not heretofore subject to administrative review at the state level before a quasi-judicial tribunal. A special assessment levy, just as intercounty equalization (the issue in Emmet County), could be challenged only in the circuit court.
The opinion of the Court says that the "review of special assessments by the tribunal will not endanger the timely and orderly collection of taxes or present the risks indicated in Emmet County”.91 Those statements are made on faith and without *699apparent recognition of the realities of the time frame involved in review by the Tax Tribunal or the consequences of an enlarged92 scope of review (de novo) with a right of appeal, under the Tax Tribunal Act, to the Court of Appeals and a constitutional right to have the appellate court determine whether the judgment is supported by substantial evidence on the whole record.
In holding that the Tax Tribunal has jurisdiction, the Court has not simply construed the act to provide that actions formerly brought in the circuit court must now be brought before the Tax Tribunal. It has construed the act to provide for an entirely different kind of review, de novo review. See part VI below.
There is much the same danger that interposing, at the state level, a level of administrative and enlarged review will impair the ability of local governmental units to levy special assessments as there would have been had this Court construed the Tax Tribunal Act to provide for review of intercounty equalization.
M
We do not say or think that "the Legislature made a mistake”.93 The Legislature did just fine. It used words with a meaning fixed in the constitutional and legal history of this state and relied on this Court to discern that meaning. It is this Court that makes a mistake.
Ill
The term "special assessments” appears, as the *700opinion of the Court points out,94 in a number of places in the general property tax laws. That no doubt explains why the words "special assessments” were included in the § 31 jurisdictional statement. Otherwise, it might have been thought that administrative appeals from decisions relating to "special assessments * * * under property tax laws”, subject to the jurisdiction of the State Tax Commission, had not been transferred to the Tax Tribunal and remained subject to quasi-judicial review by the State Tax Commission.
The opinion of the Court states, and we agree, "[bjecause these provisions [referring to special assessments in The General Property Tax Act and in other laws collected in the chapter on real and personal property taxation] do not authorize any special assessments, they must refer to special assessments levied under other laws.”95
Although special assessments are levied under other laws, laws which are not property tax laws, "these provisions” (concerning [see part B below] the collection of special assessments and. the sale of property so assessed for nonpayment of special assessments) are laws or provisions of law which are property tax laws. Decisions respecting the collection of "special assessments * * * under property tax laws” are subject to the jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal.
A
A decision to finance a public improvement by creating a special assessment district and levying a special assessment is not made under The Gen*701©ral Property Tax Act96 or other ad valorem property tax laws or provisions of law which are subject to administration by the State Tax Commission. Rather, such a decision is made pursuant to authority conferred in the statutes defining the municipal powers of counties,97 cities (home-rule98 *702and fourth-class),99 townships,100 charter townships,101 and other governmental bodies (county drain commissioners,102 metropolitan districts103 and villages)104 which are not subject to administrative supervision by the State Tax Commission.
B
The statutes authorizing the establishment of special assessment districts to finance local improvements and the levying of special assessments often give the assessing authority the option of either collecting the assessment or of turning the assessment roll over to the property tax collector.105 Thus, although special assessments are not levied "under property tax laws”, they may be collected by a tax collector under property tax laws.
The Tax Tribunal has said that the State Tax Commission had authority to exercise supervisory control over the actions of a tax collector respect*703ing special assessments,106 for example a tax collector’s refusal to collect a special assessment.107 An ad valorem property tax collector, when billing and collecting a special assessment, functions under procedures set forth in the property tax laws and his acts or failure to act have been regarded as decisions relating to special assessments under property tax laws.
Accordingly, action or non-action of a tax collec*704tor in respect to special assessments, although levied under laws or provisions of law which are not property tax laws, is subject to administrative supervision by the State Tax Commission when required to be collected pursuant to property tax laws and, since enactment of the Tax Tribunal Act, to the jurisdiction ov appeals transferred to the Tax Tribunal. The Tax Tribunal has jurisdiction under § 31 of decisions, formerly appealable to the State Tax Commission, relating to the collection of special assessments when required to be carried out "under property tax laws”.
C
The opinion of the Court argues that there is "no basis for concluding” that the Legislature meant to include within the Tax Tribunal’s jurisdiction only decisions concerning the "ministerial acts involved in the collection of special assessments”.108 The Legislature must have had a larger purpose.
We do not contend that when the Tax Tribunal Act was enacted the Legislature decided to subject decisions relating to the collection of special assessments to Tax Tribunal review but not decisions relating to the levying of special assessments, and that it therefore made a distinction between levying and collection. The distinction is not the result of conscious choice by the Legislature at the time of the enactment of the Tax Tribunal Act but rather follows from choices made long ago by the Legislature and the resulting circumstance that the State Tax Commission never had jurisdiction over decisions relating to levying but did have *705jurisdiction over decisions relating to collection pursuant to the property tax laws.
Since it was the Legislature’s purpose to transfer to the Tax Tribunal jurisdiction over all the appellate business of the State Tax Commission, the Tax Tribunal Act was worded so that the Tax Tribunal would obtain jurisdiction of administrative appeals respecting special assessments. Administrative appeals were, however, limited to decisions under the property tax laws. The only decisions respecting special assessments under the property tax laws concern the collection of special assessments.
The Legislature need not have had a larger purpose. The basic legislative decision, made long ago, was that local units of government may levy special assessments without state supervision and may use the existing ad valorem tax collection machinery, which is subject to state supervision, to collect the special assessment. The decision in 1974, when the Tax Tribunal Act was enacted, was simply to try to do a better job (by creating the Tax Tribunal) in an area of prior state involvement, not to expand that involvement.
Merely because part of the business transferred was the infrequent review of a petition respecting collection, formerly appealable administratively, the Legislature need not have intended to transform altogether the review of local governmental decisions to levy special assessments by providing an administrative appeal at the state level in a relatively large number of cases.
The premise set forth in the opinion of the Court, that the Legislature would not have been *706content with merely providing for review of the ministerial acts involved in the collection of special assessments, overlooks the difference between reviewing decisions of the governing body of a city or of a drain commissioner to finance a public improvement by a special assessment and apportioning such an assessment and reviewing the decision of a tax collector whether to bill and collect an assessment or to refuse to do so.
Nor is it likely that the different means of review of the different decisions will, as argued in the opinion of the Court, "result in forum shopping and increase the possibility of inconsistent decisions in similar cases”.109 The jurisdiction of the State Tax Commission and of the Tax Tribunal with respect to collection does not extend to whether there is a special benefit to the property proposed to be specially assessed, the issue which is generally litigated in special assessment cases. The only issue that could be raised before the Tax Tribunal in regard to collection would be the rarely litigated one of whether the local unit of government had duly adopted, in accordance with procedural requirements, a special assessment roll which the tax collector is required to bill and collect.110 The danger of forum shopping or of inconsistent decisions in regard to matters of that kind, which infrequently are a matter of serious dispute, is small.
D
In construing a statute, a court properly looks at the results which will follow from alternate constructions. We do not therefore take issue with the *707opinion of the Court for advancing "policy” arguments and considering, for example, whether the different means of review of the different decisions appear to be consonant with reason. Our difference of opinion does not concern methodology. We both pay homage to the same jurisprudential gods. We simply see different truths.
IV
Section 41 of the Tax Tribunal Act provides that persons who were theretofore entitled to proceed before "the state tax commission or circuit court” for determination of a matter "subject to the tribunal’s jurisdiction * * * shall proceed only” before the tribunal.111 (Emphasis supplied.)
A'
For reasons already stated — a decision levying a special assessment is not made "under property tax laws” — a challenge to a special assessment is not a matter "subject to the tribunal’s jurisdiction”.
B
The history and antecedents of the Tax Tribunal Act — consistent with a literal reading of § 41— indicate a legislative intent to divest the circuit court of jurisdiction over matters which could be brought either before "the state tax commission or the circuit court” (emphasis supplied), not of mat*708ters which could be brought only in the circuit court.
Before the enactment of the Tax Tribunal Act, a taxpayer had two means of obtaining relief from ad valorem property tax assessments. An administrative appeal could be filed with the State Tax Commission under § 152 of The General Property Tax Act.112 If the tax was paid under protest, an action could be commenced in circuit court for refund under § 53 of that act.113 The two remedies were not mutually exclusive; taxpayers could, and occasionally did, pursue both.
Although both remedies could be pursued, challenges to ad valorem property taxes asserting improper valuation were invariably made before the State Tax Commission, not the courts. The courts had exercised only a limited review of property tax assessments and had disavowed any power to set assessments. Almost without exception the courts had refused to disturb valuations set by tax agencies and would, at most, set aside a palpably erroneous assessment subject to proper reassessment. A taxpayer could obtain effective and final relief only before the State Tax Commission.114
*710The Tax Tribunal Act was enacted to create a specialized, full-time body to hear all property tax appeals.115 The combination in one body, the State Tax Commission, of both the supervisory and the review function was eliminated; henceforth, taxpayers would have an administrative appeal to a tribunal not directly involved in the assessment process, and the State Tax Commission would devote itself solely to administrative supervision of the assessment and collection process. To provide a unified procedure, it was necessary to vest the tribunal with exclusive jurisdiction of all property tax challenges. The Tax Tribunal Act thus established a forum, the Tax Tribunal, to hear appeals formerly reviewed administratively by the State Tax Commission under § 152 and judicially through circuit court refund actions under § 53.
Because a challenge to a special assessment levy on the ground that there was no special benefit was not formerly heard by the State Tax Commission, the jurisdiction exercised by the circuit court to hear a challenge to a special assessment levy was not alternative or supplemental to an administrative appeal to the State Tax Commission. The judicial remedy was the only remedy and, in the limited kinds of cases where judicial relief was *711granted, the courts provided, in contrast with ad valorem property tax appeals, an effective remedy.
In eliminating the duplicative and essentially ineffectual jurisdiction of the circuit court in ad valorem property tax appeals, there was no purpose to eliminate circuit court jurisdiction where the judicial remedy had no administrative parallel and the circuit court had provided an effective remedy.
Indeed, where an action for refund in a court had been an effective remedy, the Legislature, in subsequent legislation affecting the Tax Tribunal’s jurisdiction, continued court jurisdiction although the court remedy was duplicative of administrative review by the Tax Tribunal. Court jurisdiction was continued notwithstanding the "proliferation” of remedies, "problems of forum shopping” and "possibility of inconsistent decisions”.116 In the final resolution, in 1980, of the legislative process adding administrative appeals concerning state taxes formerly heard by the Board of Tax Appeals to the jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal, the Legislature preserved the taxpayer’s alternative judicial remedy by providing that a taxpayer who pays an asserted deficiency under protest may commence an action for refund in the Court of Claims.117
*712The language of §41 of the Tax Tribunal Act ("before the state tax commission or circuit court”) (emphasis supplied) refers quite clearly to contests concerning ad valorem property taxes which, uniquely, could have theretofore been brought either as an administrative appeal "before the state tax commission” under § 152 of The General Property Tax Act "or ['before the’] circuit court” for a refund of taxes paid under § 53 of that act.
Persons who theretofore challenged the levy of a special assessment were not entitled to proceed "before the state tax commission or circuit court” (emphasis supplied). A property owner seeking to challenge a special assessment levy could proceed only in the circuit court.118
The opinion of the Court states that § 41 "implemento] the tribunal’s broad-based jurisdiction over proceedings previously conducted both before the State Tax Commission and the circuit court”119 (emphasis supplied). Challenges to the levying of a *713special assessment were not, however, "previously conducted both before the State Tax Commission and the circuit court” but only in the circuit court.
The last quoted statement in the opinion of the Court was the predicate of the argument, "[because the tribunal has jurisdiction over matters formerly heard in circuit court, its jurisdiction is not limited to matters heard by the State Tax Commission. This reasoning is particularly applicable to special assessments, because many of the actions challenging special assessments were heard in circuit court”.120 The argument ignores that everything "previously conducted both before the State Tax Commission and the circuit court” was formerly heard in the State Tax Commission as well as formerly heard in the circuit court. It does not follow that matters (appeals from special assessment levies) not formerly heard in the State Tax Commission, matters which formerly could only be heard in the circuit court, are now within the jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal simply because they were formerly heard in the circuit court. Only matters "previously conducted both before the State Tax Commission and the circuit court” are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal.
V
This Court has said that it is to be presumed, in reviewing a claim that a statute has divested a court of original and general authority of a measure of its jurisdiction, that the court retains its *714authority.121 It is assumed that if divestiture of jurisdiction is intended the Legislature will express itself "with clearness and leave nothing for the play of doubt and uncertainty”.122 There is a parallel rule of strict construction applicable where, as here, it is claimed that language of a statute is in derogation of the jurisdiction of the circuit court.123
For reasons already stated at length, an intent to divest the circuit court of its jurisdiction over an action to set aside and enjoin the collection of a special assessment on the ground that no special benefit will be conferred by the improvement has not been stated in the Tax Tribunal Act in unambiguous terms, "with clearness * * * leav[ing] nothing for the play of doubt and uncertainty”. An intent to divest general jurisdiction must be indicated with greater clarity and certainty than is evidenced by this act.124
*715VI
Today’s holding, that the Tax Tribunal has jurisdiction, works a significant substantive enlargement of the scope of review of special assessments. It does not merely change the forum in which review will occur. The enlarged scope of review provides additional opportunities for objectors to employ delaying tactics with resulting increases in the cost of local improvements if bonds to pay for the cost of the improvement cannot be sold during the pendency of litigation.
In circuit court challenges to special assessments levied by cities, drain commissioners and other local governmental authorities, the courts of this state have confined the judicial inquiry to the lawfulness of the special assessment and whether there is a special benefit and have generally refused to review the apportionment of benefits.125
Section 35 of the Tax Tribunal Act provides that *716"[a] proceeding before the tribunal shall be original and independent and should be considered de novo”.126
As a result of today’s decision, persons protesting special assessments levied under the home-rule cities act, the Drain Code or other enabling legislation can obtain a Tax Tribunal redetermination of the apportionment of benefits in an "original”, "independent”, "de novo” proceeding — contrary to the sense of the Drain Code and to well-established judicial precedents regarding special assessments generally — with appellate review as of right, under the Tax Tribunal Act, by the Court of Appeals.
Because a decision of the Tax Tribunal relating to special assessments is, we all agree, not a "decision relating to valuation”127 the appellate review would include, as a constitutional minimum, a determination of whether the Tax Tribunal’s decision is "supported by competent, material and substantial evidence on the whole record”.128
*717A
In an effort to avoid the delays of judicial proceedings, the Drain Code provides that proceedings to establish a drain shall be subject to review on certiorari in the circuit court within ten days after a copy of the final order is filed in the office of the drain commissioner and, if no certiorari be brought within the time prescribed, "the drain shall be deemed to have been legally established, and the taxes therefor legally levied, and the legality of said drain and the taxes therefor shall not thereafter be questioned in any suit at law or equity”.129
This Court has held that review on certiorari is limited and that complaints concerning the apportionment of the benefit are not subject to review in certiorari proceedings; absent fraud (actual or constructive) the determination of the board constituted by the probate court130 for the apportionment of benefits is final.131 Generally, a court of equity will intervene only when it is demonstrated that there is no special benefit at all or that the assess*718ment or levy was made without statutory authorization.132
This Court has similarly so held in actions brought in the circuit court complaining of special assessments by cities and other local units of government. The rule is that a court of equity will not substitute its judgment and "weigh the benefits, if, in truth, there are benefits to be weighed”, Fluckey v Plymouth, 358 Mich 447; 100 NW2d 486 (1960), and will intervene only where there is an absence of benefit. Fluckey, supra; Brill v Grand Rapids, 383 Mich 216; 174 NW2d 832 (1970); Johnson v Inkster, 401 Mich 263; 258 NW2d 24 (1977).
The Drain Code provides that if certiorari proceedings are brought and the proceedings are "sustained, the party bringing the certiorari shall be liable for the costs thereof, and if they be not sustained, the parties making application for the drain shall be liable for the costs”.133 Presumably, this provision of the Drain Code is now also superseded upon substitution of Tax Tribunal review for certiorari review. This Court having scrapped the sections of the Drain Code concerning judicial review and the time for review may find it difficult to justify a holding that the Tax Tribunal has authority to apply a provision applicable to a procedure which this Court has ruled has been eliminated by the Tax Tribunal Act.
B
Under the practice prevailing before the adop*719tion of the Tax Tribunal Act, a city or a drain commissioner could seek summary disposition or early trial, and, because the courts did not provide independent, de novo review, insubstantial claims were disposed of readily.
But now, a property owner who formerly could not challenge the apportionment of benefits by a board constituted by a probate court under the Drain Code, who formerly was limited to certiorari review in the circuit court, who could challenge a local assessment made by a city only if he could show an absence of benefit or that the special assessment was not lawfully made, will be able to obtain an independent, de novo review of the apportionment of benefits as well as of a claim that there is no benefit at all.
Substituting Tax Tribunal review for circuit court review is not likely to reduce, and is more likely to facilitate, further appeals to the Court of Appeals and to this Court. Decisions of the Tax Tribunal not related to valuation or allocation must, under the minimum constitutional standard, be reviewed by the Court of Appeals to determine whether they are supported by competent, material and substantial evidence on the whole record.
Providing for review of apportionment of benefits works a profound change in the appellate procedures respecting decisions levying drain and other local special assessments. The cost of most local improvements is funded through bond issues. The pendency of litigation may prevent the sale of bonds. Providing additional avenues for litigation may thus result in significant delays in the sale of bonds with attendant additional construction and other costs.
*720The Legislature desired to facilitate the speedy construction of drain projects and to protect against unfounded litigation by imposing tight time limits and restrictions on appellate review and by providing for the assessment of costs. There is no reason to suppose that in adopting the Tax Tribunal Act to address problems in the administration of the property tax laws the Legislature wished to so alter the scope of review and to work such a dramatic change in the levying and collection of special assessments.
In the instant case, Novi expects that if it succeeds in persuading this Court that the Tax Tribunal has jurisdiction that it will prevail because this action was not commenced before the Tax Tribunal within the 30-day time limit provided for filing an appeal.134 In a case where the property owners are seeking to have the amount of a special benefit reapportioned, cities may rue the day on which it was established that property owners have the right to independent de novo review of the apportionment of benefits.
VII
The opinion of the Court argues that because the Court of Appeals has consistently decided, beginning five years ago in a conclusory opinion,135 *721that the Tax Tribunal has jurisdiction of a petition to review the levy of a special assessment, and because the Legislature did not, when amending the Tax Tribunal Act in 1978 or 1980, respond to the Court of Appeals decisions, there has been legislative approval of those decisions.136
Some statutes are frequently amended, e.g., the Worker’s Disability Compensation Act of 1969, The General Property Tax Act, the Revised Judicature Act of 1961, the Revised Probate Code, the Insurance Code of 1956, and the Michigan Penal Códe, to name just a few. This Court cannot seriously regard a failure to incorporate in an amendatory act corrective action in respect to a judicial decision as bicameral and gubernatorial approval of such judicial decision, especially where the sections affected by the amendatory act were not those construed in the judicial decision, only three years intervened between the judicial decision and *722the enactment of the amendatory act affecting other sections, and the judicial decision is of the Court of Appeals and not of this Court.
There are other argued cases awaiting decision in this Court which could readily be disposed of by this Court if all that we need to do is to look at the passage of time since a judicial pronouncement (not of the Court of Appeals but of this Court) and the Legislature’s failure to respond.
VIII
The opinion of the Court refers to an "initially” circulated opinion which preceded the filing of a responsive opinion by the writer of this opinion137 and states that the initially filed opinion addressed the issues briefed and argued by the parties.
An issue briefed and argued by the parties was whether the circuit court has jurisdiction. In arguing that issue, the Wikmans and the other plaintiffs contended that a proceeding challenging the levy of a special assessment sounds in equity and therefore the circuit court continues to have jurisdiction. They did not make the argument advanced in this opinion concerning the meaning of "property tax laws” as words limiting the jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal.
One can say that the issue was raised or one can say that it was not.
The initially filed opinion provided, as did the Court of Appeals, for remand of this cause to the Tax Tribunal. Implicit in that decision is that the Tax Tribunal has jurisdiction. The initially filed *723opinion so declared and the opinion of the Court so declares.138
The opinion of the Court relies (as did the initially filed opinion) on decisions of the Court of Appeals declaring that the Tax Tribunal has jurisdiction and cites decisions of that Court as authoritative. To have ignored the proposed action to remand to the Tax Tribunal because the Wikmans and the other plaintiffs did not make the argument for circuit court jurisdiction advanced in this opinion, but only the argument that the circuit court has jurisdiction as a court of equity, would be to add to that body of "precedent” by default. The jurisdiction of the circuit court over special assessments would then, as a practical matter, be ousted by the consent of the litigants in this case.
The decision of this Court in this cause, remanding the cause to the Tax Tribunal, will be read by the Tax Tribunal, by the circuit courts, and by the Court of Appeals as dispositive of the question of whether an action challenging a special assessment levy may or, indeed, must be brought before the Tax Tribunal or whether it. can continue to be brought and maintained in the circuit court.
This Court has an obligation, when construing a statute concerning the jurisdiction of the circuit court and an administrative tribunal, to consider all the language of the statute — in the instant case, the term "property tax laws” — although the briefs of counsel fail to advert to all the language. The Court is not limited by counsels’ presentations.
This is not ordinary litigation in which the *724Court can rest decision upon omissions of counsel or of the parties in the course of litigation. The Court has a responsibility to the other persons who will, as a practical matter, be governed by this decision.
The issue goes to the jurisdiction of the circuit courts and the Tax Tribunal. It cannot be waived by the parties or their counsel.139 Indeed, the defendants, Novi and its treasurer, did not raise the jurisdictional issue until after the trial and the matter was on appeal to the Court of Appeals.140
The question of the meaning of "property tax laws” could be posed to the litigants and amicus briefs could be invited from the Michigan Association of Counties, Michigan Municipal League, Michigan Townships Association, county drain commissioners and others before deciding or appearing to decide the question. I would favor that course because I agree with the view expressed in the opinion of the Court that we should not decide a question without providing an opportunity for adversary presentation. Despite the long delay in deciding this issue, it is of far greater importance that it be decided correctly than that it be decided today.141
*725IX
The circuit judge found that the Wikmans and the other plaintiffs would receive no special benefit from the proposed improvements to Taft Road over and above those enjoyed by the public at large.142 In a number of cases, this Court has held that such a finding entitles property owners to equitable relief from a special assessment although they failed to observe statutorily prescribed procedures for contesting a special assessment.143
If it were necessary to decision — although as we would construe the Tax Tribunal Act it is not — we would nevertheless be inclined to agree with the opinion of the Court that an equitable remedy is not available in the instant case.144 .
The general rule heretofore has been that courts will not review the judgment of a governmental authority establishing a special assessment district or the apportionment of benefits, but that such deference to the finding of a governmental authority is not warranted and equitable relief is available where the property owner shows that the governmental authority acted without a factual predicate — without lawful authority or in the absence of special benefit.145
The holding, in the opinion of the Court, that the Tax Tribunal has jurisdiction means that re*726view of the entire matter, factually, on the merits, in an independent, original de novo hearing,146 is obtainable in a quasi-judicial proceeding. The Tax Tribunal will presumably approach its reviewing responsibility with care. Concern about the adequacy of factual determinations where they are made upon a hearing conducted by the city or other governmental authority levying the special assessment is not likely to provide a basis for equitable intervention.
Nor does it appear that there is any need to enjoin collection of a special assessment in order to provide an adequate remedy. While the Tax Tribunal Act requires payment of ad valorem property taxes as a precondition to a hearing, there is no such requirement for other matters within the Tax Tribunal’s jurisdiction.147 Plaintiffs have no need for temporary injunctive relief unless their property is about to be sold, before final decision of the Tax Tribunal and on any appeals therefrom, for nonpayment of the special assessment. A favorable decision by the Tax Tribunal or on appeal would have the effect of a permanent injunction against collection of the special assessment.
There is no need to decide in this case whether a class action can be maintained in equity to enjoin a special assessment. This is not a class action. Plaintiffs, 45 persons owning 34 separate homes, joined together to bring this action. While it appears that each property owner may be required to pay $50 to commence a proceeding before the Tax Tribunal, it has not been asserted that in the circumstances of the instant case the Tax Tribunal *727remedy is for that reason inadequate. In Romulus City Treasurer v Wayne County Drain Comm’r, post, p 728, decided today, we explore the class action question.
We would reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals, and remand the cause to it for consideration of the other issues raised by the city’s appeal and the plaintiffs’ cross-appeal.
Kavanagh, J., concurred with Levin, J.The plaintiffs first contested the special assessment in public hearings held by the Novi City Council. They asserted that the affected property owners would not be specially benefited by the proposed improvement and that its cost should be spread against the entire city.
The city treasurer notified the plaintiffs by letters dated May 14, 1976, that the city council had confirmed the special assessment on April 26, 1976. The letters also stated the amount of the special assessment apportioned to the addressee property owner and that the first installment would be reflected in the 1976 city tax bill.
The plaintiffs filed this action in circuit court on June 9, 1976, reiterating the objections raised at the public hearing. They asked that the special assessment be adjudged illegal and void, .that their property be discharged of any liens, and that an injunction be entered restraining all efforts to assess and collect the special assessment.
The defendants, Novi and its treasurer, contend that an appeal from a special assessment must be brought within 30 days (see fn 134) of confirmation of the assessment roll before the Tax Tribunal, and that plaintiffs’ asserted error — not noticed by defendants until the cause reached the Court of Appeals on appeal by the defendants from an adverse determination on the merits — in bringing their appeal in the wrong forum bars any relief because the 30-day time limit has long ago expired.
The verdict of an advisory jury was that the paving of Taft Road did not confer additional benefit upon the property of the plaintiffs over and above that conferred upon the general public of Novi.
The circuit judge entered the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:
"I. Findings of Fact
"1. That the improvements to Taft Road, the subject of this lawsuit, included widening the traveled portion of the road, paving the road, adding two eight-foot shoulders and large drainage ditches on both sides, and straightening both vertically and horizontally the road bed.
"2. That these total improvements changed the character of this essentially rural road to that of a through road or a thoroughfare.
"3. That the improvements necessitated the removal of all trees, shrubbery and growth along both sides of said road.
"4. That the plaintiffs’ abutting property owners, use of Taft Road approximated only five (5%) percent when measured against the impact on the road and use by the school district and the public at large.
"5. That the resident property owners of Taft Road sustained some *657detriment to their property caused by the improvements and those detriments included the following:
"A. Removal of all trees, approximately 60 in number;
"B. Removal of all screening vegetation;
"C. Loss of sound barrier and privacy from road;
"D. Loss of aesthetics;
"E. Expected increase in volume of traffic;
"F. Increase of the speed of vehicular traffic on the improved surface of Taft Road.
"6. That any beneñt received by the plaintiffs in this case was so minimal as to be offset by the detriments. As a consequence this court ñnds that plaintiffs received no special benefits from the improvements to Taft Road over and above those enjoyed by the public at large.
”11. Conclusions of Law
"1. That the road improvements to Taft Road between Ten Mile and Grand River in the City of Novi do not confer any special beneSts on the abutting property owners over and above the beneñts received ■by the public at large.
"2. That the special assessment roll numbers 32 and 33 by the city assessor of the City of Novi are invalid and void.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Although the finding of-'"no special benefit” is not relevant in deciding the construction of the Tax Tribunal Act, it might be relevant in deciding plaintiffs’ claim that they can maintain an action in equity although the jurisdiction' of the Tax Tribunal is "exclusive”. See part IX, below.
The Court of Appeals said:
"Our review of the record convinces us that the equities are on the side of the plaintiffs; nonetheless, it is well-settled that the parties may not confer by waiver, stipulation or otherwise, subject-matter jurisdiction where it does not exist.”
The finding "that the equities are on the side of the plaintiffs” might, again, be relevant in deciding plaintiffs’ equitable claim. See part IX, below.
This direction was rested on the authority of GCR 1963, 820.1(7):
"Rule 820. Miscellaneous Relief Obtainable in Court of Appeals.
“.1 Relief Obtainable. The Court of Appeals may, at any time, in *658addition to its general powers, in its discretion and on such terms as it deems just:
“(7) Give any judgment and make any order which ought to have been given or made, and make such other and further orders and grant such relief, as the case may require.”
MCL 205.735; MSA 7.650(35). See fn 134.
Ante, p 626.
"The tribunal’s exclusive and original jurisdiction shall be:
"(a) A proceeding for direct review of a final decision, finding, ruling, determination, or order of an agency relating to assessment, valuation, rates, special assessments, allocation, or equalization, under property tax laws.
"(b) A proceeding for refund or redetermination of a tax under the property tax laws.” MCL 205.731; MSA 7.650(31).
A "proceeding” is defined as "an appeal”, MCL 205.703(e); MSA 7.650(3)(e).
"(1) Subject to section 28 of article 6 of the constitution of 1963, and pursuant to section 102 of Act No. 306 of the Public Acts of 1969, as amended, being section 24.302 of the Michigan Compiled Laws, and in accordance with general court rules, an appeal from the tribunal’s decision shall be by right to the court of appeals. For purposes of the constitutional provision, the tribunal is the final agency for the administration of property tax laws.” MCL 205.753(1); MSA 7.650(53)(1).
See fn 97 ff.
See fn 111.
See fns 81 and 118.
See fn 114.
The state has not provided a state administrative tribunal to review decisions of local units of government in regard to, for example, excise taxes, issuance and denial of licenses, and zoning, nor has it enacted an administrative procedures act with respect to the actions of local units of government.
See text accompanying and following fn 65.
See the opinion of the Court, fn 16, ante, p 637. See also fn 105.
At the time of the enactment of the Tax Tribunal Act, § 53 of The General Property Tax Act provided that any person may pay "any tax or special assessment” under protest and, within 30 days and not afterwards, commence an action for a refund. MCL 211.53; MSA 7.97. This provision fell into desuetude as to special assessments following this Court’s decision in Knott v Flint, 363 Mich 483, 495; 109 NW2d 908 (1961), where four justices said that the provision concerning actions for refund of special assessments violated the title-object clause of the constitution because the title of The General Property Tax Act related solely to the "taxation of property”. See fn 59.
See fn 105 ff.
See fn 106 ff.
See fn 135.
See fn 126.
See text accompanying and following fn 65.
See text (subpart L) following fn 88.
See text (subpart B) accompanying and following fn 30.
See text (subpart D) accompanying and following fn 41.
See text (subpart B) accompanying and following fn 30.
See fns 69 and 117 and accompanying text.
See fn 7.
See fn 7.
Ante, p 631.
See fn 8.
"All final decisions, findings, rulings and orders of any administrative officer or agency existing under the constitution or by law, which are judicial or quasi-judicial and affect private rights or licenses, shall be subject to direct review by the courts as provided by law. This review shall include, as a minimum, the determination whether such final decisions, findings, rulings and orders are authorized by law; and, in cases in which a hearing is required, whether the same are supported by competent, material and substantial evidence on the whole record. Findings of fact in workmen’s compensation proceedings shall be conclusive in the absence of fraud unless otherwise provided by law.
“In the absence of fraud, error of law or the' adoption of wrong principles, no appeal may be taken to any court from any ñnal agency provided for the administration of property tax laws from any decision relating to valuation or allocation.” Const 1963, art 6, §28. (Emphasis supplied.)
"Mr. Brake: * * *
"What we said the other day, by a margin of 11 votes, was that after the taxpayer has gone to the board of review in his local community, then has gone to the state tax commission, and they have said how much his property is worth, that then he can always go to a court and have the judge say: 'No, I don’t think that value is right. I don’t think this property is worth $10,000. I think it’s worth $9,500.’ That is just impossible if you’re going to have a property tax law that *669will work. And that is all that we were trying to get at. Never, never in the world can we have a judge substitute his opinion for the opinion of the assessors and have tax machinery that you can live with. Now, when there is a matter of bad faith, when there is a matter of fraud, an illegal tax, the remedy in the court is ready any time. You always can get in court on those things. All we’re talking about is the matter of fixing the value upon which property is to be taxed.
“If the assessment is illegal, you don’t wait until you’ve gone through the state tax commission. You have a remedy immediately on an assessment that is illegal, in the circuit court of your own county. This is just a matter of the fixing of the value — nothing else— for the decision of the tax allocation board. I. think our wording excludes everything else.
"Mr. Allen: Mr. President, I would also dispute Mr. Hatch’s point. I think he feels that somehow or other we’re limiting, by this amendment, the right of appeal from the state tax commission that now exists. All we’re trying to do in this is to say that on state tax commission matters we preserve all the rights that already exist but we are not going to go further and allow the court to substitute its judgment and become an assessor.
"We also are concerned about the question of time that is involved; in the inability of local units to spread their rolls where you first have the appeal to the state tax commission and then another appeal. The amendment is s designed to protect all the existing rights, and I haven’t heard complaints on appeals from the state tax commission. I don’t think we have a problem there. We take nothing away, but we don’t want to broaden it and we do broaden it far too much if we don’t put the amendment in.
"Mr. Thomson: Mr. President, fellow delegates, I believe that Delegate Hatch approached this from a theoretical rather than a practical standpoint. With 12 years’ experience as an assessing officer and 20 years’ experience as a member of an allocation board, we have enough delay when we have to fool around with the state tax commission; so I don’t think that we possibly could get by if it had to be a continuation in the courts. I urge you to vote for the amendment.
"Mr. Buback: Mr. President and fellow delegates, I strongly urge you to approve this amendment. I’ve been asked to make a little statement here and I think it’s worthwhile for the record.
"Section 28 of article VI, which in its entirety is statutory language which does not belong in the constitution, most certainly should at least be amended to include an exception for appeals from the proceedings of the state tax commission except in the case of fraud or illegality of assessment. The findings of fact of the state tax commission are normally highly technical determinations of valuations for *670either assessment or equalization purposes. They should not be disturbed except in the case of fraud. No evidence has been given to demonstrate any abuse of this power on the part of the tax commission and therefore this constitution should not contain a restrictive provision which will result in costly delays in the proceedings for the assessment and collection of property taxes to the detriment of all local units of government. The property tax is and will remain the single most important revenue source for such local units, and unless appeals on matters of assessment and equalization can be handled in an expeditious manner, the furnishing of local services will be interfered with and our citizens will suffer. To open up full review of determination of facts on assessments and equalization will only serve to establish the supreme court of Michigan as a super assessor and will result in disturbing the uniform application of assessing principles by the state tax commission. I strongly urge the adoption of this amendment.” 2 Official Record, Constitutional Convention 1961, pp 3240-3243.
“No appeal may be taken to any court from a decision of the state tax commission fixing the value of described property for property tax purposes or determining an appeal from a decision of the county tax allocation board.” 2 Official Record, Constitutional Convention 1961, p 3240.
2 Official Record, Constitutional Convention 1961, pp 3291-3293.
Id.
This becomes even more clear when one considers the language chosen by the committee on style and drafting to express the intention of the delegates to make an exception for decisions of the State Tax Commission fixing the value of property for property tax purposes.
The enabling act which created the State Tax Commission provides that it "shall have general supervision of the administration of the tax laws of the state”. 1927 PA 360; MCL 209.104; MSA 7.634. (Emphasis supplied.) The Department of Revenue was created (1941 PA 122; MCL 205.1; MSA 7.657[1]) to administer the subsequently enacted sales, intangible, and other state taxes and, hence, the need to add "property” before "tax laws” in the constitution to refer accurately to the State Tax Commission and its functions. See fn 70.
The language quoted from 1927 PA 360 repeats language which first appeared in an act adopted two years earlier (1925 PA 155; MCL 209.152 and 209.153; MSA 7.621 and 7.622) creating a State Tax Department to which was transferred the powers and duties of the Board of State Tax Commissioners which was created by an amendment (1899 PA 154) to The General Property Tax Act of 1893.
The provisions added in 1899, creating the Board of State Tax Commissioners and providing for appeals thereto by those aggrieved by property tax assessments, have remained a part of The General Property Tax Act (see MCL 211.146-211.154; MSA 7.204-7.211) although, as a result of the Tax Tribunal Act, the reviewing functions of the State Tax Commission have been transferred to the Tax Tribunal.
The General Property Tax Act was amended in 1969 to exempt the proceedings of the State Tax Commission from the contested case provisions of the Administrative Procedures Act and to provide that "in its determination, article VI, section 28, of the constitution of the *672state of Michigan shall apply”. 1969 PA 270; MCL 211.152(3); MSA 7.210(3).
See fns 7, 8, and 31.
Ante, p 639.
Ante, p 640. A similar argument is made in respect to the word "collection”. Ante, p 642.
The opinion of the Court declares:
“However, special assessments levied against property owners for public improvements to realty which especially benefit their property are special assessments under the property tax laws for the purposes of the Tax Tribunal Act.” Ante, p 636.
The opinion of the Court also declares:
"[T]he phrase [“property tax laws”] distinguishes special assessments that are under the taxing power and that relate to real property from other types of special assessments”. Ante, p 640.
The following provisions of the Tax Tribunal Act, for example, could not be applied to special assessments:
"Sec. 35. (1) * * * In the case of an assessment dispute as to the valuation of the property or where an exemption is claimed, the assessment must be protested before the board of review before the tribunal may acquire jurisdiction of the dispute, except that for the 1976 tax year only in a county whose state equalized valuation set by the state tax commission exceeds its assessed valuation and its equalized valuation set by the county board of commissioners for that year by at least 10%, a taxpayer may appeal directly to the tax tribunal.” MCL 205.735(1); MSA 7.650(35)(1). (Emphasis supplied.)
"Sec. 37. (1) In arriving at its determination of a lawful property assessment, the tribunal shall determine the amount by multiplying its finding of true cash value by a percentage equal to the ratio of the average level of assessment in relation to true cash values in the assessment district.” MCL 205.737(1); MSA 7.650(37)(1). (Emphasis supplied.)
There is no reference to payment of "special assessments”, only to payment of "taxes”. See MCL 205.743(1); MSA 7.650(43X1). This provision, by its terms as amended by 1976 PA 365, would not apply to a special assessment. See MCL 205.743(2); MSA 7.650(43X2).
There is no provision of the Tax Tribunal Act which would be applicable only to special assessments.
See fns 7 and 8.
See MCL 205.734; MSA 7.650(34); MCL 205.735; MSA 7.650(35); MCL 205.737; MSA 7.650(37); MCL 205.743; MSA 7.650(43).
Ante, p 633.
The opinion of the Court refers to this Court’s opinion in Motz v Detroit, 18 Mich 495 (1869); MCL 103.4; MSA 5.1823 and Dukesherer Farms, Inc v Director of Dep’t of Agriculture (After Remand), 405 Mich 1, 14, 23; 273 NW2d 877 (1979).
Motz was one of the Detroit Paving Cases. Three opinions were filed by the four justices; the opinion of the Court in the instant case does not state what portion of which opinion in Motz is relied on and for what. The Detroit Paving Cases are adverted to further in fn 55 and accompanying text.
The statutory reference concerns the power of the city to cause the construction of sidewalks and to assess the cost to the abutting property owner as a special assessment; the opinion of the court does not state how such a special assessment differs from the special assessment involved in the Detroit Paving Cases, on which it relies, or the special assessment for the improvement of Taft Road involved in the instant case.
Dukesherer Farms dealt with the question "whether the 'assessments’ authorized by the Agricultural Commodities Marketing Act constitute 'taxes’ subject to constitutional limitations and restrictions and therefore represent an unconstitutional delegation of the taxing power to producers of agricultural commodities in violation of the Michigan Constitution”. The Court concluded that the levy was "an assessment and not a tax”, and thus there was no unconstitutional delegation of the "taxing power” of this state.
The constitutional question (is this governmentally authorized ex-*677actment a tax?) presented in Dukesherer Farms is not the question here. We are confronted rather with a constructional question under the Tax Tribunal Act. The opinion of the Court argues that a special assessment levied by a home-rule city is a tax levied under the "taxing power”. See flu 55 and accompanying text. Dukesherer Farms stands for the proposition that the levy or assessment there involved was not a "tax", The levy or assessment involved in Dukesherer Farms not being a "tax”, a decision appealing from such a levy or assessment would not, in either the construction of "property tax laws” discernible from the opinion of the Court or the construction which we believe to be correct, be within the jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal. (The reasoning of the Court would not include within "property tax laws” a non-governmental exaction authorized or required by government [the levy or assessment in Dukesherer Farms or, for example, compulsory insurance programs], and implicit in the construction of "property tax laws” which we believe to be correct is that the term includes only a governmental exaction.)
See fn 7.
See Dukesherer Farms, Inc v Director of Dep’t of Agriculture (After Remand), 405 Mich 1, 14, 23; 273 NW2d 877 (1979), supra, discussed in fn 45.
Poll and capitation taxes are no longer exacted.
The corporation franchise, intangibles (fn 50) and use taxes (fn 51) are taxes on property. Like the ad valorem property tax, they are based on a measure of the value of the property.
The franchise tax is based on "paid-up capital and surplus”; the latter is defined as the "net value of the corporation’s property, less its outstanding indebtedness and paid-up capital”. 1921 PA 85, §4 (formerly MCL 450.304; MSA 21.205), repealed by 1975 PA 230, which transferred certain pending and future appeals to the Tax Tribunal.
The intangibles tax on non-income-producing intangible personal property is based on “face or par value”, which is also the minimum tax on income-producing intangible personal property. The intangibles tax on banks and savings and loan associations is based on the "face value” of deposits in banks and the “paid-in value of the share” in a savings and loan association. MCL 205.132; MSA 7.556(2).
The use tax is based on the "price”. MCL 205.93; MSA 7.555(3).
The measure of value for the use tax (price) is close to the ad valorem property tax measure of value (true cash value [Const 1963, art 9, § 3] and "usual selling price” MCL 211.27; MSA 7.27).
The "face value” of bank deposits and the "paid-in value” of savings and loan shares (see fn 50) is also close to true cash value or usual selling price, as would be the "net value” of a corporation’s property (see fn 49). Those measures of value may, indeed, be closer than the amount of a special assessment levy based on "benefit” conferred which need not be solely related to the "enhanced value” of the property specially benefited. Foren v Royal Oak, 342 Mich 451, 456; 70 NW2d 692 (1955).
The franchise (fn 49) and intangibles taxes (fn 50) are, like the ad valorem property tax, annual taxes. The use tax, like a special assessment, is levied in respect to tangible property and is levied once.
See fn 69.
The United States Constitution provides: "No Capitation, or other direct, Tax shall be laid, unless in Proportion to the Census or Enumeration herein before directed to be taken.” Art I, § 9.
On rehearing, the Court reached the same conclusion. The opinions are quite lengthy, extending over 100 pages, and for that reason we will simply quote the headnotes in 39 L Ed 1108:
"1. Taxes on real estate being indisputably direct taxes, taxes on the rents or income of real estate are equally direct taxes.
"2. Taxes on personal property, or on the income of personal property, are likewise direct taxes.”
Ante, p 640.
Justice Campbell wrote:
"The first question that arises is, under what division of powers is this exercise of authority to be classed? It was held by the former Supreme Court, in Williams v Mayor of Detroit, 2 Mich 560 [1853], that these expenditures and charges could only be justified under the taxing power, as the imposition of burdens for public purposes. Such is the course of modern decisions; and if it be not an exercise of the taxing power, it is not easy to find any basis for it to rest upon.” Justice Christiancy wrote a separate opinion. Woodbridge v Detroit, 8 Mich 274, 289 (1860).
Justice Manning disagreed and said:
"Taxes for purely local public improvements, like the one before us, more generally called assessments, are not mentioned in the constitution, nor is it necessary they should be to give the legislature power over them. The power to impose and collect such taxes, like all other legislative powers not mentioned in the constitution, is plenary, and in the exercise of it is subject to legislative discretion only.” Chief Justice Martin concurred in Justice Manning’s opinion. Id., 281.
See Moore v Harrison, 224 Mich 512; 195 NW 306 (1923). See also Cilley v Sullivan, 187 Mich 447; 153 NW 773 (1915); Attorney General ex rel Alexander v McClear, 146 Mich 45; 109 NW 27 (1906); Kinnie v Bare, 68 Mich 625; 36 NW 672 (1888).
While a special assessment is a governmental exaction and is in that sense a tax, it is no longer denominated a tax for the purposes of the 15-mill limitation and most other purposes (see fn 59).
Graham is discussed and the constitutional provision there construed is set forth in fn 59. The 1963 Constitution, art 9, § 6, eliminates the constructional issue posed and resolved in Graham by adding the words "ad valorem”, thereby embodying the Graham construction of the words "tax” and "assessed against property”. Graham continues to stand for the proposition that a special assessment is not a "tax assessed against property”.
This Court has held that provisions of the constitution and of The General Property Tax Act concerning "property taxes” do not apply to special assessments because they are not taxes. This Court has said:
"There is a clear distinction between what are termed general taxes and special assessments. The former are burdens imposed generally upon property owners for governmental purposes without regard to any special benefit which will inure to the taxpayer. The latter are sustained upon the theory that the value of the property in the special assessment district is enhanced by the improvement for which the assessment is made.” In re Petition of Auditor General, 226 Mich 170, 173; 197 NW 552 (1924). Similarly, see Graham v Saginaw, 317 Mich 427, 431-433; 27 NW2d 42 (1947); see also cases cited in In re Petition of Auditor General, 226 Mich 170, 173-174; 197 NW 552 (1924); 2 Cooley, Taxation (3d ed), p 1153.
Illustrative of the distinction between special assessments and property taxes are decisions of this Court holding that
—an exemption from "property taxes” does not provide an exemption from special assessments, see Lake Shore & M S R Co v Grand Rapids, 102 Mich 374; 60 NW 767 (1894); In re Petition of Auditor General, supra.
—the 15-mill limitation on the amount of taxes that may be assessed against "property” ("The total amount of taxes assessed against property for all purposes in any one year shall not exceed one and one-half percent of the assessed valuation of said property”. Const 1908, art 10, § 21; similarly, see Const 1963, art 9, § 6.) does not apply to special assessments, see Graham v Saginaw, supra.
—a statute providing that "[n]o injunction shall issue to stay proceedings for the assessment or collection of taxes under [The General Property Tax Act]” (1929 CL 3507; now MCL 211.114; MSA 7.168) is inapplicable to special assessments because special assessments are not levied under The General Property Tax Act, see Forest Hill Cemetery Co v Ann Arbor, 303 Mich 56, 67; 5 NW2d 564 (1942); and
—a term in a lease requiring the lessee to pay "all taxes” did not embrace special assessments because the general understanding of the meaning of the word "taxes” does not include special assessments, *684see Blake v Metropolitan Chain Stores, 247 Mich 73; 225 NW 587 (1929); the lease required the payment of “all taxes, ordinary as well as extraordinary, of every kind that may be levied upon or assessed against said premises”.
Indeed, special assessments were found so dissimilar to property taxes that an amendment to The General Property Tax Act to add a provision concerning actions for refund of special assessments (1941 PA 234 amending § 53; MCL 211.53; MSA 7.97) was thought by four of eight justices (before the number was reduced to seven) to violate the title-object clause of the constitution (Const 1908, art 5, § 21; currently Const 1963, art 4, § 24) because the title of the act "related solely to the taxation of property and the procedure to be followed with reference thereto”. Knott v Flint, 363 Mich 483, 495; 109 NW2d 908 (1961). (Emphasis supplied.) Flint had contended that a law action for refund was an adequate remedy. The other four justices, three without discussion of § 53, agreed with the lead opinion (signed by four) that an equitable action could be maintained and that the proofs supported the decree finding no special benefit.
See fn 33 and accompanying text.
Section 265 of the Drain Code provides that “drain taxes assessed under the provisions of this act shall be subject to the same interest and charges, and shall be collected in the same manner as state and other general taxes are collected, and collecting officers are hereby vested with the same power and authority in the collection of such taxes as are or may be conferred by law for collecting general taxes”. MCL 280.265; MSA 11.1265.
This might provide a statutory basis for State Tax Commission and Tax Tribunal review of the collection of drain taxes. But see Hillyer v Jonesfield Twp, 114 Mich 644, 646; 72 NW 619 (1897), holding that succeeding language of this section of the Drain Code " 'if such tax shall be paid under protest, the reasons therefor shall be specified, and the same procedure observed as is or may be required by the general tax law,’ should be construed as having reference to the protest and the action of the officer to whom the money is paid, and not as intended to give a right of action against the township”.
Some statutes provide for levies which, although denominated "special assessments”, are not truly special assessments but rather *686are ad valorem property taxes because they are to be spread, like an ad valorem tax, not on the basis of special benefit but ad valorem against all real property within the local unit of government making the assessment. Although denominated a special assessment, such a levy is a tax and is subject to constitutional and other limitations applicable to taxes:
"[A]n assessment levied against all real property within a local unit of government which does not confer a special benefit on the property assessed is a tax, notwithstanding the fact that it is denominated by statute as a special assessment. In OAG, 1979-1980, No 5706, p 770 (May 13, 1980), it was determined that a so-called special assessment against all of the property within a municipality to finance a municipal ambulance service would be, in effect, a general tax subject to the voter approval requirements of Const 1963, art 9, §§ 6 and 31. The reason for the conclusion was that a municipal-wide levy for such a purpose is not a special assessment since it would be for the benefit of all of the residents thereof and would confer no special benefit on the property assessed.” OAG, 1981, No 6018 (December 22, 1981).
While the Drain Code provides that "[a]U apportionments of benefits under the provisions of this act shall be upon the principle of benefits derived”, MCL 280.152; MSA 11.1152, it permits a levy of an entire municipality’s share of a special assessment against the municipality, MCL 280.151; MSA 11.1151, which must then levy the same amount against all individual property owners in the municipality ad valorem, MCL 280.263; MSA 11.1263. Such a levy, ad valorem, is not a special assessment, OAG, 1943-1944, No 0-2042, p 693 (March 30, 1944).
Since such a levy is made ad valorem, the language of the Drain Code authorizing the municipality to make the levy might, for purposes of the Tax Tribunal Act, be a provision of law authorizing an ad valorem tax on property and, hence, the Drain Code might pro tanto be a property tax law although other provisions of the Drain Code, authorizing assessments on the basis of benefit conferred — true special assessments — are not property tax laws.
Ante, p 635.
Ante, p 639.
See fn 69.
The Tax Tribunal and its predecessors (the State Tax Commission, 1927 PA 360; MCL 209.101; MSA 7.631; the State Tax Department, 1925 PA 155; MCL 209.152; MSA 7.621; the Board of State Tax Commissioners, 1899 PA 154; 1915 CL 4144 et seq.; the State Board of Tax Appeals, 1941 PA 122; MCL 205.9 et seq.; MSA 7.657[9] et seq.; also the State Board of Tax Administration and certain functions of the Auditor General and the Secretary of State, see 1945 PA 103; MCL 205.13; MSA 7.657[13]; and the State Board of Equalization, 1911 PA 44; MCL 209.1; MSA 7.601) were constituted to provide a means for the administration of, and for review of decisions relating to, state taxes and not local taxes or assessments.
After the 15-mill limitation was added to the constitution in 1932 and the Property Tax Limitation Act was enacted in 1933, the state ceased to receive a share of the tax revenues generated by the local assessment process.
See 1933 PA, p 517 for the text of Const 1908, art 10, § 21, adding the 15-mill limitation; now Const 1963, art 9, § 6. See 1933 PA 62; MCL 211.201-211.217; MSA 7.61-7.77, for the Property Tax Limitation Act. See Stason, The Fifteen Mill Tax Amendment and Its Effect, 31 Mich L Rev 371 (1933).
When the Board of State Tax Commissioners was created and empowered in 1899 to revise the assessment of property, the constitutionality of the enabling act was challenged on the ground that it interfered with local self-government. In rejecting that challenge, this Court said:
"It was not distinctively a matter of local concern. The State is *689concerned in the proper assessment of property, not only as to its own interests as they are affected by the collection or failure to collect the funds necessary to carry on government, but, as the supreme authority in the State, the legislature is required by section 12, art 14, of the Constitution, to see to it that assessments be made on property at its real value.” Board of State Tax Comm’rs v Grand Rapids Board of Assessors, 124 Mich 491, 496; 83 NW 209 (1900).
An earlier state involvement was the creation of the State Board of Equalization in 1851. See 1851 PA 106; 1905 PA 248 (repealed as obsolete by 1915 PA 240); 1911 PA 44; MCL 209.1 et seq.; MSA 7.601 et seq.
It was essential that the state supervise the administration of the real and personal property tax laws lest underassessment or other maladministration at the local level reduce the amount of state revenues or result in a significant departure between one township, city or county and another in the level of taxation or other variance inconsistent with the basic constitutional principle of uniformity of taxation. See Const 1908, art 10, §§ 3-8; Const 1850, art 14, §§ 11-13; Const 1963, art 9, § 3.
See the State School Aid Act of 1977, 1977 PA 90; MCL 388.1401 et seq.; MSA 15.1919(701) et seq., concerning the allocation of the state school aid fund.
The State Revenue Sharing Act of 1971, 1971 PA 140; MCL 141.901 et seq.; MSA 5.3194(401) et seq., provides larger payments to those local units of government which make a greater tax effort. MCL 141.913; MSA 5.3194(413); MCL 141.905; MSA 5.3194(405). The strength of a local tax effort is gauged by the tax revenue (ad valorem, income and excise) MCL 141.904(3); MSA 5.3194(404)(3), derived in relation to the state equalized value, MCL 141.905(1); MSA 5.3194(405)(1). Absent supervision at the state level, communities might have an incentive to reduce valuations and resulting assessments not only to reduce the community’s share of the county tax bill but also to increase revenue sharing entitlements. While the amounts derived from special assessments are treated as part of the tax effort under an alternative formula which can increase but not reduce the amount of revenue sharing, MCL 141.914; MSA 5.3194(414), MCL 141.906; MSA 5.3194(406), since the amount derived is a fact rather than a concept or a formula, MCL 141.904(5); MSA 5.3194(404)(5), it may not be subject to manipulation and has not heretofore been made a matter of state supervision.
When the Tax Tribunal Act was drafted, the jurisdictional statement, § 31, was confined to taxes and assessments under property tax laws. Almost as an afterthought, it was provided, in concluding § 79, that any person who formerly could proceed before "the board of tax appeals, the corporation tax appeal board, any quasi-judicial body, the court of claims, probate court, district court, municipal court, common pleas court, or circuit court of this state for determination of a matter subject to the tribunal’s jurisdiction, as provided in this section, shall proceed only before the tribunal”. (Emphasis supplied.) But there was nary a word in § 79 regarding the § 79 jurisdiction of the tribunal. 1973 PA 186, § 79, subd 2; MCL 205.779(2); MSA 7.650(79)(2).
The Legislature clarified its meaning in 1976 when it amended § 79 to provide that cases formerly appealable to any such body or court for determination of a matter relating to the state income tax, the intangibles tax, the inheritance tax, the franchise fee, the general sales tax, the use tax, the gasoline tax, the cigarette tax, or oil and gas severance tax, "shall proceed only before the tribunal”. 1976 PA 37; MCL 205.779(2); MSA 7.650(79)(2). Significantly, all the statutes referred to concerned state taxes.
The Attorney General ruled that the 1976 amendment was violative of Const 1963, art 4, § 25, prohibiting amendment by reference to the title only and requiring re-enactment and publication at length. OAG, 1975-1976, No 5138, p 704 (December 10, 1976). But see Midland Twp v State Boundary Comm, 401 Mich 641, 656-663; 259 NW2d 326 (1977).
The Legislature tried once again in 1980, providing that a person aggrieved by a' decision of the revenue division may appeal the contested portion to the Tax Tribunal or the Court of Claims after payment of the uncontested portion, except that in an appeal to the Court of Claims the appellant "shall first pay the tax”. 1980 PA 162; MCL 205.22; MSA 7.657(22). Also in 1980, the Legislature repealed the provisions of the income tax act, 1980 PA 169, repealing MCL 206.421; MSA 7.557(1421); the General Sales Tax Act, 1980 PA 164, repealing MCL 205.72; MSA 7.543; the intangibles tax act, 1980 PA 168, repealing MCL 205.143; MSA 7.556(13); and the cigarette tax act, 1980 PA 167, amending MCL 205.508; MSA 7.411(8) — all state taxes— theretofore providing for judiciál review in the circuit court, thereby underscoring its intention to direct all appeals regarding such state taxes to the Tax Tribunal or the Court of Claims.
The Corporation Franchise Fee Appeal Board was abolished by 1975 PA 230, which also transferred that board’s jurisdiction to the Tax Tribunal.
With the demise of the state property tax, the state sought other *691means of revenue, and the sales tax was enacted in 1933 (1933 PA 167; MCL 205.51; MSA 7.521), and a succession of other taxes: the use tax (1937 PA 94; MCL 205.91; MSA 7.555[1]), the intangibles personal property tax (1939 PA 301; MCL 205.131; MSA 7.556[1]), the cigarette tax (1947 PA 265; MCL 205.501; MSA 7.411[1]), and the income tax (1953 PA 150; MCL 205.551 et seq.; MSA 7.557[1] et seq., now 1967 PA 281; MCL 206.1 et seq.; MSA 7.557[101] et seq.).
With the advent of these taxes, new agencies were created to administer them — the State Board of Tax Administration, for the sales and use taxes, and the Department of Revenue (now the Revenue Division of the Department of Treasury) to which was transferred all, or substantially all administrative functions in regard to state taxes, with the exception of real and personal property taxes, which continue to be administered by the State Tax Commission and the State Board of Equalization. See MCL 205.13; MSA 7.657(13). As a result, the State Tax Commission ceased to be charged with the administration of "all the tax laws of this state”. See fn 36.
While the Legislature conferred on the State Commissioner of Revenue, under this act and the one referred to in the next footnote, the power to provide by rule and decision a measure of uniformity in the administration of the uniform city income tax and the uniform city utility users tax ordinances, it did not confer general supervisory powers upon the commissioner. See MCL 141.693; MSA 5.3194(103).
To be sure, it did thereby provide for an administrative appeal at the state level. But it did so in respect to a tax levied pursuant to a uniform ordinance potentially having statewide effect. A city income tax is not purely local — it affects non-residents. The City of Novi levied the special assessments disputed here pursuant to an ordinance drafted by the city fathers or their legal counsel; the provisions of city charters and ordinances on special assessments are not uniform and do not potentially have statewide effect.
The administrative appeal under those uniform acts is not final and does not limit the extent of judicial review; the statutes provide that a person or' city aggrieved by a decision of the State Commissioner of Revenue may bring an action in the circuit court "to obtain a judicial determination of the matter”. MCL 141.694; MSA 5.3194(104), MCL 141.835; MSA 5.3194(335).
The State Commissioner of Revenue was not named in § 79 of the Tax Tribunal Act as originally enacted or as amended. The city income and utility users taxes are not named in § 79 as amended in 1976. See fn 69. Thus, no appeal can be taken to the Tax Tribunal from a decision of the State Commissioner of Revenue in respect to the city income and utility users taxes.
See MCL 141.834; MSA 5.3194(334).
The Legislature did not, in 1980 (see fn 69) or at some other time, eliminate the provisions of the City Income Tax Act, MCL 141.694; MSA 5.3194(104), and the City Utility Users Tax Act, MCL 141.835; MSA 5.3194(335), providing for circuit court review.
See MCL 141.851 et seq.; MSA 5.3194(361) et seq.; MCL 141.861 et seq.; MSA 5.3194(371) et seq.
Ante, p 642.
The opinion of the Court, in stating that the "proliferation of these available remedies created problems of forum shopping and increased the possibility of inconsistent decisions”, ante, p 628, ignores that there was only one means of challenging a special assessment and that was an action in the circuit court.
To be sure, the statute provided for a refund action in the circuit court. It is, however, of no importance for present purposes whether this statutory provision was or was not constitutional (see fns 16 and 59); whether it was valid or not, the only forum in which a property owner could proceed was the circuit court, and he had only one cause of action, whether at law (for a refund) or in equity (for an injunction) or both. There was no proliferation of remedy respecting challenges to special assessment levies or problem of forum shopping or possibility of inconsistent decisions.
Ante, p 629.
Ante, p 642.
Const 1963, art 9, § 3.
See 5 Callaghan’s Michigan Civil Jurisprudence, Constitutional Law, § 212, p 414.
See Johnson v Inkster, 401 Mich 263; 258 NW2d 24 (1977); Brill v Grand Rapids, 383 Mich 216; 174 NW2d 832 (1970); Blades v Genesee *695County Drain Dist No 2, 375 Mich 683; 135 NW2d 420 (1965); Smith v Garden City, 372 Mich 189; 125 NW2d 269 (1963); Knott v Flint, supra, fn 60; Fluckey v Plymouth, 358 Mich 447; 100 NW2d 486 (1960); Foren v Royal Oak, 342 Mich 451; 70 NW2d 692 (1955); Graham v Saginaw, supra, fn 60; Forest Hill Cemetery Co v Ann Arbor, supra, fn 60; Campbell v Plymouth, 293 Mich 84; 291 NW 231 (1940); Cleveland v Detroit, 276 Mich 443; 267 NW 874 (1936); Sumner v Detroit, 275 Mich 689; 267 NW 769 (1936); Marqua v Detroit, 268 Mich 380; 256 NW 455 (1934); Long v Monroe, 265 Mich 425; 251 NW 582 (1933); Lambrecht v Detroit, 264 Mich 577; 250 NW 315 (1933); Emmons v Detroit, 255 Mich 558; 238 NW 188 (1931), (On Rehearing) 261 Mich 455; 246 NW 179 (1933); Barris v Detroit, 260 Mich 622; 245 NW 790 (1932); Linski v Detroit, 260 Mich 385; 244 NW 483 (1932); Campbell v Detroit, 259 Mich 297; 243 NW 11 (1932); Alexander v Detroit, 259 Mich 241; 242 NW 902 (1932); Houseman v Detroit, 257 Mich 557; 241 NW 820 (1932); Frischkorn Investment Co v Detroit, 257 Mich 546; 241 NW 903 (1932); Meyer v Detroit, 257 Mich 361; 241 NW 264 (1932); Rood v Detroit, 256 Mich 547; 240 NW 41 (1932); Theisen v Detroit, 254 Mich 338; 237 NW 46 (1931); Oprisiu v Detroit, 248 Mich 590; 227 NW 714 (1929); Panfil v Detroit, 246 Mich 149; 224 NW 616 (1929); Coburn v Wyandotte, 245 Mich 314; 222 NW 729 (1929); Doherty v Detroit, 244 Mich 660; 222 NW 177 (1928); Miller v Detroit, 244 Mich 38; 221 NW 292 (1928); MacLachlan v Detroit, 208 Mich 188; 175 NW 445 (1919). See fns 13 and 60.
1974 PA 4.
1974 PA 345.
As to villages:
"An action may not be instituted for the purpose of contesting or enjoining the collection of a special assessment unless: (a) Within 45 days after the confirmation of the special assessment roll, written notice is given to the council indicating an intention to file such an action and stating the grounds on which it is claimed that the assessment is illegal; and (b) the action is commenced within 90 days after the confirmation of the roll.” MCL 68.34; MSA 5.1370(4).
As to fourth-class cities:
"An action of any kind shall not be instituted for the purpose of contesting or enjoining the collection of any special assessment unless, within 45 days after the confirmation of the special assessment roll, written notice is given to the council indicating an intention to file such an action and stating the grounds on which it is claimed that the assessment is illegal and unless that action is commenced within *69690 days after the confirmation of the roll. If a portion of an assessment roll is determined to be illegal, in whole or in part, the council may revoke its confirmation, correct the illegality, if possible, and reconfirm it. Property which is not involved in the illegality shall not be assessed more than was imposed upon the original confirmation without further notice and hearing thereon.” MCL 104A.4; MSA 5.1854(4).
1948 CL 68.13; MSA 5.1361.
1948 CL 104.22; MSA 5.1846.
See, e.g., provisions cited in fn 96 ff.
Further evidence that the Legislature was thinking of state statutes and state taxes, not local taxes and special assessments levied under ordinances prescribing their own procedures, is the differential between the times prescribed by Novi’s ordinances for the commencement of legal proceedings and the time prescribed by the Tax Tribunal Act.
Novi’s special assessment ordinance does not require that notice be given of the rejection of a protest or of confirmation of a special assessment roll. It provides only that legal action must be commenced within 60 days of confirmation. Novi Ordinance No 69-01, § 26.01, May 20, 1969. A more recent ordinance, adopted after the enactment of the Tax Tribunal Act, extended the time period to 90 days. Novi Ordinance No 78-1.02, § 23, April 3, 1978. In the instant case, letters dated 18 days after confirmation were sent to property owners.
The Legislature, in providing in the Tax Tribunal Act that proceedings shall be commenced within 30 days after the final decision, ruling, determination or order, MCL 205.735; MSA 7.650(35), no doubt contemplated that the aggrieved party would be notified of an adverse decision, ruling, determination or order and have a full 30 days within which to appeal. See MCL 205.22; MSA 7.657(22) regarding state taxes now subject to the tribunal’s jurisdiction; and 1921 PA 85, § 9, formerly MCL 450.309; MSA 21.210, repealed by 1975 PA 230, concerning the corporation franchise tax appeals board.
After Emmet County v State Tax Comm, 397 Mich 550; 244 NW2d 909 (1976) was decided, the Legislature, by amendment of the Department of Revenue Act (see fn 69), transferred to the Tax Tribunal jurisdiction of matters formerly appealable to the Board of Tax Appeals.
In all events, each grant of jurisdiction to the Tax Tribunal has been of matters formerly administratively appealable. A challenge to the levy of a special assessment has never been administratively appealable.
Ante, p 641, fn 22.
Id.
The Courts narrowly limited the scope of the inquiry. See fn 129 if and accompanying text.
The opinion of the Court characterizes the argument of this opinion:
"Essentially, the argument is that the Legislature made a mistake.” Ante, p 626.
Ante, p 637, fn 16. See text accompanying fn 16.
Ante, p 637.
MCL 211.1 et seq.; MSA 7.1 et seq.
MCL 123.751-123.763; MSA 5.570(21)-5.570(33).
MCL 117.4d(1); MSA 5.2077(1).
While the home rule act does contain provisions concerning ad valorem property taxation, special assessments are not levied "under” those provisions.
The home rule act requires that the charter of a city provide for "annually laying and collecting taxes in a sum, except as otherwise provided by law, not to exceed 2% of the assessed value of the real and personal property in the city”, MCL 117.3(g); MSA 5.2073(g), and for the times of preparation of the assessment roll, the meeting of the board of review and confirmation of the assessment roll, MCL 117.3(i); MSA 5.2073(i). The act also provides a means (vote of the people) for increasing the rate of taxation "now fixed by law”, MCL 117.5; MSA 5.2084.
The decision levying this special assessment was not, however, made "under” those provisions of the home rule act but rather under separate provisions of that act and Novi’s charter and ordinance concerning special assessments, MCL 117.4d; MSA 5.2077.
Allowing that the provisions of the home rule act referred to above (§§3[g], 3[i] and 5) are property tax laws, and putting aside the question whether a charter or ordinance is a "law”, this special assessment was not made under a provision of law concerning ad valorem property taxes and thus was not made under property tax laws.
To say that the entire home rule act, all its provisions, are property tax laws because it contains provisions regarding the rate of ad valorem property taxation, requiring a city charter to provide therefor and for the times of certain acts in the assessment process, would manifestly be an incorrect characterization.
If the home rule act — the entire act, all its provisions — is a property tax law because of the provisions requiring the city charter to establish a rate of ad valorem taxation and the times of certain acts in the assessment process, then the home rule act and all its provisions — whatever they in fact concern — would by like token be an election law, a public utility law, a rapid transit law, a zoning law and a civil service law. (The home rule act authorizes a home-rule city to provide "for the time, manner and means of holding elections and the registration of electors”, MCL 117.3[c]; MSA 5.2073[c], for the purchase, construction and operation of "public utilities for supplying water, light, heat, power, and transportation to the municipality and the inhabitants thereof’, MCL 117.4f[3]; MSA 5.2079[3], for "rapid transit”, MCL 117.4g; MSA 5.2080, zoning, MCL 117.4i[3]; MSA 5.2082[3], among other provisions.)
*702Provisions of the home rule act, regarding elections, public utilities, rapid transit, zoning, civil service — and special assessments — may not, simply because the act also contains provisions regarding ad valorem property taxes, be deemed to be ad valorem property tax laws.
MCL 104A.1-104A.5; MSA 5.1854(11-5.1854(5).
MCL 41.721-41.737; MSA 5.2770(51)-5.2770(67).
MCL 42.31; MSA 5.46(31).
MCL 280.151-280.161, 280.261-280.283; MSA 11.1151-11.1161, 11.1261-11.1283.
MCL 119.3-119.4; MSA 5.2133-5.2134.
MCL 68.31-68.35; MSA 5.1370(1)-5.1370(5).
Although some of the acts, MCL 280.265; MSA 11.1265 (fn 61); MCL 123.757; MSA 5.570(27); MCL 41.356; MSA 5.2585(6), authorizing special assessments provide that they shall be collected in the same manner as other general taxes, most allow the local authority to provide for the manner of collection which need not be tied to the collection of property taxes. MCL 41.397; MSA 5.2597; MCL 41.729; MSA 5.2770(59); MCL 42.31; MSA 5.46(31); MCL 68.32; MSA 5.1370(2); MCL 104A.2; MSA 5.1854(2); MCL 117.4d; MSA 5.2077; MCL 125.946c; MSA 5.3526(3).
The State Tax Commission has broad supervisory powers over taxing agencies and tax assessment procedures. See In re Dearborn Clinic & Diagnostic Hospital, 342 Mich 673; 71 NW2d 212 (1955).
Whether by státute, e.g., MCL 41.801; MSA 5.2640(1), or charter provision, special assessment rolls are often spread and collected along with the regular tax roll of the township or city. Such rolls are subject to inspection for at least procedural irregularities. For example, § 37 of The General Property Tax Act provides:
"The county board of commissioners * * * shall also examine all certificates, statements, papers and records submitted to it, showing the moneys to be raised in the several townships for school, highway, drain, township, and other purposes. It shall hear and duly consider all objections made to raising any such moneys by any taxpayer to be affected thereby. If it shall appear to the board that any certificate, statement, paper, or record is not properly certified, or that the same is in anyway defective, or that any proceeding to authorize the raising of any such moneys has not been had or is in anyway imperfect the board shall verify the same, and if the certificate, statement, paper, record, or proceeding can then be corrected, supplied, or had, the board shall authorize and require the defects or omissions of proceedings to be corrected, supplied, or had. It may refer any or all the certificates, statements, papers, records, and proceedings to the prosecuting attorney, whose duty it shall be to examine the same and without delay report in writing his opinion to the board.” MCL 211.37; MSA 7.55.
The Tax Tribunal has said that a determination made by the board of county commissioners not to spread a special assessment and, presumably, determinations concerning procedural irregularities, which were formerly appealable to the State Tax Commission, MCL 211.37a; MSA 7.56, are now appealable to the Tax Tribunal. Calder v DeWitt Twp, 1 MTTR 205 (1976)..
Whatever authority the State Tax Commission may have over the property tax collector and, thus, to supervise the collection or non-collection of special assessments turned over to the collector, would not enlarge or confer upon the State Tax Commission authority over decisions made by local units of government whether to levy and, if so, how to apportion the burden of the overall assessment or cost of the improvement.
Ante, p 626.
Ante, p 643.
See fns 106 and 107.
"A person or legal entity which, immediately before the effective date of this act, was entitled to proceed before the state tax commission or circuit court of this state for determination of a matter subject to the tribunal’s jurisdiction, as provided in section 31, shall proceed only before the tribunal.” MCL 205.741; MSA 7.650(41).
MCL 211.152; MSA 7.210.
MCL 211.53; MSA 7.97.
Section 53 authorized an action for refund of ad valorem taxes paid under protest provided that the action was commenced in the circuit court within 30 days of payment. MCL 211.53; MSA 7.97.
An action for refund was not an effective remedy where the issue was valuation; if it served any purpose, it was to safeguard the taxpayer’s right to a refund where the tax had been paid pending' a decision of the State Tax Commission.
We found 17 cases which were brought under § 53 for refunds raising questions of improper assessment or valuation. Of the 17 cases, in 11 the circuit court gave no relief to the taxpayer: Twenty-Two Charlotte, Inc v Detroit, 294 Mich 275; 293 NW 647 (1940); Moran v Grosse Pointe Twp, 317 Mich 248; 26 NW2d 763 (1947); *709Grand Rapids Steel & Supply Co v Grand Rapids, 35 Mich App 59; 192 NW2d 376 (1971); Sloman-Polk Co v Detroit, 261 Mich 689; 247 NW 95 (1933); S S Kresge Co v Detroit, 276 Mich 565; 268 NW 740 (1936); Newport Mining Co v Ironwood, 185 Mich 668; 152 NW 1088 (1915); Copper Range Co v Adams Twp, 208 Mich 209; 175 NW 282 (1919); Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co v Republic Twp, 196 Mich 189; 163 NW 90 (1917); Kingsford Chemical Co v Kingsford, 347 Mich 91; 78 NW2d 587 (1956); Island Mill Lumber Co v Alpena, 176 Mich 575; 142 NW 770 (1913); General Discount Corp v Detroit, 306 Mich 458; 11 NW2d 203 (1943).
In only one case — on extraordinary facts involving gross overassessment — did the taxpayers obtain judicial relief. Helin v Grosse Pointe Twp, 329 Mich 396; 45 NW2d 338 (1951). Even there the taxpayers faced reassessment and the prospect of further proceedings if they wished to contest the reassessment — hárdly an effective remedy.
In Mohawk Data Sciences Corp v Detroit, 63 Mich App 102, 107-108; 234 NW2d 420 (1975), the Court of Appeals affirmed a decision of the circuit court holding that personal property tax had been illegally assessed and ordering a refund of the entire tax paid, again subject to reassessment, because the assessor had relied entirely on the list price of data-processing equipment in arriving at cash value. The Court of Appeals said that the evidence showed that this "method of assessment” "was an unrealistic approach to a valuation of this property, that it was at variance with financial realities and that the result was an illegal tax”. Again, the Court did not determine a proper assessment, only that the assessment that had been made was improper, and ordered a refund of the tax without prejudice to reassessment.
In Detroit v Fruehauf Trailer Co, 339 Mich 256; 63 NW2d 666 (1954), this Court indicated that the State Tax Commission could simply reassess property after a circuit court had voided a tax as illegal and granted a refund.
In two cases the taxpayer prevailed because the Board of State Tax Commissioners (the predecessor of the State Tax Commission) increased the assessment without following statutory procedure. Bialy v Bay City, 139 Mich 495; 102 NW 1033 (1905); Delray Land Co v Springwells Twp, 149 Mich 397; 112 NW 1132 (1907).
In another case, a refund was ordered because the city assessed property in excess of the amount subsequently determined by the State Tax Commission. Hudson Motor Car Co v Detroit, 282 Mich 69; 275 NW 770 (1937).
One taxpayer recovered the amount by which his assessment was increased on account of an illegal reduction in another taxpayer’s assessment. Fletcher Paper Co v Alpena, 160 Mich 462; 125 NW 405 (1910).
Of the 17 cases, 8 had been appealed to the State Tax Commission. Six were not appealed to the State Tax Commission or its predecessors, but the assessment had been set by the State Tax Commission and its action was the basis of the complaint. In three cases there was no appeal to the State Tax Commission or complaint of its actions. In one of these latter cases, the action covered a number of tax years, and it may have appeared that only the court would have jurisdiction *710to grant relief, General Discount Corp v Detroit, supra. In the other two cases, both decided more than 60 years ago, there is no reference to the commission or its predecessors in the reported opinions, Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co v Republic Twp, supra; Fletcher Paper Co v Alpena, supra.
"The legislation was prompted by a desire to create an appellate body for all tax appeals whose members would devote their full time to the matters presented and would thus be able to decide these matters both expeditiously and expertly. The State Tax Commission, because of staffing and budgetary limitations, had become unable to keep pace with the annually accelerating burden of appeals filed with it and, at the same time, to perform its numerous other assessment and equalization duties.” Stanley, Tunstall & Opper, State and Local Taxation, 21 Wayne L Rev 619, 653 (1975).
Ante, p 628.
The amendatory act providing for appeal to the Tax Tribunal in lieu of the Board of Tax Appeals and for the alternative remedy in the Court of Claims is 1980 PA 162; MCL 205.22 et seq.; MSA 7.657(22) et seq. The remedy in the circuit court was repealed by 1980 PA 169 for income taxes (MCL 206.421; MSA 7.557[1421]), by 1980 PA 164 for sales taxes (MCL 205.72; MSA 7.543), by 1980 PA 168 for intangibles taxes (MCL 205.143; MSA 7.556[13]) and by 1980 PA 167 for cigarette taxes (MCL 205.508; MSA 7.411[8]). See fn 69.
The Tax Tribunal Act had, as originally enacted, provided somewhat ambiguously for the transfer to the Tax Tribunal of matters formerly heard before the Board of Tax Appeals and the Corporation Tax Appeal Board effective January 1, 1976. See fn 69. This transfer *712of initial jurisdiction was deferred until January I, 1977, and the language was clarified by 1976 PA 37. See fn 69. The Attorney General ruled that the effort to abolish the Board of Tax Appeals and Corporation Tax Appeal Board did not succeed because of violation of the re-enactment and republication requirements of Const 1963, art 4, § 25. See fn 69.
The Board of Tax Appeals continued to operate. Its abolition and the transfer of its jurisdiction has now been effected by 1980 PA 162.
Research fails to disclose a single instance of an appeal to the State Tax Commission from the levying of a special assessment whether under the Drain Code, MCL 280.1 et seq.; MSA 11.1001 et seq., or the various enabling acts authorizing villages, townships, cities, counties and other units of local government to levy special assessments.
The State Tax Commission may have exercised jurisdiction over a treasurer who refused to collect a special assessment or sought to collect a special assessment that had not been properly levied. See fns 106 and 107.
Ante, p 641.
Id.
"In dealing with statutes intended to affect or claimed to affect the continuance of jurisdiction in courts of original and general authority the law has always recognized a principle of construction which served to favor the retention of jurisdiction.
"Whatever presumptions are permitted are in favor of the retention of the authority, * * * and it is very natural and reasonable to suppose that the Legislature, in so far as they should think it needful to authorize interruptions and the shiftings of jurisdiction, would express themselves with clearness and leave nothing for the play of doubt and uncertainty.” Crane v Reeder, 28 Mich 527, 532-533 (1874).
Statutes in derogation of the common law must be strictly construed; and statutes which seek to divest jurisdiction cannot accomplish that goal save under clear mandate of law. Leo v Atlas Industries, Inc, 370 Mich 400, 402; 121 NW2d 926 (1963).
Crane v Reeder, 28 Mich 527, 533.
Paley v Coca Cola Co, 389 Mich 583; 209 NW2d 232 (1973); Leo v Atlas Industries, Inc, 370 Mich 400; 121 NW2d 926 (1963).
The Tax Tribunal is a "quasi-judicial agency”, not a court, MCL 205.721; MSA 7.650(21), and lacks judicial power. See Dation v Ford Motor Co, 314 Mich 152; 22 NW2d 252 (1946); Michigan Mutual Liability Co v Baker, 295 Mich 237; 294 NW 168 (1940).
The Legislature was probably concerned that were the Tax Tribu*715nal given the full judicial powers of a court its members would have to be elected rather than appointed, tending to defeat the goal of creating a body with specialized, expert experience; and that were the Tax Tribunal a court, its review of valuations and allocations under property tax laws would be limited by Const 1963, art 6, §28, to review for "fraud, error of law or the adoption of wrong principles”, instead of the Tax Tribunal being the final agency, contemplated by the constitution, before such limited judicial review. Stanley, Tunstall & Opper, State and Local Taxation, 21 Wayne L Rev, pp 653-654 (1975).
Equitable powers, such as the power to enter the injunction sought in this case, are judicial powers. The Tax Tribunal has concluded that it does not have the power to provide an equitable remedy:
"While recent changes in the statutory law and court rules promulgated pursuant thereto have eliminated many of the formalities associated with the historic separation of law and equity, we do not believe these changes have been so far reaching as to extend the availability of equitable remedies such as class actions beyond courts of general jurisdiction, which have traditionally possessed equitable powers, and into administrative agencies without such extension being specifically enumerated in the statutes governing the operation of the agency in question.” Calder v DeWitt Twp, supra, 1 MTTR 207.
See fns 129 through 132 and accompanying text.
"(i) A proceeding before the tribunal shall be original and independent and shall- be considered de novo.” MCL 205.735; MSA 7.650(35).
The language adopted on the floor of the Constitutional Convention, prior to changes made by the committee on style and drafting read: "fixing the value of described property for property tax purposes”. See fn 33.
"Valuation”, it appears from context and history, refers to the determination of "true cash value” for ad valorem property tax purposes. See Const 1963, art 9, § 3. See also § 35 of the Tax Tribunal Act requiring protest to the board of review where an assessment dispute concerns the "valuation” of property, MCL 205.735; MSA 7.650(35). No board of review is provided for protest of a special assessment.
"Allocation”, it appears from the language of the clause as adopted on the floor of the constitutional convention before revision by the committee on style and drafting, refers to decisions of the county tax allocation board (see fn 33) pursuant to the Property Tax Limitation Act (see fn 66).
Const 1963, art 6, § 28. See fn 31 for text.
MCL 280.161; MSA 11.1161. See also MCL 280.72a; MSA 11.1072(1); MCL 280.88; MSA 11.1088; MCL 280.106; MSA 11.1106; MCL 280.122; MSA 11.1122; MCL 280.122a; MSA 11.1122(1); MCL 280.123; MSA 11.1123; MCL 280.125; MSA 11.1125; MCL 280.151; MSA 11.1151; MCL 280.155; MSA 11.1155; MCL 280.157; MSA 11.1157; MCL 280.158; MSA 11.1158; MCL 280.191; MSA 11.1191; MCL 280.243; MSA 11.1243; MCL 280.493; MSA 11.1493; MCL 280.521; MSA 11.1521; MCL 280.532; MSA 11.1532; MCL 280.563; MSA 11.1563; MCL 280.577; MSA 11.1577; MCL 280.581; MSA 11.1581.
See MCL 280.156-280.157; MSA 11.1156-11.1157.
see Fuller v Cockerill, 257 Mich 35, 39; 239 NW 293 (1932); Hudlemyer v Dickinson, 143 Mich 250, 256; 106 NW 885 (1906); Clinton Twp v Teachout, 150 Mich 124, 128; 111 NW 1052 (1907); Hinkley v Bishopp, 152 Mich 256, 264; 114 NW 676 (1908); Troost v Fellows, 169 Mich 66, 70, 71; 134 NW 1011 (1912).
See Meyering Land Co v Spencer, 273 Mich 703, 708-709; 263 NW 777 (1935); Lake Twp v Millar, 257 Mich 135, 142; 241 NW 237 (1932); Blades v Genesee County Drain Dist No 2, 375 Mich 683, 693, 694; 135 NW2d 420 (1965).
MCL 280.161; MSA 11.1161.
See MCL 205.735; MSA 7.650(35). This section of the Tax Tribunal Act, as last amended by 1976 PA 365, provides that the jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal "in an assessment dispute” shall be invoked "not later than June 30 of the tax year involved” but that in all "other matters” the time for filing is 30 days after the final decision.
Only an appeal from an ad valorem assessment must or may be filed "not later than June 30 of the tax year involved”. If special assessments are subject to the jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal, they are subject to the 30-day time limit applicable to "all other matters”.
See Edros Corp v Port Huron, 78 Mich App 273; 259 NW2d 456 (1977), submitted on the June calendar and decided in an opinion per *721curiam. See also Eyde v Lansing Twp, 105 Mich App 370; 306 NW2d 797 (1981); Emerick v Saginaw Twp, 104 Mich App 243; 304 NW2d 536 (1981).
Ante, p 637.
The opinion of the Court cites two decisions of this Court as authority for the proposition that legislative acquiescence in the decisions of the Court of Appeals referred to in fn 135 should be given consideration in deciding the correct construction of the Tax Tribunal Act. In In re Clayton Estate, 343 Mich 101; 72 NW2d 1 (1955), the Court declined to overrule a decision of this Court construing a statute which had been made some 30 years earlier. In Magreta v Ambassador Steel Co (On Rehearing), 380 Mich 513; 158 NW2d 473 (1968) , the Court declined to construe the workers’ compensation act in a manner inconsistent with the established administrative practice since the first enactment of the statute some 50 years earlier. These decisions do not support the proposition that this Court should be influenced by the concept of legislative acquiescence when exercising its appellate function of reviewing a recent construction of a statute by the Court of Appeals.
We also note that as a canon of statutory construction "Legislative silence is a poor beacon to follow in discerning the proper statutory route.” Zuber v Allen, 396 US 168, 185; 90 S Ct 314; 24 L Ed 2d 345 (1969) .
Ante, p 625.
Ante, p 626.
Orloff v Morehead Mfg Co, 273 Mich 62; 262 NW2d 736 (1935). Similarly, see Emerick v Saginaw, supra, fn 135 (special assessment challenge in circuit court; the Court of Appeals, adverting to the Tax Tribunal Act, addressed "a jurisdictional matter not yet raised by the parties at the circuit level or upon appeal”).
See fns 1 and 3.
Romulus City Treasurer v Wayne County Drain Comm, post, p 728, could be released to the parties (with revision of the circulated opinions to reserve the Tax Tribunal Act jurisdictional question) and need not await further briefing and argument of the instant cause because we all agree that the claim pleaded in Romulus may be maintained in circuit court even if the Tax Tribunal generally has jurisdiction.
See fn 2.
See fn 132. See also Wyzlic v Ironwood, 365 Mich 87; 112 NW2d 94 (1961).
The Legislature may be powerless to abrogate the equitable jurisdiction of the circuit court. See Mathias v Owosso Twp Treasurer, 73 Mich 5; 40 NW 926 (1888). Cf. Brown v Kalamazoo Circuit Judge, 75 Mich 274; 42 NW 827 (1889).
See fns 131 and 132 and accompanying text.
See fn 126 and accompanying text.
MCL 205.743(2); MSA 7.650(43)(2).