Taxpayers for Michigan Constitutional Govt v. State of Michigan ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                                     Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    Chief Justice:               Justices:
    Syllabus                                                      Bridget M. McCormack        Brian K. Zahra
    David F. Viviano
    Richard H. Bernstein
    Elizabeth T. Clement
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    Elizabeth M. Welch
    This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been                Reporter of Decisions:
    prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.                  Kathryn L. Loomis
    TAXPAYERS FOR MICHIGAN CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT v STATE OF
    MICHIGAN
    Docket Nos. 160658 and 160660. Argued March 4, 2021 (Calendar No. 4). Decided
    July 28, 2021.
    Taxpayers for Michigan Constitutional Government, Steve Duchane, Randall Blum, and
    Sara Kandel brought an original action in the Court of Appeals against the state of Michigan; the
    Department of Technology, Management, and Budget; and the Office of the Auditor General to
    enforce § 30 of the Headlee Amendment, Const 1963, art 9, § 30, which prohibits the state from
    reducing its budget for total state spending paid to all units of local government, taken as a group,
    below that proportion in effect in fiscal year 1978–1979. Plaintiffs alleged in a four-count
    complaint that the state’s accounting practices have resulted in violations of the Headlee
    Amendment: Count I asserted that the state violated § 30 by classifying as state spending paid to
    local government monies paid to school districts pursuant to Proposal A, Const 1963, art 9, § 11;
    Count II made the same assertion as to monies paid to public school academies (PSAs) pursuant
    to Proposal A and MCL 380.501(1); Count III alleged that the state improperly classified as § 30
    state spending those funds paid to maintain trunk-line roads; and Count IV sought a determination
    that state funds directed to local governments for new state mandates may not be counted toward
    the proportion of state funds required by § 30. The Court of Appeals, BORRELLO, P.J., and FORT
    HOOD and SHAPIRO, JJ., dismissed Count III without prejudice upon stipulation of the parties in
    an unpublished order entered on December 4, 2017 (Docket No. 334663). Both plaintiffs and
    defendants moved for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10). In a published
    decision on reconsideration, the Court of Appeals, BORRELLO, P.J., and METER and SHAPIRO, JJ.,
    granted defendants summary disposition on Count I, holding that Proposal A spending is properly
    categorized as state funding to a unit of local government. 
    330 Mich App 295
     (2019) (opinion by
    SHAPIRO, J.). The panel majority also granted summary disposition to the state defendants on
    Count II, over a partial dissent from Judge METER, holding that state aid to PSAs falls within the
    scope of state spending to units of local government under § 30. The panel majority granted
    plaintiffs’ motion for summary disposition on Count IV, over a partial dissent from Judge
    BORRELLO, holding that state spending to fund state-mandated local services as required by § 29
    should not be included in the state’s calculation of the proportion of total state spending under
    § 30. Finally, the panel granted plaintiffs mandamus relief and directed the state to comply with
    reporting requirements found in MCL 21.235(3) and MCL 21.241. Both plaintiffs and defendants
    sought leave to appeal in the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court granted the applications. 
    505 Mich 1136
     (2020).
    In an opinion by Justice CAVANAGH, joined by Chief Justice MCCORMACK and Justices
    BERNSTEIN, CLEMENT (except as to Part VIII), and WELCH, the Supreme Court held:
    Proposal A payments to school districts and § 29 state spending to fund new state-
    mandated local services and activities are both properly counted in the calculation of total state
    spending to all units of local government under Const 1963, art 9, § 30; a PSA is not a “school
    district” within the meaning of Const 1963, art 9, § 33; PSAs themselves are not political
    subdivisions of the state for purposes of the Headlee Amendment, but on remand the Court of
    Appeals must consider whether PSA funding should be counted as spending paid to a unit of local
    government if the authorizing body of the PSA is a school district, intermediate school district, or
    community college; and the Court of Appeals’ grant of mandamus was vacated and remanded to
    the Court of Appeals for clarification.
    1. The Court of Appeals correctly held that Proposal A spending is properly categorized
    as state spending paid to a unit of local government. Const 1963, art 9, § 30 provides that the
    proportion of total state spending paid to all units of local government, taken as a group, shall not
    be reduced below that proportion in effect in fiscal year 1978–1979. Const 1963, art 9, § 25
    provides, in pertinent part, that the state is prohibited from shifting the tax burden to local
    government and that implementation of § 25 is specified in §§ 26 through 34. Section 25 is a
    preface meant to provide context to the amendment as a whole and is not an independent statement
    of a substantive right. Because the constitutional language was clear, reliance on drafters’ notes
    regarding § 25 was inappropriate. And because § 25 was not a provision that could be
    independently enforced, the inquiry into whether Proposal A funding should be counted as part of
    “total state spending paid to all units of Local Government, taken as a group” under § 30 was
    straightforward. Section 33 provides that the term “local government” includes school districts.
    Proposal A funding paid to school districts is state funding paid out of the State School Aid Fund.
    Accordingly, Proposal A funding is money collected and disbursed by the state to a unit of local
    government, and it was accurate to include Proposal A funds in determining the total state spending
    paid to all units of local government. Therefore, the Court of Appeals’ grant of summary
    disposition to defendants on Count I was affirmed.
    2. The Court of Appeals improperly concluded that a PSA is a “school district” within the
    meaning of Const 1963, art 9, § 33. Section 33 defines “local government” as any political
    subdivision of the state, including, but not restricted to, school districts, cities, villages, townships,
    charter townships, counties, charter counties, authorities created by the state, and authorities
    created by other units of local government. A PSA is a state-supported public school operating
    under a charter contract issued by a public authorizing body. Simply because a PSA is a “school
    district” for purposes of Proposal A funding does not necessarily mean that a PSA is also a “school
    district” as contemplated by the Headlee Amendment. Rather, the Headlee voters would not have
    considered PSAs as equivalent with “school districts” as the term was understood at the time the
    amendment was ratified. Like traditional school districts, PSAs deliver education to the students
    of this state, but they do not resemble traditional school districts in many other ways: PSAs are
    organized as nonprofit corporations by a person or other entity, while school districts are legislative
    creations; PSAs are not limited to a defined local geographic area like school districts; instead of
    a locally elected school board directly beholden to the voters of a school district, the governing
    body of a PSA is made up of a board of directors comprised of privately selected members; unlike
    a school district board, the board of directors of a PSA may enter into a contract with an education-
    management corporation to manage or operate the PSA or to provide the PSA with instructional
    or other services; and a PSA is funded solely by the state and may not levy taxes like a school
    district. In fact, a PSA is often viewed as an alternative to the traditional educational services
    offered by a school district, not an equivalent. Accordingly, a PSA is not a “school district” as
    Headlee voters would have understood the term. Furthermore, while PSAs deliver traditional
    governmental services, their distinctive marks are not those of a “political subdivision of the state”
    as the voters who ratified the Headlee Amendment in 1978 would have understood the term. A
    PSA authorized by the governing board of a state public university, MCL 380.501(2)(a)(iv), is
    definitively not a political subdivision of the state. A PSA is not itself a political subdivision of
    the state, nor is a state university. A PSA authorized by the governing board of a state public
    university is not geographically limited, and it is responsive to the voters of the state of Michigan
    at large, not to voters of any particular locale. Therefore, those PSAs are not included in the
    definition of “Local Government” under § 33 of the Headlee Amendment, and any state funding
    they receive should not be counted under § 30 as part of “total state spending paid to all units of
    Local Government.” However, aside from state public universities, MCL 380.501(2)(a)(i) to (iii)
    also empowers the boards of school districts, intermediate school districts, and community
    colleges to authorize PSAs. If, for example, a traditional school district—a “local government”
    under § 33 of the Headlee Amendment—experiments with the charter-school model to provide
    educational services to local children, this might properly be counted as state spending to a unit of
    local government under § 30. Accordingly, although a PSA is not itself a political subdivision of
    the state, the case had to be remanded to the Court of Appeals to consider whether state funding to
    PSAs authorized by a school district, an intermediate school district, or a community college
    should be counted as state spending paid to a unit of local government for purposes of § 30 of the
    Headlee Amendment.
    3. The Court of Appeals improperly held that state funds provided to local governments
    to satisfy state obligations under § 29 of the Headlee Amendment should not be counted in the
    calculation of total state spending to units of local government under § 30. Section 29 requires the
    state to provide funding if the state requires a unit of local government to engage in a new activity
    or service, and § 29 prohibits the state from reducing the financed proportion of the necessary costs
    of any existing activity or service as provided for in 1978. In this case, the Court of Appeals erred
    by relying on the drafters’ notes to § 29 without considering the plain language of the amendment.
    There are two types of state spending for purposes of § 30—state spending paid to units of local
    government and all other state spending. Nothing in § 30 suggests that total state spending paid
    to all units of local government should not include state spending to local governments to support
    both new and existing § 29 state mandates. And § 29 is silent as to whether § 29 funds should be
    included or excluded in the § 30 calculation of total state spending to units of local government.
    State funding to a unit of local government is state funding to a unit of local government, whether
    that funding is tied to a state mandate or is unrestricted aid for discretionary spending.
    Accordingly, state funding provided to units of local government as required by § 29 should be
    counted for purposes of total state spending paid to all units of local government under § 30, and
    the judgment of the Court of Appeals was reversed on Count IV.
    4. The Court of Appeals’ grant of mandamus was vacated. To obtain the extraordinary
    remedy of mandamus, a plaintiff bears the burden of showing that the plaintiff has a clear legal
    right to performance of the specific duty sought; that the defendant has a clear legal duty to
    perform; that the act is ministerial; and that no other adequate legal or equitable remedy exists that
    might achieve the same result. In this case, plaintiffs did not provide any argument or explanation
    regarding mandamus except for a single mention in the prayer for relief of their complaint that
    requested mandamus relief directing the state to comply with the reporting requirements of MCL
    21.235 and MCL 21.241. When plaintiffs moved for summary disposition, they again included
    no in-depth discussion of the mandamus issue. Accordingly, there was a question as to whether
    the request for mandamus was even adequately pleaded. The Court of Appeals’ grant of
    mandamus was puzzling. It was unclear in many respects; it vaguely ordered “the state through
    its officers and departments” to comply with MCL 21.235 and MCL 21.241 when those statutes
    apply to the governor (who was not a named defendant in this action) and to the Department of
    Technology, Management, and Budget; and it was unclear whether the duties to be performed were
    ministerial or involved the exercise of discretion. Moreover, the panel’s explanation that the writ
    of mandamus was to be “prospective only” because plaintiffs “waived their claim to compensation
    for the state’s past practice of counting funding for new or increased mandates for purposes of
    § 30” appeared to be unrelated to the actual mandamus relief granted—compliance with the annual
    reporting requirements of MCL 21.235(3) and MCL 21.241. Accordingly, because the nature of
    the relief requested or granted was unclear, Part III(D) of the Court of Appeals opinion had to be
    vacated, and this issue was remanded to the Court of Appeals with the direction that it specify
    which defendant is failing to perform which clear legal duty and that it analyze whether granting
    the extraordinary writ of mandamus was warranted.
    Part III(B) of the Court of Appeals opinion affirmed; Parts III(C) and (D) of the Court of
    Appeals opinion reversed; Part III(E) of the Court of Appeals opinion vacated; and case remanded
    to the Court of Appeals to consider whether PSA funding should be counted as spending paid to a
    unit of local government if the authorizing body of the PSA is a school district, intermediate school
    district, or community college and to clarify the Court of Appeals’ grant of mandamus relief.
    Justice VIVIANO, joined by Justice ZAHRA, concurring in part and dissenting in part, agreed
    with the majority’s decision in all respects except as to Part VI regarding funding for PSAs.
    Because PSAs, as a category, qualify as political subdivisions of the state under Const 1963, art 9,
    § 33, Justice VIVIANO would have held that state spending for PSAs is properly considered
    “spending paid to all units of Local Government” under Const 1963, art 9, § 30. The definition of
    “Local Government” in Const 1963, art 9, § 33 contemplates a broad and inclusive definition of
    that term. It means “any” political subdivision, and the phrase “including, but not restricted to”
    contemplates that there are entities that qualify as local governments beyond those explicitly listed.
    At the time that the Headlee Amendment was ratified, political subdivisions had pertinent
    characteristics that included a geographically limited unit of government, formed to exercise
    political power, and that is beholden to a local electorate. They also operated as a division of the
    state to exercise some governmental function for the public benefit, had a capacity for self-
    governance, and sometimes wielded the power of taxation. Those characteristics should be
    considered in the context of the enumerated examples provided in § 33 because the Court cannot
    define the general term “political subdivision” in a way that would exclude one or more of those
    examples. PSAs have characteristics similar to both school districts and authorities that existed in
    1978. Like school districts, PSAs provide educational services; these services are a governmental
    function operated for the public benefit. Certain PSAs also operate in a limited geographic area in
    a similar manner to certain authorities and school districts. PSAs also resemble other authorities
    that do not have strict geographic boundaries but will be confined by necessity to a certain area of
    operations. Next, while PSAs lack the power of taxation, this factor was not dispositive; authorities
    often lacked this power, yet § 33 still lists them as examples of political subdivisions. School
    districts also lack the power to raise operating funds through the imposition of property taxes after
    the passage of Proposal A, Const 1963, art 9, § 11. Finally, PSAs have sufficient ability to self-
    govern and have electorate control through the public authorizing bodies. Because the governing
    bodies of authorities in existence in 1978 were almost universally chosen—not by the electorate
    directly, but by the participating municipalities or state officers—a political subdivision does not
    need to have either direct electoral control or total self-governance for purposes of the Headlee
    Amendment. Rather, in light of the authorities in existence at the time of ratification, so long as
    there is some public, electoral control of a political subdivision through an authorizing body,
    municipality, or state officer, that is enough to weigh in favor of finding that an entity is a political
    subdivision. Accordingly, Justice VIVIANO would have held that PSAs qualify as political
    subdivisions under § 33 and that state spending for PSAs qualifies as part of the total state spending
    paid to all units of local government under § 30.
    Justice CLEMENT, concurring in part and dissenting in part, agreed with the Court’s
    resolution of the substantive Headlee Amendment claims but dissented as to the Court’s
    disposition of the state’s challenge to the Court of Appeals’ issuance of the writ of mandamus.
    While she concurred with the Court’s decision to vacate the entire mandamus portion of the Court
    of Appeals opinion, because this aspect of plaintiffs’ case was inadequately pleaded, Justice
    CLEMENT would not have directed that Court to continue struggling on remand with an issue that
    was not adequately framed. In this case, all four of plaintiffs’ counts in their complaint were
    substantive Headlee Amendment claims; not one was a count seeking a writ of mandamus. The
    only mention of mandamus in the complaint was a single line in the prayer for relief. The
    complaint offered no allegations about what legal duties MCL 21.235 and MCL 21.241 impose on
    any public officers, and no actual public officers were named as defendants. The Court of Appeals
    similarly did not address which officers needed to perform which duties. The burden was on
    plaintiffs to plead facts establishing the elements of the cause of action, and plaintiffs here did not
    even list mandamus as one of the counts in their complaint. Therefore, Justice CLEMENT would
    have simply held that plaintiffs’ complaint was inadequate and would have vacated Part III(E) of
    the Court of Appeals opinion without directing the Court to work further on the mandamus issue
    on remand.
    Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    Chief Justice:                 Justices:
    OPINION                                 Bridget M. McCormack          Brian K. Zahra
    David F. Viviano
    Richard H. Bernstein
    Elizabeth T. Clement
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    Elizabeth M. Welch
    FILED July 28, 2021
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    TAXPAYERS FOR MICHIGAN
    CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT,
    STEVE DUCHANE, RANDALL BLUM,
    and SARA KANDEL,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v                                                      No. 160658
    STATE OF MICHIGAN, DEPARTMENT
    OF TECHNOLOGY, MANAGEMENT
    AND BUDGET, and OFFICE OF
    AUDITOR GENERAL,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    TAXPAYERS FOR MICHIGAN
    CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT,
    STEVE DUCHANE, RANDALL BLUM,
    and SARA KANDEL,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v                                                           No. 160660
    STATE OF MICHIGAN, DEPARTMENT
    OF TECHNOLOGY, MANAGEMENT
    AND BUDGET, and OFFICE OF
    AUDITOR GENERAL,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH
    CAVANAGH, J.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    At issue in this case is a dispute over what monies should be included in calculating
    “total state spending paid to all units of Local Government” under § 30 of the Headlee
    Amendment, Const 1963, art 9, § 30. Plaintiffs argue that the state is shortchanging units
    of local government by improperly inflating that figure. Specifically, plaintiffs allege that
    “Proposal A” payments that the state directs to school districts pursuant to Const 1963, art
    9, § 11 should not be counted and that neither should state spending for state-mandated
    local services and activities under Const 1963, art 9, § 29. We disagree. Both are properly
    counted as part of total state spending paid to units of local government for purposes of the
    Headlee Amendment. Accordingly, we affirm Part III(B) and reverse Part III(D) of the
    Court of Appeals opinion. Plaintiffs also argue that state aid to public school academies
    (PSAs) 1 should not be counted as part of the total state spending paid to units of local
    government under § 30. The Court of Appeals rejected this argument, concluding that
    PSAs are “school districts,” a type of “Local Government” specified in § 33, and, therefore,
    1
    Commonly referred to as charter schools.
    2
    that their state funding is properly counted as part of “total state spending paid to all units
    of Local Government.” We conclude, however, that the panel erred when it held that PSAs
    are “school districts” as the term is used in the Headlee Amendment. We further hold that
    PSAs are themselves not a “political subdivision of the state” as voters would have
    understood the term when the Headlee Amendment was ratified. It is unclear, however,
    whether the fact that a PSA’s authorizing body, such as a school district, intermediate
    school district, or community college, might be an entity considered a “Local Government”
    changes that general conclusion. Therefore, we reverse the conclusion reached in Part
    III(C) of the Court of Appeals opinion that PSAs are “school districts” and remand to the
    Court of Appeals for its reconsideration of this issue. Finally, we vacate the panel’s grant
    of mandamus in Part III(E) and direct the Court of Appeals to provide further explanation
    of its decision to grant this extraordinary remedy.
    II. THE HEADLEE AMENDMENT
    We begin with a brief overview of the constitutional framework at issue. In 1978,
    Michigan voters approved an amendment of our state Constitution; that amendment is
    popularly known as the Headlee Amendment. See Const 1963, art 9, § 6 and §§ 25 to 34. 2
    The Headlee Amendment was born out of a nationwide “taxpayers revolt” and was meant
    to limit legislative expansion of requirements placed on local government, put a freeze on
    what had been perceived as excessive government spending, and lower taxes at both the
    local and state levels. Bolt v Lansing, 
    459 Mich 152
    , 161; 587 NW2d 264 (1998). To
    2
    The amendment added §§ 25 through 34 to Article 9 of the Michigan Constitution and
    amended § 6 of Article 9.
    3
    accomplish this, the Headlee Amendment sets forth “a fairly complex system of revenue
    and tax limits.” Durant v Michigan, 
    456 Mich 175
    , 182; 566 NW2d 272 (1997).
    Although the Headlee Amendment has been the focus of much litigation since its
    inception, relatively little attention has been paid to § 30—the centerpiece of the instant
    case. Section 30 provides in full:
    The proportion of total state spending paid to all units of Local
    Government, taken as a group, shall not be reduced below that proportion in
    effect in fiscal year 1978-79. [Const 1963, art 9, § 30.]
    The parties agree that to maintain 1978–1979 levels of state spending to units of local
    government as required by § 30, at least 48.97% of state spending must be paid to “units
    of Local Government.” 3 This Court has explained that the phrase “taken as a group” in
    § 30 requires only that the “overall percentage allotment of the state budget for local units
    of government must remain at 1978 levels.” Durant v State Bd of Ed, 
    424 Mich 364
    , 393;
    381 NW2d 662 (1985).         This means that neither specific individual units of local
    government (e.g., the city of Lansing) nor classes of units of local government (e.g., cities)
    are entitled to the same proportion of the allotment for units of local government as they
    received in 1978–1979.
    3
    As discussed further, the Headlee Amendment defines “Local Government” as “any
    political subdivision of the state, including, but not restricted to, school districts, cities,
    villages, townships, charter townships, counties, charter counties, authorities created by the
    state, and authorities created by other units of local government.” Const 1963, art 9, § 33.
    4
    III. FACTUAL BACKGROUND & PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Plaintiffs, Taxpayers for Michigan Constitutional Government and certain
    individual taxpayers, filed this original action 4 in the Court of Appeals, seeking
    declaratory, injunctive, and mandamus relief against the state of Michigan; the Department
    of Technology, Management and Budget (DTMB); and the Office of the Auditor General
    (collectively, “the state” or “the state defendants”). The basis of these claims is plaintiffs’
    belief that the state is violating and evading the Headlee Amendment in the way that it
    counts and classifies monies paid to units of local government. There are three specific
    counts of plaintiffs’ complaint at issue in this appeal. First, in Count I, plaintiffs allege that
    the state defendants violated §§ 25 and 30 by classifying monies paid to school districts
    pursuant to Proposal A, Const 1963, art 9, § 11, as state spending paid to units of local
    government. Second, in Count II, plaintiffs allege that the state defendants violated those
    same provisions by classifying monies paid to PSAs as state spending to units of local
    government. Third, in plaintiffs’ Count IV, 5 they allege that funds directed to units of local
    government for state mandates pursuant to § 29 of the Headlee Amendment should not be
    counted toward calculating state funding under § 30.
    Following discovery and motion practice, both plaintiffs and defendants moved for
    summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10) (no genuine issue of material fact).
    In a published decision on reconsideration, the Court of Appeals granted the state
    4
    “Any taxpayer of the state shall have standing to bring suit in the Michigan State Court
    of Appeals to enforce the provisions of Sections 25 through 31 . . . .” Const 1963, art 9,
    § 32.
    5
    A third count related to road funding is no longer at issue.
    5
    defendants summary disposition on Count I, holding that Proposal A spending is properly
    categorized as state funding to a unit of local government.           Taxpayers for Mich
    Constitutional Gov’t v Michigan (On Reconsideration), 
    330 Mich App 295
    , 310; 948
    NW2d 91 (2019) (opinion by SHAPIRO, J.); 
    id. at 332
     (METER, J., concurring in part and
    dissenting in part); 
    id. at 337
     (BORRELLO, P.J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    The panel majority also granted summary disposition to the state defendants on Count II,
    over a partial dissent from Judge METER, holding that state aid to PSAs falls within the
    scope of state spending to units of local government under § 30. Id. at 311 (opinion by
    SHAPIRO, J.); id. at 337 (BORRELLO, P.J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). The
    panel majority granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary disposition on Count IV, over a
    partial dissent from Judge BORRELLO, holding that state spending to fund state-mandated
    local services as required by § 29 should not be included in the state’s calculation of the
    proportion of total state spending under § 30. Id. at 314 (opinion by SHAPIRO, J.); id. at
    332 (METER, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Finally, the panel granted
    plaintiffs mandamus relief and directed the state to comply with reporting requirements
    found in MCL 21.235(3) and MCL 21.241. Id. at 319-320 (opinion by SHAPIRO, J.); id. at
    332 (METER, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part); id. at 333 (BORRELLO, P.J.,
    concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    Both plaintiffs and defendants, left unsatisfied by various aspects of the Court of
    Appeals’ decision, filed separate applications for leave to appeal in this Court. We granted
    both parties’ applications for leave to appeal and directed them to address the issues
    discussed herein. Taxpayers for Mich Constitutional Gov’t v Michigan, 
    505 Mich 1136
    (2020).
    6
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “The interpretation of a constitutional provision is a question of law, which we
    review de novo.” Paquin v St Ignace, 
    504 Mich 124
    , 129; 934 NW2d 650 (2019). This
    Court’s primary objective is to “realize the intent of the people by whom and for whom the
    constitution was ratified.” Id. at 129-130 (quotation marks and citation omitted). Thus,
    we employ the rule of common understanding: “The interpretation that should be given it
    is that which reasonable minds, the great mass of the people themselves, would give it.”
    Traverse City Sch Dist v Attorney General, 
    384 Mich 390
    , 405; 185 NW2d 9 (1971)
    (quotation marks and citation omitted). In determining the common understanding of the
    voters, the Court may also consider the circumstances surrounding the adoption of the
    provision and the purpose sought to be accomplished by the provision. 
    Id.
    A motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) tests the factual
    sufficiency of a claim. El-Khalil v Oakwood Healthcare, Inc, 
    504 Mich 152
    , 160; 934
    NW2d 665 (2019). Summary disposition under this rule is appropriate when there is no
    genuine issue of material fact. 
    Id.
    V. COUNT I
    In Count I, plaintiffs argue that by including Proposal A funding paid to school
    districts when calculating total state spending paid to units of local government, the state
    defendants violate § 30 of the Headlee Amendment. Like the Court of Appeals panel, we
    disagree.
    In 1993, the Legislature passed 
    1993 PA 145
    , “which effectively eliminated the
    authority of school districts to levy millage on real property for local and intermediate
    school district operating expenses . . . .” Durant v Michigan, 
    238 Mich App 185
    , 195-196;
    7
    605 NW2d 66 (1999). This resulted in billions of dollars in lost revenue for school districts.
    Id. at 196. Thereafter, the Legislature passed 
    1993 PA 336
    , “which would fund school
    districts through an increase in the personal income and single business tax rate, the
    creation of a new real estate transfer tax, and the levying of a certain level of millage unless
    the electorate adopted a proposed amendment of the Michigan Constitution . . . .” 
    Id.
     In
    1994 Michigan voters ratified constitutional amendments intended to make up for that lost
    revenue, popularly known as “Proposal A.” Const 1963, art 9, §§ 3, 5, 8, and 11. Proposal
    A “authorized an increase in the state sales and use tax for use in school aid, limited use of
    local property taxes for school purposes, and authorized other changes in school finance.”
    Durant, 456 Mich at 211 n 42. Pertinent here, the new and additional tax revenue collected
    pursuant to Proposal A was largely dedicated to the State School Aid Fund; those funds
    are used for aid to school districts, higher education, and school employees’ retirement
    systems. Const 1963, art 9, § 11. Under Proposal A, therefore, the responsibility for school
    funding was no longer a purely local endeavor supported by local property taxes but instead
    was managed at the state level through increased statewide taxation. After Proposal A
    passed, state defendant DTMB began including spending from Proposal A revenue in its
    calculation of total state spending paid to units of local government under § 30 of the
    Headlee Amendment.
    Plaintiffs argue that by including Proposal A funds paid to school districts out of the
    State School Aid Fund in the calculation of total state spending paid to units of local
    government under § 30, the state is violating § 25 of the Headlee Amendment. Section 25
    provides:
    8
    Property taxes and other local taxes and state taxation and spending
    may not be increased above the limitations specified herein without direct
    voter approval. The state is prohibited from requiring any new or expanded
    activities by local governments without full state financing, from reducing
    the proportion of state spending in the form of aid to local governments, or
    from shifting the tax burden to local government. A provision for emergency
    conditions is established and the repayment of voter approved bonded
    indebtedness is guaranteed. Implementation of this section is specified in
    Sections 26 through 34, inclusive, of this Article. [Const 1963, art 9, § 25
    (emphasis added).]
    Plaintiffs argue that by using Proposal A revenue in the calculation of total state spending
    paid to units of local government, the state has impermissibly shifted the tax burden to
    local governments. This is because post-Proposal A, a larger share of the 48.97% of state
    spending goes to schools instead of other units of local government, and this forces local
    governments to raise taxes in order to provide services that the state had previously funded.
    The first flaw in plaintiffs’ argument, as the Court of Appeals majority recognized,
    is that § 25 of the Headlee Amendment is a preface meant to provide context to the
    amendment as a whole, not an independent statement of a substantive right. Taxpayers,
    330 Mich App at 300 n 1. In fact, this Court has stated that it is “quite clear that § 25 is
    merely an introduction” to the following sections of the Headlee Amendment, “not an
    independent statement of rights or duties.” Durant, 424 Mich at 376 n 4. 6 The plain
    6
    The Court of Appeals has reached a similar conclusion several times. See Commuter Tax
    Ass’n of Metro Detroit v Detroit, 
    109 Mich App 667
    , 670; 311 NW2d 449 (1981)
    (“Headlee, [§] 25, states a general purpose, but, by its own terms, is implemented by the
    sections which follow . . . .”); Waterford Sch Dist v State Bd of Ed, 
    130 Mich App 614
    ,
    620; 344 NW2d 19 (1983) (describing § 25 as “an introductory paragraph to the
    amendment which, by its very language, indicates that its substantive implementation is
    specified in the sections of the statute which follow”); Jackson Co v Jackson, 
    302 Mich App 90
    , 93 n 1; 836 NW2d 903 (2013) (rejecting the independent enforcement of § 25).
    9
    language of § 25 supports this conclusion because it denotes that its “[i]mplementation” is
    specified in §§ 26 through 34 of Article 9. Const 1963, art 9, § 25; Durant, 456 Mich at
    182 (explaining that the system of revenue and tax limits created by the Headlee
    Amendment are “summarized” in § 25 and then “implemented in the following sections”). 7
    Plaintiffs point to the Drafters’ Notes of the Headlee Amendment, which state that
    § 25 “specifically prohibits the state from circumventing the intent of the amendment by
    shifting tax burdens from the state to local governmental levels.” 8 While the Drafters’
    Notes are “one tool available to the courts,” they are not authoritative because the notes
    were not published until after the amendment was passed and “the drafters’ intent might
    have been different than the meaning given by the great mass of people . . . .” Durant, 456
    Mich at 195-196. Accordingly, the Drafters’ Notes are generally “given little weight when
    the intent of those who ratified or voted for adoption is manifested otherwise.” Durant,
    424 Mich at 382 n 12. Reliance on the Drafters’ Notes where, as here, the constitutional
    language is clear is inappropriate. American Axle & Mfg v Hamtramck, 
    461 Mich 352
    ,
    7
    Even were we to assume for the sake of argument that § 25 is a substantive provision,
    there are reasons to believe that any shifting that took place is not the type that the Headlee
    Amendment would prohibit. Section 25 states, “The state is prohibited . . . from shifting
    the tax burden to local government.” Const 1963, art 9, § 25 (emphasis added). If a shift
    occurred here, it was at the behest of the voters through the passage of Proposal A.
    Moreover, the responsibility for school funding shifted from local government to the state,
    not from the state to local government as prohibited by § 25.
    8
    Taxpayers United Research Institute, Drafters’ Notes—Tax Limitation Amendment
    (Proposal E, approved by the electors on November 7, 1978, as an Amendment to the
    Michigan Constitution of 1963), § 25, p 3.
    10
    362; 604 NW2d 330 (2000). To the extent that the Drafters’ Notes are relevant, however,
    they explicitly provide:
    The Preamble to the Amendment, Section 25, serves as a summary of
    Sections 26 through 34, inclusive and Section 6, as amended; and spells
    out . . . the objectives, purposes, and intent of the drafters, petitioners and the
    voters . . . . [Taxpayers United Research Institute, Drafters’ Notes—Tax
    Limitation Amendment (Proposal E, approved by the electors on
    November 7, 1978, as an Amendment to the Michigan Constitution of 1963),
    § 25, pp 2-3 (emphasis added).]
    In other words, the Drafters’ Notes confirm that the drafters themselves did not view § 25
    as an independent source of substantive restrictions but as a “[p]reamble” or “summary”
    of the rest of the Headlee Amendment. 9
    Because § 25 is not a provision that can be independently enforced, our inquiry into
    whether Proposal A funding should be counted as part of “total state spending paid to all
    units of Local Government, taken as a group” under § 30 is straightforward. The Headlee
    Amendment explicitly provides that “Local Government” includes “school districts.”
    Const 1963, art 9, § 33. Proposal A funding paid to school districts is state funding paid
    out of the State School Aid Fund. 10 Very simply, Proposal A funding is money collected
    and disbursed by the state to a unit of local government. When determining “total state
    9
    Taking § 25 line by line evidences its summary nature. The first sentence, “Property
    taxes and other local taxes and state taxation and spending may not be increased above the
    limitations specified herein without direct voter approval,” speaks to §§ 26 and 31. The
    second sentence, “The state is prohibited from requiring any new or expanded activities by
    local governments without full state financing, from reducing the proportion of state
    spending in the form of aid to local governments, or from shifting the tax burden to local
    government,” refers to § 29, § 30, and then back to § 29, respectively. The third sentence,
    “A provision for emergency conditions is established and the repayment of voter approved
    bonded indebtedness is guaranteed,” concerns § 27.
    10
    See State School Aid Act, MCL 388.1601 et seq.
    11
    spending to all units of Local Government, taken as a group,” it is, therefore, accurate to
    include Proposal A funds in that calculation. Plaintiffs’ argument would require this Court
    to improperly read a nonexistent exception into the § 30 calculation by excluding one type
    of state spending to a local government.
    While plaintiffs believe that the relationship between Proposal A and the Headlee
    Amendment undermines the purpose of the Headlee Amendment, these provisions are
    coequal constitutional amendments. Even were we to conclude that Proposal A frustrates
    the spirit of the Headlee Amendment by creating a new source of tax revenue for the state
    to collect and disburse and then counting that in the § 30 calculation of total state spending,
    the decision to adopt Proposal A was a choice the voters made. 11 “[T]he voters themselves
    determine any constitutional requirements and are fully in control of what will be mandated
    by the constitution through the ratification process.” Durant, 
    424 Mich 379
     n 6.
    While state funding to units of local government has changed post-Proposal A, the
    Headlee Amendment never guaranteed a particular level of funding to any particular unit
    of local government. Durant, 424 Mich at 393. With the inclusion of Proposal A funding
    in the § 30 calculation, it simply cannot be said that units of local government “taken as a
    11
    We reject plaintiffs’ speculation that the voters were totally unaware of the potential
    impacts that Proposal A could have on the function of the Headlee Amendment. In fact,
    plaintiffs’ own evidence on this point—a May 14, 1993 Detroit News article entitled
    “Headlee Criticizes Proposal A as ‘Tax Shift and Tax Increase’ ”—reveals that there was
    public discourse on this very topic before the adoption of Proposal A. The article,
    published almost a year before Proposal A was ratified, details how Richard Headlee,
    author of the Headlee Amendment, criticized Proposal A as a “major tax shift” and argued
    that it would “gut[] Section 30 and protection of local government revenue sharing”—the
    very same arguments that plaintiffs raise today. Cain, Headlee Criticizes Proposal A as
    ‘Tax Shift and Tax Increase’, Detroit News (May 14, 1993), p 2B.
    12
    group” have collectively suffered. 12 In sum, § 25 of the Headlee Amendment is not an
    independent source of a substantive right on which plaintiffs can rely, and their arguments
    find no support in the plain language of § 30. On Count I, therefore, we affirm the Court
    of Appeals’ grant of summary disposition to the state defendants.
    VI. COUNT II
    Plaintiffs’ Count II is also concerned with school funding, but of a different type—
    funding for PSAs. Plaintiffs argue that money paid to PSAs out of the state’s School Aid
    Fund should not be used to calculate total state spending to units of local government under
    § 30 of the Headlee Amendment. The Headlee Amendment specifically defines “Local
    Government” as “any political subdivision of the state, including, but not restricted to,
    school districts, cities, villages, townships, charter townships, counties, charter counties,
    authorities created by the state, and authorities created by other units of local government.”
    Const 1963, art 9, § 33. The Court of Appeals concluded that a PSA is a “school district”
    within the meaning of § 33, making it a unit of “Local Government.” We disagree.
    In 1993, the Legislature authorized the creation of PSAs. A PSA is a state-supported
    public school operating under a charter contract issued by a public authorizing body. 13
    MCL 380.501(1) of the Revised School Code, MCL 380.1 et seq., provides that a PSA is
    12
    In fact, post-Proposal A, although units of local government other than schools may
    receive a lesser percentage of the 48.97% portion of the state budget, it seems that each
    percentage point likely represents more money because the state now takes in additional
    revenue from Proposal A associated sales tax.
    13
    See Michigan Department of Education, Michigan Charter Schools—Questions
    and        Answers     (November     2017    rev),    p 1,     available     at
     (accessed June 17, 2021)
    [https://perma.cc/FPS6-ZWG3].
    13
    “a school district for the purposes of section 11 of article IX of the state constitution of
    1963 . . . .” That constitutional provision, Const 1963, art 9, § 11, adopted as part of
    Proposal A, provides for the creation of the State School Aid Fund. The State School Aid
    Act’s definition of “district” also includes both local school districts and PSAs. MCL
    388.1603(7).
    On the basis of these authorities, the Court of Appeals majority concluded that PSAs
    receive state funding earmarked for school districts and are, therefore, school districts for
    the purpose of receiving state school aid. Taxpayers, 330 Mich App at 312 (opinion by
    SHAPIRO, J.); id. at 337 (BORRELLO, P.J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). We
    find no error in this conclusion, but whether the Legislature has decided to treat PSAs as
    “school districts” for purposes of receiving state funding is beside the point.         The
    Legislature’s subsequent enactment of a statute cannot supersede the common
    understanding of a term adopted by the voters who ratified the constitutional amendment.
    See Pillon v Attorney General, 
    345 Mich 536
    , 547; 77 NW2d 257 (1956) (“Neither the
    legislature, nor this Court, has any right to amend or change a provision in the
    Constitution.”). Moreover, the plain language of MCL 380.501(1) signifies that the
    Legislature intended that PSAs be considered a “school district” for a specific purpose by
    mentioning that PSAs are “school districts” under Const 1963, art 9, § 11 (establishing the
    State School Aid Fund). 14 Simply because a PSA is a “school district” for purposes of
    Proposal A funding does not necessarily mean that a PSA is also a “school district” as
    14
    MCL 380.501(1) also indicates that a PSA is a “public school” for purposes of Const
    1963, art 8, § 2. See Council of Organizations & Others for Ed About Parochiaid, Inc v
    Governor, 
    455 Mich 557
    ; 566 NW2d 208 (1997).
    14
    contemplated by the Headlee Amendment. In other words, that the Legislature authorized
    the creation of PSAs and treats them as school districts for the specific purpose of receiving
    aid from the State School Aid Fund tells us nothing about whether the voters would have
    understood a PSA to be a “local government” for purposes of the Headlee Amendment.
    In addition, we conclude that the Headlee voters would not consider PSAs as
    equivalent with “school districts” as the term was understood at the time the amendment
    was ratified. Like traditional school districts, PSAs deliver education to the students of
    this state, but they do not resemble traditional school districts in many other ways. For
    example, PSAs are organized as nonprofit corporations by a person or other entity, 15 while
    school districts are legislative creations. PSAs are not limited to a defined local geographic
    area like school districts. 16 Instead of a locally elected school board directly beholden to
    the voters of a school district, the governing body of a PSA is made up of a board of
    directors comprised of privately selected members. MCL 380.503(11). Unlike a school
    district board, the board of directors of a PSA may enter into a contract with an education-
    management corporation to manage or operate the PSA or to provide the PSA with
    instructional or other services. See MCL 380.503c; MCL 380.503(6)(k) and (n). 17 A PSA
    15
    See Nonprofit Corporation Act, MCL 450.2101 et seq.
    16
    State public universities, for example, are the authorizing bodies for about 70% of PSAs
    in this state. See State of Michigan, Public School Academies by Authorizer
    
    (accessed June 22, 2021) [https://perma.cc/PU5Q-4E3Y]. A PSA must “be open to all
    pupils who reside within the geographic boundaries of that authorizing body,” MCL
    380.504(3), which for a state-public-university authorizer is the entire state of Michigan.
    17
    See OAG, 1995-1996, No. 6,915 (September 4, 1996).
    15
    is funded solely by the state and may not levy taxes like a school district. 18 A PSA, in fact,
    is often viewed as an alternative to the traditional educational services offered by a school
    district, not an equivalent. 19 Accordingly, we conclude that a PSA is not a “school district”
    as Headlee voters would have understood the term. 20
    As Judge METER recognized, because a PSA is not a “school district,” a specific
    type of political subdivision of the state, our analysis must shift to whether a PSA can itself
    be categorized more generally as a “political subdivision of the state.” If so, then it is a
    “local government” under Const 1963, art 9, § 33, and any state spending that it receives
    18
    We acknowledge the dissent’s argument that, following the passage of Proposal A, there
    are now limitations on the ability of school districts to raise operating funds through
    property taxes. However, the voters approved Proposal A in 1994—16 years after the
    voters ratified the Headlee Amendment—and we focus our inquiry on the voters’
    contemporaneous understanding of the term “school districts.” Walker v Wolverine
    Fabricating & Mfg Co, Inc, 
    425 Mich 586
    , 596; 391 NW2d 296 (1986) (“The paramount
    rule of constitutional construction is that the constitution should be given that interpretation
    which the great mass of people would have understood when they ratified it.”). Moreover,
    unlike PSAs, school districts still retain significant powers of taxation. See, e.g., MCL
    380.1212(1) (providing a taxing power to support a building-and-site sinking fund); MCL
    380.1351(4) (providing a taxing power to service capital project debts); MCL 123.52
    (providing a taxing power for recreational facilities and playgrounds).
    19
    See Furst, The Short But Very Curious Legal History of Michigan’s Charter Schools,
    105 West’s Ed L Rep 1, 2 (1996) (“These academies were to operate as public schools and
    thereby be competitive with existing school districts to provide a new initiative for
    schooling in Michigan, an initiative that would result in better education for the children
    of the state.”).
    20
    We note that two of our attorneys general have concluded that a PSA is not a “school
    district” as a general proposition. See OAG, 1995-1996, No. 6,915 (September 4, 1996);
    OAG, 2003-2004, No. 7,154 (March 31, 2004). And we are not aware of any cases in
    which our state courts have concluded that PSAs are, as a general proposition, school
    districts.
    16
    should be counted under § 30 when calculating total state spending to units of local
    government. Because PSAs did not exist when the Headlee Amendment was ratified in
    1978, we agree with Judge METER’s instinct to consider construction of the term from both
    before and shortly after the Headlee Amendment’s ratification to ascertain whether
    Headlee voters would have considered a PSA to be a “political subdivision of the state.” 21
    We first look to an opinion from our Attorney General from 15 years before the
    voters passed the Headlee Amendment. OAG, 1963-1964, No. 4,037 (January 2, 1963).
    There, the Attorney General considered whether a county drainage district constituted a
    political subdivision of the state. As a general matter, said the Attorney General, “political
    divisions of the state are those which are formed for the more effectual or convenient
    exercise of political power within . . . particular localities” and have certain “distinctive
    marks.” Id. at 3 (quotation marks and citation omitted). These distinctive marks include
    that a political subdivision of a state will
    embrace a certain territory and its inhabitants, organized for the public
    advantage, and not in the interest of particular individuals or classes; that
    their chief design is the exercise of governmental functions, and that to the
    electors residing within each is, to some extent, committed the power of local
    government, to be wielded either mediately or immediately, within their
    territory, for the peculiar benefit of the people there residing. [Id. (quotation
    marks and citation omitted).]
    21
    See McPherson v Blacker, 
    92 Mich 377
    , 383; 
    52 NW 469
     (1892) (“ ‘[W]here a particular
    construction has been generally accepted as correct, and especially when this has occurred
    contemporaneously with the adoption of the constitution, and by those who had opportunity
    to understand the intention of the instrument, it is not to be denied that strong presumption
    exists that the construction rightly interprets the intention.’ ”), quoting 1 Cooley,
    Constitutional Limitations (1868), p 67.
    17
    A few years after the Headlee Amendment was ratified, our Court of Appeals similarly
    wrote that attributes “generally regarded as distinguishing a political subdivision are its
    existence for the purpose of discharging some function of local government, its prescribed
    area and its authority for self-government through officers selected by it.” People v
    Egleston, 
    114 Mich App 436
    , 440; 319 NW2d 563 (1982). Taken together, we conclude
    that the Headlee voters would have understood a “political subdivision of the state” to mean
    a geographically limited unit of government formed to exercise political power and that is
    beholden to a local electorate. 22
    Because PSAs provide educational services, they perform “essential public
    purposes and governmental functions of this state.”          MCL 380.501(1).       But other
    characteristics of PSAs lead us to agree with Judge METER that PSAs do not fall under the
    category of a “political subdivision of the state” for largely the same reasons we concluded
    that a PSA is not a “school district” as the term is used in the Headlee Amendment. 23 PSAs
    are nonprofit corporations, which are private entities and not governmental bodies. PSAs
    do not have limited or local geographic boundaries. The governing body of a PSA is not
    elected by voters. The governing board of a PSA answers to its authorizing body, not to
    local voters. Council of Organizations & Others for Ed About Parochiaid, Inc v Governor,
    22
    As the dissent points out, political subdivisions might also have other characteristics such
    as the capacity for self-governance or the power of taxation.
    23
    The dissent concludes that the performance of essential public purposes and
    governmental functions of this state “weighs heavily in favor of a finding that PSAs are
    political subdivisions.” We disagree. Numerous state agencies and even quasi-
    governmental entities perform essential public purposes and governmental functions of this
    state yet would not be considered “political subdivisions of the state” as the term is used in
    relation to the definition of “Local Government” in § 33.
    18
    
    455 Mich 557
    , 575; 566 NW2d 208 (1997). While “the public maintains control of the
    schools through the authorizing bodies,” 
    id. at 576
    , this control is much less direct, or even
    merely symbolic.      Similarly, because a PSA is under the immediate control of its
    authorizing body, its ability to self-govern is hindered and it has no independent political
    power. In sum, while PSAs deliver traditional governmental services, their “distinctive
    marks” are not those of a “political subdivision of the state” as the voters who ratified the
    Headlee Amendment in 1978 would have understood the term.
    The dissent discusses “authorities created by the state” and “authorities created by
    other units of local government,” which are two specifically enumerated types of “political
    subdivisions of the state” listed in § 33. It points out that “authorities,” such as water
    authorities; 24 garbage, rubbish, and dog-pound authorities; 25 and metropolitan district
    authorities, 26 were in existence at the time the Headlee Amendment was ratified, 27 yet they
    have less well-defined geographic boundaries, they lack the power of taxation, and their
    governing bodies are not generally directly elected by the voters. Because authorities fall
    within the purview of § 33 and have these characteristics, the dissent reasons that PSAs
    24
    MCL 121.29 et seq.
    25
    MCL 123.301 et seq.
    26
    MCL 119.1 et seq.
    27
    The dissent also discusses the Mackinac Bridge Authority, created to construct and
    maintain the Mackinac Bridge. We are skeptical of the dissent’s conclusion that the
    Mackinac Bridge Authority qualifies as an authority created by the state that is also a
    political subdivision of the state for purposes of § 33 of the Headlee Amendment. Unlike
    the other authorities discussed, the Mackinac Bridge Authority is an instrumentality of the
    state, MCL 254.302(1), and does not exercise political power on behalf of a local
    population or have a mechanism for local electorate control.
    19
    must also fall within the purview of the definition of “political subdivision of the state” in
    § 33.
    We cannot say for certain that the authorities mentioned by the dissent would each
    qualify as political subdivisions of the state as contemplated by § 33; that is not the question
    we are faced with today. However, assuming that the authorities listed in the dissent are
    political subdivisions of the state, it does not follow that PSAs must also be political
    subdivisions of the state. We detect differences between the two entities. First, we disagree
    that the authorities discussed by the dissent do not have well-defined geographic
    boundaries given that they are generally made up of the territories comprising the local
    governmental units that agree to participate in the authority. 28 That certain authorities
    might have the ability to contract outside that territory29 or operate within 10 miles of the
    territory30 does not expand the authority’s own inherent territorial limits. Second, as the
    dissent recognizes, the fact that a PSA cannot levy taxes is not dispositive of whether it is
    a political subdivision of the state. Some political subdivisions of the state, such as cities
    or counties, may levy taxes, whereas others, such as the authorities examined by the
    dissent, generally cannot. Third, we agree with the dissent that authorities and PSAs are
    28
    For example, garbage, rubbish, and dog-pound authorities “shall be comprised of the
    territory within such incorporating municipalities.”          MCL 123.301.         Similarly,
    metropolitan districts are comprised of the “territory within [the] respective limits” of two
    or more cities, villages, or townships. MCL 119.1.
    29
    See MCL 123.305(1) and (2) (authorizing garbage, rubbish, or dog-pound authorities to
    enter into contracts with other units of local government).
    30
    See MCL 124.406(b) (allowing a metropolitan transportation authority to operate within
    a 10-mile radius of the authority’s territory).
    20
    generally similarly removed from direct electorate control. The level of direct electorate
    accountability, however, is not the same for every PSA.
    Overall, again assuming that the authorities identified in the dissent are all political
    subdivisions of the state, we do not find PSAs sufficiently analogous to them to conclude
    that, if those authorities are political subdivisions of the state, PSAs must also be political
    subdivisions of the state. We conclude that a PSA authorized by the governing board of a
    state public university, MCL 380.501(2)(a)(iv), is definitively not a political subdivision of
    the state. A PSA is not itself a political subdivision of the state, nor is a state university.
    A PSA authorized by the governing board of a state public university is not geographically
    limited, and it is responsive to the voters of the state of Michigan at large, 31 not to voters
    of any particular locale. Therefore, those PSAs are not included in the definition of “Local
    Government” under § 33 of the Headlee Amendment, and any state funding they receive
    should not be counted under § 30 as part of “total state spending paid to all units of Local
    Government.” However, aside from state public universities, MCL 380.501(2)(a)(i) to (iii)
    also empowers the boards of school districts, intermediate school districts, and community
    colleges to authorize PSAs. 32 If, for example, a traditional school district—a “local
    government” under § 33 of the Headlee Amendment—experiments with the charter-school
    model to provide educational services to local children, this might properly be counted as
    state spending to a unit of local government under § 30.
    31
    This can be either through appointment to a university’s governing board by the governor
    or through statewide elections. Const 1963, art 8, §§ 5 and 6.
    32
    The authorizing body of a PSA “is the fiscal agent” of the PSA that receives payment
    from the state and “shall then forward the payment” to the PSA. MCL 380.507(3).
    21
    We express no opinion on this issue because we believe it to be worthy of further
    briefing and full consideration by our Court of Appeals. Accordingly, although we hold
    that a PSA is not a political subdivision of the state, we remand this case to the Court of
    Appeals to consider whether state funding to PSAs authorized by a school district, an
    intermediate school district, or a community college should be counted as state spending
    to a unit of local government for purposes of § 30 of the Headlee Amendment.
    VII. COUNT IV
    The next argument plaintiffs advance is that state funds provided to local
    governments to satisfy state obligations under § 29 of the Headlee Amendment should not
    be counted in the calculation of total state spending to units of local government under
    § 30. 33 The Court of Appeals majority agreed. Taxpayers, 330 Mich App at 314 (opinion
    by SHAPIRO, J.); id. at 332 (METER, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). However,
    we concur with the dissenting judge because the majority’s analysis ignores the plain
    language of the amendment. Therefore, we reverse.
    Section 29 of the Headlee Amendment provides:
    The state is hereby prohibited from reducing the state financed
    proportion of the necessary costs of any existing activity or service required
    of units of Local Government by state law. A new activity or service or an
    increase in the level of any activity or service beyond that required by
    existing law shall not be required by the legislature or any state agency of
    units of Local Government, unless a state appropriation is made and
    disbursed to pay the unit of Local Government for any necessary increased
    33
    We note that the parties present this argument largely in the abstract and have not
    provided the Court with examples of state-mandated and state-funded programs that are
    accounted for in the 48.97% portion of the state budget for local government spending but
    that plaintiffs believe should count toward the 51.03% portion of the state’s budget.
    22
    costs. The provision of this section shall not apply to costs incurred pursuant
    to Article VI, Section 18. [Const 1963, art 9, § 29.]
    Through § 29, the Headlee Amendment sought to maintain state funding for state-
    mandated programs in effect when the amendment was passed and to ensure that if the
    state mandated any new activities or services, those activities or services would come with
    concomitant state funding. Judicial Attorneys Ass’n v Michigan, 
    460 Mich 590
    , 595; 597
    NW2d 113 (1999). Section 29 “reflect[s] an effort on the part of the voters to forestall any
    attempt by the Legislature to shift responsibility for services to the local government, once
    its revenues were limited by the Headlee Amendment, in order to save the money it would
    have had to use to provide the services itself.” Durant, 424 Mich at 379.
    According to plaintiffs, when the Legislature requires “[a] new activity or service
    or an increase in the level of any activity or service” and “a state appropriation is made and
    disbursed to pay the unit of Local Government for any necessary increased costs,” Const
    1963, art 9, § 29, that money should not be included in calculating the 48.97% of “total
    state spending paid to all units of Local Government” under § 30. If it is counted, argue
    plaintiffs, the state may impose funded mandates that reduce the state’s “required”
    payments to local governments. Plaintiffs suggest that, in theory, the state could earmark
    every dollar of the required 48.97% funding for state-mandated local activities or services
    and leave $0 for local government discretionary spending.
    The Court of Appeals majority agreed, concluding that “when §§ 29 and 30 are read
    together, they require the state to fully fund the necessary implementation costs of any new
    mandate imposed on a unit of local government and to provide this funding in addition to
    the funding paid in satisfaction of the state’s § 30 revenue-sharing obligation.” Taxpayers,
    23
    330 Mich App at 314 (opinion by SHAPIRO, J.); id. at 332 (METER, J., concurring in part
    and dissenting in part). In support, the panel majority looked to the Drafters’ Notes
    associated with § 30. The Drafters’ Notes state that the “primary intent” of § 30 was to
    “prevent a shift in tax burden, either directly or indirectly from state to local responsibility”
    and that “[a]dditional or expanded activities mandated by the state, as described in Section
    29 would tend to increase the proportion of total state spending paid to local government
    above that level in effect when this section becomes effective.” Drafters’ Notes, § 30,
    pp 10-11. This note, said the majority, supports plaintiffs’ position by “evinc[ing] an intent
    that state-funding obligations arising from new § 29 obligations are to be paid in addition
    to § 30 revenue sharing.” Taxpayers, 330 Mich App at 316 (opinion by SHAPIRO, J.); id.
    at 332 (METER, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    The majority erred, however, by relying on the Drafters’ Notes without considering
    the plain language of the amendment. American Axle & Mfg, Inc v Hamtramck, 
    461 Mich 352
    , 362; 604 NW2d 330 (2000) (“[R]eliance on extrinsic evidence [is] inappropriate
    because the constitutional language is clear.”). 34 The calculation of total state spending
    paid to units of local government under § 30, as discussed in regard to Count I, is
    34
    The majority also relied on the Drafters’ Notes for § 30 without mentioning the Drafters’
    Notes for § 29. Although we give little weight to these notes, Durant, 424 Mich at 382
    n 12, we take notice that the § 29 note explicitly states:
    This section does not necessarily prevent the state from shifting funds
    from general and unrestricted revenue sharing to the funding of a state
    mandated activity but it does prohibit shifting funds from state mandated
    programs unless the mandate for such programs is eliminated. [Drafters’
    Notes, § 29, p 10 (emphasis added).]
    This note supports that funding for discretionary spending is not required.
    24
    straightforward.   There are two types of state spending for purposes of § 30—state
    spending paid to units of local government and all other state spending. The former must
    make up at least 48.97% of the state budget, and the latter may make up no more than
    51.03% of the state budget. Plaintiffs do not argue that the § 29 mandated spending is not
    “state spending,” nor do they argue that it is not spending that is paid to a “unit[] of Local
    Government.” Const 1963, art 9, § 30. Nothing in § 30 suggests that “total state spending
    paid to all units of Local Government” should not include state spending to local
    governments to support both new and existing § 29 state mandates. Plaintiffs’ argument
    similarly finds no support in the text of § 29. Section 29 requires the state to provide
    funding if the state requires a unit of local government to engage in a new activity or
    service, and § 29 prohibits the state from reducing the financed proportion of the necessary
    costs of any existing activity or service as provided for in 1978. It is silent as to whether
    § 29 funds should be included or excluded in the § 30 calculation of total state spending to
    units of local government.
    We do not read language into these provisions that is simply not there. The Court
    of Appeals majority reasoned that if state spending to fund new state mandates under § 29
    could be counted for § 30, it would “supplant state spending intended for local use” and
    force the same money to perform “double duty.” Taxpayers, 330 Mich App at 316-317
    (opinion by SHAPIRO, J.); id. at 332 (METER, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    But this conclusion effectively creates a new category of spending—“state spending
    intended for local discretionary use,” which is not a type of state spending recognized by
    the Headlee Amendment—and then treats that category as uncountable under § 30. This
    is a strained construction not grounded in the language of the amendment. Instead, we
    25
    agree with Judge BORRELLO that, with no stated prohibition to the contrary in the plain
    language of the amendment, “the state is free to shift or reallocate . . . general and
    unrestricted revenue sharing paid under § 30 to fund the necessary costs incurred by units
    of local government in providing newly enacted state-mandated activity or service or an
    increase in an existing mandated activity or service without violating the scheme of the
    Headlee Amendment.” Taxpayers, 330 Mich App at 336 (BORRELLO, P.J., concurring in
    part and dissenting in part).
    Therefore, we agree with Judge BORRELLO that state funding provided to units of
    local government as required by § 29 should be counted for purposes of “total state
    spending paid to all units of Local Government” under § 30 and that this conclusion “best
    honors the voters’ intent neither to freeze legislative discretion to enact necessary and
    desirable legislation in response to changing times and conditions nor to permit state
    government unrestricted discretion in its allocation of support for mandated activities and
    services.” Taxpayers, 330 Mich App at 336-337 (BORRELLO, P.J., concurring in part and
    dissenting in part). State funding to a unit of local government is state funding to a unit of
    local government, whether that funding is tied to a state mandate or is unrestricted aid for
    discretionary spending. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals on
    Count IV.
    VIII. MANDAMUS
    Finally, plaintiffs sought and were granted a writ of mandamus in the Court of
    Appeals. We vacate the grant of mandamus and remand to the Court of Appeals to clarify
    its reasoning or reconsider its decision as it deems appropriate.
    26
    “The primary purpose of the writ of mandamus is to enforce duties created by law
    where the law has established no specific remedy and where, in justice and good
    government, there should be one.” State Bd of Ed v Houghton Lake Community Sch, 
    430 Mich 658
    , 666; 425 NW2d 80 (1988) (citations omitted). To obtain this extraordinary
    remedy, the plaintiff bears the burden of showing that “(1) the plaintiff has a clear, legal
    right to performance of the specific duty sought, (2) the defendant has a clear legal duty to
    perform, (3) the act is ministerial, and (4) no other adequate legal or equitable remedy
    exists that might achieve the same result.” Rental Props Owners Ass’n of Kent Co v Kent
    Co Treasurer, 
    308 Mich App 498
    , 518; 866 NW2d 817 (2014). “A ministerial act is one
    in which the law prescribes and defines the duty to be performed with such precision and
    certainty as to leave nothing to the exercise of discretion or judgment.” Hillsdale Co Senior
    Servs, Inc v Hillsdale Co, 
    494 Mich 46
    , 58 n 11; 832 NW2d 728 (2013) (quotation marks
    and citation omitted).
    In the prayer for relief of their complaint filed in the Court of Appeals, plaintiffs
    requested “[m]andamus relief directing the State of Michigan to fully comply with the
    reporting requirements of MCL 21.235 and 21.241[.]” They did not provide any argument
    or explanation about this requested relief or otherwise elaborate in their brief in support of
    the complaint.
    These statutes, which implement the Headlee Amendment, impose certain reporting
    requirements on the governor, MCL 21.235(3), and defendant DTMB, MCL 21.241. MCL
    21.235(3) requires that the governor include with the annual budget recommendation an
    accompanying report of the amount of state disbursements required to be paid to each local
    unit of government for the necessary cost of each state requirement and the total amount
    27
    of all disbursements to be paid to local government. MCL 21.241 requires DTMB to
    collect and tabulate various information, including:
    (a) The state financed proportion of the necessary cost of an existing
    activity or service required of local units of government by existing law.
    (b) The nature and scope of each state requirement which shall require
    a disbursement under [MCL 21.235].
    (c) The nature and scope of each action imposing a potential cost on
    a local unit of government which is not a state requirement and does not
    require a disbursement under this act.
    (2) The information shall include:
    (a) The identity or type of local unit and local unit agency or official
    to whom the state requirement or required existing activity or service is
    directed.
    (b) The determination of whether or not an identifiable local direct
    cost is necessitated by state requirement or the required existing activity or
    service.
    (c) The amount of state financial participation, meeting the
    identifiable local direct cost.
    (d) The state agency charged with supervising the state requirement
    or the required existing activity or service.
    (e) A brief description of the purpose of the state requirement or the
    required existing activity or service, and a citation of its origin in statute, rule,
    or court order. [MCL 21.241(1) and (2).]
    DTMB is then directed to publish this information in a report and submit it to the
    Legislature. MCL 21.241(3). And the report is to be updated annually. 
    Id.
    In their answer to the complaint, the state defendants denied that they had not
    complied with MCL 21.235 but admitted that they had not completed the reporting
    requirements of MCL 21.241. When plaintiffs moved for summary disposition, they again
    28
    included no in-depth discussion of the mandamus issue. In fact, because of plaintiffs’ lack
    of any explanation accompanying their request for mandamus relief, the state defendants
    argued that the claim had been abandoned. We question, therefore, whether the request for
    mandamus was even adequately pleaded.
    Despite these shortcomings, the Court of Appeals granted plaintiffs their requested
    relief, explaining:
    It is clear that MCL 21.241 establishes a legislatively mandated duty
    that the state, through its officers and departments, collect, report, and place
    on the public record certain information regarding the state’s compliance
    with the Headlee Amendment. The state has breached this duty. It is equally
    clear that the acts required by these statutory provisions are ministerial and
    that the failure of the state to undertake such acts undermines the right and
    role of taxpayer oversight and enforcement conferred by Const 1963, art 9,
    § 32. As noted by plaintiffs, the failure of the state to comply with the
    dictates of MCL 21.235(3) and MCL 21.241 “prevents taxpayers from
    knowing what mandated activity is funded and what is unfunded” and
    “prevents taxpayers from specifically identifying mandated activity that is
    included within art. 9, § 30 calculations and what, if any, mandated activity
    is not included.” For these reasons, we deem mandamus to be an appropriate
    remedy and hereby direct the state through its officers and departments to
    hereafter comply with the annual reporting requirements of MCL 21.235(3)
    and MCL 21.241. [Taxpayers, 330 Mich App at 319-320 (opinion by
    SHAPIRO, J.); id. at 332 (METER, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part);
    id. at 333 (BORRELLO, P.J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).][35]
    The panel later stated that the mandamus relief was to be “prospective only because
    plaintiffs have waived their claim to compensation for the state’s past practice of counting
    35
    We note that plaintiffs’ claim in this Court—that the writ of mandamus is to
    “prospectively requir[e] state officials, including the Auditor General, to exclude state
    spending to fund state mandates from the numerator of the § 30 calculation”—is not the
    relief the panel had granted. Moreover, as discussed in Part VII of this opinion, we hold
    that the § 29 funding is not to be excluded from the § 30 calculation of total state spending
    paid to units of local government.
    29
    funding for new or increased mandates for purposes of § 30.” Id. at 320 (opinion by
    SHAPIRO, J.); id. at 332 (METER, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part); id. at 333
    (BORRELLO, P.J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    This holding is puzzling for many reasons. First, it is unclear why the Court of
    Appeals granted plaintiffs a writ of mandamus regarding the reporting requirement of MCL
    21.235(3) when it does not appear that plaintiffs refuted defendants’ assertion that the
    governor complied with the reporting required by that statute. In their answer to the
    complaint, the state defendants admitted only to not complying with the reporting
    requirements imposed on DTMB in MCL 21.241. Second, it is unclear why the Court of
    Appeals vaguely ordered “the state through its officers and departments” to comply with
    the statutes when those statutes apply to the governor, MCL 21.235, who is not a named
    defendant in this action, and to DTMB, MCL 21.241. Third, the panel’s explanation that
    the writ of mandamus was to be “prospective only” because plaintiffs “waived their claim
    to compensation for the state’s past practice of counting funding for new or increased
    mandates for purposes of § 30” appears to be unrelated to the actual mandamus relief
    granted—compliance with the annual reporting requirements of MCL 21.235(3) and MCL
    21.241.
    When the state defendants appealed this ruling, however, they only quarreled with
    the Court of Appeals opinion insofar as it was unclear whether the mandamus relief granted
    extended to defendant Office of the Auditor General. 36 While a writ of mandamus might
    36
    As a result, our grant order only directed the parties to address this particular facet of the
    mandamus order. Taxpayers, 505 Mich at 1136.
    30
    be appropriate to compel the Auditor General to perform a statutory duty, see Thompson v
    Auditor General, 
    261 Mich 624
    , 656; 247 NW2d 360 (1933), it is unclear what statutory
    duty or other “clear legal duty” the Auditor General or the Office of the Auditor General
    has in the reporting requirements of MCL 21.235 and MCL 21.241. The Court of Appeals
    also failed to address whether these duties were ministerial or involved the exercise of
    discretion.
    In light of our disposition regarding Parts III(B) and (C) of the Court of Appeals
    opinion and because we are unable to discern the nature of the relief requested or granted,
    we vacate Part III(E) of the Court of Appeals opinion. Although we do not express an
    opinion on the appropriateness of the remedy, we remand to the Court of Appeals for
    clarification. On remand, the panel should specify which defendant is failing to perform
    which clear legal duty and should analyze whether granting the extraordinary writ of
    mandamus is warranted.
    IX. CONCLUSION
    We hold that Proposal A payments to school districts and § 29 state spending to
    fund state-mandated local services and activities are both properly counted in the
    calculation of “total state spending to all units of Local Government” under § 30 of the
    Headlee Amendment. Accordingly, we affirm Part III(B) and reverse Part III(D) of the
    Court of Appeals opinion. We also hold that the Court of Appeals erred when it held that
    PSAs are “school districts” as the term is used in the Headlee Amendment and reverse that
    conclusion reached in Part III(C) of the opinion. We further hold that PSAs themselves
    are not political subdivisions of the state for purposes of the Headlee Amendment.
    31
    However, we remand this case to the Court of Appeals to consider whether PSA funding
    should be counted as spending paid to a unit of “Local Government” if the authorizing
    body of the PSA is a school district, intermediate school district, or community college.
    Finally, we vacate Part III(E) of the opinion without prejudice and remand so that the Court
    of Appeals may clarify its grant of mandamus relief or take other action not inconsistent
    with this opinion.
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    Bridget M. McCormack
    Richard H. Bernstein
    Elizabeth T. Clement (except as to
    Part VIII)
    Elizabeth M. Welch
    32
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    TAXPAYERS FOR MICHIGAN
    CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT,
    STEVE DUCHANE, RANDALL BLUM,
    and SARA KANDEL,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v                                                         No. 160658
    STATE OF MICHIGAN, DEPARTMENT
    OF TECHNOLOGY, MANAGEMENT
    AND BUDGET, and OFFICE OF AUDITOR
    GENERAL,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    TAXPAYERS FOR MICHIGAN
    CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT,
    STEVE DUCHANE, RANDALL BLUM,
    and SARA KANDEL,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v                                                         No. 160660
    STATE OF MICHIGAN, DEPARTMENT
    OF TECHNOLOGY, MANAGEMENT
    AND BUDGET, and OFFICE OF
    AUDITOR GENERAL,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    VIVIANO, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    I concur in the majority’s decision in all respects except as to Part VI regarding
    funding for Public School Academies (PSAs), colloquially known as charter schools. I
    dissent because I believe that PSAs, as a category, are political subdivisions of the state
    under Const 1963, art 9, § 33. Therefore, I believe that state spending for PSAs is properly
    considered “spending paid to all units of Local Government” for purposes of Const 1963,
    art 9, § 30 of the Headlee Amendment.
    I. TEXT OF THE CONSTITUTION
    This case requires that we decide whether the phrase “Local Government” in § 30,
    as defined in § 33, encompasses PSAs. To do so, we must “determine the text’s original
    meaning to the ratifiers, the people, at the time of ratification.” Citizens Protecting
    Michigan’s Constitution v Secretary of State, 
    503 Mich 42
    , 61; 921 NW2d 247 (2018)
    (CPMC) (quotation marks and citation omitted). In other words, we must seek the
    “common understanding” of the constitutional provisions to ascertain and give effect to
    “the sense of the words used that would have been most obvious to those who voted to
    adopt the constitution.” Straus v Governor, 
    459 Mich 526
    , 533; 592 NW2d 53 (1999).
    Article 9, § 30 provides, “The proportion of total state spending paid to all units of
    Local Government, taken as a group, shall not be reduced below that proportion in effect
    in fiscal year 1978-79.” “Local Government” is defined in Article 9, § 33 as “any political
    subdivision of the state, including, but not restricted to, school districts, cities, villages,
    townships, charter townships, counties, charter counties, authorities created by the state,
    and authorities created by other units of local government.”
    2
    The language of § 33 reveals that this section contemplates a broad and inclusive
    definition of the term “Local Government,” given that it includes “any” political
    subdivision. (Emphasis added.) “The commonly understood word ‘any’ generally casts a
    wide net and encompasses a wide range of things.” People v Lively, 
    470 Mich 248
    , 253;
    680 NW2d 878 (2004). 1 Pertinent definitions of the word “any” demonstrate that there is
    no restriction on the type of political subdivision included. See, e.g., Webster’s Ninth New
    Collegiate Dictionary (1984) (“1 : one or some indiscriminately of whatever kind: a : one
    or another taken at random  b : EVERY — used to indicate one
    selected without restriction <[any] child would know that>”). 2          Second, the phrase
    “including, but not restricted to” contemplates, by its own terms, that there are entities that
    qualify as local governments beyond those that are explicitly listed; that is, the list of
    entities is nonexhaustive. 3
    1
    See also People v Harris, 
    495 Mich 120
    , 132; 845 NW2d 477 (2014) (“[I]t is difficult to
    imagine how the Legislature could have cast a broader net given the use of the words ‘any
    act’ . . . .”).
    2
    See also The Random House Dictionary (1984) (defining “any,” in pertinent part, as
    “every or all”). A court may use dictionaries from the relevant time period to determine
    the meaning of a particular term in the Constitution. See CPMC, 503 Mich at 71 n 64.
    Additionally, “[b]ecause ‘[d]ictionaries tend to lag behind linguistic realities,’ ” it is
    appropriate to consult dictionaries from after 1978 to understand the meaning of the term
    when the Headlee Amendment was ratified. People v Wood, 
    506 Mich 114
    , 133 n 5; 954
    NW2d 494 (2020) (VIVIANO, J., dissenting), quoting Scalia & Garner, A Note on the Use
    of Dictionaries, 
    16 Green Bag 2d 419
    , 423 (2013).
    3
    This definition in § 33 appears broader than that found in the implementing legislation
    for the Headlee Amendment, MCL 21.231 et seq. MCL 21.233(5) defines “local unit of
    government” as “a political subdivision of this state, including school districts, community
    college districts, intermediate school districts, cities, villages, townships, counties, and
    authorities, if the political subdivision has as its primary purpose the providing of local
    governmental services for residents in a geographically limited area of this state and has
    3
    II. CHARACTERISTICS OF POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS
    To determine whether a PSA is a local government for purposes of the Headlee
    Amendment, we must determine whether a PSA constitutes a “political subdivision” as
    that term was understood in 1978. To do so, we look to see if PSAs have the pertinent
    characteristics of such entities. As the majority explains, these characteristics include “a
    geographically limited unit of government, formed to exercise political power, and that is
    beholden to a local electorate.” 4 But this list of attributes is not exhaustive or complete; at
    the time that the Headlee Amendment was ratified, political subdivisions possessed other
    attributes. Importantly, political subdivisions operated as a division of the state to exercise
    the power to act primarily on behalf of that area.” Section 33 of the Constitution expressly
    provides that its list of political subdivisions is not exhaustive and does not contain the
    same restriction of “political subdivision” to entities that are geographically limited and
    that act on behalf of the people in that area. To the extent that the definition in MCL 21.233
    diverges from that in § 33, the one in MCL 21.233 must yield. See Durant v State Bd of
    Ed, 
    424 Mich 364
    , 392; 381 NW2d 662 (1985) (“The state may not avoid the clear
    requirements of [the Headlee Amendment] either by specific statute or by implementation
    of definitions adverse to the mandate of the people.”).
    4
    The majority’s description is supported not only by Attorney General Kelley’s opinion in
    OAG, 1963-1964, No. 4,037, p 3, and People v Egleston, 
    114 Mich App 436
    , 440; 319
    NW2d 563 (1982), but also by caselaw from other jurisdictions from which the Attorney
    General and Egleston drew their conclusions. See, e.g., Lydecker v Drainage & Water
    Comm’rs of Englewood Twp, 41 NJL 154, 157 (1879); Dugas v Beauregard, 155 Conn
    573, 578; 236 A2d 87 (1967); Comm’r of Internal Revenue v Shamberg’s Estate, 144 F2d
    998, 1004 (CA 2, 1944).
    4
    some governmental function for the public benefit. 5 They also had a capacity for self-
    governance. 6 And political subdivisions sometimes wielded the power of taxation. 7
    In determining the scope of the term “political subdivision” in § 33, it is important
    to consider the attributes of the other entities on the list because the definition of political
    subdivision must at least be broad enough to encompass them. In other words, we cannot
    define the general term “political subdivision” in a way that would exclude one or more
    5
    See Egleston, 114 Mich App at 440 (“[I]ts existence [is] for the purpose of discharging
    some function of local government . . . .”); OAG, 1963-1964, No. 4,037, at 3 (describing
    that they are “ ‘organized for the public advantage’ ” and that “ ‘their chief design is the
    exercise of governmental functions’ ”), quoting Lydecker, 41 NJL at 157. This particular
    attribute—the exercise of governmental functions for the public benefit—was recognized
    in many decisions prior to 1978, including those from other jurisdictions. See Lydecker,
    41 NJL at 156-157; Shamberg’s Estate, 144 F2d at 1004; Dugas, 155 Conn at 578. See
    also Fair v Sch Employees Retirement Sys of Ohio, 44 Ohio App 2d 115, 118-119; 
    335 NE2d 868
     (1975) (“The term [political subdivision] may be used in more than one sense,
    and it may designate a true governmental subdivision such as a county, township, etc., or
    it may have a broader meaning, denoting any subdivision of the state created for a public
    purpose although authorized to exercise a portion of the sovereign power of the state only
    to a limited degree. Broadly speaking, a political subdivision of a state is a subdivision
    thereof to which has been delegated certain functions of local government.”) (quotation
    marks and citation omitted).
    6
    See Egleston, 114 Mich App at 440 (describing that a political subdivision has “authority
    for self-government through officers selected by it”), citing Dugas, 155 Conn at 578; OAG,
    1963-1964, No. 4,037, at 3 (describing that the electors of the subdivision possess “ ‘to
    some extent . . . the power of local government’ ”), quoting Lydecker, 41 NJL at 157.
    7
    See OAG, 1963-1964, No. 4,037, at 3 (describing that political subdivisions have “ ‘the
    sovereign power of taxation to meet their own necessities’ ”), quoting Lydecker, 41 NJL at
    157; Dugas, 155 Conn at 578 (holding that an entity was not a political subdivision
    because, among other things, it had “no power to levy taxes”); Shamberg’s Estate, 144 F2d
    at 1003, 1005 (describing that the political subdivision at issue did not have the power of
    taxation but noting that “the lack of taxing power . . . is only one of the attributes of
    sovereignty”).
    5
    enumerated examples. Every constitutional provision “must be interpreted in the light of
    the document as a whole, and no provision should be construed to nullify or impair
    another.” 8 When specific examples follow a general term, as in § 33, this “can serve the
    function of making doubly sure that the broad (and intended-to-be-broad) general term is
    taken to include the specifics.” Scalia & Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal
    Texts (St. Paul: Thomson/West, 2012), p 204. “When the genus comes first (‘all buildings,
    assembly houses, courthouses, jails, police stations, and government offices’) it is a
    stranger that arrives, so to speak, without an introduction saying it is limited; one is invited
    to take it at its broadest face value.” Id. at 205. 9 Accordingly, we must frame our
    8
    Lapeer Co Clerk v Lapeer Circuit Court, 
    469 Mich 146
    , 156; 665 NW2d 452 (2003).
    9
    Justice Antonin Scalia and Bryan Garner explain that the doctrine of ejusdem generis
    does not and should not apply when specific examples follow a general term. This doctrine
    states that “[w]here general words follow an enumeration of two or more things, they apply
    only to persons or things of the same general kind or class specifically mentioned . . . .”
    Reading Law, p 199. The editors of the treatise Sutherland Statutes and Statutory
    Construction expanded this doctrine in 1973 to state that it also applies when specific words
    follow general ones. Id. at 204, citing 2A Sands, Sutherland Statutes and Statutory
    Construction (4th ed), § 47:17, p 166. However, Scalia and Garner explain that this
    expansion was inappropriate; when specific examples follow a general term, this does not
    restrict the general, in part, because “there is no commonly used verbal formulation . . . that
    makes that [limiting] function clear in the specific-followed-by-general context. One never
    encounters a provision that reads ‘all assembly houses, courthouses, jails, police stations,
    government offices, and, without limitation by reason of the foregoing, all other
    buildings.’ ” Reading Law, pp 204-205.
    Scalia and Garner’s construction of the doctrine is in tension with our current
    caselaw, which adopted Sutherland’s construction that ejusdem generis applies when a
    general term is followed by specific ones. See Belanger v Warren Consol Sch Dist Bd of
    Ed, 
    432 Mich 575
    , 583-584; 443 NW2d 372 (1989). For the reasons stated by Scalia and
    Garner, I believe that our adoption of Sutherland’s construction was in error. However,
    even if I were to apply a limiting construction under the ejusdem generis doctrine in this
    context, it would not change my analysis or conclusion. Our interpretation of the general
    6
    understanding of the term “political subdivision” by referring to the list of examples
    provided.
    The first enumerated example relevant to my analysis is “school district.” 10 I share
    some agreement with the majority that PSAs and traditional school districts are not exactly
    alike. In particular, as the majority describes, school districts are governed by a school
    board, whose members are directly elected by the voters in a school district. MCL
    380.11a(5) to (7); MCL 168.642c. However, the majority downplays the other shared
    characteristics of school districts that are pertinent here. First, school districts, like PSAs,
    perform the governmental function of providing free public education. See Const 1963,
    art 8, § 2. Second, school districts operate in a defined geographic area, see, e.g., MCL
    380.626, but may also admit students from the same intermediate school district, see MCL
    388.1705, or students residing in a contiguous intermediate school district, see MCL
    388.1705c. Third, though less significant, school districts lack the power to raise operating
    funds through the imposition of property taxes after the passage of Proposal A. See Const
    1963, art 9, § 11.
    term (political subdivision) would involve consideration of the characteristics of the
    specific examples to determine if PSAs are “of the same general kind or class . . . .”
    Reading Law, p 199. As my analysis demonstrates, consideration of these characteristics,
    as set forth in the enumerated examples, leads to the conclusion that PSAs fall within the
    term “political subdivision.”
    10
    I take no issue with the majority’s conclusion that MCL 380.501(1) does little to inform
    our analysis. In MCL 380.501(1), the Legislature described that a PSA is a “school district
    for the purposes of [Proposal A, Const 1963, art 9, § 11].” This is a legislative declaration
    that PSAs are school districts only for the purposes of Proposal A, not the Headlee
    Amendment.
    7
    In this context, it is also revealing that the ratifiers included on the list “authorities
    created by the state, and authorities created by other units of local government” as express
    examples of political subdivisions. Const 1963, art 9, § 33. An authority “is a corporation
    controlled by a state that has delegated governmental power to that authority for the
    performance of a state function, rather than acting directly through a state agency.”
    4 Rathkopf’s The Law of Zoning and Planning (4th ed, June 2021 update), § 76:18. These
    types of entities are created to “perform a special purpose or purposes, or to perform some
    of the functions of privately-owned public service corporations.” 1 McQuillin, Municipal
    Corporations (3d ed, August 2020 update), § 2:35. These authorities have independence
    to administer their purposes and have a modicum of autonomy with regard to their separate
    corporate legal status, freedom from normal governmental management controls, and
    ability to support themselves monetarily.          Id.   They are generally considered an
    “instrumentality of the state.” Id.
    Considering authorities that were in existence in 1978 reveals three things about
    political subdivisions that should affect our understanding of that term in § 33. 11 First, the
    Legislature did not always define the geographic boundaries of these authorities with
    precision. Many authorities in existence in 1978 had specific geographic boundaries, such
    as those of the authorizing municipalities. 12       But that was not always true—some
    11
    Because we seek the common understanding of authorities in 1978, I look only to entities
    that were in existence at that time. See notes 12 to 15 of this opinion.
    12
    See, e.g., MCL 121.2 (water authorities operate within the limits of the authorizing
    municipalities); MCL 119.2 (metropolitan districts operate within the limits of the
    authorizing municipalities). The Charter Water Authority Act, MCL 121.29 et seq., was
    8
    authorities, like garbage, rubbish, and dog-pound authorities created under MCL 123.301
    et seq. had boundaries that were not well defined. 13 MCL 123.301(1) allows two or more
    municipalities to incorporate authorities for these purposes. While the authority may
    contract with any municipality that is a part of the authority, MCL 123.305(1), it may also
    contract with “a city, village, or township that is not a part of the authority,” MCL
    123.305(2). In other words, the authority has a choice of where to operate—and it may do
    so outside the bounds of the authorizing municipalities. Other authorities in existence in
    1978 had similar provisions. See MCL 254.311 (allowing the Mackinac Bridge Authority
    to construct a “bridge,” which includes all roads, facilities, parks, equipment, etc.
    connected to the project); 14 MCL 124.406(b) (allowing public transportation authorities to
    operate in the 10 miles outside of the metropolitan transportation authority “if there is no
    similar authority established or operating public transportation facilities within such 10
    mile extra-territorial distance”). 15
    Second, while some authorities had the power to levy taxes directly, many of these
    authorities lacked the power of taxation and were instead funded by the authorizing body
    or another public entity. 16 For example, the Mackinac Bridge Authority was funded by
    enacted by 
    1957 PA 4
    , and the Metropolitan District Act, MCL 119.1 et seq., was enacted
    by 
    1929 PA 312
    .
    13
    The joint garbage and rubbish disposal act was enacted by 
    1947 PA 179
    .
    14
    The Mackinac Bridge Authority act, MCL 254.311 et seq., was enacted by 
    1952 PA 214
    .
    15
    The Metropolitan Transportation Authorities Act, MCL 124.401 et seq., was enacted by
    
    1967 PA 204
    .
    16
    Examples of authorities with direct taxing power include water authorities, MCL 121.18,
    and metropolitan districts, MCL 119.3 and MCL 119.4.
    9
    bonds that the authority issued itself and by appropriations from the State Highway
    Department. MCL 254.317. Metropolitan transportation authorities were prohibited from
    levying taxes themselves; instead, they were funded by tolls, grants, appropriations from
    participating counties and political subdivisions, or tax proceeds “collected by the state or
    a political subdivision and returned or paid to the authority pursuant to law or contract.”
    MCL 124.414(a) to (d). Similarly, garbage, rubbish, and dog-pound authorities had “no
    direct taxing power” but were instead funded by the participating municipalities. MCL
    123.308.
    Third, and most importantly to the analysis here, the governing bodies of these
    authorities were almost universally chosen—not by the electorate directly, but by the
    participating municipalities or state officers. The board of commissioners for water
    authorities was appointed by the legislative bodies of each participating city. MCL 121.6.
    The same was true of metropolitan districts. MCL 119.6. Six board members of the
    Mackinac Bridge Authority were appointed by the governor; the last was to be appointed
    by the director of the Department of Transportation. MCL 254.302(2). Metropolitan
    transportation authorities are governed by a nine-member board, all of whom are appointed
    by the governor. MCL 124.410(1)(d). The governing boards of other authorities, such as
    garbage, rubbish, and dog-pound authorities and building authorities, were to be selected
    as provided in the articles of incorporation. See MCL 123.302; MCL 123.955.
    III. ANALYSIS OF PUBLIC SCHOOL ACADEMIES
    The characteristics of school districts and authorities outlined above inform the
    analysis of whether PSAs should be considered “political subdivisions.” Like school
    10
    districts, PSAs provide educational services; these services are a governmental function
    operated for the public benefit. See Const 1963, art 8, § 2. 17 As the majority recognizes,
    the performance of these functions unquestionably constitutes the performance of
    “essential public purposes and governmental functions of this state.” MCL 380.501(1).
    This factor weighs heavily in favor of a finding that PSAs are political subdivisions.
    Certain PSAs also operate in a limited geographic area in a similar manner to certain
    authorities and school districts. If a PSA is authorized by the board of a school district,
    intermediate school district, or community college, the PSA “shall not operate” outside the
    authorizing body’s boundaries. MCL 380.502(2)(a) to (c). Enrollment in the PSA “shall
    be open to all pupils who reside within the geographic boundaries of that authorizing
    body,” though it “may be open to all individuals who reside in this state . . . .” MCL
    380.504(3). 18 If the authorizing body is a state public university, enrollment “shall be open
    to all pupils who reside in this state who meet the [PSA’s] admission policy.” Id. But, as
    defendants correctly assert on appeal, enrollment will be practically limited to the PSA’s
    immediate geographic area. A student living in Marquette likely will not enroll in a PSA
    in Detroit, even if he or she could do so.
    17
    See also L M v Michigan, 
    307 Mich App 685
    , 697; 862 NW2d 246 (2014) (noting that
    the Constitution requires the Legislature to “provide for and finance a system of free public
    schools” but “leaves the actual intricacies of the delivery of specific educational services”
    to schools themselves).
    18
    “Shall” in this context indicates a mandatory directive, whereas “may” indicates a
    permissive one. See Manuel v Gill, 
    481 Mich 637
    , 647; 753 NW2d 48 (2008) (“In general,
    our courts have said that the term ‘may’ is ‘permissive,’ as opposed to the term ‘shall,’
    which is considered ‘mandatory.’ ”) (citations omitted).
    11
    In this respect, PSAs resemble other authorities that do not have strict geographic
    boundaries but will be confined by necessity to a certain area of operations. As discussed
    above, garbage, rubbish, and dog-pound authorities can contract with any municipality,
    whether the municipality is an authorizing body or not. The Mackinac Bridge Authority
    has the authority to operate anywhere that is connected to the Mackinac Bridge. But these
    authorities will be practically confined to the specific area in which they operate. So, too,
    are PSAs geographically confined, even if they may be similarly allowed, in some
    circumstances, to operate in any part of the state or accept students residing anywhere in
    the state. This practical limitation is similar to Michigan’s school-of-choice program in
    which public schools may choose to accept students residing within the same intermediate
    school district, MCL 388.1705(2), or residing in a contiguous intermediate school district,
    MCL 388.1705c. School districts therefore may accept students from outside their own
    boundaries, but enrollment is still limited to a particular geographic area. Contrary to the
    majority’s conclusion, this factor weighs in favor of a finding that PSAs are political
    subdivisions.
    Next, while PSAs lack the power of taxation—“[a] public school academy may not
    levy ad valorem property taxes or another tax for any purpose,” MCL 380.503(9)—this
    factor is not dispositive. The ability to tax “is only one of the attributes of sovereignty.”
    Shamberg’s Estate, 144 F2d at 1005. Further, as noted above, authorities often lack this
    power, yet Const 1963, art 9, § 33 still describes them as examples of political subdivisions.
    And, as also noted above, school districts also now lack the power to raise operating funds
    through the imposition of property taxes. Therefore, it is clear that the ability to tax is not
    a dispositive attribute of a political subdivision.
    12
    Finally, contrary to the majority’s conclusion, PSAs have sufficient ability to self-
    govern and have electorate control. The majority correctly notes that the “governing body
    of a PSA is not elected by voters” and, thus, that the PSA “is under the immediate control
    of its authorizing body.” 19 The majority makes much of the supposed lack of electorate
    control or self-governance, in part because of the difference between the boards of PSAs
    and the boards of traditional school districts, which are directly elected and, therefore, have
    a greater capacity for self-governance. 20 However, the majority fails to acknowledge that
    governing bodies of authorities are also not directly elected and, thus, have a similarly
    limited ability to self-govern.
    In Council of Organizations & Others for Ed About Parochiaid, Inc v Governor,
    
    455 Mich 557
    , 571; 566 NW2d 208 (1997), we addressed whether PSAs were “public
    schools” for the purpose of Const 1963 art 8, § 2, which requires the Legislature to
    “maintain and support a system of free public elementary and secondary schools . . . .” The
    plaintiffs there argued, among other things, that PSAs were not public schools because a
    PSA “is run by a private board of directors and because the authorizing body has no means
    for selecting members of the board . . . .” Id. at 575. We disagreed, holding that through
    19
    A PSA is governed by a board of directors, MCL 380.502(1), but the authorizing body
    adopts a resolution to establish “the method of selection, length of term, and number of
    members of the board of directors,” MCL 380.503(5). The authorizing body also oversees
    the PSA, and that oversight must be “sufficient to ensure that the board of directors is in
    compliance with the terms of the contract and with applicable law.” MCL 380.507(1)(d).
    20
    The majority also notes that PSAs are nonprofit corporations, but this, too, misses that
    some authorities are created as nonprofit entities. See MCL 390.951 (“There is created a
    nonprofit authority as an agency in the department of education, to be known as the
    ‘Michigan higher education assistance authority’.”).
    13
    MCL 380.503(3), 21 “the Legislature has mandated the board of director’s selection
    process” and could “change this process at any time.” Id. Further, we explained that while
    the board of a PSA is not chosen by the electorate or the Legislature, “the board of the
    authorizing bodies is publicly elected or appointed by public bodies.” Id. Therefore, “the
    public maintains control of the schools through the authorizing bodies.” Id. at 576.
    As we explained in Council of Organizations, the public still maintains control over
    PSAs through the public authorizing bodies. This is analogous to how authorities work.
    As discussed above, authorities in existence in 1978 were not controlled by the electorate
    but rather by the participating municipalities or the governor. Those public bodies and
    officials are directly elected, giving the public direct control over the authorities only
    through an intermediary. Further, some of these authorities are governed by articles of
    incorporation that are expressly adopted by the legislative body of municipalities. See
    MCL 123.301; MCL 123.955. In these latter examples especially, the municipalities have
    the ability to control the self-governance of the authority through the adoption or rejection
    of the articles of incorporation. 22 Because they have a similar governance structure, PSAs
    have a sufficient ability to self-govern to qualify as a political subdivision.
    The factors of electoral control and self-governance weigh in favor of finding that
    PSAs are political subdivisions. The electorate still has control over PSAs through the
    21
    This provision is now codified in MCL 380.503(5). See note 19 of this opinion.
    22
    Attorney General Kelley deemed this indirect control to be sufficient when he stated that
    “ ‘to the electors residing within each [political subdivision] is, to some extent, committed
    the power of local government, to be wielded either mediately or immediately . . . .’ ”
    OAG, 1963-1964, No. 4,037, at 3, quoting Lydecker, 41 NJL at 157 (emphasis added). If
    the electors have mediate, i.e., indirect, control of an entity, as is true with PSAs, that
    indirect control is enough to support a finding that the entity is a political subdivision.
    14
    authorizing body, and PSAs still possess the ability to run their own affairs, even if the
    authorizing body oversees those affairs. A political subdivision does not need to have
    either direct electoral control or total self-governance for purposes of the Headlee
    Amendment. Rather, in light of the authorities in existence at the time of ratification, so
    long as there is some public, electoral control of a political subdivision through an
    authorizing body, municipality, or state officer, that is enough to weigh in favor of finding
    that an entity is a political subdivision. If authorities are expressly considered political
    subdivisions for purposes of § 33 and the electorate has the same level of control over both
    these authorities and PSAs, we should treat PSAs in the same manner as authorities.
    Therefore, under a proper interpretation of § 33, PSAs qualify as political
    subdivisions.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For these reasons, I respectfully dissent from Part VI of the majority opinion and
    would hold that state spending for PSAs qualifies as part of the “total state spending paid
    to all units of Local Government” under § 30. Accordingly, I would affirm the judgment
    of the Court of Appeals on that issue.
    David F. Viviano
    Brian K. Zahra
    15
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    TAXPAYERS FOR MICHIGAN
    CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT,
    STEVE DUCHANE, RANDALL BLUM,
    and SARA KANDEL,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v                                                         No. 160658
    STATE OF MICHIGAN, DEPARTMENT
    OF TECHNOLOGY, MANAGEMENT
    AND BUDGET, and OFFICE OF
    AUDITOR GENERAL
    Defendants-Appellees.
    TAXPAYERS FOR MICHIGAN
    CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT,
    STEVE DUCHANE, RANDALL BLUM,
    and SARA KANDEL,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v                                                         No. 160660
    STATE OF MICHIGAN, DEPARTMENT
    OF TECHNOLOGY, MANAGEMENT
    AND BUDGET, and OFFICE OF
    AUDITOR GENERAL,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    CLEMENT, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    I concur in full with the Court’s resolution of the substantive Headlee Amendment
    claims. I dissent only as to the Court’s disposition of the state’s challenge to the writ of
    mandamus issued by the Court of Appeals (acting as a trial court) in Docket No. 160660.
    While I concur with the Court’s decision to vacate the entire mandamus portion of the
    Court of Appeals opinion, 1 because this aspect of plaintiffs’ case was inadequately pleaded
    I would not direct that Court to continue struggling on remand with an issue that is not
    adequately framed.
    Any debate about whether a case has been adequately pleaded obviously should
    begin with a discussion of the elements of the action. “To support mandamus, plaintiffs
    must have a clear legal right to performance of the specific duty sought to be compelled;
    defendants must have the clear legal duty to perform such act; and it must be a ministerial
    act . . . .” Toan v McGinn, 
    271 Mich 28
    , 34; 
    260 NW 108
     (1935). A “ministerial act” is
    one “where the law prescribes and defines the duty to be performed with such precision
    and certainty as to leave nothing to the exercise of discretion or judgment.” 
    Id.
     (quotation
    marks and citation omitted).
    While the majority of the Court of Appeals’ jurisdiction is appellate, it has some
    limited original jurisdiction, including over actions challenging compliance with the
    Headlee Amendment, see Const 1963, art 9, § 32, so this action was initiated when
    plaintiffs filed a complaint in that Court. The named defendants were the state itself; the
    1
    Although the lead opinion in the Court of Appeals was only signed by Judge SHAPIRO,
    the partial dissents from Judges METER and BORRELLO confined their disagreement with
    Judge SHAPIRO to other issues and otherwise concurred with his analysis of the mandamus
    component of this case. As a result, I refer to Judge SHAPIRO’s opinion as the opinion of
    the Court when analyzing this mandamus question.
    2
    Department of Technology, Management and Budget; and the Office of the Auditor
    General. As the majority notes, “There are three specific counts of plaintiffs’ complaint at
    issue in this appeal,” and there was also a fourth count that was disposed of (relating to
    highway funding) before the case reached us. All four counts were substantive Headlee
    claims; not one of them was a count seeking a writ of mandamus. As the majority notes,
    the only mention of mandamus in the complaint is a single line in the prayer for relief
    asking for “[m]andamus relief directing the State of Michigan to fully comply with the
    reporting requirements of MCL 21.235 and 21.241[.]” The complaint offers no allegations
    about what legal duties those statutes impose on any public officers, and indeed, arguably
    no actual public officers are named as defendants, inasmuch as corporate entities (the state,
    a department, and an office) are named rather than actual officers. The majority notes that
    plaintiffs’ briefing in the Court of Appeals “did not provide any argument or explanation
    about this requested relief . . . .”
    In its opinion resolving the case, the Court of Appeals granted mandamus relief to
    plaintiffs. The opinion, however, is as vague as plaintiffs’ complaint. The Court of
    Appeals noted that MCL 21.241 “establishes a legislatively mandated duty that the state,
    through its officers and departments, collect, report, and place on the public record certain
    information regarding the state’s compliance with the Headlee Amendment,” but “[t]he
    state has breached this duty.” Taxpayers for Mich Constitutional Gov’t v Michigan (On
    Reconsideration), 
    330 Mich App 295
    , 319; 948 NW2d 91 (2019) (opinion by SHAPIRO, J.).
    After concluding that the requested actions were ministerial, the Court “deem[ed]
    mandamus to be an appropriate remedy and hereby direct[ed] the state through its officers
    and departments to hereafter comply with the annual reporting requirements of MCL
    3
    21.235(3) and MCL 21.241.” 
    Id. at 320
     (opinion by SHAPIRO, J.). Its opinion did not
    describe which officers need to perform which duties. The state sought leave to appeal in
    this Court, asking for relief specific to the Auditor General. The state phrased the question
    presented here as:
    The Auditor General reviews and determines how state funds are
    spent and examines whether the State properly accounts for spending to units
    of local government. The Court of Appeals’ opinion did not expressly
    address the issue of mandamus against the Auditor General but may imply
    that its review and determination under existing laws were subject to
    mandamus relief. Would mandamus relief as to the Auditor General, based
    on the claims raised for the first time in this case, i.e., despite no prior court
    decision that its processes were contrary to law, represent clear error?
    In my view, the state’s conditional phrasing in its application for leave to appeal
    should have been a red flag that what it was asking for was an advisory opinion. We were
    effectively asked: if a court tried to hold the Auditor General in contempt, would that be
    legally viable (and if so, under what circumstances)? Baked into that are questions about
    the scope of the Auditor General’s responsibilities under the pertinent statutes as well as
    how the Auditor General properly would respond to the substantive Headlee ruling.
    Judicial review of these questions is frustrated by the fact that plaintiffs have failed to allege
    any specific legal duty they want performed, nor have they “connected the dots” between
    any such duty and a specific officer who must perform it. The confusion is underlined by
    the fact that plaintiffs’ brief in Docket No. 160660 says that “[t]he only mandamus relief
    at issue on this appeal is the Court of Appeals grant of mandamus prospectively requiring
    state officials, including the Auditor General, to exclude state spending to fund state
    mandates from the numerator of the [Const 1963, art 9, § 30] calculation.” This appears
    4
    nowhere in the Court of Appeals opinion. The mandamus relief the Court of Appeals
    directed relates to reporting requirements under MCL 21.235 and MCL 21.241.
    We are faced, it seems to me, with a mess. On the one hand, it appears that the
    state’s appeal essentially asks us for advice, which we are not in the business of providing.
    But the reason the state wants advice is because the Court of Appeals judgment against the
    state is extremely vague—as vague as plaintiffs’ complaint. Further contributing to the
    confusion is that plaintiffs themselves do not appear to accurately represent what it is that
    the Court of Appeals ordered; their characterization of what is “at issue on this appeal”
    appears ungrounded in the text of the Court of Appeals opinion we are asked to review.
    Our pleading rules require that a complaint contain “[a] statement of the facts . . . on which
    the pleader relies in stating the cause of action, with the specific allegations necessary
    reasonably to inform the adverse party of the nature of the claims the adverse party is called
    on to defend[.]” MCR 2.111(B)(1) (emphasis added). It seems clear to me that this
    complaint is inadequate. It has long been established that mandamus is an action at law,
    see Woodworth v Old Second Nat’l Bank, 
    144 Mich 338
    , 338-339; 
    107 NW 905
     (1906),
    and as with any other action at law, the burden is on the plaintiff to plead facts establishing
    the elements of the cause of action. That simply is not the case here—plaintiffs do not
    even list mandamus as one of the counts in their complaint. Perhaps as a result, plaintiffs’
    complaint fails to allege any “specific duty” to be performed, nor does it identify any
    “defendants [who] have the clear legal duty to perform such act[.]” Toan, 
    271 Mich at 34
    .
    In response to this state of affairs, the majority “vacate[s] the grant of mandamus
    and remand[s] to the Court of Appeals to clarify its reasoning or reconsider its decision as
    it deems appropriate.” While I certainly prefer this disposition of the case as opposed to
    5
    affirming the judgment of the Court of Appeals, I would simply vacate this aspect of the
    judgment as having been erroneously rendered and would not direct the Court of Appeals
    to continue shadowboxing with this poorly pleaded aspect of the case. This is all the more
    so when we consider the arm’s length manner in which business is conducted in the Court
    of Appeals; it has no convenient mechanisms for a panel of its judges to take the steps a
    trial court might take to straighten out confusion of this sort, like holding a status
    conference with the litigants. See MCR 2.112, 
    480 Mich clviii
    , clx-clxii (YOUNG, J.,
    concurring) (discussing the “practical difficulties associated with the Court of Appeals[’]
    exercise of original jurisdiction” given that “[n]one of the tools available to our circuit
    courts for processing trials are available” to it and its “primary function is revisionary,”
    leaving it “ill-equipped to evaluate the claims and defenses in a complex and fact-intensive
    original action without the assistance of the parties in developing the factual bases for their
    claims and defenses”). I believe that the best resolution of the mandamus issue would
    simply be to hold that plaintiffs’ complaint was inadequate and vacate Part III(E) of the
    Court of Appeals opinion without directing the Court to work further on the issue on
    remand.
    Elizabeth T. Clement
    6