Lakeshore Group v. Department of Environmental Quality ( 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
    LAKESHORE GROUP v DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
    Docket Nos. 159524 and 159525. Argued on application for leave to appeal October 7,
    2020. Decided May 20, 2021.
    Lakeshore Camping, Gary Medler, and Shorewood Association petitioned for contested
    case hearings before an administrative-law judge (ALJ), challenging permits and a special
    exception granted by the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (now the Michigan
    Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE)) to Dune Ridge SA LP. The
    petitions were consolidated, but Medler’s and Shorewood’s petitions were subsequently dismissed
    pursuant to a settlement agreement. Lakeshore Group, Jane Underwood, Charles Zolper, Lucie
    Hoyt, William Reininga, Kenneth Altman, and others moved to intervene. The ALJ denied
    intervention to some of these parties and ultimately dismissed the matter, concluding that the
    remaining petitioners and intervenors lacked standing. In February 2014, Dune Ridge, a real estate
    developer, had purchased a 130-acre plot of land along the shore of Lake Michigan. The property
    was located in a critical dune area and therefore was subject to certain regulations under the sand
    dunes protection and management act (SDPMA), MCL 324.35301 et seq. EGLE issued the
    requisite permits and special exceptions needed for development of the property to Dune Ridge,
    and in October 2014, Lakeshore Camping, Medler, and Shorewood filed their petitions under MCL
    324.35305(1), which allows certain aggrieved parties to challenge the grant or denial of a permit
    or special exception and to request a contested case hearing on the permitting decision. Around
    September 2015, Underwood and Zolper moved to intervene in the case as aggrieved adjacent
    property owners. The ALJ also allowed Lakeshore Group, an unincorporated nonprofit
    association, to intervene after determining that it had “representational standing” through Zolper,
    one of its members. Lakeshore Camping and other petitioners were eventually dismissed from the
    case, leaving Underwood, Zolper, and Lakeshore Group as the sole remaining petitioners. In
    December 2015, Dune Ridge conveyed about 20 acres of its property that was immediately
    adjacent to Underwood’s property to a nature conservancy, the Oval Beach Preservation Society.
    Dune Ridge then moved for partial summary disposition, seeking to dismiss Underwood because
    she no longer owned property immediately adjacent to Dune Ridge’s property. In July 2016, the
    ALJ granted the motion. In September 2016, Dune Ridge sold 15 acres of its property, including
    the land immediately adjacent to Zolper’s property, to Vine Street Cottages, LLC. Dune Ridge
    then moved for summary disposition as to Zolper, and the ALJ dismissed Zolper and Lakeshore
    Group, finding that they no longer had standing because Zolper was no longer an immediately
    adjacent property owner. Underwood, Zolper, Lakeshore Group, and others appealed the decision
    of the ALJ in the Ingham Circuit Court. On appeal in the circuit court, Rosemarie E. Aquilina, J.,
    reversed the ALJ’s orders dismissing Underwood, Zolper, and Lakeshore Group, concluding that
    the ALJ made an error of law when he determined that petitioners “lost” standing when Dune
    Ridge conveyed to others the portions of its property that were adjacent to the land owned by
    Underwood and Zolper. EGLE appealed, and the Court of Appeals, SAWYER, P.J., and CAVANAGH
    and K. F. KELLY, JJ., reversed the circuit court’s decision in an unpublished per curiam opinion,
    concluding that although Underwood and Zolper were immediately adjacent property owners
    when they intervened in the case, they lost this status when Dune Ridge conveyed its property to
    Oval Beach and Vine Street and consequently they had lost their rights to challenge the permitting
    decision. Underwood, Zolper, and others sought leave to appeal in the Supreme Court, which
    ordered and heard oral argument on whether Underwood and Zolper satisfied the statutory standard
    for standing under MCL 324.35305(1) notwithstanding Dune Ridge’s land sales. 
    505 Mich 875
    (2019).
    In an opinion by Chief Justice MCCORMACK, joined by Justices BERNSTEIN, CLEMENT, and
    CAVANAGH, the Supreme Court held:
    MCL 324.35305(1) balances the need to preserve critical dune areas with the benefits of
    economic development and human uses of the dunes by allowing two specified groups to request
    a contested hearing when a permit is issued to develop land on critical dune areas: (1) aggrieved
    applicants for a permit or special exception and (2) aggrieved owners of the property immediately
    adjacent to the proposed use. Although there is no dispute that Underwood and Zolper had petition
    rights under MCL 324.35305(1) when they moved to intervene, the question was whether the
    subsequent sale by Dune Ridge of slivers of its property extinguished those petition rights. The
    statute does not provide that a party who has exercised its petition rights may later be divested of
    those rights. MCL 324.35305(1) outlines a two-step process: an aggrieved permit applicant or
    immediately adjacent land owner may request a formal hearing, and once an eligible party requests
    a hearing, the hearing shall be conducted by the department as a contested case hearing under the
    Administrative Procedures Act, MCL 24.201 et seq. Although the parties disputed whether the
    statute’s use of the mandatory term “shall” requires EGLE to hold a hearing or whether it merely
    mandates how a hearing would take place, this dispute missed the larger point: MCL 324.35305(1)
    does not include any intermediary step between an eligible party’s request and the hearing. In
    other words, no statutory language empowers EGLE to deny a hearing to a petitioner who qualified
    as an eligible party under the statute when the hearing was requested and who continues to desire
    a hearing. Therefore, under the statute, specific aggrieved parties may file a petition and then the
    department must hold a contested case hearing in conformity with the Administrative Procedures
    Act. The Court of Appeals erred by holding that Underwood and Zolper lost their petition rights
    under the statute when Dune Ridge sold parcels of its land because they no longer fit the statutory
    criteria laid out in MCL 324.35305(1). The statute does not allow for forced forfeiture. The
    requirements that MCL 324.35305(1) imposes on a petitioner are threshold requirements for
    requesting a hearing, and there is no basis for imposing an additional requirement that a petitioner
    must maintain their original status throughout the proceedings.
    Reversed.
    Justice ZAHRA, dissenting, noted that before the 2012 amendment of MCL 324.35305(1),
    the statute provided that anyone aggrieved by a decision of the department could request a formal
    hearing. Following the amendment, however, only an applicant for a permit or a special exception
    or the owner of the property immediately adjacent to the proposed use has the right to request a
    formal hearing if they are aggrieved by a decision of the department. Justice ZAHRA opined that
    under the amended language, petitioners did not have a statutory right to a formal hearing because
    although when they petitioned for a hearing at least one of the petitioners owned property
    immediately adjacent to the property owned by Dune Ridge, none of them owned property
    immediately adjacent to the proposed use by Dune Ridge. MCL 324.35305(1) does not provide
    the owner of the immediately adjacent property the right to a contested case, but only the owner
    of the property immediately adjacent to the proposed use. Because the SDPMA does not suggest
    that the proposed use extends to the entire parcel of property in which the use is sought, and all of
    the permits at issue concerned proposed uses within the interior of the property, none of the
    proposed uses was immediately adjacent to petitioners’ properties. Justice ZAHRA also disagreed
    that EGLE was obligated under the statute to hold a hearing upon request by an eligible party.
    Rather, the lack of an intermediary step in the statute between a party’s request and the hearing
    should not be filled by inappropriately inserting a requirement that EGLE must hold a hearing
    upon a party’s request. Discretion is inherent in the act of considering a request, and the majority
    opinion improperly removed discretion from the department to grant or deny a request for a
    hearing.
    Justice VIVIANO, dissenting, agreed with Justice ZAHRA that petitioners had failed to
    establish that they had the right to a formal hearing under MCL 324.35305(1) because their
    property did not have a common border directly connected with the proposed use. However,
    Justice VIVIANO concluded that it was not necessary to reach the issue of whether EGLE otherwise
    has discretion under the statute to grant or deny a hearing to an aggrieved party.
    Justice WELCH did not participate in the disposition of this case because the Court
    considered it before she assumed office.
    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 May 20, 2021
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    LAKESHORE GROUP, CHARLES
    ZOLPER, JANE UNDERWOOD, LUCIE
    HOYT, and WILLIAM REININGA,
    Petitioners-Appellants,
    and
    KENNETH ALTMAN, DAWN
    SCHUMANN, GEORGE SCHUMANN,
    MARJORIE SCHUHAM and
    LAKESHORE CAMPING,
    Intervenors-Appellants,
    v                                                     Nos. 159524-5
    DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL
    QUALITY and DUNE RIDGE SA LP,
    Respondents-Appellees.
    BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH (except WELCH, J.)
    MCCORMACK, C.J.
    Under the sand dunes protection and management act (SDPMA), MCL 324.35301
    et seq., 1 when the government grants a development permit or special exception for a
    protected sand dune area, aggrieved owners of land immediately adjacent to the proposed
    use may request a contested case hearing to challenge the permitting decision. The
    petitioners Charles Zolper and Jane Underwood were aggrieved owners of property
    adjacent to the defendant Dune Ridge development project when they requested such a
    hearing—that is, they were eligible for a hearing. But before the hearing was conducted,
    Dune Ridge sold a strip of land between the proposed development and each petitioner’s
    property, making them no longer adjacent property owners.
    We must now determine whether these petitioners lost their eligibility for a
    contested hearing after properly requesting it. We answer no: Because the statute provides
    no means to deprive an eligible petitioner of a contested hearing, we hold that the
    petitioners are entitled to a contested case hearing. We reverse the judgment of the Court
    of Appeals and remand to the administrative tribunal to conduct a formal contested case
    hearing.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    In February 2014, real estate developer Dune Ridge purchased a 130-acre plot of
    land in Saugatuck, Michigan. The property, located along the shore of Lake Michigan, had
    been developed and used by a church camp for approximately 100 years. Dune Ridge
    1
    The SDPMA is Part 353 of the Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act
    (NREPA), MCL 324.101 et seq.
    2
    proposed to transform the area by tearing down old campground structures, widening and
    paving roads, constructing more than 20 luxury homes with paved driveways and septic-
    disposal and drain-field systems, and building a marina, along with other permanent site
    alterations.
    Dune Ridge’s newly acquired property was located in a state-designated critical
    dune area, 2 which meant that Dune Ridge needed to secure permits from the local unit of
    government or the Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) 3 in order
    to proceed with its proposed development project. MCL 324.35304(1)(a). Dune Ridge
    complied with that requirement, and in August 2014, EGLE approved and issued Dune
    Ridge’s first set of requested permits and special exceptions. Not everyone was pleased
    about this development, and in October 2014, Lakeshore Camping, Gary Medler, and
    Shorewood Association filed three separate petitions requesting contested case hearings,
    which were consolidated.
    They requested these hearings pursuant to § 35305(1) of the SDPMA, which allows
    certain aggrieved parties to challenge the grant (or denial) of a permit or special exception.
    That statute allows applicants for permits or special exceptions, as well as aggrieved
    2
    There are approximately 70,000 acres of protected critical dune areas in Michigan
    extending along much of Lake Michigan’s shoreline and the shores of Lake Superior. A
    map of the critical dune areas is available online. See Michigan Department of
    Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy, Atlas of Critical Dunes – Township Maps of
    Critical Dune Areas, available at  (accessed November 12, 2020) [https://perma.cc/E4XQ-
    LWSN].
    3
    The Department is listed as a defendant, but under its former name, the Department of
    Environmental Quality. See Executive Order No. 2019-02.
    3
    “owner[s] of the property immediately adjacent to the proposed use” to request a formal
    hearing on a permitting decision. MCL 324.35305(1). The hearings are conducted as a
    contested case, which the Administrative Procedures Act 4 defines as “a proceeding . . . in
    which a determination of the legal rights, duties, or privileges of a named party is required
    by law to be made by an agency after an opportunity for an evidentiary hearing.” MCL
    24.203(3).
    By mid-September 2015, nearly a year after the parties had filed their initial requests
    for contested case hearings, the consolidated case was still pending. But it was no longer
    much of a consolidated case: Medler and Shorewood Association had been dismissed with
    prejudice under the terms of settlement agreements they entered into with Dune Ridge.
    This left only Lakeshore Camping.
    It was around this time that appellants Underwood and Zolper, alongside six of their
    neighbors and Lakeshore Group, moved to intervene.              See Mich Admin Code, R
    792.10306. Both Underwood and Zolper owned property bordering Dune Ridge’s 130-
    acre development property and claimed that they were aggrieved by the natural destruction
    posed by Dune Ridge’s development project. EGLE did not object to the motion to
    intervene. Dune Ridge did, arguing that the petitioners did not live “immediately adjacent”
    to the proposed use, because the proposed development was to take place in the interior of
    the Dune Ridge property. The administrative law judge (ALJ) dismissed this argument,
    finding that Dune Ridge’s construction of § 35305(1) would impermissibly narrow its
    application to circumstances where the proposed development takes place on the border of
    4
    MCL 24.201 et seq.
    4
    parcels owned by the permit applicant. The ALJ allowed Underwood, Zolper, and two of
    their neighbors who also lived immediately adjacent to the proposed development to
    intervene. The ALJ denied the motion as to the other would-be intervenors who lived near,
    but not immediately adjacent to, the Dune Ridge property. For reasons not relevant to this
    appeal, Underwood and Zolper soon found themselves as the only remaining individual
    petitioners. 5
    On December 14, 2015, Dune Ridge conveyed 20.6 acres of its property to the Oval
    Beach Preservation Society, a nature conservancy organization, to preserve the property in
    its undeveloped state. The location of the conveyed property was significant: It was
    immediately adjacent to Underwood’s property, effectively creating an Oval Beach
    Preservation Society-owned buffer between the properties owned by Underwood and Dune
    Ridge. Shortly thereafter, Dune Ridge filed a motion for partial summary disposition to
    dismiss Underwood from the contested case, arguing that Underwood no longer owned
    property immediately adjacent to Dune Ridge’s property. The ALJ granted the motion in
    a July 7, 2016 order.
    5
    Lakeshore Camping, one of the original petitioners, was dismissed because it did not own
    property immediately adjacent to the development. The other two neighbors were also
    dismissed because while they lived on property adjacent to the development, they did not
    own the property, which belonged to Shorewood Association. Lakeshore Group, an
    unincorporated nonprofit association, was initially denied the right to intervene. Later in
    the proceedings, however, the ALJ determined that the group had “representational
    standing” because Zolper was one of its members. See Trout Unlimited, Muskegon White
    River Chapter v White Cloud, 
    195 Mich App 343
    , 348; 489 NW2d 188 (1992) (“A
    nonprofit corporation has standing to advocate interests of its members where the members
    themselves have a sufficient stake or have sufficiently adverse and real interests in the
    matter being litigated.”).
    5
    On September 30, 2016, Dune Ridge sold 15 acres of its property to an organization
    called Vine Street Cottages, LLC. The parcel included the land immediately adjacent to
    the land owned by Zolper, and Dune Ridge again moved for summary disposition. The
    ALJ found that Zolper, like Underwood before him, was no longer able to contest Dune
    Ridge’s proposed development. Lakeshore Group, which had enjoyed representational
    standing through Zolper, was also dismissed.
    On appeal, the Ingham Circuit Court reversed the ALJ’s orders. Applying the
    principle of legal standing to this administrative-hearing process, the circuit court held that
    while jurisdictional challenges may be raised at any time, a court determines standing when
    the suit is filed. Therefore, the circuit court concluded, the ALJ committed a substantial
    and material error of law when he ruled that the petitioners “lost” standing following Dune
    Ridge’s conveyance of portions of its property to the Oval Beach Preservation Society and
    Vine Street Cottages, LLC.
    EGLE appealed. In a March 21, 2019 per curiam opinion, the Court of Appeals
    reversed the circuit court and held that while Zolper and Underwood were “immediately
    adjacent” property owners when they intervened in the case, they later lost their right to
    challenge the permitting decision. Lakeshore Group v Dep’t of Environmental Quality,
    unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued March 21, 2019 (Docket
    Nos. 340623 and 340647), pp 11-12.          The panel, like the circuit court, applied the
    justiciability doctrine of standing to the statutory hearing process but reached the opposite
    conclusion. Because standing is jurisdictional, the panel reasoned, a party’s “lack of
    standing may be raised at any time.” Id. at 10. As a result, Zolper and Underwood had
    lost the right to a contested case hearing because they had lost their status as owners of
    6
    “ ‘the property immediately adjacent to the proposed use.’ ” Id. at 11, quoting MCL
    324.35305(1).
    The petitioners appealed, arguing that the Court of Appeals erred by reversing the
    circuit court. We directed briefing and oral argument on the following question:
    [W]hether appellants Jane Underwood and Charles Zolper, as “owner[s] of
    [] property immediately adjacent to the proposed use” at the time of their
    intervention in these contested cases, satisfy the statutory standard for
    standing under MCL 324.35305(1), notwithstanding the developer’s
    subsequent sales of land located between each appellant’s respective
    property and the property being developed. [Lakeshore Group v Dep’t of
    Environmental Quality, 
    505 Mich 875
     (2019) (second and third alterations
    in original).]
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    This case involves an issue of statutory interpretation, which we review de novo.
    Whitman v City of Burton, 
    493 Mich 303
    , 311; 831 NW2d 223 (2013). 6 This means that
    we review the issue independently, without any required deference to the lower court.
    Millar v Constr Code Auth, 
    501 Mich 233
    , 237; 912 NW2d 521 (2018).
    III. ANALYSIS
    The SDPMA built a regulatory infrastructure around the state’s critical dune areas—
    “unique, irreplaceable, and fragile resource[s] that provide significant recreational,
    economic, scientific, geological, scenic, botanical, educational, agricultural, and ecological
    benefits.” MCL 324.35302(a). The SDPMA balances the need to preserve the dunes with
    “the benefits of economic development and multiple human uses of the critical dunes.”
    MCL 324.35302(b). The statutory provision at issue, § 35305(1), reflects this goal:
    6
    Vacated in part on other grounds 
    497 Mich 896
     (2014).
    7
    If an applicant for a permit or a special exception or the owner of the
    property immediately adjacent to the proposed use is aggrieved by a decision
    of the department in regard to the issuance or denial of a permit or special
    exception under this part, the applicant or owner may request a formal
    hearing on the matter involved. The hearing shall be conducted by the
    department as a contested case hearing in the manner provided for in the
    administrative procedures act of 1969, 
    1969 PA 306
    , MCL 24.201 to 24.328.
    Section 35305(1) limits who can request a contested hearing to two categories of potential
    petitioners: “applicant[s] for a permit or a special exception” and “owner[s] of the property
    immediately adjacent to the proposed use . . . aggrieved by a decision of the department.” 7
    The question is not whether Underwood and Zolper had § 35305(1) petition rights
    in September 2015 when they moved to intervene. We agree with the Court of Appeals
    that they did. 8 See Lakeshore, unpub op at 9. The question is rather whether Dune Ridge’s
    subsequent sale of slivers of its property to third parties extinguished Underwood’s and
    Zolper’s petition rights.
    7
    The statute once allowed any “person [who] is aggrieved by a decision of the department”
    to request a formal hearing, but a 2012 amendment narrowed the language to its present
    form. Compare MCL 324.35305(1), as enacted by 
    1995 PA 59
    , with MCL 324.35305(1),
    as amended by 
    2012 PA 297
    .
    8
    The dissent disagrees. It embraces Dune Ridge’s view that Underwood and Zolper never
    had a statutory right to challenge EGLE’s determination because “proposed use” in MCL
    324.35305(1) refers narrowly to only the specific section of the parcel of land being
    developed. That interpretation—which would allow adjoining property owners to petition
    a local unit of government for a hearing only when the proposed development takes place
    on the literal border between the properties—is not a reasonable reading of the statutory
    language. It would likely insulate all sand dune development from review—how often do
    people build on the border of their property? It’s no wonder that such an interpretation has
    not been embraced by EGLE or any tribunal. Indeed, Dune Ridge opted not to appeal the
    ALJ’s decision rejecting this interpretation and instead made the property transfers that led
    us here.
    8
    No text in MCL 324.35305 provides that a party that has exercised its petition rights
    may later be divested of those rights. ALJs derive their authority from the Legislature;
    they may not exercise powers not expressly granted through statute. See Soap & Detergent
    Ass’n v Natural Resources Comm, 
    415 Mich 728
    , 736; 330 NW2d 346 (1982) (“It is
    beyond debate that the sole source of an agency’s power is the statute creating it.”);
    Coffman v State Bd of Examiners in Optometry, 
    331 Mich 582
    , 590; 50 NW2d 322 (1951)
    (“Administrative boards, commissions, and officers have no common-law powers. Their
    powers are limited by the statutes creating them to those conferred expressly or by
    necessary or fair implication.”), quoting 42 Am Jur, § 26, p 316. The statute at issue here
    outlines a straightforward two-step (and only two-step) process: an aggrieved permit
    applicant or immediately adjacent land owner “may request a formal hearing.” MCL
    324.35305(1). If an eligible party requests a hearing, “[t]he hearing shall be conducted by
    the department as a contested case hearing in the manner provided for in the administrative
    procedures act of 1969.” Id. The term “shall” indicates that conduct is mandatory. Walters
    v Nadell, 
    481 Mich 377
    , 383; 751 NW2d 431 (2008).
    The parties dispute whether “shall” imposes an obligation on EGLE to hold a
    hearing or whether it merely mandates how a hearing would take place (i.e., in conformity
    with the Administrative Procedures Act). The dispute over this single word misses the
    larger point: MCL 324.35305(1) includes no intermediary step between the request and the
    hearing. No statutory language empowers EGLE to deny a hearing to a petitioner who
    satisfied the statute’s requirement when the hearing was requested and who continues to
    desire a hearing. The statutory algorithm is straightforward: specific aggrieved parties may
    file a petition and then the department must hold a contested case hearing in conformity
    9
    with the Administrative Procedures Act. Cf. Brandon Sch Dist v Mich Ed Special Servs
    Ass’n, 
    191 Mich App 257
    , 258, 264-265; 477 NW2d 138 (1991) (affirming an Insurance
    Commissioner’s denial of a petition for a contested case hearing because the relevant
    statute’s statement that the Commissioner “may” hold a hearing was not “a mandatory
    decree,” meaning the denial was within the Commissioner’s discretion). If an eligible party
    requests a hearing, EGLE must hold one. 9
    The statute provides no off-ramp, and the Court of Appeals erred by creating one.
    The panel concluded that Dune Ridge’s sale of parcels of its land meant that Zolper and
    Underwood “no longer fit the statutory criteria” laid out in MCL 324.35305(1). Lakeshore,
    unpub op at 12. In other words, the Court of Appeals understood Dune Ridge’s unilateral
    actions, undertaken after Zolper and Underwood properly intervened but before a contested
    case hearing took place, to have forfeited Zolper’s and Underwood’s rights to challenge
    the permitting decision. See 
    id.
    But § 35305(1) does not allow for forced forfeiture. The requirements that the
    statute imposes on the petitioners—that they be either aggrieved permit applicants or
    9
    The dissent believes that the agency enjoys the discretion to deny a hearing even to
    aggrieved owners of immediately adjacent property. But the statute’s text is plain: the
    discretion rests with aggrieved owners of immediately adjacent property, who may request
    a hearing, not the department, which must comply with the statute’s requirement that “[t]he
    hearing shall be conducted . . . as a contested case hearing in the manner provided for in
    the administrative procedures act . . . .” MCL 324.35305(1). The dissent’s concern about
    the potential for gamesmanship by adjacent property owners who sell their property is hard
    to follow. A no-longer-adjacent property owner who wants to participate in a contested
    hearing requested when she was an adjacent property owner is an unlikely hypothetical.
    But if it presents itself, this hypothetical claimant will have an uphill battle establishing
    that she is aggrieved by the proposed development.
    10
    aggrieved immediately adjacent land owners—are threshold requirements for requesting a
    hearing. There is no basis for imposing an additional requirement that a petitioner maintain
    that status throughout the proceedings. 10
    We therefore reverse the Court of Appeals. The Legislature enacted the SDPMA to
    balance the preservation of critical dune areas with the need for economic development.
    To achieve that balance, the Legislature determined that only specific people may request
    an administrative contested case hearing. But for those limited qualifying parties, the
    hearing must occur. The statute simply does not create any process for divesting a qualified
    petitioner of their right to a hearing. Nor does it import principles of legal standing or
    10
    Though the ALJ and the courts below have largely addressed this dispute under the
    justiciability doctrines of standing and mootness, the language of MCL 324.35305(1) is
    dispositive. We also question, though reserve for another day, whether nonjudicial officers
    like ALJs should invoke such traditional justiciability doctrines when a statute does not.
    These doctrines narrow the types of cases that courts may decide. Underpinning these
    doctrines is the idea that the scope of judicial power is limited and that certain disputes
    may be inappropriate for judicial adjudication. See Mich Chiropractic Council v Comm’r
    of the Office of Fin & Ins Servs, 
    475 Mich 363
    , 372; 716 NW2d 561 (2006), overruled on
    other grounds by Lansing Sch Ed Ass’n v Lansing Bd of Ed, 
    487 Mich 349
    , 352-353, 371
    n 18, 372; 792 NW2d 686 (2010). Justiciability doctrines are guardrails for the judiciary,
    preventing courts from encroaching on the other branches and encouraging judicial
    restraint. Administrative agencies like EGLE do not possess the judicial power. “In other
    words, administrative agencies are not bound by the same justiciability limitations that
    affect the authority of the judiciary.” Mich Chiropractic Council, 
    475 Mich at
    372 n 18.
    This makes sense in light of the principles that animate justiciability doctrines: a
    legislatively created hearing process (unlike a proceeding in a Michigan court) need not be
    concerned about encroaching on the Legislature’s power. In the present case, Zolper and
    Underwood’s complaint is that they were unlawfully deprived of a statutorily created
    contested hearing before a nonjudicial hearing officer, not that they should have access to
    a hearing in court. The Legislature created this hearing right, and the Legislature’s statute
    governs this dispute. Cf. Huffman v Indiana Office of Environmental Adjudication, 
    811 NE2d 806
    , 812-813 (Ind, 2004) (finding that an Indiana ALJ should not have invoked the
    judicial doctrine of standing because “the statute, and only the statute, defines the class of
    persons who can seek administrative review of agency action”).
    11
    mootness into this specific contested hearing process. Courts can’t add requirements to the
    text of the statute.
    This dispute is a simple one. As EGLE admits, the petitioners satisfied this
    particular statute’s strict requirements for requesting a contested hearing when they filed
    their petitions. The statute requires that they get that hearing and leaves no room for the
    respondent to forfeit it for them.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    When EGLE grants a permit or special exception to allow development in a
    protected sand dune area, under MCL 324.35305, aggrieved owners of land immediately
    adjacent to the proposed development have a statutory right to request a contested case
    hearing. That is precisely what Zolper and Underwood did. The statute then requires
    EGLE to conduct a contested case hearing pursuant to the Administrative Procedures Act.
    No hearing took place; instead, years of litigation ensued over whether Dune Ridge’s
    conveyance of land could deprive Zolper and Underwood of their statutory right to a
    hearing. The text of the statute says no.
    Bridget M. McCormack
    Richard H. Bernstein
    Elizabeth T. Clement
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    12
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    LAKESHORE GROUP, CHARLES
    ZOLPER, JANE UNDERWOOD, LUCIE
    HOYT, and WILLIAM REININGA,
    Petitioners-Appellants,
    and
    KENNETH ALTMAN, DAWN
    SCHUMANN, GEORGE SCHUMANN,
    MARJORIE SCHUHAM, and
    LAKESHORE CAMPING,
    Intervenors-Appellants,
    v                                                           Nos. 159524-5
    DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL
    QUALITY and DUNE RIDGE SA LP,
    Respondents-Appellees.
    ZAHRA, J. (dissenting).
    I respectfully dissent. Petitioners were never eligible to request a formal hearing
    because they have never owned property immediately adjacent to the proposed use. But
    even if petitioners had met the statutory requirements when they requested a formal
    hearing, respondent Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) 1
    1
    See note 3 of the majority opinion.
    retained implicit discretion under MCL 324.35305(1) to grant or deny petitioners a
    contested hearing.
    I have no quarrel with the “facts and procedural history” of this case as presented in
    the majority opinion. But I take exception to the majority’s terse treatment of respondent
    Dune Ridge’s view that Jane Underwood and Charles Zolper “never had a statutory right
    to challenge EGLE’s determination because ‘proposed use’ in MCL 324.35305 refers
    narrowly to only the specific section of the parcel of land being developed . . . .” 2
    The majority acknowledges that the Legislature in 2012 “narrowed the language”
    of MCL 324.35305(1), 3 but it does not acknowledge the effect of this “narrowing” of
    language on a person’s right to request a formal hearing under the sand dunes protection
    and management act, MCL 324.35301 et seq. (the Act). Formerly, MCL 324.35305(1)
    provided that anyone “aggrieved by a decision of the department” was permitted to request
    a formal hearing. 4 This language was revised, however, and under the current version of
    MCL 324.35305(1), aside from “an applicant for a permit or a special exception,” only
    “the owner of the property immediately adjacent to the proposed use” has the right to
    request a formal hearing if they are aggrieved by a decision of the department. 5
    The significance of the amendment as applied to this case cannot be ignored. While
    petitioners would have been able to request a formal hearing under the previous version of
    2
    Ante at 8 n 8 (emphasis omitted).
    3
    Ante at 8 n 7.
    4
    MCL 324.35305(1), as enacted by 
    1995 PA 59
    .
    5
    MCL 324.35305(1), as amended by 
    2012 PA 297
    .
    2
    the statute, the plain and clear language of the current version of MCL 324.35305(1) does
    not provide petitioners a statutory right to request a formal hearing. The majority’s opinion
    does not meaningfully examine the history and language of MCL 324.35305(1) to resolve
    the threshold question squarely presented: whether petitioners are “the owner[s] of the
    property immediately adjacent to the proposed use.”
    There is no dispute that at least one petitioner, at some point, owned the property
    “immediately adjacent” to the property owned by Dune Ridge. Likewise, there is no
    dispute that Dune Ridge applied for several permits, as defined by the Act, “for a use within
    a critical dune area” on its property. 6 The proposal for “use” “means a developmental,
    silvicultural, or recreational activity done or caused to be done by a person that significantly
    alters the physical characteristic of a critical dune area or a contour change done or caused
    to be done by a person.” 7
    In this case, the permits did not pertain to any proposed use that was immediately
    adjacent to petitioners’ property. The administrative-law judge (ALJ) addressed this
    6
    MCL 342.35301(g).
    7
    MCL 324.35301(k). Before deciding on Dune Ridge’s application for a permit, EGLE
    conducted public hearings on June 3, 2014, and June 30, 2014. Note that in contrast to
    MCL 324.35305(1), which allows the “owner of the property immediately adjacent to the
    proposed use” to request a formal hearing, a public hearing is provided “[u]pon the written
    request of 2 or more persons who own real property within 2 miles of the project,” MCL
    324.35304(1)(c). The 2012 amendment of the Act likewise restricted a person’s ability to
    request a public hearing. Before the 2012 amendment, MCL 324.35304(4)(c) required a
    public hearing “[u]pon the written request of 2 or more persons that own real property
    within the local unit of government or an adjacent local unit of government, or that reside
    within the local unit of government or an adjacent local unit of government . . . .” MCL
    342.35304(4)(c), as enacted by 
    1995 PA 59
    .
    3
    question and summarized Dune Ridge’s argument as “advancing a construction of
    § 35305(1) that only confers standing to adjoining property owners if the proposed use is
    on the border of parcels owned by the applicant.” The ALJ rejected Dune Ridge’s
    argument, concluding that
    [t]o accept this construction would impermissibly limit an adjoining property
    owner’s right to a contested case. By its terms, § 35305(1) provides both the
    applicant and the owner of the immediately adjacent property the right to a
    contested case. In this case, Ms. Hoyt, Mr. Reininga Jr., Ms. Underwood,
    and Mr. Zolper are owners of the immediately adjacent property, and thus
    have standing to challenge the issuance of permits and/or special exception
    issued to Dune Ridge.[8]
    The ALJ’s reasoning runs contrary to the pertinent statutory language. MCL
    324.35305(1) does not provide the owner of the immediately adjacent property the right to
    a contested case. The statute only provides the right to “request a formal hearing on the
    matter involved” to “the owner of the property immediately adjacent to the proposed use.”
    Nothing in the Act remotely suggests that the proposed use extends to the entire parcel of
    property in which the use is sought. This conclusion is particularly unremarkable given
    that Dune Ridge applied for multiple permits for proposed uses on the same parcel of
    property. These permits all concerned proposed uses situated within the interior of its
    8
    The Court of Appeals did not actually decide the statutory question squarely presented:
    whether “the property” is “immediately adjacent” to “the proposed use.” Lakeshore Group
    v Dep’t of Environmental Quality, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals,
    issued March 21, 2019 (Docket Nos. 340643 and 340647).
    4
    property and none of the proposed uses was “immediately adjacent” to petitioners’
    properties. 9
    The majority likewise dismisses Dune Ridge’s view that petitioners “never had a
    statutory right to challenge EGLE’s determination because ‘proposed use’ in MCL
    324.35305(1) refers narrowly to only the specific section of the parcel of land being
    developed.” 10 The majority asserts without explanation that this “is not a reasonable
    reading of the statutory language.” 11 I disagree. Not only is this understanding of MCL
    324.35305(1) reasonable, but it is the only way that MCL 324.35305 can plainly be
    9
    Any suggestion that Dune Ridge acted nefariously in proposing use only within the
    interior of its property is belied by EGLE’s approval of the permits along with the city of
    Saugatuck’s blessing. Indeed, MCL 324.35304(1)(g) provides that
    a permit shall be approved unless the local unit of government or the
    department determines that the use will significantly damage the public
    interest on the privately owned land, or, if the land is publicly owned, the
    public interest in the publicly owned land, by significant and unreasonable
    depletion or degradation of any of the following:
    (i) The diversity of the critical dune areas within the local unit of
    government.
    (ii) The quality of the critical dune areas within the local unit of
    government.
    (iii) The functions of the critical dune areas within the local unit of
    government.
    Here, petitioners clearly advocated that the proposed uses “will significantly damage the
    public interest on the privately owned land,” but the city was simply not persuaded.
    10
    Ante at 8 n 8 (emphasis omitted).
    11
    Ante at 8 n 8.
    5
    understood and applied. This is particularly so when considered in light of the legislative
    changes to this statute. 12
    MCL 324.35305(1) states in relevant part:
    If an applicant for a permit or a special exception or the owner of the
    property immediately adjacent to the proposed use is aggrieved by a decision
    of the department in regard to the issuance or denial of a permit or special
    exception under this part, the applicant or owner may request a [contested]
    hearing on the matter involved.
    The statute does not define the words “immediately” or “adjacent,” so we turn to a
    dictionary to shed light on their ordinary meanings. 13 “Adjacent” can mean either “having
    a common endpoint or border” or “not distant[;] nearby.” 14 The Legislature took the
    guesswork out of picking the applicable definition here by modifying “adjacent” with the
    word “immediately,” which is relevantly defined as “in direct connection or relation.” 15
    Thus, the only fair reading of the statutory text is that eligibility for requesting a contested
    hearing is limited to owners of property having a common border in direct connection with
    the proposed use.
    12
    “Unlike legislative history, statutory history—the narrative of the ‘statutes repealed or
    amended by the statute under consideration’—properly ‘form[s] part of the context of the
    statute[.]’ ” See People v Pinkney, 
    501 Mich 259
    , 276 n 41; 912 NW2d 535 (2018),
    quoting Scalia & Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts (St. Paul:
    Thomson/West, 2012), p 256.
    13
    Krohn v Home-Owners Ins Co, 
    490 Mich 145
    , 156; 802 NW2d 281 (2011) (“We may
    consult dictionary definitions to give words their common and ordinary meaning.”).
    14
    Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed).
    15
    
    Id.
    6
    MCL 324.35305(1) also refers to “the owner of the property,” which clearly means
    a parcel of property. The statute, however, does not then refer to “the property” again, but
    rather, to “the proposed use.” By using these distinct terms, the Legislature indicated that
    “the property” should not be substituted for “the proposed use” when this term is used later
    in the statute. Had the Legislature wanted “the proposed use” to be considered coextensive
    with “the property,” it readily could have said so by, for example, referring to “the owner
    of the property immediately adjacent to the [property of the] proposed use.” But the
    Legislature did not do so.
    To interpret the term “the property” to have the same meaning as “the proposed use”
    violates the presumption against consistent usage. “A word or phrase is presumed to bear
    the same meaning throughout a text; a material variation in terms suggests a variation in
    meaning.” 16 For example, if a document says “land in one place and real estate later, the
    second provision presumably includes improvements as well as raw land.” 17 Clearly, this
    presumption applies to this text: the statute uses the term “the property” in one place and
    the term “the proposed use” later, so the second term refers to something different than the
    first. Yet, the majority treats them the same. In sum, I conclude that the Legislature clearly
    understood the meaning of “the property” and did not use that same meaning when it
    16
    Reading Law, p 170.
    17
    
    Id.
    7
    referred to “the proposed use” later in the statute. 18 Petitioners have therefore failed to
    establish their right to request a formal hearing.
    I also take exception to the majority’s conclusion that “[i]f an eligible party requests
    a hearing, EGLE must hold one.” 19 MCL 324.35305(1) provides:
    If an applicant for a permit or a special exception or the owner of the
    property immediately adjacent to the proposed use is aggrieved by a decision
    of the department in regard to the issuance or denial of a permit or special
    exception under this part, the applicant or owner may request a formal
    hearing on the matter involved. The hearing shall be conducted by the
    department as a contested case hearing in the manner provided for in the
    administrative procedures act of 1969, 
    1969 PA 306
    , MCL 24.201 to 24.328.
    As noted in the majority opinion, “[t]he parties dispute whether ‘shall’ imposes an
    obligation on EGLE to hold a hearing or whether it merely mandates how a hearing would
    take place (i.e., in conformity with the Administrative Procedures Act).” 20 Rather than
    resolving this dispute by parsing the words of the statute, the majority chooses to focus on
    what is not in the statute. Specifically, the majority finds a gap in the statutory language
    in that “MCL 324.35305(1) includes no intermediary step between the request and the
    hearing.” 21 The majority therefore concludes that the absence of this “intermediary step”
    automatically entitles petitioner to a hearing. The majority’s construction plainly runs
    18
    Indeed, the Legislature showed that it was capable of expressing a more relaxed
    proximity requirement in another section of Part 353. See note 7 of this opinion.
    19
    Ante at 10.
    20
    Ante at 9.
    21
    Ante at 9.
    8
    afoul of the “omitted-case canon” of statutory interpretation, which provides that
    “[n]othing is to be added to what the text states or reasonably implies (casus omissus pro
    omisso habendus est). That is, a matter not covered is to be treated as not covered.” 22 Here,
    the majority improperly fills the gap between what is in the statute—that “the applicant or
    owner may request a formal hearing on the matter involved” and that “[t]he hearing shall
    be conducted by the department as a contested case hearing in the manner provided for in
    the administrative procedures act”—by inappropriately inserting “[i]f an eligible party
    requests a hearing, EGLE must hold one.” Further, the majority’s gap-filler is not even
    reasonably implied by the statute. Common sense and experience caution that requests are
    not always granted. The above statute simply cannot be read as providing petitioners a
    right to a contested hearing merely upon their request for a formal hearing.
    In addition, the Legislature has made very clear in other statutes concerning
    administrative proceedings when a request for a contested hearing is not within an agency’s
    discretion to grant, and it did not do so here. For instance, under the Social Welfare Act,23
    “the provider upon request shall be entitled to an immediate hearing held in conformity
    with chapter 4 and chapter 6 of the administrative procedures act of 1969 . . . .” 24 Under
    the Public Health Code, 25 “[a]n applicant, licensee, or other person whose legal rights,
    22
    Reading Law, p 93.
    23
    MCL 400.1 et seq.
    24
    MCL 400.111a(8) (emphasis added).
    25
    MCL 333.1101 et seq.
    9
    duties, or privileges are required by this code to be determined by the department, after an
    opportunity for a hearing, has the right to a contested case hearing in the matter, which
    shall be conducted pursuant to the administrative procedures act of 1969.” 26 The Mental
    Health Code 27 provides that “[a]n administrative hearing shall be held and the
    department . . . shall make a redetermination of ability to pay.” 28
    That said, “[t]he omitted-case canon . . . must sometimes be reconciled with the
    principle that a text does include not only what is express but also what is implicit. For
    example, when a text authorizes a certain act, it implicitly authorizes whatever is the
    necessary predicate of that act.” 29     For example, “[a]uthorization to harvest wheat
    genuinely implies authority to enter the land for that purpose.” 30 But a “request” need not
    necessarily be granted; in fact, the very nature of a request is that the outcome is uncertain,
    so the required, genuine implication from the text cannot be that the request will be granted
    absent language, which is not present here, to remove the discretion inherent in the act of
    considering a request.
    Moreover, by removing discretion from EGLE to grant a formal hearing, the
    majority simultaneously creates a problematic statutory regime that, in its words, “provides
    26
    MCL 333.1205(1) (emphasis added).
    27
    MCL 330.1001 et seq.
    28
    MCL 330.1834(b).
    29
    Reading Law, p 96.
    30
    Id. at 96-97.
    10
    no off-ramp” 31 or procedure by which the permit applicant can avoid a formal hearing after
    it has been requested by the owner of immediately adjacent property. Simply because the
    statute does not expressly provide for, in the majority’s terminology, “forced forfeiture,”32
    does not mean that the agency is precluded from exercising its implicit discretion to grant,
    and by necessary extension, to deny petitioner a contested hearing. Otherwise, EGLE is
    without discretion to refuse a request for a contested hearing by a petitioner who has since
    sold the parcel of the property that actually was immediately adjacent to the proposed use.
    An interpretation of a statute, such as the majority’s in this case, that would permit a sham
    contested hearing should be viewed with great skepticism.
    For the above-stated reasons, I would deny the application for leave to appeal and
    order that the case be dismissed with prejudice.
    Brian K. Zahra
    31
    Ante at 10.
    32
    Ante at 10.
    11
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    LAKESHORE GROUP, CHARLES
    ZOLPER, JANE UNDERWOOD, LUCIE
    HOYT, and WILLIAM REININGA,
    Petitioners-Appellants,
    and
    KENNETH ALTMAN, DAWN
    SCHUMANN, GEORGE SCHUMANN,
    MARJORIE SCHUHAM, and
    LAKESHORE CAMPING,
    Intervenors-Appellants,
    v                                                            Nos. 159524-5
    DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL
    QUALITY and DUNE RIDGE SA LP,
    Respondents-Appellees.
    VIVIANO, J. (dissenting).
    I join Justice Zahra’s dissent to the extent it would hold that petitioners failed to
    establish that they have the right to request a formal hearing under MCL 324.35305(1)
    because their property does not have a common border in direct connection with the
    proposed use. I do not join in the dissent’s second point—i.e., that the Department of
    Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy otherwise has discretion to grant or deny a
    contested hearing to an aggrieved party—because it is unnecessary for us to reach that
    issue.
    David F. Viviano
    WELCH, J. did not participate in the disposition of this case because the Court
    considered it before she assumed office.
    2