King v. State of Michigan , 488 Mich. 208 ( 2010 )


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  •                                                                              Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    Chief Justice:        Justices:
    Opinion                                                  Marilyn Kelly         Michael F. Cavanagh
    Maura D. Corrigan
    Robert P. Young, Jr.
    Stephen J. Markman
    Diane M. Hathaway
    Alton Thomas Davis
    FILED DECEMBER 29, 2010
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    STEVEN KING,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                              No. 140684
    STATE OF MICHIGAN, MICHIGAN
    DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND
    ECONOMIC GROWTH, and
    COMMISSIONER OF THE OFFICE OF
    FINANCIAL AND INSURANCE
    REGULATION,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH
    DAVIS, J.
    Defendants appeal a Court of Appeals judgment affirming the trial court’s grant of
    summary disposition in favor of plaintiff, which enjoined defendants from revoking
    plaintiff’s resident insurance producer1 license. We affirm.
    1
    A “resident insurance producer” is more commonly known as an insurance agent.
    The issues in this case are (1) whether in 2004 the Commissioner of the Office of
    Financial and Insurance Services2 was required by statute to deny plaintiff’s application
    for a resident insurance producer license on the basis of plaintiff’s fully disclosed prior
    felony conviction, (2) whether the commissioner is now required by statute to
    affirmatively revoke plaintiff’s license on the basis of the same prior felony, and (3)
    whether the commissioner is now permitted to revoke plaintiff’s license on the basis of
    the same prior felony. We answer all three questions in the negative.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    In 2000, plaintiff was convicted of operating a motor vehicle under the influence
    of liquor (OUIL), a felony. MCL 257.625. In 2004, he applied to the Michigan Office of
    Financial and Insurance Services (OFIS)3 for a resident insurance producer license.
    Plaintiff fully disclosed his conviction. Plaintiff applied for a waiver pursuant to 18 USC
    1033.4 The director of OFIS’s licensing division sent plaintiff a letter that read in part:
    Please be apprised that pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1033 and
    1034, specifically Section 1033(3)(2), permission to engage in the business
    of insurance is hereby granted to you by the Commissioner of the Office of
    2
    This position was held by Linda Watters from April 2003 until October 2007, when Ken
    Ross was appointed.
    3
    OFIS is now the Office of Financial and Insurance Regulation, but at most of the
    relevant times, including in the Court of Appeals, it was referred to as OFIS.
    4
    This section provides, among other things, that a person
    who has been convicted of any criminal felony involving dishonesty or a
    breach of trust . . . may engage in the business of insurance or participate in
    such business if such person has the written consent of any insurance
    regulatory official authorized to regulate the insurer, which consent
    specifically refers to this subsection. [18 USC 1033(e).]
    2
    Financial and Insurance Services under this federal statute in response to
    your application for such waiver. OFIS reviewed your 3rd OUIL felony
    conviction.
    Please note that it is highly recommended that this letter be
    safeguarded and kept together with your license as proof of this waiver
    under 18 U.S.C. 1033/1034 in case your record and/or ability to engage in
    the business of insurance is ever challenged by someone in the industry,
    state government, or federal government.
    Thus, defendants unquestionably had been made aware of plaintiff’s felony.              The
    commissioner granted plaintiff’s license.
    Plaintiff then pursued a career as an insurance agent for a number of years. In the
    meantime, he has not been convicted of any other felonies or provided any new grounds
    for revocation of his license that we are aware of. In 2008, defendants began proceedings
    to revoke plaintiff’s license, and plaintiff initiated the instant suit. The gravamen of
    defendants’ argument is that a change to the Insurance Code in 2002 had required the
    commissioner to deny plaintiff’s application, that failing to do so was a mistake, and that
    the current provisions of the Insurance Code require the commissioner to correct that
    mistake. The trial court ruled that even if the commissioner had made a mistake in
    granting plaintiff’s license, equity precluded defendants from revoking it now, and the
    Court of Appeals affirmed.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The trial court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition is reviewed de
    novo. Coblentz v City of Novi, 
    475 Mich 558
    , 567; 719 NW2d 73 (2006). This Court
    reviews de novo questions of statutory interpretation. 
    Id.
     The trial court’s exercise of its
    equitable authority is discretionary within the confines of equity jurisprudence and the
    3
    facts of the particular case, Youngs v West, 
    317 Mich 538
    , 545; 27 NW2d 88 (1947), and
    this Court reviews a trial court’s grant of injunctive relief for an abuse of that discretion,
    Pontiac Fire Fighters Union Local 376 v City of Pontiac, 
    482 Mich 1
    , 8; 753 NW2d 595
    (2008). The trial court’s findings of fact are reviewed for clear error. Beason v Beason,
    
    435 Mich 791
    , 801-803; 460 NW2d 207 (1990), citing MCR 2.613(C).
    III. THE INSURANCE CODE
    A. INSURANCE CODE LICENSURE PROVISIONS IN 2004
    Before 2002, the Insurance Code’s licensure provisions had required applicants to
    have “good moral character.” See former MCL 500.1204(4), as amended by 
    1986 PA 173
    . It remains the law today that no licensing agency may make a finding as to an
    applicant’s moral character on the sole basis of a criminal conviction. MCL 338.42. It
    also remains the law that “[o]rders, decisions, findings, rulings, determinations, opinions,
    actions, and inactions of the commissioner in [the Insurance Code] shall be made or
    reached in the reasonable exercise of discretion.” MCL 500.205.
    The “good moral character” requirement in the Insurance Code’s licensure
    provisions was replaced by 
    2001 PA 228
    . When plaintiff applied for his license, MCL
    500.1205(1)(b) provided that an application “shall not be approved” if the applicant had
    “committed any act that is a ground for denial, suspension, or revocation under [MCL
    500.1239].” While this seems mandatory when read in isolation, MCL 500.1239(1)
    provided that “the commissioner may place on probation, suspend, revoke, or refuse to
    issue” a license for a list of possible reasons, including an applicant’s “having been
    convicted of a felony.” MCL 500.1239(1)(f) (emphasis added). Consistent with MCL
    4
    500.205, the licensure requirement mandates that the commissioner make a discretionary
    judgment call when reviewing an application and deny the application if he or she
    concludes—in the exercise of that discretion—that denial, suspension, or revocation
    would be appropriate.
    In other words, 
    2001 PA 228
     replaced the ambiguous judgment call of “good
    moral character” with a more rigorously defined judgment call that entailed consideration
    of enumerated scenarios under which adverse action may be found appropriate. When
    the applicable versions of MCL 500.1205, MCL 500.1239, and MCL 500.205 are read
    together, they set forth a licensure procedure that requires the commissioner to exercise
    judgment within a framework, rather than exercising judgment in a more nebulous
    environment. We reject defendants’ contention that the Insurance Code in effect in 2004
    required the commissioner to deny plaintiff’s application. The Insurance Code did not,
    and the commissioner’s exercise of discretion in granting plaintiff a license was therefore
    permissible.
    We recognize that shortly before plaintiff applied for his license, the commissioner
    rendered a decision5 concluding that 
    2001 PA 228
     removed the discretion to permit
    felons to receive licenses. An agency’s interpretation of a statute is entitled to deference,
    but generally only if that interpretation has been relied on for a long time, and in any
    event no such interpretation may overcome the plain meaning of the statute itself.
    Ludington Serv Corp v Acting Ins Comm’r, 
    444 Mich 481
    , 505 & n 35; 511 NW2d 661
    (1994). Defendants acknowledge that this unpublished decision has not been extensively
    5
    Mazur v Office of Fin & Ins Servs, issued May 14, 2004 (Docket No. 2003-1515).
    5
    relied on or applied consistently, and our review of the record indicates that the opinion
    was not even widely circulated internally. Furthermore, it was clearly not relied on when
    the commissioner considered plaintiff’s application and granted his license. Finally, the
    decision was incorrect.
    Therefore, we answer the first question, whether in 2004 the commissioner had
    been required by statute to deny plaintiff’s application, in the negative.
    B. INSURANCE CODE LICENSURE PROVISIONS IN 2008 AND TODAY
    Subsequently, 
    2008 PA 422
     and 
    2008 PA 423
     amended MCL 500.1205 and MCL
    500.1239. MCL 500.1205 now provides in relevant part that “[a]n application for a
    resident insurer [sic] producer license shall not be approved unless the commissioner
    finds that the individual . . . [h]as not committed any act listed in [MCL 500.1239(1)].”
    And MCL 500.1239(1)(f) provides that “the commissioner shall refuse to issue a license”
    for “[h]aving been convicted of a felony.”
    These two statues are now consistent, and were a convicted felon to apply for an
    insurance producer license today, the commissioner would be required to deny it. Indeed,
    plaintiff concedes as much. But no language in these statutes rebuts the general rule of
    construction that changes to a statute should only apply prospectively. Even if we were
    to engage in a speculation that the amendment was intended to clarify the Legislature’s
    prior intent, amendments may not be applied retrospectively if doing so would impair a
    vested right. Brewer v A D Transp Express, Inc, 
    486 Mich 50
    , 56-57; 782 NW2d 475
    (2010). The fact that an applicant like plaintiff would necessarily be denied a license
    6
    today does not automatically invalidate defendant’s decision to exercise its discretion to
    grant him a license in 2004.
    Although the current statutes require denial of a license, they do not require an
    existing license to be revoked. The first clause of MCL 500.1239(1) states in full: “In
    addition to any other powers under this act, the commissioner may place on probation,
    suspend, or revoke an insurance producer’s license or may levy a civil fine under [MCL
    500.1244] or any combination of actions, and the commissioner shall refuse to issue a
    license under [MCL 500.1205 or 500.1206a], for any 1 or more of the following
    causes[.]” Denial is mandatory if any of a number of enumerated conditions is satisfied;
    however, revocation is still as discretionary as it was in 2004.
    Therefore, we answer the second question, whether defendant is currently required
    by statute to revoke plaintiff’s license, in the negative.
    IV. REVOCATION
    We observe initially that the plain language of the present Insurance Code gives
    the commissioner the discretion to pursue revocation of plaintiff’s resident insurance
    producer license for a variety of possible reasons, including plaintiff’s having been
    convicted of a felony. However, we emphasize that doing so must be a “reasonable
    exercise of discretion.” MCL 500.205. Here, the gravamen of defendants’ argument is
    that the commissioner is required to revoke plaintiff’s license. This erroneous abdication
    of discretion is, in itself, an abuse of discretion. People v Stafford, 
    434 Mich 125
    , 134 n
    4; 450 NW2d 559 (1990). Therefore, in this case, the commissioner cannot be said to be
    engaging in a “reasonable exercise of discretion.”
    7
    With regard to this issue, we hold only that the commissioner may not revoke a
    license on the basis of the erroneous belief that he must do so when, in fact, he has
    discretion. Because this result is mandated by the plain terms of the Insurance Code, we
    make no pronouncement about whether equity applies here or what effect it might have.
    On that limited basis, we therefore answer the third question, whether the commissioner
    is now permitted to revoke plaintiff’s license, in the negative.
    V. CONCLUSION
    Plaintiff’s license was properly granted by the commissioner in 2004.          The
    Insurance Code does not require plaintiff’s license to be revoked now. The commissioner
    could have exercised reasonable discretion and decided to pursue revocation of plaintiff’s
    license; however, in this case, the commissioner necessarily abused that discretion by
    proceeding on the basis of an erroneous belief that he was required to revoke plaintiff’s
    license.
    For the reasons stated, we affirm the courts below.
    Alton Thomas Davis
    Diane M. Hathaway
    8
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    STEVEN KING,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                             No. 140684
    STATE OF MICHIGAN, MICHIGAN
    DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND
    ECONOMIC GROWTH, and
    COMMISSIONER OF THE OFFICE OF
    FINANCIAL AND INSURANCE
    REGULATION,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    CAVANAGH, J. (concurring).
    I concur in affirming the judgment of the Court of Appeals, but write separately to
    express my view that the Office of Financial and Insurance Services (OFIS)1 may not—in
    the absence of additional cause—revoke plaintiff’s license solely on the basis of the fully
    disclosed and waived felony conviction known to OFIS when it issued plaintiff’s license
    in 2004. I would additionally hold that a governmental licensing agency is estopped from
    revoking a license solely on the basis of the same fully disclosed and accurate facts for
    which it had previously granted an express waiver if the licensee has reasonably relied to
    his detriment on the license issued.
    1
    Now known as the Office of Financial and Insurance Regulation.
    First, I note that the stark conflict between MCL 500.1205(1)(b) and MCL
    500.1239 as it existed in 2004 creates an ambiguity. Compare MCL 500.1205(1)(b)
    (“license shall not be approved”) with the 2004 version of MCL 500.1239 (“the
    commissioner may . . . refuse to issue [a] . . . license”).        One provision allows
    discretionary licensing of convicted felons; the other precludes all discretion. By even
    the narrowest definition of ambiguity, the statutory provisions at issue here are
    ambiguous because “one [‘irreconcilably conflicts’] with another . . . .” Petersen v
    Magna Corp, 
    484 Mich 300
    , 311 & n 23; 773 NW2d 564 (2009), quoting Lansing Mayor
    v Pub Serv Comm, 
    470 Mich 154
    , 166; 680 NW2d 840 (2004).2
    Defendants argue that the mandatory-denial provision applies only to resident
    insurance producers, whereas the discretionary-denial provision would apply to
    nonresident insurance producers.    Statutes, however, “must be construed to prevent
    absurd results . . . .” People v Tennyson, 
    487 Mich 730
    , 741; 790 NW2d 354 (2010)
    (quotation marks and citation omitted). An interpretation of a statute is absurd when “it
    is clearly inconsistent with the purposes and policies of the act in question.” Cameron v
    Auto Club Ins Ass’n, 
    476 Mich 55
    , 128-129; 718 NW2d 784 (2006) (KELLY, J.,
    dissenting). One of the main purposes animating our statutory insurance scheme is to
    protect Michigan citizens from unscrupulous insurers. See title of 
    1956 PA 218
     (“An
    2
    I continue to adhere to the definition of “ambiguity” expressed in Chief Justice KELLY’S
    lead opinion in Petersen, 
    484 Mich at 329
     (stating that ambiguity exists “‘when a statute
    is capable of being understood by reasonably well-informed persons in two or more
    different senses’”) (citation omitted). But because the statute at issue here is ambiguous
    under any standard, it is unnecessary to consider this issue further.
    2
    act . . . to provide for the protection of policyholders, claimants, and creditors of unsound
    or insolvent insurers . . . .”); In re Certified Question, 
    413 Mich 22
    , 38; 319 NW2d 320
    (1982) (“The extensive regulation of the insurance industry provided for in [the Insurance
    Code] indicates a legislative purpose to protect policyholders.”). It would indeed be an
    absurd result to conclude that the Legislature intended to allow discretionary licensing of
    out-of-state felons to sell insurance in Michigan while mandating that no licenses could
    be issued to resident felons. Such an intention would provide less protection to Michigan
    policyholders, in direct conflict with the purposes animating the Insurance Code. The
    state is much better equipped to exercise oversight of in-state insurance producers, to
    discipline them when necessary, and to bring them and their property within reach of the
    Michigan courts. I therefore decline to adopt an absurd interpretation of the licensing
    provisions in order to avoid a finding of ambiguity.
    Second, I believe that equitable remedies may be available when a statute is
    ambiguous. See Stokes v Millen Roofing Co, 
    466 Mich 660
    , 672; 649 NW2d 371 (2002)
    (opinion by WEAVER, J.)
    Third, a court may, in its sound discretion, grant equitable relief if no legal remedy
    is available or if an available remedy at law is doubtful or uncertain. See Tkachik v
    Mandeville, 
    487 Mich 38
    , 45; 790 NW2d 260 (2010), quoting Powers v Fisher, 
    279 Mich 442
    , 448; 
    272 NW 737
     (1937); Edsell v Briggs, 
    20 Mich 429
    , 433 (1870). In the instant
    case, the only statutory remedy available to plaintiff after revocation is an administrative
    appeal to “determine the reasonableness of the commissioner’s action.”                 MCL
    500.1239(2).    Because defendants argue that they must revoke plaintiff’s license,
    3
    however, the only “reasonableness” determination to be made at such an appeal would be
    whether the commissioner reasonably concluded that plaintiff had a felony conviction.
    Because there is no question that the felony conviction exists—as plaintiff fully
    disclosed—the licensing statutes provide him no meaningful remedy whatsoever.
    Fourth, in certain cases, equitable estoppel may be an appropriate remedy where
    one party has changed its position in reasonable reliance on a governmental mistake.
    See, e.g., Pittsfield Twp v Malcolm, 
    375 Mich 135
    , 147-148; 134 NW2d 166 (1965)
    (estopping a municipality from enforcing its zoning regulations against a kennel owner
    who was erroneously issued a building permit after he had relied on the permit and built a
    kennel). There is no question here that plaintiff has reasonably relied on the license
    issued to develop a career and that revocation would cause plaintiff an extreme detriment.
    I would thus hold that a governmental licensing agency is estopped from revoking
    a license solely on the basis of the same fully disclosed and accurate facts for which it
    had previously granted an express waiver if the licensee has reasonably relied to his
    detriment on the issued license. The language “fully disclosed and accurate” requires that
    the licensing agency have before it all the information necessary when making its
    decision to grant a waiver.       The phrase “reasonably relied” is equally important.
    Contrary to the dissent’s concerns, I cannot imagine a situation in which it would be
    reasonable for a child molester who was issued a daycare license or a dangerous felon
    who was issued a license to carry a firearm to rely on such a wrongfully issued license.
    The situation here is vastly different. First, all the materials available to the public at the
    time plaintiff applied for his license indicated that a waiver of felony convictions was
    4
    possible.3 Indeed, defendants informed plaintiff that a waiver was possible. In addition,
    the waiver letter that OFIS sent to plaintiff expressly indicated that OFIS was fully aware
    of plaintiff’s felony conviction when granting the waiver. Plaintiff had absolutely no
    reason to think that the waiver was not available or that it was improperly granted when
    he relied on the license issued to invest years of his life developing a career. Conversely,
    a convicted child molester or violent felon would have little reason to believe that he or
    she would be eligible for a daycare or firearms license.
    A court’s discretionary use of equity allows “complete justice” to be done.
    Tkachik, 487 Mich at 46 (quotation marks and citation omitted). Achieving “complete
    justice” necessarily requires a court to examine and balance competing interests. It is
    beyond cavil that the need to protect children from child molesters would outweigh any
    interest of a child molester in keeping an erroneously issued license and the need to
    protect society from dangerous felons would outweigh any interest the felon has in
    keeping such a license. Any arguments posited that the rule I would apply to this case
    could allow such absurd results is pure hyperbole.
    3
    The Court of Appeals noted (1) that the agency’s interpretation of the licensing statute
    in Mazur v Office of Fin & Ins Servs, Case No. 03-384-L, Docket No. 2003-1515 (May
    14, 2004), had not been published or communicated to the public in the form of a rule,
    new guideline, or OFIS letter or directive, (2) that the interpretation was never
    communicated internally at OFIS, and (3) that waivers of felony convictions remained
    possible following Mazur. King v Michigan, unpublished opinion per curiam of the
    Court of Appeals, issued January 21, 2010 (Docket No. 288290), p 2.
    5
    Accordingly, I concur in affirming the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
    Michael F. Cavanagh
    Marilyn Kelly
    6
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    STEVEN KING,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    V                                                            No. 140684
    STATE OF MICHIGAN, MICHIGAN
    DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND
    ECONOMIC GROWTH, and
    COMMISSIONER OF THE OFFICE OF
    FINANCIAL AND INSURANCE
    REGULATION,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    YOUNG, J. (dissenting).
    This case requires this Court to interpret the relevant licensing provisions of the
    amended Insurance Code, which preclude persons who have been convicted of a felony
    from receiving a resident insurance producer license, in the context of the entire
    Insurance Code. In this case, the Office of Financial and Insurance Services (OFIS)1
    failed to discharge its statutory duties and enforce relevant statutory mandates when it
    granted plaintiff an insurance license in 2004, despite plaintiff’s previous conviction of a
    felony. The decision by OFIS to seek revocation of that license, while unfortunate for the
    improperly licensed plaintiff, is nonetheless proper because the original licensure was
    1
    The Office of Financial and Insurance Services has since been reorganized and is now
    part of the Official of Financial and Insurance Regulation, one of the named defendants
    in this case.
    invalid. Governmental administrators, like those in OFIS, cannot act in derogation or
    contravention of their statutory authority when issuing licenses. Because the majority
    justices fail to render meaning to all relevant provisions of the Insurance Code by holding
    contrarily, and thereby exercise judicial power to avoid the application of a valid statute, I
    respectfully dissent.
    I. ANALYSIS
    A. STATUTORY ANALYSIS
    This case requires that we interpret the Insurance Code—specifically MCL
    500.1205 and MCL 500.1239—as it existed in 2004.              When “interpreting statutory
    language, this Court’s primary goal is to give effect to the Legislature’s intent. If the
    Legislature has clearly expressed its intent in the language of a statute, that statute must
    be enforced as written, free of any ‘contrary judicial gloss.’”2
    MCL 500.1205 governs the licensing of insurance agents who reside in Michigan;
    in 2004, MCL 500.1205(1) provided, in relevant part:
    An application for a resident insurer [sic] producer license shall not
    be approved unless the commissioner finds that the individual meets all of
    the following:
    * * *
    2
    Dep’t of Agriculture v Appletree Mktg, LLC, 
    485 Mich 1
    , 8; 779 NW2d 237 (2010),
    quoting Morales v Auto-Owners Ins Co (After Remand), 
    469 Mich 487
    , 490; 672 NW2d
    849 (2003) (citation omitted).
    2
    (b) Has not committed any act that is a ground for denial,
    suspension, or revocation under [MCL 500.1239].[3]
    In 2004, MCL 500.1239 provided, in relevant part:
    (1)In addition to any other powers under this act, the commissioner
    may place on probation, suspend, revoke, or refuse to issue an insurance
    producer’s license or may levy a civil fine under [MCL 500.1244] or any
    combination of actions for any 1 or more of the following causes:
    * * *
    (f) Having been convicted of a felony.[4]
    At its most basic level, this case turns on the answer to a single question: in 2004,
    did these provisions of the Insurance Code prohibit OFIS from issuing a resident
    insurance producer license to an applicant who had been convicted of a felony?
    Defendant OFIS argues that these provisions required OFIS to deny plaintiff a license
    because he had been convicted of a felony.            Plaintiff argues, however, that these
    provisions, when read together, did not constitute a statutory mandate that required OFIS
    to deny plaintiff a license, and therefore OFIS is equitably estopped from revoking it
    now. Thus, the primary dispute here is whether OFIS was mandated by statute to reject
    plaintiff’s application in 2004, or whether OFIS had discretion to approve or reject the
    application at that time.       If defendants’ statutory interpretation is correct and the
    Insurance Code mandated that OFIS not grant licenses to former felons, then there exists
    a clear statutory mandate that neither equity nor this Court can avoid. In that situation,
    3
    (Italics and bold added.)
    4
    (Emphasis added.)
    3
    OFIS must be allowed to retract the license that should not have been issued in the first
    place. For the reasons set forth below, I agree with defendants.
    If MCL 500.1205(1)(b) is read in isolation, there is no question that OFIS cannot
    issue a license to a convicted felon. In effect, it provides that an application for a resident
    insurance producer license shall not be approved unless the commissioner finds that the
    individual has not committed a felony. Here, OFIS approved a license without making
    the requisite finding that plaintiff had not committed a felony. Indeed, the opposite is
    true: OFIS knew that plaintiff had in fact committed a felony, as plaintiff honestly
    disclosed and as OFIS recognized in the letter it sent to plaintiff when informing plaintiff
    that he was being granted a “waiver.”
    However, MCL 500.1205(1)(b) cannot be read in isolation, but must be interpreted
    in light of the language of MCL 500.1239(1)(f), to which it makes direct reference. By
    itself, MCL 500.1239(1)(f) permits the OFIS commissioner to refuse to issue a license
    when an applicant has a felony conviction, but it does not forbid OFIS to grant the license
    as MCL 500.1205 does.
    The OFIS commissioner resolved the apparent conflict between MCL 500.1205
    (no discretion) and MCL 500.1239 (some discretion) in favor of applying the “no
    discretion” standard of MCL 500.1205 because it is “more particular” and “particularly
    concerned with establishing standards for licensure.”5          The commissioner’s Mazur
    decision attempted to establish harmony between the two statutes by concluding that
    5
    Mazur v Office of Fin & Ins Servs, Case No. 03-384-L, Docket No. 2003-1515 (May 14,
    2004), p 3.
    4
    OFIS must exercise the discretion conferred by MCL 500.1239(1) in light of the
    standards conferred by MCL 500.1205(1)(b).
    I would hold that OFIS correctly resolved the apparent conflict between MCL
    500.1205 and MCL 500.1239 in the way that most closely adheres to the Legislature’s
    stated intent.6 In coming to this conclusion, it is necessary to consider the entire statutory
    structure of the licensing provisions in the Insurance Code. As noted, MCL 500.1205
    governs the licensing of resident insurance producers for individuals who reside in
    Michigan.    The Insurance Code also allows the licensing of nonresident insurance
    producers who are licensed in another state but transact business in Michigan, which is
    separately governed by MCL 500.1206a.7 MCL 500.1239 applies both to resident and
    nonresident insurance producers.
    6
    Mazur is a nonbinding administrative decision. Nevertheless, when interpreting a
    statute that a governmental agency has the power to interpret and duty to enforce, this
    Court accords
    “respectful consideration” for the agency’s statutory interpretation, and will
    provide “cogent reasons” for overruling an agency’s interpretation.
    Furthermore, when the law is “doubtful or obscure,” the agency’s
    interpretation is an aid for discerning the Legislature’s intent. However, the
    agency’s interpretation is not binding on the courts, and it cannot conflict
    with the Legislature’s intent as expressed in the language of the statute at
    issue. [In re Complaint of Rovas Against SBC Mich, 
    482 Mich 90
    , 103;
    754 NW2d 259 (2008), citing and quoting Boyer-Campbell Co v Fry, 
    271 Mich 282
    ; 
    260 NW 165
     (1935).]
    Contrary to the standard cited in the lead opinion, see ante at 5, Rovas and Boyer-
    Campbell remain good law and therefore articulate the proper standard by which this
    Court reviews an administrative agency’s interpretation of a statute. See generally Rovas,
    482 Mich at 104-109.
    7
    Individuals who receive nonresident insurance producer licenses are subject to separate
    requirements to obtain and maintain a license that are different from applicants from
    5
    The Legislature has chosen to apply differing standards to resident and
    nonresident insurance producers.      While MCL 500.1205 provides that a resident
    applicant “shall not” be licensed if he has committed an act described in MCL 500.1239,
    MCL 500.1206a(1) contrarily provides that “[u]nless denied licensure under [MCL
    500.1239], a nonresident person shall receive a nonresident insurance producer
    license . . . .”8 Thus, the Legislature specifically used discretionary language in MCL
    500.1239 to permit the commissioner to determine, in his discretion, whether to “refuse
    to issue an insurance producer’s license” to a nonresident applicant who has been
    convicted of a felony. At the same time, the Legislature prohibited such issuance to
    resident applicants by using mandatory language in MCL 500.1205.
    This interpretation avoids rendering any language nugatory or mere surplusage.9
    In particular, it accords meaning both to MCL 500.1205 and MCL 500.1239. The
    primary purpose of MCL 500.1239 is to provide grounds for probation, suspension,
    revocation, or refusal to issue a license. Thus, under this interpretation, every word in
    MCL 500.1239 has meaning because its provisions cover when OFIS may take
    disciplinary action against a licensee and its provisions covering initial licensing clearly
    refer to nonresident applicants. MCL 500.1205, on the other hand, covers solely the
    Michigan who receive resident insurance producer licenses.           See, generally, MCL
    500.1204e and MCL 500.1206a.
    8
    (Emphasis added.)
    9
    See Wickens v Oakwood Healthcare Sys, 
    465 Mich 53
    , 60; 631 NW2d 686 (2001)
    (observing that this Court must “avoid a construction that would render any part of the
    statute surplusage or nugatory”).
    6
    initial licensing of resident agents, and it merely incorporates by reference the
    requirements of MCL 500.1239, not its discretionary standard. By according meaning to
    each of these statutory provisions, it becomes clear that the Legislature wished to provide
    no discretion to the commissioner when licensing individuals from Michigan, but allow
    the commissioner to retain some discretion in taking disciplinary action or in licensing a
    nonresident applicant. Therefore, the statutory scheme removes the discretion explicitly
    contemplated in MCL 500.1239 in the initial licensing phase for resident applicants, but
    does not render it nugatory for all purposes.
    Further, this construction is in accord with the rule of statutory construction
    providing that where “‘a statute contains a general provision and a specific provision, the
    specific provision controls.’”10 When read together, the mandatory standard of MCL
    500.1205 controls over the discretionary standard of MCL 500.1239 because it is more
    specific: MCL 500.1205 exclusively addresses the issuance of resident insurance
    producer licenses, whereas MCL 500.1239 includes language regarding probation,
    suspension, issuance of civil fines, revocation of insurance licenses, and issuance of
    10
    Jones v Enertel, Inc, 
    467 Mich 266
    , 270; 650 NW2d 334 (2002), quoting Gebhardt v
    O'Rourke, 
    444 Mich 535
    , 542-543; 510 NW2d 900 (1994); see also People v Ellis, 
    224 Mich App 752
    , 756; 569 NW2d 917 (1997) (“The specific statute is treated as an
    exception to the general one.”). This Court has further explained that “[i]n order to
    determine which provision is truly more specific and, hence, controlling, we consider
    which provision applies to the more narrow realm of circumstances, and which to the
    more broad realm.” Miller v Allstate Ins Co, 
    481 Mich 601
    , 613; 751 NW2d 463 (2008).
    Of note, the applicable versions of both MCL 500.1205 and MCL 500.1239 became
    effective March 1, 2002, and therefore the rule of statutory interpretation that the latter
    enacted statute prevails in the face of a statutory conflict is inapposite in this case.
    7
    nonresident licenses. Because it relates to discipline generally, MCL 500.1239 thus has a
    broader application that cannot displace the standard of MCL 500.1205, which is specific
    to licensing resident insurance producers. Similarly, this specific directive controls over
    the general provision in MCL 500.205 that OFIS must act within the reasonable exercise
    of its discretion when making decisions or reaching conclusions.11
    The lead and concurring opinions fail to consider the entire structure of the
    Insurance Code when coming to their respective conclusions that the code allows a
    discretionary standard to be applied to nonresident applicants, and that the code is
    ambiguous. As the above analysis demonstrates, and contrary to the argument made by
    the concurring justice, these statutory provisions are reconcilable and thus certainly not
    ambiguous.12 “Conflicting provisions of a statute must be read together to produce an
    harmonious whole and to reconcile any inconsistencies wherever possible.”13 A statute is
    11
    MCL 500.205 generally directs that “[o]rders, decisions, findings, rulings,
    determinations, opinions, actions, and inactions of the commissioner in this act shall be
    made or reached in the reasonable exercise of discretion.” For the reasons stated in the
    text, I reject the lead opinion’s representation of MCL 500.205 as trumping the
    limitations imposed by MCL 500.1205.
    12
    The concurring justice merely notes the conflict in wording, but provides absolutely no
    attempt at statutory interpretation or reconciliation of the separate statutory provisions
    before declaring that the statutes “irreconcilably conflict[]” with each other. See ante at 2
    (CAVANAGH, J., concurring) (citation and quotation marks omitted). Nor does the
    concurring justice accord any significance to the fact that the code treats resident and
    nonresident applicants under separate standards, instead merely finding this Legislative
    choice “absurd.”
    13
    World Book, Inc v Dep’t of Treasury, 
    459 Mich 403
    , 416; 590 NW2d 293 (1999).
    8
    not ambiguous simply because it is susceptible to more than one interpretation.14 Such an
    inexact standard would simply leave too much legislative work product open to
    reinterpretation or unwarranted intervention by the judiciary, as this case illustrates.
    Under this opinion’s analysis, every provision of the code—including both the mandatory
    standard of MCL 500.1205 and the discretionary standard of MCL 500.1239—is
    accorded its plain meaning, but only when done with the understanding that there are two
    types of insurance producers licensed in Michigan and the code treats them differently.
    The lead and concurring opinions simply do not account for this.
    Moreover, plaintiff’s contrary attempt to reconcile these statutory provisions is not
    convincing. Plaintiff chiefly argues that OFIS has the discretion to determine whether
    grounds exist to deny a license and thus may “find” that an applicant has not committed a
    felony for the purposes of licensing. However, the relevant factual inquiry that OFIS
    must undertake does not leave room for ambiguity: either an applicant has been convicted
    of a felony or he has not.       If the applicant has been convicted of a felony, the
    commissioner can hardly be said to have the discretionary power to “find” that he has not
    been convicted of a felony. Indeed, a decision so out of accord with reality would clearly
    constitute obvious error requiring reversal.
    Aside from failing to consider the entire structure and separate provisions of the
    Insurance Code, the lead opinion’s statutory analysis does not otherwise withstand
    scrutiny. The lead opinion generally concludes that OFIS initially had broad discretion to
    14
    See, e.g., Lansing Mayor v Pub Serv Comm, 
    470 Mich 154
    , 166; 680 NW2d 840
    (2004).
    9
    render its licensing decision, but that the 2002 amendments to the Insurance Code
    replaced the “nebulous environment” in which OFIS made its decisions with the current
    “framework” in which OFIS now makes its decisions.15 This argument appears to be
    little more than judicial gloss masking as interpretation in derogation of this Court’s
    stated duty to determine the Legislature’s intent.16
    The lead opinion fails to explain how the relevant statutory provisions are “read
    together,”17 and why, when the various statutory provisions are read together, they should
    not be construed as having required OFIS to deny plaintiff’s license.18 Nor does the lead
    opinion employ or discuss any of the traditional canons of construction that guide this
    Court’s interpretation of statutes. Instead, the majority justices simply and summarily
    reject defendants’ argument, but support this conclusion with little else than their own
    ipse dixit.
    15
    Ante at 5.
    16
    See Wayne Co v Hathcock, 
    471 Mich 445
    , 456; 684 NW2d 765 (2004) (“In
    interpreting this statutory language, this Court’s primary goal is to give effect to the
    Legislature’s intent. If the Legislature has clearly expressed its intent in the language of a
    statute, that statute must be enforced as written, free of any ‘contrary judicial gloss.’”)
    (citation omitted); In re Certified Question from the United States Court of Appeals for
    the Sixth Circuit, 
    468 Mich 109
    , 119; 659 NW2d 597 (2003) (“The imposition of a
    contrary judicial gloss is inappropriate where the Legislature has clearly expressed its
    intentions in the words of the statute.”).
    17
    Ante at 4.
    18
    The lead opinion similarly determines that the Mazur decision “was incorrect” with,
    literally, no explanation why. See ante at 6.
    10
    Perhaps more egregious, the lead opinion’s ultimate interpretation fails to accord
    meaning to all the words of the statute. In particular, the statement in MCL 500.1205
    that the insurance license “shall not be approved” if the applicant has been convicted of a
    felony is rendered functionally without meaning by the lead opinion’s interpretation.19
    Nor do the majority justices who join either the lead or concurring opinions accord any
    significance to the fact that the code treats resident and nonresident applicants under
    separate standards, or address why this fact does not resolve the apparent conflict in the
    statutory provisions as discussed above. Moreover, the admonition of MCL 500.205 that
    OFIS must not abuse its discretion when making decisions can hardly be said to allow
    OFIS to make whatever determination it feels is reasonable under the circumstances
    given that the Legislature has instructed in MCL 500.1205(1) that OFIS “shall not” take
    certain action. Nevertheless, the majority justices read these general statements in such a
    way as to displace the more specific statutory provisions.
    B. ANALYSIS OF THIS COURT’S PRIOR CASES
    This Court has long held in cases involving similar licensing decisions that
    revocation procedures must be invoked if a license was granted in excess of an agency’s
    statutory authority. As far back as the early twentieth century, this Court decided that a
    facially valid license that was nevertheless issued in violation of a statute should be
    revoked.20 In Gamble v Liquor Control Comm, this Court reaffirmed that principle,
    19
    (Emphasis added.)
    20
    See George v Travis, 
    185 Mich 597
    ; 
    152 NW 207
     (1915).
    11
    stating that the proper question before a court in such cases is to determine whether the
    license was issued in violation of the relevant statute.21 Having determined that it was,
    the Court held that the license should have been revoked.22 In Elliott v Liquor Control
    Comm, having determined that granting the plaintiff a license in that case was
    “forbidden,” the commission was “required to revoke, rescind and cancel the license
    heretofore issued . . . .”23 Similarly, the Court applied Elliott in Big Bear Markets of
    Mich, Inc v Mich Liquor Control Comm, holding that the plaintiff’s license “was
    improperly granted and was, in consequence, subject to revocation” notwithstanding a
    showing that the party that the statute was designed to protect was willing to waive its
    21
    
    323 Mich 576
    , 579; 36 NW2d 297 (1949).
    22
    
    Id. at 580
    . This case, like others at the time, held that a licensee has no vested or
    property interest in a license and that due process protections are not necessary to revoke
    a license. As defendant correctly note, courts have since held that a licensee has a vested
    property interest in the license, which entitles the holder to due process protections. See,
    e.g., Bundo v Walled Lake, 
    395 Mich 679
    ; 238 NW2d 154 (1976). This latter change in
    the law does not render the earlier decisions irrelevant. Specifically, recognizing that
    licenses provide an interest to the licensee and that a licensee is entitled to due process
    protections before revocation does not affect the analysis regarding the revocation of
    invalid licenses, although revocations must now comport with due process. Moreover,
    courts have held only that a person is entitled to procedural due process in these
    situations. See generally Bundo. Thus, a licensee is entitled to timely written notice
    detailing the reasons for the proposed administrative action, an effective opportunity to
    defend and present supportive evidence, and a statement of findings. Bundo, 
    395 Mich at 696-697
    . This “rudimentary” due process balances the interests of a person who has
    invested in a license that is necessary for his livelihood with the community’s interest in
    proper regulation. 
    Id. at 696
    ; see also Bois Blanc Island Twp v Natural Resources Comm,
    
    158 Mich App 239
    ; 404 NW2d 719 (1987). Therefore, improperly issued licenses—
    including the one issued to plaintiff here—may be revoked as long as the licensee is
    accorded procedural due process.
    23
    
    339 Mich 78
    , 82-83; 62 NW2d 594 (1954).
    12
    rights under the statute.24     In Kassab v Acho, the Court of Appeals more recently
    reaffirmed these principles, stating:
    [The defendant-licensee] argues that the commission has the
    authority to continue the license on the ground of manifest injustice. We
    disagree. As an agency, the commission has no inherent powers and,
    therefore, any authority must come from the Legislature.                  The
    commission’s plenary power to regulate liquor traffic is subject to statutory
    restraints. The commission’s rules and regulations, promulgated pursuant
    to the Liquor Control Act, MCL 436.7; MSA 18.977, prohibit the
    commission from issuing an SDD license in violation of the one-half[-]mile
    rule. None of the exceptions to the rule applied and, thus, the commission
    had no discretion to waive the rule. Where a liquor license is issued in
    violation of a statute, it must be revoked. Manifest injustice is not a means
    by which the commission may avoid legislative mandate as well as its own
    regulations.[25]
    In short, these cases have continually reaffirmed the principle that a governmental entity
    cannot act in contravention of its statutory powers. When an agency does not act in
    accordance with its limited statutory powers, its decision should not stand, even if that
    action will result in a harsh outcome.
    This principle is particularly important because of the structure of our government,
    which provides for a separation of powers among the three branches. This system
    requires that the Legislature and Governor make policy choices and that the courts
    enforce those political decisions as written. In this case, because the statute as written at
    the time of plaintiff’s licensing in 2004 mandated that OFIS decline to license anyone
    who had been convicted of a felony, OFIS should not have licensed plaintiff, and this
    24
    
    345 Mich 569
    , 576; 77 NW2d 135 (1956).
    25
    
    150 Mich App 104
    , 112-113; 388 NW2d 263 (1986) (citations omitted).
    13
    Court cannot use equity to displace the statutory mandate or otherwise validate that
    improper decision.
    This Court has reaffirmed this basic principle underlying the separation of powers
    throughout its history. In Stokes v Millen Roofing Co, this Court held the trial court’s
    analysis invalid because “equity is invoked to avoid application of a statute. Courts must
    be careful not to usurp the Legislative role under the guise of equity because a statutory
    penalty is excessively punitive.”26 As this Court elaborated in Bilt-More Homes, Inc v
    French, and readopted in Stokes, it is not a court’s place
    to begin the process of attrition whereby, in appealing cases, the statutory
    bite is made more gentle, until eventually the statute is made practically
    innocuous and the teeth of the strong legislative policy effectively pulled.
    If cases of such strong equities eventually arise that the statute does more
    harm than good the legislature may amend it . . . .[27]
    Similarly, in Martin v Secretary of State, this Court again reaffirmed the guiding
    principle that courts cannot use equity to displace a statutory requirement designed by the
    Legislature.28 There, the plaintiff was a candidate for elective office who had been
    misled by the Secretary of State regarding the number of signatures needed to qualify to
    be placed on the ballot. As a consequence, he failed to collect enough signatures by the
    26
    Stokes v Millen Roofing Co, 
    466 Mich 660
    , 671-672; 649 NW2d 371 (2002).
    27
    Bilt-More Homes, Inc v French, 
    373 Mich 693
    , 699; 130 NW2d 907 (1964) (quotation
    marks and citation omitted), quoted and reaffirmed in Stokes, 
    466 Mich at 672
    .
    28
    
    482 Mich 956
     (2008), adopting the opinion in relevant part of Judge O’CONNELL, in
    Martin v Secretary of State, 
    280 Mich App 417
    , 430; 760 NW2d 726 (2008)
    (O’CONNELL, P.J., dissenting).
    14
    statutory deadline and the Secretary of State refused to place his name on the ballot. We
    explained that courts could not use equity to compel the government to perform an act
    that the law clearly forbid, even when the state itself was the root cause of the problem—
    as is the case here.29 Moreover, our decision affirmed that an administrative agency is
    not permitted to expand its own authority beyond what the Legislature granted. As
    Justice MARKMAN explained,
    it is not ‘manifestly unjust’ for this Court to conclude that the plain words
    of a law enacted by the Legislature cannot be modified by a clerk in the
    Secretary of State’s office (or indeed by the Secretary of State herself). . . .
    There cannot be as many laws as there are public servants who dispense
    guidance or advice on the meaning of the law.” [30]
    It would indeed be a strange system of government if every administrator or bureaucrat
    had the power to make decisions in derogation of the limited statutory powers provided
    by the Legislature. Yet the lead and concurring justices would essentially give every
    governmental bureaucrat the extraordinary power to countermand what the Legislature
    has proscribed. It is an abrogation of the legitimate exercise of judicial power to allow
    agency decisions to be the ultimate authority in licensing when those decisions are made
    in a manner contrary to a legislative mandate.
    In contravention of these principles, both plaintiff and the concurring justice cite
    approvingly Pittsfield Twp v Malcolm for the proposition that there are cases that present
    “exceptional circumstances” whereby courts may employ equity to avoid unjust results.31
    29
    See Martin, 482 Mich at 956-957 (YOUNG, J., concurring).
    30
    Id. at 957 (MARKMAN, J., concurring).
    31
    
    375 Mich 135
    , 144-148; 134 NW2d 166 (1965).
    15
    Malcolm is indicative of the occasional discord in this Court’s caselaw. In particular, it
    characterizes the unevenness by which this Court has occasionally treated the interplay
    between positive law and equity over the course of its history. However, I do not believe
    that the holding of Malcolm can overcome the general prohibition against applying equity
    to circumvent a statutory mandate, nor can it overcome the more applicable line of cases
    from this Court requiring improperly issued licenses to be revoked.            Additionally,
    Malcolm is largely distinguishable on its facts because it involved a local zoning
    ordinance—under which discretionary exceptions (zoning variances) are often sought and
    obtained—and did not involve a legislatively enacted mandate. Similarly, the plaintiff’s
    and the Court of Appeals’ reliance on Kern v City of Flint,32 is inapposite, even if it
    remains good law, because equity was used there to prevent the enforcement of terms in a
    contract. The Court in Kern did not use equity to overcome a statutory mandate, which
    implicates the Legislature’s constitutional authority to make policy for the citizens of this
    state.
    On the basis of my statutory construction, which I believe properly accords
    meaning to all the Legislature’s chosen words in the relevant statutes and considers the
    entire structure of the Insurance Code, I would hold that the Court of Appeals erred by
    failing to analyze the relevant statutory provisions as they existed in 2004 and then
    invoking equity to avoid the result of that analysis.
    32
    
    125 Mich App 24
    ; 335 NW2d 708 (1983).
    16
    I. RESPONSE TO THE LEAD OPINION’S ADDITIONAL ARGUMENTS
    The lead opinion asks and answers three questions, only one of which is actually
    necessary for the disposition of this case: did the Insurance Code expressly prohibit OFIS
    from issuing a license to plaintiff in 2004? As discussed earlier, the lead opinion refuses
    to engage in any meaningful statutory construction in answering this question and thereby
    draws a conclusion that fails to give effect to all the words of the relevant statute. The
    lead opinion then engages in a discussion of two questions—whether OFIS is required to
    revoke plaintiff’s license and whether OFIS may revoke plaintiff’s license under the
    statute as currently written—that no party or justice disputes. In short, the lead opinion’s
    cursory attempt at statutory interpretation and other analysis theoretically supporting its
    disposition in this case does not scour.
    The lead opinion asks “whether the commissioner is now required by statute to
    affirmatively revoke plaintiff’s license on the basis of the same prior felony.”33 As far as
    I can tell, no party or justice disputes that the answer to this question is quite obviously
    “no,” nor is the answer to this question relevant to a disposition here. OFIS admits that it
    does not seek to revoke plaintiff’s license on the basis of any post-licensure conduct by
    plaintiff, nor does OFIS argue that the statute, as it is currently written, requires
    revocation. Instead, OFIS argues that because it was illegal to license plaintiff in the first
    place under the statute as it existed in 2004, the issuance of the license was outside
    OFIS’s administrative authority and the license therefore must be revoked.
    33
    Ante at 2.
    17
    Additionally, the lead opinion asks “whether the commissioner is now permitted to
    revoke plaintiff’s license on the basis of the same prior felony.” It then curiously and
    circularly answers this question by stating that “the commissioner may not revoke a
    license on the basis of the erroneous belief that he must do so when, in fact, he has
    discretion.”34
    Again, the question posed and answer provided by the lead opinion is irrelevant to
    the actual argument that OFIS makes as authority for its ability to revoke plaintiff’s
    license in the instant case. As OFIS argued in its brief and as OFIS’s attorney readily
    noted at oral argument, the OFIS commissioner in this case is not exercising his
    discretionary authority under MCL 500.1239. Instead, counsel for OFIS urged at oral
    argument that the commissioner was
    being guided by the mandatory language of [MCL 500.]1205 and further
    guided by this Court’s decisions in similar licensing cases where this Court
    has clearly said when a license is granted in excess of the statutory
    authority or in violation of it, it’s not discretionary and the agency is bound
    to revoke it.
    * * *
    [While] procedurally this is a revocation proceeding, . . . the
    revocation proceeding is touched off by the grant of an improper license.
    So it’s not – this proceeding is not governed by the normal discretionary
    standard for revocation because the license here was never validly issued by
    the agency.
    Indeed, counsel for OFIS further admitted that if this were a typical revocation
    proceeding governed by the discretionary standard employed in such proceedings, then
    34
    Ante at 8.
    18
    the commissioner would have “no grounds to revoke Mr. King’s license . . . .” However,
    as OFIS argues and the above analysis demonstrates, that does not dispose of the true
    issue in this case: whether the statute, as it was written in 2004, mandated that plaintiff
    not be given a license, thus making his subsequent licensure invalid. And as previously
    discussed, this Court’s caselaw has continually reaffirmed that even though statutory
    revocation provisions may be written as discretionary, those revocation procedures must
    be invoked if the original license was granted in excess of an agency’s authority.
    By invoking a premise that OFIS readily concedes and by ignoring the argument
    OFIS actually proffers in defense of its action here, the author of the lead opinion renders
    an opinion that is largely unresponsive to the issues raised by this appeal. This error is
    further complicated by the fact that the lead opinion declines to address whether equity
    may otherwise be invoked to save plaintiff’s license. Indeed, the lead opinion makes “no
    pronouncement about whether equity applies here or what effect it might have.”35 It does
    so notwithstanding the fact that the linchpin of plaintiff’s entire argument is that OFIS is
    equitably estopped from revoking his license because of plaintiff’s truthful disclosure of
    his felony and OFIS’s full review and waiver of the same. Similarly, equity was also the
    only basis on which the lower courts rendered their decisions. However, as the above
    statutory analysis demonstrates, and contrary to the concurring justice’s position, equity
    cannot be properly invoked in this case because the statute mandates a particular
    outcome. The lead opinion avoids this established principle by disclaiming that it is
    35
    Ante at 8.
    19
    using equity even though its statutory analysis fails to establish a sufficient and
    alternative basis to do so.
    Finally, the lead opinion also fails to distinguish (or even discuss) any of the
    relevant caselaw holding that a license issued in violation of a statute should be revoked.
    Nor do the justices joining the lead and concurring opinions appear willing to recognize
    the implications of their decision today, and I question whether those justices would draw
    the same conclusions if plaintiff here were less sympathetic. Consider, for example, a
    convicted child molester who received a license to open a daycare center, contrary to a
    clear statutory mandate preventing such licensure.36 Would the majority justices here
    prevent the government from revoking the invalid license?            Similarly, consider a
    dangerous felon who was inappropriately and illegally provided a license to carry a
    firearm, contrary to the clear statutory mandate preventing such licensure37 and the fact
    that possession of a firearm by such a person is a separate crime punishable by up to five
    years in prison.38 Would the majority justices here allow the felon to retain his firearm
    license? In these scenarios, would the concurring justices in particular still unequivocally
    “hold that a governmental licensing agency is estopped from revoking a license solely on
    the basis of the same fully disclosed and accurate facts for which it had previously
    granted an express waiver if the licensee has reasonably relied to his detriment on the
    36
    See MCL 722.115g(3).
    37
    See MCL 28.425b; MCL 28.425b(7)(f) and (11).
    38
    See MCL 750.224f.
    20
    issued license”?39 Indeed, such a rule has the potential to establish an untenable state of
    affairs in which every bureaucrat would become a king unto himself whose decisions—
    no matter how contrary to established law—are insulated from challenge.
    III. CONCLUSION
    The proper interpretation of the relevant statutory provisions as articulated in this
    dissent would admittedly produce a result in this case that is harsh for this plaintiff who
    properly disclosed a condition that made him ineligible for the license he was
    improvidently granted. While this result is unfortunate for this particular plaintiff, it is
    also what the law requires. The inflexibility purposely built into this statute by the
    Legislature and approved by the Governor is the result of policy determinations made by
    those political branches of government.40 Save those statutes that are an affront to the
    39
    Ante at 1 (CAVANAGH, J., concurring).
    40
    The purposefulness of this inflexibility and the bright-line nature of this rule was
    reaffirmed when the Legislature amended MCL 500.1239(1) in 2009 in order to remove
    any dispute that OFIS must deny convicted felons a license to be a resident insurance
    producer. MCL 500.1239 now provides:
    (1) In addition to any other powers under this act, the commissioner
    may place on probation, suspend, or revoke an insurance producer’s license
    or may levy a civil fine under section 1244 or any combination of actions,
    and the commissioner shall refuse to issue a license under section 1205 or
    1206a, for any 1 or more of the following causes:
    * * *
    (f) Having been convicted of a felony. [Emphasis added.]
    This amended language unanimously passed both chambers of the Michigan Legislature,
    and was signed into law by Governor Granholm on January 5, 2009. See 
    2008 PA 423
    .
    21
    constitution, no court can employ its limited judicial power to overcome a valid statutory
    mandate. Nor can the rule of law, as prescribed by MCL 500.1205(1)(b) when read in
    the context of MCL 500.1239(1) and MCL 500.1206a, be displaced by the actions of
    OFIS administrators. An administrative agency may exercise only the powers provided
    to it and must act within the parameters conferred upon it by statutory law.41 Action in
    excess of these powers or outside these parameters in situations in which the Legislature
    has mandated a specific outcome is not valid.        Because the majority justices here
    effectively sanction such impermissible conduct, I dissent.
    Robert P. Young, Jr.
    Maura D. Corrigan
    Stephen J. Markman
    41
    See, e.g., Union Carbide Corp v Pub Serv Comm, 
    431 Mich 135
    , 146; 428 NW2d 322
    (1988); Mason Co Civic Research Council v Mason Co, 
    343 Mich 313
    , 326-327; 72
    NW2d 292 (1955); Taylor v Pub Utilities Comm, 
    217 Mich 400
    , 402-403; 
    186 NW 485
    (1922).
    22