Steven R Gentry v. Charter Township of Clinton ( 2023 )


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  •             If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
    revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    STEVEN R. GENTRY,                                                    UNPUBLISHED
    March 30, 2023
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v                                                                    No. 360116
    Macomb Circuit Court
    CHARTER TOWNSHIP OF CLINTON,                                         LC No. 2021-002813-CZ
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Before: CAVANAGH, P.J., and MARKEY and BORRELLO, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    In this action generally challenging the Charter Township of Clinton’s use of specific
    property tax revenue, plaintiff appeals as of right the circuit court’s order granting the township’s
    motion for summary disposition based on a determination that the Michigan Tax Tribunal had
    exclusive subject-matter jurisdiction over the case pursuant to MCL 205.731(b) and MCL 205.774.
    The trial court further concluded that even if it had subject-matter jurisdiction, plaintiff’s case
    should still be dismissed because plaintiff lacked taxpayer standing and plaintiff’s action was
    untimely under Bigger v City of Pontiac, 
    390 Mich 1
    ; 
    210 NW2d 1
     (1973). For the reasons set
    forth in this opinion, we affirm the trial court’s decision granting summary disposition in favor of
    the township because plaintiff lacked standing to bring this action.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Plaintiff initiated this purported class-action lawsuit on August 2, 2021, generally
    challenging the propriety of the township’s use of revenue collected from a property tax millage
    that was approved by voters pursuant to a ballot initiative. Plaintiff alleged that in 2013, township
    voters had approved a millage for the purpose of purchasing additional police vehicles and
    covering operating costs of the police department, that this millage had been renewed by township
    voters in 2018 to continue through 2025, and that the township had not used the “vast majority”
    of the revenue collected from this millage for its intended purpose. As an owner of real property
    in the township, plaintiff claimed to have paid the property tax at issue.
    Specifically, in his first amended complaint, plaintiff alleged that “the Township has
    simply hoarded millions of dollars raised by the Supplemental Police Tax and/or used those
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    revenues to make payments to reduce its actuarily-accrued liability for retiree health care
    expenses—expenses that are not ‘operational costs.’ ” Plaintiff further alleged that the “Township
    increased the amount of money in its Police Fund from an already-excessive $21 million to over
    $36 million since the Supplemental Police Tax was first imposed, even after paying the improper
    nonoperational expenses.” Plaintiff asserted claims for assumpsit, unjust enrichment, and
    injunctive relief. Based on these claims, plaintiff sought a refund to the class members of the tax
    allegedly unlawfully collected during the previous six years and plaintiff sought to enjoin the
    township from further collecting the millage.
    The township moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(4), (C)(5), (C)(7), and
    (C)(8). The township argued, as relevant to this appeal, that only the tax tribunal had jurisdiction
    over the type of claims raised by plaintiff, that plaintiff did not have standing to bring these claims
    because he had only alleged harm of the type experienced by all taxpayers generally, and that
    plaintiff’s claims were untimely under Bigger.
    In opposition, plaintiff argued that his action was supported by South Haven v Van Buren
    Co Bd of Comm’rs, 
    478 Mich 518
    ; 
    734 NW2d 533
     (2007), and that taxpayers have a cause of
    action for a refund where a municipality uses revenues from a voter approved millage for purposes
    other than those stated on the ballot. Plaintiff maintained that the circuit court had jurisdiction
    over the matter, rather than the tax tribunal, because plaintiff was only challenging the township’s
    use of the tax proceeds, and plaintiff was not challenging the amount or validity of an assessment
    or seeking the type of refund under the state’s property tax laws that would bring the matter within
    the tax tribunal’s jurisdiction. Plaintiff also argued that he had standing because he had a direct
    cause of action under South Haven, thus negating the need to rely on concepts of taxpayer standing,
    and he nonetheless suffered a special injury by personally paying the tax at issue. Finally, as
    relevant to this appeal, plaintiff argued that Bigger did not apply to this case.
    The trial court subsequently issued a written opinion and order, thoroughly analyzing the
    issues and explaining its reasoning for determining that the township was entitled to summary
    disposition. First, although the trial court concluded that the tax tribunal did not have jurisdiction
    under MCL 205.731(a), the trial court nevertheless granted the township’s motion for summary
    disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(4) for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, because it determined
    that the tax tribunal had exclusive subject-matter jurisdiction over plaintiff’s claims under MCL
    205.731(b) and MCL 205.774. The trial court reasoned that plaintiff was seeking a refund of
    taxes, which brought his action within the scope of MCL 205.731(b) and MCL 205.774, and that
    plaintiff had not explained how his equitable claims constituted extraordinary circumstances that
    warranted divesting the tax tribunal of jurisdiction. Additionally, the trial court concluded that
    even if it had subject-matter jurisdiction, plaintiff did not have standing to pursue his claims
    because he had not satisfied the requirements of demonstrating taxpayer standing. The court also
    determined that plaintiff’s claims were barred under Bigger.
    Plaintiff now appeals.
    II. SUBJECT-MATTER JURISDICTION
    Plaintiff first argues that the trial court erred by determining that the tax tribunal had
    exclusive subject-matter jurisdiction over plaintiff’s claims.
    -2-
    A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    This Court “review[s] de novo a trial court’s decision to grant or deny a motion for
    summary disposition.” Winkler v Marist Fathers of Detroit, Inc, 
    500 Mich 327
    , 333; 
    901 NW2d 566
     (2017). The question whether a court has subject-matter jurisdiction presents an issue of law
    that this Court reviews de novo. Hillsdale Co Senior Servs., Inc v Hillsdale Co, 
    494 Mich 46
    , 51;
    
    832 NW2d 728
     (2013). This Court also reviews de novo issues of statutory interpretation. 
    Id.
    Summary disposition may be granted under MCR 2.116(C)(4) if the “court lacks
    jurisdiction of the subject matter.”
    In reviewing a motion under MCR 2.116(C)(4), it is proper to consider the
    pleadings and any affidavits or other documentary evidence submitted by the
    parties to determine if there is a genuine issue of material fact. Jurisdictional
    questions are reviewed de novo, but this Court must determine whether the
    affidavits, together with the pleadings, depositions, admissions, and documentary
    evidence, demonstrate . . . [a lack of] subject matter jurisdiction. [Forest Hills
    Coop v Ann Arbor, 
    305 Mich App 572
    , 617; 
    854 NW2d 172
     (2014) (quotation
    marks and citations omitted; ellipsis and alteration in original).]
    B. ANALYSIS
    The first issue presented by plaintiff appeal concerns whether the circuit court or tax
    tribunal had subject-matter jurisdiction over plaintiff’s claims. “Subject-matter jurisdiction refers
    to a court’s power to act and authority to hear and determine a case.” 
    Id.
     The question of subject-
    matter jurisdiction concerns “a court or tribunal’s abstract power to try a case of the kind or
    character of the one pending.” New Covert Generating Co, LLC v Twp of Covert, 
    334 Mich App 24
    , 48; 
    964 NW2d 378
     (2020). As our Supreme Court has explained,
    [j]urisdiction over the subject-matter is the right of the court to exercise judicial
    power over that class of cases; not the particular case before it, but rather the
    abstract power to try a case of the kind or character of the one pending; and not
    whether the particular case is one that presents a cause of action, or under the
    particular facts is triable before the court in which it is pending, because of some
    inherent facts which exist and may be developed during the trial. [Winkler, 500
    Mich at 333-334 (quotation marks and citation omitted; alteration in original).]
    Furthermore, the “question of jurisdiction is not dependent on the truth or falsity of the
    allegations, but upon their nature.” Petersen Fin LLC v Kentwood, 
    326 Mich App 433
    , 441-442;
    
    928 NW2d 245
     (2018). “The inquiry into subject-matter jurisdiction is determinable at the
    commencement of a case, not its conclusion.” Id. at 442. “A court’s subject-matter jurisdiction is
    determined only by reference to the allegations listed in the complaint.” Id. at 446 (quotation
    marks and citation omitted).
    Regarding the circuit court’s jurisdiction, the Michigan Constitution provides:
    The circuit court shall have original jurisdiction in all matters not prohibited
    by law; appellate jurisdiction from all inferior courts and tribunals except as
    -3-
    otherwise provided by law; power to issue, hear and determine prerogative and
    remedial writs; supervisory and general control over inferior courts and tribunals
    within their respective jurisdictions in accordance with rules of the supreme court;
    and jurisdiction of other cases and matters as provided by rules of the supreme
    court. [Const 1963, art 6, § 13.]
    Additionally, under MCL 600.605, “[c]ircuit courts have original jurisdiction to hear and
    determine all civil claims and remedies, except where exclusive jurisdiction is given in the
    constitution or by statute to some other court or where the circuit courts are denied jurisdiction by
    the constitution or statutes of this state.” “Divestiture of jurisdiction cannot be accomplished
    except under clear mandate of law.” Romulus City Treasurer v Wayne Co Drain Comm’r, 
    413 Mich 728
    , 738; 
    322 NW2d 152
     (1982). Circuit courts “are courts of general jurisdiction” and
    when construing relevant statutory and constitutional provisions implicating the potential
    divestiture of the circuit court’s jurisdiction, there is a presumption that the circuit court retains
    jurisdiction and “any intent to divest the circuit court of jurisdiction must be clearly and
    unambiguously stated.” Winkler, 500 Mich at 334 (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    At issue in this case is MCL 205.731, in which the Legislature granted original and
    exclusive subject-matter jurisdiction to the tax tribunal over certain types of proceedings. See also
    New Covert, 334 Mich App at 48. MCL 205.731 provides in relevant part as follows:
    The tribunal has exclusive and original jurisdiction over all of the following:
    (a) A proceeding for direct review of a final decision, finding, ruling,
    determination, or order of an agency relating to assessment, valuation, rates, special
    assessments, allocation, or equalization, under the property tax laws of this state.
    (b) A proceeding for a refund or redetermination of a tax levied under the
    property tax laws of this state.
    * * *
    (e) Any other proceeding provided by law.
    Our Supreme Court has characterized MCL 205.731 as an “exception” to the circuit court’s
    jurisdiction for tax cases. Hillsdale Co, 
    494 Mich at 52
    . MCL 205.731 is located within the Tax
    Tribunal Act, MCL 205.701 et seq. As used in this act, “tribunal” means “the tax tribunal created
    under section 21.” MCL 205.703(g). “Agency” means “a board, official, or administrative agency
    empowered to make a decision, finding, ruling, assessment, determination, or order that is subject
    to review under the jurisdiction of the tribunal or that has collected a tax for which a refund is
    claimed.” MCL 205.703(a). Pursuant to MCL 205.774, the “right to sue any agency for refund
    of any taxes other than by proceedings before the tribunal is abolished as of September 30, 1974[,]”
    and “[i]f a tax paid to an agency is erroneous or unlawful, it shall not be requisite that the payment
    be made under protest in order to invoke a right to refund by proceedings before the tribunal.”
    “The tribunal’s jurisdiction is based either on the subject matter of the proceeding (e.g., a direct
    review of a final decision of an agency relating to special assessments[, assessments, valuation,
    rates, allocation, or equalization] under property tax laws) or the type of relief requested (i.e., a
    -4-
    refund or redetermination of a tax under the property tax laws).” Wikman v City of Novi, 
    413 Mich 617
    , 631; 
    322 NW2d 103
     (1982).
    Here, the trial court concluded that it did not have subject-matter jurisdiction because the
    tax tribunal had exclusive subject-matter jurisdiction over plaintiff’s claims pursuant to MCL
    205.731(b) and MCL 205.774. In arguing to the contrary, plaintiff relies primarily on our Supreme
    Court’s decision in South Haven, 
    478 Mich 518
    . Plaintiff contends that South Haven supports his
    argument that he may seek a refund under the circuit court’s general equitable powers without
    invoking the exclusive jurisdiction of the tax tribunal under MCL 205.731(b). Plaintiff also relies
    on our Supreme Court’s decision in Romulus, 
    413 Mich 728
    , to argue that the circuit court had
    subject-matter jurisdiction over this matter because the type of refund plaintiff seeks is not the type
    of typical tax refund contemplated by MCL 205.731(b). Therefore, plaintiff argues under South
    Haven and Romulus, tax revenues from a millage may be returned to taxpayers when the funds
    were spent for a purpose not provided for by the millage. Consequently, plaintiff contends that
    the relief he is seeking is not a refund under the state’s property tax laws (as contemplated by MCL
    205.731(b)) but is instead an entirely different cause of action that is rooted in the Supreme Court’s
    South Haven decision and based on a challenge to the use of tax revenue from a voter-approved
    millage.
    In South Haven, 
    478 Mich at 521-522
    , the Supreme Court was presented with an issue
    involving a statute that required funds from a road millage to be distributed according to a specific
    formula between cities, villages, and the county for their roads. Voters in the county approved a
    road millage that only provided revenue to the county and did not contain a provision for the
    statutorily required distributions to cities and villages. 
    Id. at 522-523
    . The city of South Haven,
    which did not have any county roads within its boundaries, subsequently objected to the county’s
    failure to allocate any of the millage funds to the city and initiated a lawsuit in the circuit court.
    
    Id. at 523
    . The circuit court dismissed the action on summary disposition pursuant to MCR
    2.116(C)(4), concluding that the tax tribunal had exclusive jurisdiction of the matter. 
    Id.
     The
    Court of Appeals reversed and held that jurisdiction was proper in the circuit court rather than the
    tax tribunal “because the case did not involve assessment, valuation, rates, special assessments,
    allocation, equalization, a refund, or a redetermination of a tax.” 
    Id. at 524
    .
    On appeal to our Supreme Court, our Supreme Court determined that the statutory
    distribution procedure was violated, and the Court proceeded to address whether there was a
    remedy available to the city. 
    Id. at 527-528
    . After first determining that the statute did not
    authorize a cause of action for restitution of misallocated funds, 
    id. at 530-531
    , the Court stated
    that
    although plaintiff may not seek restitution, this Court has permitted a plaintiff to
    seek injunctive relief when a government official does not conform to his or her
    statutory duty to distribute funds in a specified manner. Thus, two possible judicial
    remedies are available in a case where voters approve a ballot proposal that
    improperly allocates proceeds: to enjoin collection of the improper millage or to
    refund collected taxes to the taxpayers. These remedies would be unexceptional
    exercises of the power of the judiciary to give injunctive relief to prevent illegal
    acts. [Id. at 531 (citations omitted).]
    -5-
    The Supreme Court noted that “neither of these remedies [were] appropriate” in that case
    because “the millage ha[d] already been collected and the taxpayers were not seeking a refund[.]”
    
    Id.
     at 531 n 20. The Court then concluded:
    Plaintiff seeks a third possible remedy: a writ of mandamus compelling
    defendants to disgorge the funds and allocate them in accordance with the statutory
    formula. This we decline to do because the city is not entitled to receive any of the
    funds. Under the General Property Tax Act, . . . when a millage proposal is
    submitted to the electors for approval, the ballot must “fully disclose each local unit
    of government to which the revenue from that millage will be disbursed,” and must
    state “[a] clear statement of the purpose for the millage.” This statute does not
    expressly preclude using for one purpose tax revenue specifically approved for a
    different purpose. However, a fundamental rule of statutory construction is that the
    Legislature did not intend to do a useless thing. If funds that voters approved for
    the purpose stated on the ballot could be redirected to another purpose without
    seeking new approval, there would be no reason for including the purpose on the
    ballot. Indeed, voters could be lulled into voting for a millage for a popular purpose,
    only to have the funds then used for something they may well have never approved.
    This is contrary to the General Property Tax Act. The voters of Van Buren County
    did not approve the allocation of funds for city roads, and perhaps would not have
    approved a proposal including that purpose. While no court has warrant to violate
    MCL 224.20b by ordering distribution contrary to that statute, it likewise may not
    violate MCL 211.24f by ordering these funds to be used for a purpose not approved
    by the voters. Accordingly, South Haven is not entitled to receive any of the
    proceeds of the millage. [Id. at 531-533 (citations omitted; alteration in original).]
    In reaching this result, the Court additionally noted that the Legislature had authorized the
    Attorney General, by statute,1 to pursue a civil action to recover misappropriated funds and that
    the city’s “statutorily provided remedy [was] through the Attorney General.” 
    Id. at 530
    .
    In Romulus, 
    413 Mich at 733-735
    , the plaintiffs brought an action in the circuit court
    challenging their drain taxes on the ground that the defendants allegedly committed a constructive
    fraud by using money collected through special assessments to pay for administrative expenses
    instead of properly using the special assessment revenue for its enumerated purposes and only
    relying on general taxation funds to pay administrative expenses. The plaintiffs included
    “township and city treasurers, acting in their official capacities, and landowners.” 
    Id. at 733
    . Our
    Supreme Court addressed the scope of the tax tribunal’s jurisdiction and whether plaintiffs’
    constructive fraud claim was within the exclusive jurisdiction of the tax tribunal or whether it could
    properly be considered by the circuit court. 
    Id. at 735-736
    .
    In analyzing this issue, the Romulus Court noted that the “focus” of the plaintiffs’ claim
    “concern[ed] not the factual underpinnings of the pertinent assessments, but rather how funds
    1
    The Court cited MCL 224.30, which is specific to violations of certain laws regarding roads. See
    MCL 224.30; South Haven, 
    478 Mich at 530
    . Accordingly, this statute has no bearing on the
    instant case.
    -6-
    collected pursuant to the special assessment laws may be spent.” Id. at 736. The Court explained
    that the matters within the tax tribunal’s jurisdiction under MCL 205.731 “most clearly relate to
    the basis for a tax, and much less clearly to the proper uses which may be made of the funds once
    collected.” Id. at 738. Our Supreme Court concluded that the plaintiffs’ claim was not within the
    tax tribunal’s exclusive jurisdiction under MCL 205.731(a) because questions regarding how the
    funds collected from the special assessments may properly be expended are not implicated by
    disputes concerning any of the matters described in subsection (a).2 Id. at 738-739. The Court
    reasoned as follows:
    Because questions as to the lawful expenditure of funds do not arise within the other
    matters within the tribunal’s jurisdiction, and because the tribunal’s expertise
    relates much more directly to other questions concerning the lawfulness of
    challenged special assessments, we cannot assume that the Legislature intended to
    divest the circuit court of its equitable jurisdiction to grant declaratory and
    injunctive relief in matters involving the appropriate use of funds collected under
    the guise of special assessment laws. [Romulus, 413 Mich at 738-739.]
    However, the plaintiffs’ claim included a request for the return to the landowner plaintiffs
    of money, which was being held in escrow, that had been collected as special assessments and also
    earmarked for administrative expenses. Id. at 733-734. Thus, the Court stated that the question
    remained whether pursuant to MCL 205.731(b) and MCL 205.774, the landowner plaintiffs’
    request for a return of the money in escrow was a matter within the tax tribunal’s exclusive
    jurisdiction such that the circuit court was precluded from considering the claim or whether the
    landowner plaintiffs’ request could be considered under the circuit court’s equity jurisdiction. Id.
    at 732-733, 736, 739, 745-746. The Court held that the matter was, “at least in part, an equitable
    action, not within the Tax Tribunal’s exclusive jurisdiction, and thus properly brought in the circuit
    court.” Id. at 732-733. Explaining its holding, the Court reasoned as follows:
    We conclude that, if the funds in escrow have been justifiably withheld from the
    county, the landowner plaintiffs’ claim that the funds should be repaid to them
    because of defendants’ constructive fraud is not a claim for a tax refund within the
    exclusive jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal.
    We do not reach this conclusion by holding that equity jurisdiction
    supersedes the Legislature’s intended jurisdiction of the Tax Tribunal. Rather, we
    believe that the Legislature has not shown a clear intent to abolish the circuit court’s
    equity jurisdiction to consider the plaintiffs’ claim to the funds in escrow. In
    accordance with the settled principle that the divestiture of jurisdiction cannot be
    accomplished except under clear mandate of law, we will not presume an intent not
    clearly expressed. Although it is arguable that MCL 205.731(b) and MCL 205.774
    could apply because the funds in escrow were collected as purported special
    assessments, a return of the funds from this escrow account would not be a typical
    tax refund and to treat it as such would likely lead to an anomalous result. If the
    2
    As previously stated, these matters are “assessment, valuation, rates, special assessments,
    allocation, or equalization, under the property tax laws of this state.” MCL 205.731(a).
    -7-
    circuit court determines that the funds in escrow were properly withheld from the
    county, then principles of equity may dictate that the funds should be returned to
    those who paid them. If so, the court would be in an intractable position if such
    relief were deemed to be a tax refund over which the circuit court had no
    jurisdiction. Rather, the rule that equity will grant complete relief is applicable
    here. The Tax Tribunal Act does not prevent a court of equity from determining
    what should be done with funds that in extraordinary circumstances have been
    properly withheld from the county. [Id. at 746-747 (some citations omitted).]
    Here, plaintiff’s claims focus on allegations that the township improperly used tax revenue
    for purposes other than those for which that specific tax revenue was intended. Our Supreme
    Court’s decision in South Haven supports the general proposition that revenue generated from a
    voter-approved millage may not be spent for purposes other than those approved by the voters
    without contravening the General Property Tax Act.3 South Haven, 
    478 Mich at 531-533
    . Because
    plaintiff’s challenge in the instant case relates to how the millage revenue could lawfully be spent
    after being collected rather than the underlying basis for the tax, plaintiff’s claims do not implicate
    the special expertise of the tax tribunal and therefore do not fall within the tax tribunal’s exclusive
    jurisdiction under MCL 205.731(a). Romulus, 
    413 Mich at 736, 738-739
    . Accordingly, the trial
    court did not err by determining that the tax tribunal did not have exclusive subject-matter
    jurisdiction under MCL 205.731(a).
    However, the question remains whether plaintiff’s claims are within the exclusive subject-
    matter jurisdiction of the tax tribunal under MCL 205.731(b) because plaintiff seeks a “refund.”
    Answering this question also implicates MCL 205.774, which generally prohibits lawsuits for tax
    refunds “other than by proceedings before the tribunal.” In his first amended complaint, plaintiff
    specifically sought to have the township refund the money collected pursuant to the millage.
    The tax tribunal’s jurisdiction under MCL 205.731(b) is based on the type of relief
    requested. Wikman, 
    413 Mich at 631
    . The issue thus becomes whether plaintiff’s requested relief
    actually constitutes “a refund . . . of a tax levied under the property tax laws of this state,” for
    purposes of MCL 205.731(b),4 or a “refund of any taxes,” for purposes of MCL 205.774, such that
    jurisdiction in the circuit court is precluded.
    The answer to this question is not entirely clear. Our Supreme Court in South Haven did
    not address the question of subject-matter jurisdiction, leaving intact the ruling of the Court of
    Appeals that jurisdiction was proper in the circuit court. However, in South Haven there was no
    request by taxpayers for a refund of the tax revenue at issue; instead, the city sought to have the
    money reallocated by the county so that some of the revenue would flow to the city. South Haven,
    
    478 Mich at 525
    , 531 n 20, 531-533. Thus, South Haven does not answer the question whether a
    3
    At this juncture, there is no need to express an opinion on whether the township actually spent
    funds for a purpose that would not fall within the purpose approved by the voters. As previously
    stated, the “question of jurisdiction is not dependent on the truth or falsity of the allegations, but
    upon their nature.” Petersen, 
    326 Mich App at 441-442
    .
    4
    There is no claim that plaintiff seeks a “redetermination” of his taxes.
    -8-
    request by a taxpayer to have tax revenue returned based on a claim that the revenue was spent for
    an improper purpose constitutes a “refund” for purposes of the tax tribunal act and the issue of
    subject-matter jurisdiction. Additionally, the Court in South Haven was not asked to address the
    issue, thus, there is nothing in that opinion that could be cited to support a conclusion that the relief
    sought by plaintiff in the instant case either does or does not constitute a “refund” to taxpayers. 5
    The Court in Romulus came closer to addressing the question currently before this Court.
    In Romulus, the Court held that a claim by landowner plaintiffs for a return of escrowed tax funds
    based on allegations that the taxing authority committed a constructive fraud by improperly
    allocating those funds to unauthorized administrative expenses did not constitute a claim for a
    “typical tax refund” within the tax tribunal’s exclusive jurisdiction under MCL 205.731(b) and
    MCL 205.774. Romulus, 
    413 Mich at 733-734, 745-747
    . Thus, the Romulus Court reasoned that
    “the Legislature has not shown a clear intent to abolish the circuit court’s equity jurisdiction” under
    such circumstances. 
    Id. at 746
    . However, the Romulus Court reached this conclusion based in
    part on the fact that money potentially subject to being returned to the taxpayers was being held in
    escrow and it was “not possible to determine that the funds in escrow were improperly withheld
    from the county.” 
    Id. at 746-747
    . Such factual circumstances are not present in the instant case
    where plaintiff seeks to have the township return tax money that it has already collected and
    allocated.
    Thus, Romulus does not directly support plaintiff’s argument. Romulus does, however,
    support the general proposition that the basis on which a plaintiff seeks money from the township
    that originated as tax revenue affects whether the relief claimed by plaintiff constitutes a “typical
    tax refund” such that the claim should be adjudicated in the tax tribunal or instead constitutes some
    other type of claim that properly belongs within the jurisdiction of the circuit court. The mere fact
    that a tax is involved does not automatically place the matter within the exclusive jurisdiction of
    the tax tribunal. Cf. Petersen, 318 Mich App at 449 (“The MTT does not have subject-matter
    jurisdiction over contract disputes simply because the substance of the contract regards special
    assessments.”).
    Furthermore, Romulus supports the conclusion that the Legislature did not intend to divest
    the circuit court of jurisdiction over claims that implicate issues concerning how a municipality
    5
    Despite the broad reading of this decision advocated by plaintiff, our Supreme Court’s decision
    in South Haven was limited to a narrow issue that is not implicated in this case and, further, does
    not address the pertinent issue currently before this Court. Specifically, the Supreme Court in
    South Haven explained that it had granted leave to appeal “limited to consideration of whether the
    city was entitled to any of the tax proceeds,” ordering the parties “to address whether the ballot
    proposal violated the statute and, if so, what remedy might be available, and whether the parties
    by their conduct ‘otherwise agreed’ to a different allocation than that required by statute.” Id. at
    525. The Supreme Court’s analysis of that issue simply has no bearing on whether a request by a
    taxpayer, rather than a city, to have millage revenue directly returned to the taxpayer based on a
    claim that the taxing authority misallocated the millage revenue for in improper purpose constitutes
    a “refund” for purposes of the tax tribunal act. It similarly does not support plaintiff’s claim that
    he has standing to bring this action, which is discussed later in this opinion.
    -9-
    may lawfully spend money after it has been collected from taxes, in light of the nature of the tax
    tribunal’s special expertise. As our Supreme Court explained in Romulus:
    The tribunal that was created to exercise such jurisdiction was labeled a
    “quasi-judicial agency”, MCL 205.721, whose membership is to be comprised of
    persons with various specified qualifications. Of the seven members, two must be
    attorneys with experience either in property tax matters or in judicial or quasi-
    judicial office. MCL 205.722. One member must be a certified assessor; one, an
    experienced professional real estate appraiser; and one, a certified public
    accountant with experience in state-local tax matters. . . . [P]ersons who are not
    members of any of the enumerated disciplines are required to have experience in
    state or local tax matters.
    The expertise of the tribunal members can be seen to relate primarily to
    questions concerning the factual underpinnings of taxes. In cases not involving
    special assessments, the tribunal’s membership is well-qualified to resolve the
    disputes concerning those matters that the Legislature has placed within its
    jurisdiction: assessments, valuations, rates, allocation and equalization. In special
    assessment cases, the tribunal is competent to ascertain whether the assessments
    are levied according to the benefits received. Although the tribunal, in making its
    determinations, will make conclusions of law, MCL 205.751, the matters within its
    jurisdiction under MCL 205.731 most clearly relate to the basis for a tax, and much
    less clearly to the proper uses which may be made of the funds once collected.
    [Romulus, 413 Mich at 737-738 (some citations omitted).]
    Here, determining whether the trial court correctly concluded that the tax tribunal had
    exclusive subject-matter jurisdiction under MCL 205.731(b) requires a clear definition of the term
    “refund” as used in MCL 205.731(b) and MCL 205.774, both of which are contained within the
    Tax Tribunal Act. The Romulus Court did not define this term, although it stated that the factual
    circumstances in that case did not involve a “typical tax refund.” Romulus, 413 Mich at 746.
    Resolution of this question presents an issue of statutory interpretation. When interpreting
    the language of a statute, courts seek to “ascertain the legislative intent that may reasonably be
    inferred from the words expressed in the statute.” Koontz v Ameritech Servs, Inc, 
    466 Mich 304
    ,
    312; 
    645 NW2d 34
     (2002). “If the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, the statute must
    be enforced as written and no further judicial construction is permitted.” Farris v McKaig, 
    324 Mich App 349
    , 353; 
    920 NW2d 377
     (2018) (quotation marks and citation omitted). “Courts must
    give effect to every word, phrase, and clause in a statute, and must avoid an interpretation that
    would render any part of the statute surplusage or nugatory.” Koontz, 
    466 Mich at 312
    . Statutory
    “words and phrases shall be construed and understood according to the common and approved
    usage of the language; but technical words and phrases, and such as may have acquired a peculiar
    and appropriate meaning in the law, shall be construed and understood according to such peculiar
    and appropriate meaning.” MCL 8.3a; see also Farris, 324 Mich App at 354.
    Here, the term “refund” is not defined within the Tax Tribunal Act. See MCL 205.703. It
    is thus appropriate to consult dictionary definitions. Farris, 324 Mich App at 354. Black’s Law
    Dictionary (11th ed) provides three definitions of “refund,” two of which are relevant to the instant
    -10-
    case: “1. The return of money to a person who overpaid, such as a taxpayer who overestimated tax
    liability or whose employer withheld too much tax from earnings. 2. The money returned to a
    person who overpaid.” The definition for the term “tax refund” is “[m]oney that a taxpayer
    overpaid and is thus returned by the taxing authority.—Also termed tax rebate.” Black’s Law
    Dictionary (11th ed). Accordingly, although these demonstrations show that a tax refund is
    accomplished by returning tax money to the taxpayer, it is also clear that a tax refund is given
    based on some kind of overpayment. In other words, the tax is refunded because the taxpayer did
    not owe the tax or owed less tax. That is not the basis on which plaintiff seeks monetary relief in
    this case.
    According to the first amended complaint, plaintiff sought the return of millage funds based
    on his claims of “ASSUMPSIT (MONEY HAD AND RECEIVED)” and “UNJUST
    ENRICHMENT.”
    “Unjust enrichment is a cause of action to correct a defendant’s unjust retention of a benefit
    owed to another.” Wright v Genesee Co, 
    504 Mich 410
    , 417; 
    934 NW2d 805
     (2019). “A claim of
    unjust enrichment can arise when a party has and retains money or benefits which in justice and
    equity belong to another.” 
    Id. at 418
     (quotation marks and citation omitted). Though plaintiff’s
    complaint contains a claim of “assumpsit,” assumpsit has technically been abolished as a cause of
    action, but “the substantive remedies traditionally available under assumpsit were preserved[.]”
    Youmans v Charter Twp of Bloomfield, 
    336 Mich App 161
    , 213; 
    969 NW2d 570
     (2021) (quotation
    marks and citation omitted; alteration in original). “At common law, assumpsit was a proper
    vehicle for recovering unlawful fees, charges, or exactions—including unlawful utility charges—
    that the plaintiff had paid to a municipality under compulsion of local law.” 
    Id.
     However, “an
    ‘assumpsit’ claim is modernly treated as a claim arising under ‘quasi-contractual’ principles, which
    represent ‘a subset of the law of unjust enrichment.’ ” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    “The remedy for unjust enrichment is restitution.” Wright, 504 Mich at 418. “A claimant
    entitled to restitution may obtain a judgment for money in the amount of the defendant’s unjust
    enrichment.” Id. (quotation marks and citation omitted). “Restitution restores a party who yielded
    excessive and unjust benefits to his or her rightful position.” Id. at 419. In sum, as our Supreme
    Court has explained,
    [u]njust enrichment has evolved from a category of restitutionary claims with
    components in law and equity into a unified independent doctrine that serves a
    unique legal purpose: it corrects for a benefit received by the defendant rather than
    compensating for the defendant’s wrongful behavior. Both the nature of an unjust-
    enrichment action and its remedy—whether restitution at law or in equity—
    separate it from tort and contract. [Id. at 422.]
    Additionally, plaintiff sought injunctive relief asking the court to enjoin the township from
    any further collection of the millage because the township was allegedly spending the revenue for
    unauthorized purposes. It is thus clear from examining plaintiff’s first amended complaint that the
    essence of his claim is that because the township has collected revenue from a voter-approved
    millage and improperly spent that revenue for purposes not authorized by the voters, the township
    should be enjoined from further collecting the millage revenue and should also make restitution
    for its unauthorized actions by returning the millage proceeds to the voters. “It is well settled that
    -11-
    the gravamen of an action is determined by reading the complaint as a whole, and by looking
    beyond mere procedural labels to determine the exact nature of the claim.” Adams v Adams (On
    Reconsideration), 
    276 Mich App 704
    , 710-711; 
    742 NW2d 399
     (2007).
    Accordingly, the crucial issue to be adjudicated with respect to plaintiff’s claims is whether
    the township improperly used the revenue from the millage and, if so, whether such a finding
    provides a proper basis for the remedies of restitution or injunctive relief. 6 Accordingly, because
    plaintiff only challenges the township’s use of tax revenue that has already been collected and
    because plaintiff seeks restitution on that basis rather than a refund of a tax overpayment, the relief
    sought by plaintiff is not a “typical tax refund” and his claim does not fall within the tax tribunal’s
    exclusive subject-matter jurisdiction under MCL 205.731(b) and MCL 205.774. See Romulus 
    413 Mich at 746-747
    .
    Our Supreme Court’s opinion in Hillsdale does not compel a different outcome. In
    Hillsdale, 
    494 Mich at
    50 & n 2, the circuit court granted plaintiff’s requested writ of mandamus
    to the extent of requiring the defendant county to levy the full amount of a millage that had been
    approved by the voters. Our Supreme Court addressed the issue “whether the Michigan Tax
    Tribunal possesse[d] jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ claim for mandamus to enforce the terms of a
    property-tax ballot proposition that provided for the levy of an additional 0.5 mill property tax in
    Hillsdale County to fund plaintiff Hillsdale County Senior Services, Inc. (HCSS).” 
    Id. at 48
    . The
    Court concluded that the case was within the tax tribunal’s exclusive jurisdiction because “the
    heart of the dispute pertains to the ‘amount of a charge’ by defendant to its property taxpayers,”
    which constituted a property tax “rate” for purposes of MCL 205.731(a). 
    Id. at 53-55
    . The
    Hillsdale Court stated, “this case does not involve a proceeding for a refund under MCL
    205.731(b); rather, it involves a proceeding under MCL 205.731(a).” 
    Id. at 61
    .
    The issue of how the millage revenue should be spent, which is the central issue in the
    instant case, was not before the Supreme Court in Hillsdale. Admittedly, the Hillsdale Court stated
    that “Wikman and Romulus are of limited application outside the context of special assessments.”
    
    Id. at 59
    . Also, with respect to the issue presented in the instant case regarding jurisdiction over a
    matter involving a challenge to how tax revenue was spent, there does not seem to be any
    appreciable difference between whether that revenue was collected pursuant to a special
    assessment or a millage. Accordingly, we conclude that Hillsdale does not provide any rule or
    legal analysis that requires us to reach a different result in this case.
    In the present case, as in Romulus, it is not the merely because plaintiff sought equitable
    relief that this case remains within the subject-matter jurisdiction of the circuit court. Romulus,
    413 Mich at 746. Rather, the Legislature did not indicate a clear intent to divest the circuit court
    of jurisdiction over a matter of this type because the subject matter of plaintiff’s complaint does
    not involve any of the enumerated issues in MCL 205.731(a) and the relief requested by plaintiff
    did not constitute a “refund” for purposes of MCL 205.731(b) and MCL 205.774. See Wikman,
    
    413 Mich at 631
    . Accordingly, the trial court erred when deciding it lacked subject-matter
    6
    At this juncture, we do not express an opinion on whether plaintiff would be entitled to either of
    these remedies if it were shown that the township improperly spent the millage funds.
    -12-
    jurisdiction. Consequently, we reverse that ruling. In light of our conclusion that the trial court
    had subject-matter jurisdiction, plaintiff’s additional argument that the trial court was precluded
    from making additional alternative rulings (regarding standing and the application of Bigger) if
    the trial court did not have subject-matter jurisdiction7 is moot. “An issue is deemed moot when
    an event occurs that renders it impossible for a reviewing court to grant relief.” B P 7 v Bureau of
    State Lottery, 
    231 Mich App 356
    , 359; 
    586 NW2d 117
     (1998).
    III. STANDING
    Plaintiff next argues that the trial court erred by determining that he lacked standing to
    bring this lawsuit.
    A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Whether a party has standing presents a question of law that this Court reviews de novo.
    Glen Lake-Crystal River Watershed Riparians v Glen Lake Ass’n, 
    264 Mich App 523
    , 527; 
    695 NW2d 508
     (2004). This Court “review[s] de novo a trial court’s decision to grant or deny a motion
    for summary disposition.” Winkler, 500 Mich at 333.
    B. ANALYSIS
    In Michigan, courts employ a “limited, prudential approach” to standing. Lansing Sch Ed
    Ass’n v Lansing Bd of Ed, 
    487 Mich 349
    , 352-353; 
    792 NW2d 686
     (2010). “[T]he standing inquiry
    focuses on whether a litigant is a proper party to request adjudication of a particular issue and not
    whether the issue itself is justiciable.” 
    Id. at 355
     (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    In Lansing, the Supreme Court held:
    We hold that Michigan standing jurisprudence should be restored to a limited,
    prudential doctrine that is consistent with Michigan’s long-standing historical
    approach to standing. Under this approach, a litigant has standing whenever there
    is a legal cause of action. Further, whenever a litigant meets the requirements of
    MCR 2.605, it is sufficient to establish standing to seek a declaratory judgment.
    Where a cause of action is not provided at law, then a court should, in its discretion,
    determine whether a litigant has standing. A litigant may have standing in this
    context if the litigant has a special injury or right, or substantial interest, that will
    be detrimentally affected in a manner different from the citizenry at large or if the
    statutory scheme implies that the Legislature intended to confer standing on the
    litigant. [Id. at 372.]
    7
    “When a court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction, the court’s acts and proceedings are of no force
    and validity.” Trost v Buckstop Lure Co, Inc, 
    249 Mich App 580
    , 586; 
    644 NW2d 54
     (2002)
    (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    -13-
    The Supreme Court explained the historical development of Michigan’s standing doctrine
    in relevant part as follows:
    Historically, the standing doctrine grew out of cases where parties were
    seeking writs of mandamus to compel a public officer to perform a statutory duty.
    Standing was a prudential limit, which is to say that the court’s decision to invoke
    it was “one of discretion and not of law.” The general rule was that a court would
    not hear a case where “an individual citizen, who is only interested in common with
    all other citizens of the state in the subject matter of [the] complaint,” was suing a
    public entity to force compliance with a legal duty. Generally, the court exercised
    its discretion to hear a case if the citizen had “some individual interest in the subject
    matter of [the] complaint which is not common to all the citizens of the state . . . .”
    This was sometimes articulated as a special or specific injury or interest. [Id. at
    355-356 (citations omitted; alterations and ellipsis in original).]
    At issue in the instance case is a concept sometimes referred to as “taxpayer standing.”
    “Traditionally, a private citizen has no standing to vindicate a public wrong or enforce a public
    right if he or she has not been injured in a manner that is different from the public at large.
    Therefore, under general standing principles, a taxpayer has no standing to challenge the
    expenditure of public funds if the threatened injury to him or her is no different than that to
    taxpayers generally.” Mich Ass’n of Home Builders v City of Troy, 
    504 Mich 204
    , 226; 
    934 NW2d 713
     (2019) (citation omitted). Accord Waterford Sch Dist v State Bd of Ed, 
    98 Mich App 658
    ,
    662; 
    296 NW2d 328
     (1980) (“Traditionally, a private citizen has no standing to vindicate a public
    wrong or enforce a public right where he is not hurt in any manner differently than the citizenry at
    large. Therefore, a taxpayer has no standing to challenge the expenditure of public funds where
    the threatened injury to him is no different than that to taxpayers generally.”) (citation omitted).
    In Waterford, this Court noted that this common-law bar on taxpayer lawsuits could be
    relaxed by statute. Id. at 662-663. The statute cited in Waterford, MCL 600.2041(3), is not
    implicated here because that statute pertains to actions to “prevent the illegal expenditure of state
    funds.” MCL 600.2041(3); Waterford, 
    98 Mich App at 663
     (emphasis added). However, there is
    an analogous statute relevant to the factual circumstances in this case. MCL 129.61 specifically
    grants standing in certain taxpayer actions if specific conditions are met. That statute provides:
    Any person or persons, firm or corporation, resident in any township or
    school district, paying taxes to such political unit, may institute suits or actions at
    law or in equity on behalf of or for the benefit of the treasurer of such political
    subdivision, for an accounting and/or the recovery of funds or moneys
    misappropriated or unlawfully expended by any public officer, board or
    commission of such political subdivision. Before such suit is instituted a demand
    shall be made on the public officer, board or commission whose duty it may be to
    maintain such suit followed by a neglect or refusal to take action in relation thereto.
    Security for costs shall be filed by the plaintiff or plaintiffs in any such suit or action
    and all costs and expenses of the same shall be paid by the person or persons
    instituting the same unless and until a recovery of such funds or moneys be obtained
    as the result of such proceedings. [MCL 129.61.]
    -14-
    Our Supreme Court has explained that MCL 129.61 reflects the Legislature’s authorization
    of lawsuits by individual township taxpayers to recover funds misappropriated or unlawfully
    expended by any public officer, board or commission of the township, if all of the statutory
    prerequisites are fulfilled. Rohde v Ann Arbor Pub Sch, 
    479 Mich 336
    , 346; 
    737 NW2d 158
    (2007), overruled in part on other grounds by Lansing, 
    487 Mich 349
    .8 The Rohde Court further
    explained some of the statutory requirements in MCL 129.61 as follows:
    The statute provides that before a taxpayer may institute a lawsuit, a demand must
    be made “on the public officer, board or commission whose duty it may be to
    maintain such suit” for recovery of unlawfully expended funds. The statute does
    not expressly require that the demand be for a lawsuit. Further, just because the
    public body has the ultimate duty to bring a lawsuit if it is needed does not mean
    that the demand must be for a lawsuit. The taxpayer demand, at a minimum, calls
    on a conscientious public body to reevaluate whether it is carrying out its duties
    properly and, in fact, this may result in the public body’s acting in compliance with
    the demand. It may do this by any number of means, only one of which is to enter
    into litigation. In fact, when the statute uses the phrase “whose duty it may be to
    maintain such suit” (emphasis added), it recognizes this. Moreover, the statute
    provides that after a demand, before the taxpayer may bring a suit, a precondition
    is that the public body must neglect or refuse “to take action in relation thereto.”
    This implies that the public body need not necessarily file suit, only that it needs to
    take some kind of action relating to the matter. [Rohde, 
    479 Mich at 345-346
    .]
    Here, plaintiff alleged that he resided in the township and paid taxes to the township, and
    he brought an action against the township to recover funds he alleged had been unlawfully
    expended by the township. Thus, plaintiff could potentially satisfy the requirements for standing
    under MCL 129.61. However, plaintiff does not claim to have made any kind of “demand” before
    initiating this lawsuit. Therefore, plaintiff did not satisfy the prerequisites for bringing an action
    under MCL 129.61. With respect to an alleged statutory violation, “a private cause of action does
    not exist where the statute provides a comprehensive, exclusive scheme of enforcement of the
    rights and duties it creates.” Home Builders, 504 Mich at 223 (quotation marks and citation
    omitted). Because plaintiff has not satisfied the statutory prerequisites under MCL 129.61,
    plaintiff has failed to demonstrate he has standing to bring this action.
    Moreover, even when there exists a statute that relaxes the common-law bar on taxpayer
    suits, “[t]he taxpayers must demonstrate that they will sustain substantial injury or suffer loss or
    damage as taxpayers, through increased taxation and the consequences thereof.” Waterford, 
    98 Mich App at 663
    . Rather than address the requirements of taxpayer standing, plaintiff merely
    argues that these principles do not apply. However, considering that plaintiff has attempted to
    8
    In Rohde, 
    479 Mich at 340
    , our Supreme Court held “that MCL 129.61 is unconstitutional to the
    extent that it confers standing on taxpayers who do not meet the three-part test for determining
    whether a party has constitutional standing.” However, in Lansing, the Court subsequently
    overruled Rohde and other cases applying a constitutional standing requirement. Lansing, 
    487 Mich at 352-353, 359-360
    , 371 n 18. Accordingly, MCL 129.61 remains good law under our
    Supreme Court’s current standing jurisprudence.
    -15-
    challenge the township’s use of the millage tax revenue that plaintiff claims to have paid as a
    property owner in the township, the principles of taxpayer standing undoubtedly apply. See Home
    Builders, 504 Mich at 226; Waterford, 
    98 Mich App at 662-663
    ; MCL 129.61. As explained
    above, plaintiff has not demonstrated that he possesses standing to bring this action.
    To the extent this reasoning differs from the trial court’s reasoning for determining that
    plaintiff did not have standing, this Court may nonetheless affirm a trial court’s decision that
    reaches the correct result for different reasons. See Kyocera Corp v Hemlock Semiconductor, LLC,
    
    313 Mich App 437
    , 449; 
    886 NW2d 445
     (2015) (“We will affirm a trial court’s decision on a
    motion for summary disposition if it reached the correct result, even if our reasoning differs.”).
    Thus, we affirm the trial court’s conclusion that plaintiff lacked standing, and the trial court’s grant
    of summary disposition in favor of the township is affirmed on that basis.
    Given this conclusion, we decline to address plaintiff’s final argument that the trial court
    erred in its application of Bigger. Even if plaintiff were correct that his action was not barred by
    the holding in Bigger, he still does not have standing to bring his claim and there is no relief this
    Court may grant based on this issue. Thus, the issue is moot. B P 7, 
    231 Mich App at 359
    .
    Affirmed. No costs are awarded to either party, a public question being involved. MCR
    7.216(A)(7) and MCR 7.219(A). City of Bay City v Bay County Treasurer, 
    292 Mich App 156
    ,
    172; 
    807 NW2d 892
     (2011).
    /s/ Mark J. Cavanagh
    /s/ Jane E. Markey
    /s/ Stephen L. Borrello
    -16-