D T & v. Associates Inc v. Director of Health and Human Services ( 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
    T & V ASSOCIATES, INC d/b/a RIVER CREST                                FOR PUBLICATION
    CATERING,                                                              June 29, 2023
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v                                                                      No. 361727
    Court of Claims No.
    DIRECTOR OF HEALTH AND HUMAN                                           21-000075-MM
    SERVICES,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Before: BOONSTRA, P.J., and GADOLA and YATES, JJ.
    YATES, J. (dissenting).
    For far too long, in courts all across this country, the COVID-19 wars have raged on despite
    the fact that nearly every governmental authority at the federal, state, and local levels has declared
    an end to the COVID-19 emergency. The overheated rhetoric in briefs and oral arguments suggests
    that the remaining COVID-19 disputes on court dockets are sacred causes, rather than mere court
    cases, and the litigants and attorneys in these disputes seem determined to keep these battles going
    endlessly. But it doesn’t have to be this way. We judges have the power and, in my view, the duty
    under the mootness doctrine to dismiss the combatants from the COVID wars and bring down the
    curtain on this chapter in our history. Because the majority has decided instead to resolve the case
    before us on the merits, I dissent.
    I. THE CONTEXT OF THE DISPUTE
    As the majority accurately notes, the facts of this case are essentially undisputed. Similarly,
    the regulatory regime at issue here is easy to describe. Shortly after our Supreme Court ruled that
    the Governor lacked statutory authority to unilaterally prescribe protective measures to address the
    COVID-19 emergency, In re Certified Questions From United States Dist Court, 
    506 Mich 332
    ;
    
    958 NW2d 1
     (2020), the Director of the Department of Health and Human Services (the Director)
    picked up the ball and ran with it, issuing regulatory measures under MCL 333.2253 to combat the
    spread of COVID-19. For example, on March 19, 2021, the Director issued an “Emergency Order
    -1-
    under MCL 333.2253 – Gatherings and Face Mask Order” (the Order), which has been challenged
    by plaintiff, T & V Associates, Inc. (T&V), in this case.
    T&V alleged that it had operated a catering service and banquet facility in Oakland County
    for many years. As a matter of course, its banquets involved more than 100 guests and lasted well
    beyond 11:00 p.m. That mattered because the Order from the Director barred “[g]atherings . . . at
    food service establishments . . . offering indoor dining” that involved more than “100 persons” or
    took place “between the hours of 11:00 PM and 4:00 AM.” Thus, T&V filed this action requesting
    a declaratory judgment that MCL 333.2253 constitutes an unconstitutional delegation of legislative
    authority and a violation of T&V’s constitutional rights to procedural and substantive due process.
    Consequently, T&V’s constitutional challenge was based on the notion that it needed declaratory
    relief under MCR 2.605(A)(1) to “guide [its] future conduct in order to preserve legal rights[,]”
    Int’l Union, United Auto, Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of America v Central
    Mich Univ Trustees, 
    295 Mich App 486
    , 495; 
    815 NW2d 132
     (2012), rather than compensatory
    damages to account for economic harm it had suffered.
    T&V’s demand for declaratory relief to guide its future conduct seemed misplaced because,
    as the majority notes, T&V “has closed its banquet facility” and ceased its commercial operations.
    Beyond that, T&V’s constitutional challenge to the Director’s Order issued under MCL 333.2253
    seemed unnecessary because our Legislature amended that statute after this controversy arose, see
    
    2022 PA 274
     (effective March 29, 2023), and the Director rescinded the Order at issue here. Thus,
    any future regulatory impingement on T&V’s rights would necessarily be promulgated under the
    new version of MCL 333.2253, rather than the earlier version on which the Director’s Order rested.
    Despite these warning signs, the Court of Claims and the majority on this appeal chose to dive into
    the turbulent waters of COVID litigation by resolving T&V’s constitutional claims on the merits.
    That approach to this case plainly contravenes the mootness doctrine.
    II. THE MOOTNESS DOCTRINE MANDATES DISMISSAL
    For a host of reasons, I believe this case is as moot as moot can be.1 “A moot case presents
    ‘nothing but abstract questions of law which do not rest upon existing facts or rights.’ ” TM v MZ,
    
    501 Mich 312
    , 317; 
    916 NW2d 473
     (2018). “It involves a case in which a judgment ‘cannot have
    any practical legal effect upon a then existing controversy.’ ” 
    Id.
     Issues of mootness “are questions
    of law that are reviewed de novo.” Adams v Parole Bd, 
    340 Mich App 251
    , 259; 
    985 NW2d 881
    (2022). Because “[t]he question of mootness is a threshold issue that a court must address before
    it reaches substantive issues of a case[,]” In re Tchakarova, 
    328 Mich App 172
    , 178; 
    936 NW2d 863
     (2019), we cannot take up the merits of T&V’s constitutional claims if the mootness doctrine
    1
    I realize that a panel of this Court, by a 2-to-1 vote, denied the Director’s motion to dismiss this
    appeal as moot. T&V Assoc Inc v Dir of Health and Human Servs, unpublished order of the Court
    of Appeals, entered September 19, 2022 (Docket No. 361727). But that order, “made without any
    reasoning provided,” does not preclude us from taking up the issue of mootness now. Reynolds v
    Bureau of State Lottery, 
    240 Mich App 84
    , 103-104; 
    610 NW2d 597
     (2000).
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    applies. In considering the impact of the mootness doctrine here, we can follow a well-worn path
    to the legally mandated approach of dismissal.
    When we recently faced a challenge to a mask mandate issued in response to the COVID-
    19 emergency but then rescinded before the dispute reached this Court, we reasoned that “the issue
    on appeal is technically moot for purposes of the instant litigation[.]” Flynn v Ottawa Co Dep’t of
    Pub Health, ___ Mich App ___, ___; ___ NW2d ___ (2022) (Docket No. 359774); slip op at 4. I
    believe that statement in a published opinion binds us to the conclusion of mootness here. But we
    have consistently noted that mootness is not an inflexible doctrine, and there are exceptions to the
    general rule requiring dismissal when mootness exists. Turunen v Dir of Dep’t of Nat’l Resources,
    
    336 Mich App 468
    , 480; 
    971 NW2d 20
     (2021). Specifically, a moot issue will be reviewed if the
    issue is one of public significance that is “likely to recur, and yet likely to evade judicial review.”
    Flynn, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 4. Also, a moot issue may be reviewed under the voluntary
    cessation doctrine, which provides that:
    “[V]oluntary cessation of allegedly illegal conduct does not deprive the tribunal of
    power to hear and determine the case, i.e., does not make the case moot. A
    controversy may remain to be settled in such circumstances, e.g., a dispute over the
    legality of the challenged practices. The defendant is free to return to his old ways.
    This, together with a public interest in having the legality of the practices settled,
    militates against a mootness conclusion.” [Ed Subscription Serv, Inc v American
    Ed Servs, Inc, 
    115 Mich App 413
    , 430; 
    320 NW2d 684
     (1982), quoting United
    States v W T Grant Co, 
    345 US 629
    , 632; 
    73 S Ct 894
    ; 
    97 L Ed 1303
     (1953).]
    Under the voluntary cessation doctrine, “[t]he case may nevertheless be moot if the defendant can
    demonstrate that there is no reasonable expectation that the wrong will be repeated.” W T Grant
    Co, 
    345 US at 633
     (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    The Director long ago rescinded the Order at issue here, so T&V’s challenge to that Order
    is moot because there is no meaningful relief we can grant and any judgment from this Court would
    have no practical effect on an existing controversy. See Flynn, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 4.
    A question remains, however, whether we should review the merits of this case under the voluntary
    cessation doctrine or because the issues are likely to recur, yet evade judicial review. I cannot find
    that either of those two exceptions applies in this case.
    A. VOLUNTARY CESSATION
    In considering voluntary cessation as a basis for reaching the merits in this case, this Court
    must begin by acknowledging that, no later than June 22, 2021, all restrictions on indoor gatherings
    and dining were rescinded. That was more than two years ago, and there is nothing in the record
    to suggest that the Director rescinded the Order at issue here in response to T&V’s lawsuit. Cf.
    Resurrection Sch v Hertel, 35 F4th 524, 529 (CA 6, 2022). There is a presumption of good faith
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    by governmental actors, see Brach v Newsom, 38 F4th 6, 12-14 (CA 9, 2022),2 and the facts of this
    case do not rebut that presumption. Under the voluntary cessation doctrine, a case is moot if “the
    defendant can demonstrate that there is no reasonable expectation that the wrong will be repeated.”
    W T Grant Co, 
    345 US at 633
     (quotation marks and citation omitted). Given the Director’s good-
    faith rescission of the Order two years ago, coupled with the declaration of the end of the COVID-
    19 emergency by federal and Michigan officials alike, there remains no reasonable expectation of
    the reinstitution of the Order challenged in this case.
    The majority brushes aside mootness concerns, contending that “plaintiff continues to be a
    banquet and catering corporation and MCL 333.2253 continues to authorize [the Director] to issue
    emergency orders.” I disagree with both of those contentions. First, T&V shut down its operations
    many months ago and no longer conducts any banquet business. But in its reply brief, T&V insists
    that it was forced out of business by the Director’s Order and it might return to business if only it
    can obtain a favorable ruling from this Court. To accept this argle-bargle as a persuasive response
    to a mootness argument is to drain the mootness doctrine of all meaning. Nothing now in place as
    a result of the Director’s actions prevents T&V from resuming its catering business, so nothing in
    this record excepts this case from the application of the mootness doctrine. Second, our Legislature
    amended MCL 333.2253 during the pendency of this case, see 
    2022 PA 274
     (effective March 29,
    2023),3 so it is now literally impossible for the Director to invoke the challenged version of MCL
    333.2253 to once again impose the restrictions contested by T&V. Thus, the voluntary cessation
    exception to the mootness doctrine has no application here.
    B. LIKELY TO RECUR, YET EVADE JUDICIAL REVIEW
    The “likely to recur, and yet likely to evade judicial review” exception to the general rule
    of mootness manifestly does not apply here. To determine whether review of an issue is warranted
    under that exception, we must consider whether the issue “(1) is of public significance, (2) is likely
    to recur, and (3) may evade judicial review[.]” Gleason v Kincaid, 
    323 Mich App 308
    , 315; 
    917 NW2d 685
     (2018). There must exist “a reasonable expectation that the publicly significant alleged
    wrong will recur yet escape judicial review[.]” 
    Id.
     Even assuming, for the sake of argument, that
    T&V’s challenge to the Order presents an issue of public significance, see Flynn, ___ Mich App
    at ___; slip op at 4, there is no reasonable expectation that any alleged wrong that flowed from the
    Order will recur, yet escape judicial review.
    With regard to recurrence, the Director rescinded the challenged Order more than two years
    ago. And since that Order was rescinded, the federal government and the State of Michigan have
    both declared an end to the COVID-19 emergency. Moreover, our Legislature has since amended
    2
    Although nonbinding, decisions of lower federal courts may be considered for their persuasive
    value. In re Estate of Vansach, 
    324 Mich App 371
    , 388 n 8; 
    922 NW2d 136
     (2018).
    3
    The amendment cabined the authority of the Director to “prohibit the gathering of people for any
    purpose” by adding two restrictions set forth in MCL 333.2253(4) and (5) and expressly subjecting
    the Director’s authority under MCL 333.2253(1) to those restrictions. To be sure, neither of those
    restrictions deals with the operations of restaurants and banquet facilities, but the amendment has
    a significant impact on the Director’s authority.
    -4-
    MCL 333.2253, thereby significantly modifying the statute on which the Director relied in issuing
    the Order. So the issue here will recur if the Director decides to rely on an outdated version of a
    statute to promulgate an order to address a problem that Michigan no longer regards as a problem.
    That seems highly unlikely, to say the least.
    Finally, T&V overlooks a serious flaw in its pleadings to argue that its challenge to orders
    issued under MCL 333.2253 will likely evade review. T&V’s original complaint and its amended
    complaint request declaratory relief, but not compensatory damages. To be sure, T&V’s pleadings
    allege in passing that the company “lost enormous amounts of money” because of the Order, but
    neither the complaint nor the amended complaint quantifies those purported losses or even requests
    compensatory relief in the form of money damages. Instead, each of the complaints is styled from
    start to finish as a request “for declaratory relief.” Unlike requests for declaratory relief, “ ‘[c]laims
    for damages are largely able to avoid mootness challenges.’ ” Duckett v Solky, ___ Mich App ___,
    ___; ___ NW2d ___ (2022) (Docket No. 357346); slip op at 12. By requesting declaratory relief,
    but not money damages, T&V put the mootness doctrine squarely in play in this case. In contrast,
    if a business aggrieved by the Director’s Order files an action seeking money damages, mootness
    almost certainly will not present a bar to that claim, which thereby will not evade judicial review.
    But this is not such a case, so T&V’s challenge to the Director’s Order is subject to the mootness
    doctrine, which bars T&V’s constitutional claims. Because the majority has decided not to apply
    the mootness doctrine here to dismiss T&V’s claims, I dissent.
    /s/ Christopher P. Yates
    -5-