This original taxpayer action is brought pursuant to the provisions of the Headlee Amendment, Const 1963, art 9, §§ 25 through 34. The action addresses the parameters of the state’s funding obligations under the second sentence of § 29 of the amendment — commonly referred to as the “prohibition of unfunded mandates” or POUM provision — and Proposal A, Const 1963, art 9, § 11. Our Supreme Court held that the state violated the POUM provision when it required plaintiff school districts to collect, maintain, and report to the Center for Educational Performance and Information (CEPI) certain types of data for úse by the state, without providing funds to reimburse the school districts for the necessary increased costs they would incur in order to comply with those recordkeeping mandates. Adair v Michigan,
We adopt the findings of fact and conclusions of law of the special master, with the exception of the special master’s characterization of plaintiffs’ burden of proof. Accordingly, we enter a declaratory judgment, in part, in favor of the state, but also remand this matter to the special master to take additional proofs and conduct further fact-finding. The motion to expedite is denied as moot. We decide this case without oral argument pursuant to MCR 7.214(E).
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The special master convened an evidentiary hearing, the subject of which was plaintiffs’ claim that the existing appropriations do not fully fund the necessary costs of the CEPI mandates as the POUM provision requires. Plaintiffs’ lead counsel asserted during his opening statement that, in order to sustain this claim, plaintiffs must show only that the amounts appropri
Our Supreme Court granted leave in Adair I, in part, to determine “whether plaintiffs must introduce evidence of a specific, quantified increase in costs resulting from a violation of the Headlee Amendment provision prohibiting unfunded mandates to establish entitlement to a declaratory judgment” when the plaintiffs had alleged that the state had failed to appropriate any funding to reimburse the school districts for complying with the CEPI recordkeeping mandates. Adair I,
to establish a violation of the POUM provision, a plaintiff must show that the state required a new activity or service or an increase in the level of activities or services. If no state appropriation was made to cover the increased burden on local government, the plaintiff need not show the amount of increased costs. It is then the state’s burden to demonstrate that no state funding was required because the requirement did not actually increase costs or the increased costs were not necessary. [Id. at 480.]
The majority rejected the state’s claim that it was the school districts’ burden, and not its burden, to demonstrate that any additional costs incurred in order to comply with the recordkeeping mandates met the definition of “necessary cost” under MCL 21.233(6) and were not de minimis under MCL 21.232(4). The majority explained:
Neither Const 1963, art 9, § 29 nor MCL 21.233 suggests that plaintiffs bear the burden of proving precisely how much the school districts’ costs increased as a result of the mandate. In fact, the language of MCL 21.233 implies the opposite. That section defines “necessary cost” as the “net cost of an activity or service provided by a local unit of*311 government.” The “net cost” is defined as “the actual cost to the state if the state were to provide the activity or service mandated as a state requirement.. ..” [Adair I,486 Mich at 486-487 .]
Likewise, the majority rejected the state’s argument that the school districts were required to produce evidence of specific dollar-amount increases in the costs incurred by the districts in order to comply with the CEPI mandates. The majority indicated that the conclusion that “a plaintiff does not have the burden to make such a showing to establish entitlement to a declaratory judgment under the POUM provision ... is axiomatic from the language of Const 1963, art 9, § 29, previous caselaw involving the Headlee Amendment, and the underlying purpose for seeking a declaratory judgment.” Adair I,
The terms “net cost” and “actual cost” suggest a quantifiable dollar amount. However, nothing in MCL 21.233 suggests that it was intended to change the burden of proof in Const 1963, art 9, § 29. The specific costs that would be incurred are defined by reference to what costs the state would incur if it had to pay for the increased costs itself. Thus, it is the Legislature’s burden to demonstrate that those costs were not “necessary” under one or more of the exceptions in MCL 21.233(6)(a) to (d). Otherwise, the Legislature must determine what dollar amount is necessary, then appropriate that amount to the school districts.
This is so because MCL 21.233(6) defines “net cost” as “the actual cost to the state” if the state were to provide the activity or service required. Clearly, the Legislature is in a position far superior to plaintiffs’ to determine what the actual cost to itself would be if it performed the increased recordkeeping and reporting duties. Proofs on this point are easily accessible to the state because it could ascertain the costs it would incur if it provided the new activity. The dispositive issue is the cost to the state if it were to provide*312 the new or increased activity or service, not the cost incurred by the local governmental unit.
To impose such a requirement on plaintiffs would be illogical and inconsistent with the purposes of the POUM provision of the Headlee Amendment. We have noted that the POUM provision is intended to address future services and activities. Plaintiffs in this case filed suit fewer than two months after EO 2000-9 took effect. The parties stipulated at trial that plaintiff school districts were not required to begin complying with the order’s recordkeeping requirements until two years later.
Therefore, had this case been resolved in a timely fashion, EO 2000-9 would not have required plaintiffs to demonstrate specific amounts of necessary costs incurred. Moreover, it would have been difficult for them to do so....
Finally, plaintiffs in this case seek a declaratory judgment, not monetary damages. An action for a declaratory judgment is typically equitable in nature and subject to different rules than other causes of action. “The declaratory judgment rule was intended and has been liberally construed to provide a broad, flexible remedy with a view to making the courts more accessible to the people.” We have also consistently held that “a court is not precluded from reaching issues before actual injuries or losses have occurred.”
Defendants claim that a finding of necessary increased costs cannot be established without a comparison between the specific net costs before and after the required change in activities. For the reasons stated previously, we reject this argument. Had this action proceeded to a prompt resolution, plaintiffs could not have demonstrated such a side-by-side comparison of the “before and after” costs incurred to meet the recordkeeping requirements. It would be nonsensical to impose this additional evidentiary requirement on plaintiffs here when, in another case, it would be impossible for the plaintiffs to make such a showing. [Adair I,486 Mich at 488-491 (citations omitted).]
In the instant case, the Plaintiffs’ Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”) acknowledges that the Legislature appropriated funds to pay for the CEPI/Data Link Mandates. Consequently, the Plaintiffs have a “higher burden” which requires them to produce evidence of specific dollar-amount increases in the costs incurred in order to comply with the CEPI requirements. [Adair I,486 Mich at 480 n 29, 488.] Such a ruling is consistent not only with Adair I, but with [Adair v Michigan,470 Mich 105 , 111, 119-120;680 NW2d 386 (2004) [Adair II)].[2 ] The Plaintiffs’ poignant argument that the general direction of Adair I mitigates requiring them to establish the insufficiency of the amount of appropriation overlooks the factual distinction between Adair I (no appropriation made) and this case (tens of millions of dollars of appropriations made). Furthermore, once the state establishes an appropriation, the Plaintiffs are equipped to attack whether the amount is sufficient and the extent of any such deficiency. In fact, the Plaintiffs [sic] expert’s report does attack the methodology used by the state and concludes that the mandate was not fully funded. Unfortunately for their case, the Plaintiffs have failed to do anything else. Instead, they concede that they cannot establish a Specific Number. As such, the case is fatally flawed, and dismissal of the claim is warranted. Cf. Adair I, [486 Mich] at 480 n 29; Id. at 508 (Markman, J., dissenting).
*314 To hold otherwise could subject the taxpayers, courts, and parties to a cycle of never ending lawsuits in which the Plaintiffs only seek to prove that appropriations do not amount to full funding, while depriving the courts [of] the ability to declare what a full level of funding would be. This undermines the entire purpose of the Headlee Amendment and the efficient administration of justice.
The special master correctly recognized that Adair I is factually distinguishable from the instant case. In Adair I, the Legislature failed to appropriate any funding to reimburse the school districts for the necessary increased costs associated with the CEPI recordkeeping mandates. In this case, plaintiffs readily concede that the state has appropriated funding. The special master also correctly recognized that the Adair I majority intimated that in circumstances where an appropriation had been made, as in this case, a plaintiff asserting a POUM violation “would likely have a higher burden in order to show a POUM violation” because “[u]nder those circumstances, the state would not have violated the POUM provision per se by failing to provide funding.” Id. at 480 n 29.
We conclude that the special master relied too heavily on the distinguishing factual circumstances present in this case when determining the nature of plaintiffs’ burden of proof. Although the Adair I majority qualified its ruling that a “plaintiff need not show the amount of increased costs” with the prefatory phrase “[i]f no state appropriation was made to cover the increased burden on local government,” id. at 480, the majority based its ultimate ruling on legal and not factual grounds. Indeed, the Adair I majority expressly and broadly ruled that neither Const 1963, art 9, § 29 nor MCL 21.233 impose on a plaintiff the burden of proving “how much the school districts’ costs increased as a result of the mandate” or the “specific-dollar amount increases in
Because the Adair I majority did not address what burden a plaintiff may bear when challenging the adequacy of an existing appropriation under the POUM provision, we are now tasked with doing so. Generally, a plaintiff seeking a declaratory judgment bears the affirmative duty to prove the existence or nonexistence of a fact or facts alleged and in dispute concerning an issue raised between the parties; i.e., plaintiffs must plead and prove facts that “indicate an adverse interest necessitating the sharpening of the issues raised.” Shavers v Attorney General,
With these principles in mind, and considering the Adair I majority’s ruling that the POUM provision did not place the burden on plaintiffs to show a quantified dollar amount of any increase in necessary costs associated with complying with a state mandate, we conclude that plaintiffs’ “higher burden” must be something less than proving “how much the school districts’ costs increased as a result of the mandate” or of “specific dollar-amount increases in the costs incurred in order to comply with the CEPI requirements.” Adair I,
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We agree with the special master, however, that the Legislature did not impose unfunded mandates upon the school districts in violation of the POUM provision, as a matter of law, when it enacted
The Headlee Amendment requires the state to fund the necessary costs of new or increased activities or services mandated by the state, Adair I,
A new activity or service or an increase in the level of any activity or service beyond that required by existing law shall not be required by the legislature or any state agency of units of Local Government, unless a state appropriation is made and disbursed to pay the unit of Local Government for any necessary increased costs. [Const 1963, art 9, § 29.]
Plaintiffs assert that the four public acts at issue mandate new or increased activities or services within the meaning of the POUM provision. These public acts amend various provisions of the Revised School Code, the teacher tenure act, and PERA. Generally, among other activities, the amendments require the implementation of an annual employee evaluation system for teachers and certain school administrators, allow a tenured teacher to be demoted or discharged upon a showing that the reason for demotion or discharge is not “arbitrary and capricious,” and add new subjects that may not be topics of collective bargaining between a public school employer and a bargaining representative of its employees. The special master rejected plaintiffs’ position for the reason that “the Tenure Reforms involve benefits for employees and do not involve state mandated services or activities that require payment under the Headlee Amendment.” The special master correctly determined that the public acts at issue do not
Michigan jurisprudence has long recognized that the teacher tenure act protects public teachers from the arbitrary and capricious employment practices of school boards. Tomiak v Hamtramck Sch Dist,
Similarly, the revisions made to the Revised School Code do not implicate the POUM provision. The mandated teacher and administrator evaluation processes impose standardized evaluation processes on the school districts, pursuant to which the effectiveness of teachers and administrators may be documented and rewarded. In addition, the processes provide a means by
Plaintiffs assert, however, that the public employee benefit or protection exception found in the last sentence of MCL 21.232(1) is facially unconstitutional because the exception precludes the school districts from recovering from the state the necessary supervisory and administrative costs of complying with the new or increased activities mandated by the public acts. According to plaintiffs, this exception violates the intent of the voters who ratified the Headlee Amendment, because those voters did not intend any exceptions to an application of the POUM provision, as revealed by the clear and plain language of the provision, which sets forth no exceptions.
Plaintiffs correctly observe that “[t]he state may not avoid the clear requirements of art 9, § 29 either by specific statute or by implementation of definitions adverse to the mandate of the people.” Durant v State Bd of Ed,
Finally, the revision of PERA does not implicate the POUM provision. The addition of subjects that may not be topics of collective bargaining between a public school employer and a bargaining representative of its employees does not impose any state-mandated “activity” or “service.” Rather,
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We also agree with the special master that our prior decisions in Durant v Michigan (On Remand),
The Legislature appropriates and disburses school funding through annual amendments to the State School Aid Act, MCL 388.1601 et seq. Schmidt v Dep’t of Ed,
Plaintiffs allege that these § 152a allocations violate Const 1963, art 9, §§ 25 and 29 because the allocations reduce the overall aid to local schools appropriated in § 11 of the State School Aid Act and thereby shift the tax burden for the necessary costs of the recordkeeping
In Durant III,
IV
We also reject, as did the special master, the state’s claim that plaintiffs’ action is barred by an application of the doctrine of res judicata.
The doctrine of res judicata is employed to prevent multiple suits litigating the same cause of action. The doctrine bars a second, subsequent action when (1) the prior action was decided on the merits, (2) both actions involve the same parties or their privies, and (3) the matter in the second case was, or could have been, resolved in the first instance. Sewell v Clean Cut Mgt, Inc,463 Mich 569 , 575;621 NW2d 222 (2001). This Court has taken a broad approach to the doctrine of res judicata, holding that it bars not only claims already litigated, but also every claim arising from the same transaction that the parties, exercising reasonable diligence, could have raised but did not. Dart v Dart, 460 Mich 573, 586;597 NW2d 82 (1999).
“ ‘Whether a factual grouping constitutes a “transaction” for purposes of res judicata is to be determined pragmatically, by considering whether the facts are related in time, space, origin or motivation, [and] whether they form a convenient trial unit....’” Adair II,
Plaintiffs’ challenge to the constitutionality of the teacher and administrator evaluation requirements is not barred by res judicata. The Legislature initially enacted these evaluation requirements in
Likewise, plaintiffs’ claim that the Legislature failed to fully fund the necessary costs of the recordkeeping mandates is not barred by an application of res judicata. As previously observed, plaintiffs allege the amounts appropriated by the Legislature in § 152a of
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Finally, the state argues as a defense that the $3 billion-plus appropriation of discretionary funds found in § 22 of both
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A declaratory judgment is granted, in part, to the state consistent with this opinion. We remand this matter to the special master to reopen proofs and to make factual findings regarding plaintiffs’ claim that the existing appropriations do not fully fund the necessary costs of the CEPI mandates. We retain jurisdiction.
Notes
Section 25 of the Headlee Amendment summarizes the “fairly complex system of revenue and tax limits” imposed by the provisions of the amendment, Durant v Michigan,
Although Adair II preceded Adair I, this opinion refers to them as indicated for the sake of consistency with the special master’s references.
For these same reasons, we reject the state’s claim that the special master erred when he failed to summarily dismiss the school districts’ challenge to the adequacy of the appropriation earlier in the proceedings on the basis of the districts’ inability to prove an actual quantified amount of underfunding.
The Legislature defined the term “service” for purposes of § 29 as a “program of a local unit of government which is available to the general public or is provided for the citizens of the local unit of government.” MCL 21.234(1). Because the evaluation and tenure processes are not available to or provided for the general public, these processes do not constitute a program, and MCL 21.234(1) is not implicated on the facts of this case. We decline to address the constitutionality of MCL 21.234(1) when the statute has no application.
