BONNER v CITY OF BRIGHTON
Docket No. 146520
Supreme Court of Michigan
Argued December 12, 2013. Decided April 24, 2014.
495 Mich. 209
Leon V. and Marilyn E. Bonner brought an action against the city of Brighton in the Livingston Circuit Court, claiming that the city‘s order under Brighton Code of Ordinances (BCO) § 18-59 to demolish three unoccupied residential structures on their property violated their procedural and substantive due process rights. BCO § 18-59 states that if a structure is determined unsafe as defined under the standards set forth in BCO § 18-46 and the cost of the repairs would exceed 100 percent of the true cash value of the structure before it was deemed unsafe, the repairs are presumed unreasonable and the structure is presumed to be a public nuisance that may be ordered demolished without providing the owner an option to repair it. Under this provision, the city notified plaintiffs of the structures’ defects and code violations, informed them that the structures had been deemed unsafe and were presumed to be a public nuisance, and ordered them to demolish the structures within 60 days with no option to repair. Plaintiffs appealed this determination under the process set forth in BCO § 18-61 to the city council, which concluded that the buildings were unsafe and unreasonable to repair under BCO § 18-59 and that demolition was required within 60 days of the order. Plaintiffs then filed an independent cause of action in the circuit court, alleging various constitutional claims, and the city thereafter filed its own action in the circuit court to enforce the demolition order. The court, Michael P. Hatty, J., denied the city‘s request for a preliminary injunction and granted plaintiffs partial summary disposition, concluding that BCO § 18-59 violated substantive due process on its face by not giving property owners the opportunity to repair their property. The circuit court denied the city‘s motion for reconsideration. The Court of Appeals, MARKEY, P.J., and SHAPIRO, J. (MURRAY, J., dissenting), granted the city‘s application for leave to appeal and affirmed, holding that BCO § 18-59 violated property owners’ substantive and procedural due process rights. 298 Mich App 693 (2012). The Supreme Court granted the city‘s application for leave to appeal. 494 Mich 873 (2013).
In a unanimous opinion by Justice KELLY, the Supreme Court held:
BCO § 18-59 did not constitute an unconstitutional deprivation of substantive due process because the ordinance‘s unreasonable-to-repair presumption was reasonably related to the city‘s legitimate interest in promoting the health, safety, and welfare of its citizens. The ordinance was not an arbitrary and unreasonable restriction on a property owner‘s use of his or her property because there were circumstances under which the presumption could be overcome and repairs permitted. Further, the demolition procedures provided property owners with procedural due process by providing the right to appeal an adverse decision to the city council as well as the right to subsequent judicial review. Because plaintiffs did not show that no aggrieved property owners could meaningfully exercise their right to review or that such review was not conducted impartially, they failed to establish that BCO § 18-59, on its face, violated procedural due process rights.
- The Court of Appeals erred by failing to separately analyze plaintiffs’ substantive and procedural due process claims. The substantive component of due process protects against the arbitrary exercise of governmental power, whereas the procedural component ensures constitutionally sufficient procedures for the protection of life, liberty, and property interests. Accordingly, whether BCO § 18-59 was facially unconstitutional for denying property owners the opportunity to repair unsafe structures in violation of the right to substantive due process was a distinct issue from whether the ordinance was facially unconstitutional for permitting the demolition of unsafe structures without providing adequate procedural safeguards in violation of the right to procedural due process.
- The ordinance did not facially violate property owners’ substantive due process rights. Because property owners do not have a fundamental right to repair a structure municipally deemed unsafe before that structure can be demolished, the government‘s interference with that right need only be reasonably related to a legitimate governmental interest. BCO § 18-59 was enacted pursuant to the city‘s police powers, and its purpose was to abate a public nuisance by requiring repair or demolition of unsafe structures. Nuisance abatement is a legitimate exercise of police power, and demolition is a permissible method of achieving that end. Further, plaintiffs did not show that BCO § 18-59 violated their substantive due process rights as an arbitrary and unreasonable restriction on their property interests given that the unreasonable-to-repair presumption could be overcome by pre- senting a viable repair plan, evidence from the challenger‘s own experts that the repair costs would not exceed 100 percent of the property value, or evidence that the structure subject to demolition has some sort of cultural, historical, familial, or artistic value. The unreasonable-to-repair presumption in BCO § 18-59 was also not arbitrary because it did not represent a total prohibition on a property owner‘s opportunity to repair an unsafe structure and it applied uniformly to all nonexempt structures that had repair costs in excess of 100 percent of their value before they became unsafe.
- Plaintiffs failed to establish that BCO § 18-59 constituted a facial procedural due process violation. Affording a property owner an option to repair as a matter of right was not required before an unsafe structure could be demolished, and existing procedures in the ordinance comported with due process. Specifically, BCO § 18-52 required the city manager to serve the structure‘s owner with written notice of the determination whether the structure at issue can be made safe or whether demolition will ensue and of the owner‘s right to appeal this determination to the city council pursuant to BCO § 18-61, and the owner had the right to appeal the city council‘s decision to the circuit court pursuant to BCO § 18-63. The city was not required to provide for a reasonable opportunity to repair the unsafe structure in order for the ordinance to pass constitutional scrutiny, and the unreasonableness-to-repair presumption was rebuttable.
Court of Appeals judgment reversed; case remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
- CONSTITUTIONAL LAW — DUE PROCESS — SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS — PROCEDURAL DUE PROCESS.
Courts must analyze claims of substantive and procedural due process violations separately; the substantive component of due process protects against the arbitrary exercise of governmental power, whereas the procedural component ensures constitutionally sufficient procedures for the protection of life, liberty, and property interests (
US Const, Am XIV ;Const 1963, art 1, § 17 ). - CONSTITUTIONAL LAW — DUE PROCESS — SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS — CITY ORDINANCES — UNSAFE STRUCTURES — DEMOLITION ORDERS — REPAIR.
A city ordinance that allows the demolition of a structure that has been determined to be unsafe on the presumption that it is a public nuisance that would be unreasonable to repair if the repairs would cost more than the true cash value of the structure before it was deemed unsafe bears a reasonable relationship to a legitimate governmental interest; such an ordinance is not an arbitrary and unreasonable restriction on the owner‘s use of the property if the presumption can be overcome and repairs permitted (
US Const, Am XIV ;Const 1963, art 1, § 17 ). - CONSTITUTIONAL LAW — DUE PROCESS — PROCEDURAL DUE PROCESS — CITY ORDINANCES — UNSAFE STRUCTURES — DEMOLITION ORDERS — REPAIR.
A city ordinance that allows the demolition of a structure that has been determined to be unsafe on the presumption that it is a public nuisance that would be unreasonable to repair that also provides a meaningful right to an impartial review of the demolition order as well as subsequent judicial review is not a facial violation of the property owner‘s right to procedural due process of law (
US Const, Am XIV ;Const 1963, art 1, ).§ 17
Garan Lucow Miller, PC (by Rosalind Rochkind and Caryn A. Gordon), Pedersen, Keenan, King, Wachsberg & Andrzejak, PC (by Michael M. Wachsberg), and Law Offices of Paul E. Burns (by Paul E. Burns and Bradford L. Maynes) for the city of Brighton.
Essex Park Law Office, PC (by Dennis B. Dubuc), for Leon and Marilyn Bonner.
Amici Curiae:
McClelland & Anderson, LLP (by David E. Pierson), and Vercruysse Murray and Calzone PC (by Ronald E. Reynolds) for the Real Property Section of the State Bar of Michigan.
Plunkett Cooney (by Mary Massaron Ross and Josephine A. DeLorenzo) for the Michigan Municipal League.
McClelland & Anderson, LLP (by Gregory L. McClelland and Melissa A. Hagen), for the Michigan Association of Realtors.
Johnson, Rosati, Schultz & Joppich, P.C. (by Carol A. Rosati and Thomas R. Schultz), for the Public Corporation Law Section of the State Bar of Michigan.
KELLY, J. This case involves two landowners’ facial challenge to the constitutionality of § 18-59 of the Brighton Code of Ordinances (BCO), which creates a rebuttable
As a preliminary matter, we clarify that the landowners’ substantive due process and procedural due process claims implicate two separate constitutional rights, and that we must analyze each claim under separate constitutional tests. The Court of Appeals therefore erred by improperly conflating these analyses and subsequently determining that BCO § 18-59 facially violates plaintiffs’ general due process rights. Instead, when each due process protection is separately examined pursuant to the proper test, the ordinance does not violate either protection on its face.
We hold that BCO § 18-59 does not constitute an unconstitutional deprivation of substantive due process because the ordinance‘s unreasonable-to-repair presumption is reasonably related to the city of Brighton‘s legitimate interest in promoting the health, safety, and welfare of its citizens. Furthermore, the ordinance is not an arbitrary and unreasonable restriction on a property owner‘s use of his or her property because there are circumstances under which the presumption may be overcome and repairs permitted.
We likewise hold that the city of Brighton‘s existing demolition procedures provide property owners, including plaintiffs, with procedural due process. Contrary to plaintiffs’ argument, the prescribed procedures are not faulty for failing to include an automatic repair option, which is, in essence, plaintiffs’ substantive due process argument recast in procedural due process terms. For purposes of this facial challenge, it is sufficient that aggrieved parties are provided the right to appeal an adverse decision to the city council as well as the right to subsequent judicial review. For the facial challenge to succeed, plaintiffs must show that no aggrieved property owners can meaningfully exercise their right to review or that such review is not conducted impartially. Because they have not done so, plaintiffs have failed to establish that BCO § 18-59, on its face, violates their procedural due process rights.
We therefore reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand this case to the Livingston Circuit Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiffs Leon and Marilyn Bonner own two residential properties, 122 E. North Street and 116 E. North Street, both located in downtown Brighton. Situated on these properties are three structures — two former residential homes and one barn/garage — all of which have been unoccupied and generally unmaintained for over 30 years. In January 2009, defendant city of Brighton‘s (the City) building and code enforcement officer, James Rowell (the building official), informed plaintiffs via written notice that these three structures had been deemed “unsafe” in violation of the Brighton Code of Ordinances, and further constituted public nuisances in violation of Michigan common law.1
Whenever the city manager, or his designee, has determined that a structure is unsafe and has determined that the cost of the repairs would exceed 100 percent of the true cash value of the structure as reflected on the city assessment tax rolls in effect prior to the building becoming an unsafe structure, such repairs shall be presumed unreasonable and it shall be presumed for the purpose of this article that such structure is a public nuisance which may be ordered demolished without option on the part of the owner to repair. This section is not meant to apply to those situations where a structure is unsafe as a result of an event beyond the control of the owner, such as fire, windstorm, tornado, flood or other Act of God. If a structure has become unsafe because of an event beyond the control of the owner, the owner shall be given by the city manager, or his designee, reasonable time within which to make repairs and the structure shall not be ordered demolished without option on the part of the owner to repair. If the owner does not make the repairs within the designated time period, then the structure may be ordered demolished without option on the part of the owner to repair. The cost of demolishing the structure shall be a lien against the real property and shall be reported to the city assessor, who shall assess the cost against the property on which the structure is located.2
Consequently, plaintiffs were ordered to demolish the structures within 60 days of the date of the building official‘s letter.
Because demolition had been ordered without an option to repair, plaintiffs appealed the building official‘s determination to the Brighton City Council (city council) pursuant to the appellate process set forth in BCO § 18-61, which provides in relevant part:
An owner of a structure determined to be unsafe may appeal the decision to the city council. The appeal shall be in writing and shall state the basis for the appeal.... The owner or his agent shall have an opportunity to be heard by the city council at a regularly scheduled council meeting. The city council may affirm, modify, or reverse all or part of the determination of the city manager, or his designee.
Initially, the city council stayed its review pending the building official‘s interior inspection of the structures. However, despite having previously agreed to allow the building official interior access, plaintiffs thereafter refused entry, causing the City to petition for and obtain administrative search warrants. On May 27, 2009, the building official and several other representatives of the City inspected the structures and found over 45 unsafe conditions therein. The hearing resumed on June 4, 2009, and June 18, 2009, during which the
violation of BCO § 18-47,4 that the structures were unreasonable to repair under BCO § 18-59, and that demolition was required within 60 days of its decision.5
Rather than appeal the city council‘s decision to the Livingston Circuit Court as an original action per BCO § 18-63,6 plaintiffs instead filed this independent cause of action against the City, alleging violations of due process, generally, as well as substantive due process; a violation of equal protection; inverse condemnation or a regulatory taking; contempt of court; common-law and statutory slander of title; and a violation of Michigan housing laws under
After consolidating these cases, the circuit court denied the City‘s request for injunctive relief and likewise denied relief to plaintiffs on several of the theories
they had advanced. However, the circuit court did address the constitutionality of the ordinance, determining that, on its face, BCO § 18-59 violates substantive due process by permitting the City to order an unsafe structure to be demolished as a public nuisance without providing the owner the option to repair it when the structure is deemed unreasonable to repair as defined under the ordinance. The circuit court thus granted plaintiffs’ renewed motion for partial summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) on the substantive due process claim and thereafter denied reconsideration.8
After granting the City‘s application for leave to appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed the circuit court in a split published opinion.9 The majority concluded that the standard set forth under BCO § 18-59 is arbitrary and unreasonable, and thus violates substantive due process, because it
only allow[s] the exercise of an option to repair when a property owner overcomes or rebuts the presumption of economic unreasonableness, regardless of whether the property owner is otherwise willing and able to timely make the necessary repairs.10
The majority also determined that BCO § 18-59 does not bear a reasonable relationship to the permissible legislative objective of protecting citizens from unsafe and dangerous structures because demolition does not advance the objective of abating nuisances and protecting citizens to a greater degree than repairs, even ones more costly than the present value of the structure and that an owner is willing and able to timely finance. Accordingly, the
majority held that BCO § 18-59 is facially unconstitutional. Finally, notwithstanding the circuit court‘s abstention from reaching the procedural due process issue, the majority went on to conclude that BCO § 18-59 likewise violates procedural due process because “the only way the city‘s ordinances could withstand a procedural due process challenge” would be if it provides a property owner with the option to repair the structure.11
We granted the City‘s application for leave to appeal, directing the parties to brief separately “whether § 18-59 is facially unconstitutional on the basis that the ordinance violates: (1) substantive due process; and/or (2) procedural due process.”12
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This case implicates myriad standards of review. The circuit court granted plaintiff‘s motion for partial summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10).
summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10), a court must consider “[t]he affidavits, together with the pleadings, depositions, admissions, and documentary evidence then filed in the action or submitted by the parties,”16 in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.17
This dispute also concerns the constitutionality of a municipal ordinance, which necessarily involves the interpretation and application of the ordinance itself. We review de novo questions of constitutional law;18 however, this Court accords deference to a deliberate act of a legislative body, and does not inquire into the wisdom of its legislation.19 The decision to declare a legislative act unconstitutional should be approached with extreme circumspection and trepidation, and should never result in the formulation of a rule of constitutional law “broader than that demanded by the particular facts of the case rendering such a pronouncement necessary.”20 “Every reasonable presumption or intendment must be indulged in favor of the validity of the act, and it is only when invalidity appears so clearly as to leave no room for reasonable doubt that it violates some provision of the Constitution that a court will refuse to sustain its validity.”21
Further, because ordinances are treated as statutes for purposes of interpretation and review, we also
review de novo the interpretation and application of a municipal ordinance.22 Since the rules governing statutory interpretation apply with equal force to a municipal ordinance,23 the goal of construction and interpretation of an ordinance is to discern and give effect to the intent of the legislative body.24 The most reliable evidence of that intent is the language of the ordinance itself and, therefore, the words used in an ordinance must be given their plain and ordinary meanings.25
III. ANALYSIS
Plaintiffs make two facial constitutional attacks upon BCO § 18-59. First, they assert that the ordinance violates substantive due process by permitting demolition of an unsafe structure without extending to its owner an option to repair, because denying a property owner the chance to repair an unsafe structure does not advance the City‘s otherwise legitimate interest in protecting the health, safety, and welfare of the Brighton citizenry. Second, plaintiffs argue that the ordinance violates procedural due process by failing to provide a procedure to safeguard a property owner‘s right to choose whether to repair a structure municipally deemed unsafe before the City orders it demolished. We will address plaintiffs’ arguments in this order; before proceeding further, however, we find it necessary to make two critical observations.
First, we emphasize that this is a facial challenge to BCO § 18-59;26 plaintiffs do not challenge the ordinance‘s application in a particular instance.27 A party challenging the facial constitutionality of an ordinance “faces an extremely rigorous standard.”28 To prevail, plaintiffs must establish that ” ‘no set of circumstances exists under which the [ordinance] would be valid’ ” and ” ‘[t]he fact that the... [ordinance] might operate unconstitutionally under some conceivable set of circumstances is insufficient’ ” to render it invalid.29 Indeed, ” ‘if any state of facts reasonably can be conceived that would sustain [the ordinance], the existence of the state of facts at the time the law was enacted must be assumed’ ” and the ordinance upheld.30 Finally, because facial attacks, by their nature, are not dependent on the facts surrounding any particular decision, the specific facts surrounding plaintiffs’ claim are inapposite.31
Second, and particularly noteworthy here, we emphasize that analysis of substantive and procedural due
process involves two separate legal tests. While the touchstone of due process, generally, “is protection of the individual against arbitrary action of government,”32 the substantive component protects against the arbitrary exercise of governmental power,33 whereas the procedural component is fittingly aimed at ensuring constitutionally
Ultimately, we conclude that the ordinance infringes on plaintiffs’ due process rights, whether denominated procedural or substantive, thereby making it unnecessary to determine which due process principle is actually embodied in plaintiffs’ argument.35
As a result, the Court of Appeals conflated what previous decisions have indicated should be treated as separate inquiries. Indeed, the issue whether BCO § 18-59 is facially unconstitutional for denying property owners the opportunity to repair unsafe structures in violation of substantive due process is distinct from the issue whether the ordinance is facially unconstitutional
for permitting the demolition of unsafe structures without providing adequate procedural safeguards in violation of the right to procedural due process. By melding together plaintiffs’ substantive and procedural due process claims, the Court of Appeals failed to observe that distinction and thus examine these claims in light of the correct legal standards. We therefore take this opportunity to clarify that alleged violations of substantive and procedural due process must be separately analyzed in order to determine whether the specific dictates of due process have been satisfied.
A. GENERAL DUE PROCESS PRINCIPLES
1. LEGAL FRAMEWORK
The federal due process provision guarantees that no person shall be deprived of “life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”36 Prior caselaw has interpreted this language to “guarante[e] more than fair process,”37 but to encompass a substantive sphere as well, “barring certain government actions regardless of the fairness of the procedures used to implement them.”38 Determining whether the ordinance in this case violates due process requires that we engage in several inquiries, the first and most essential of which asks whether the interest allegedly infringed by the challenged government action — here, a property owner‘s interest in repairing an unsafe structure — comes within the definition of “life, liberty or property.”39 If it does not, the Due Process Clause affords no protection.
If, however, a life, liberty or property interest is found to exist and to be threatened by the City‘s conduct, the next two queries will address what process is due before the government can interfere with that interest. Because the Due Process Clause offers two separate types of protections — substantive and procedural — separate inquiries must examine
2. APPLICATION
Plaintiffs allege that their property rights have been violated by the City‘s decision to order their structures demolished without providing them with the option to repair the structures. Explicit in our state and federal caselaw is the recognition that an individual‘s vested interest in the use and possession of real estate is a property interest protected by due process.40 Accordingly, plaintiffs, as owners of the three structures at issue and the land on which those structures are situated, have a significant property interest within the protection of the Due Process Clause.
B. SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS
1. LEGAL FRAMEWORK
Having identified a significant property interest protected by the Due Process Clause, we continue our analysis by addressing plaintiffs’ substantive due process claim. ” ‘Substantive due process’ analysis must begin with a careful description of the asserted right,”41
for there has “always been reluctan[ce] to expand the concept of substantive due process” given that “[t]he doctrine of judicial self-restraint requires us to exercise the utmost care whenever we are asked to break new ground in this field.”42 Where the right asserted is not fundamental, the government‘s interference with that right need only be reasonably related to a legitimate governmental interest.43
A zoning ordinance must similarly stand the test of reasonableness — that it is ” ‘reasonably necessary for the preservation of public health, morals, or safety’ ”44 — and, as we have stated, it is presumed to be so until the plaintiff demonstrates otherwise. Accordingly, a plaintiff may successfully challenge a local ordinance on substantive due process grounds, and therefore overcome the presumption of reasonableness, by proving either “that there is no reasonable govern-
mental interest being advanced by the present zoning classification itself... or, secondly, that an ordinance [is] unreasonable because
2. APPLICATION
Mindful of these principles, we begin by describing the right asserted by plaintiffs. Plaintiffs are not generally arguing that they have a categorical right of property use or possession, but assert a much more limited constitutional right; namely, that encompassed within the Due Process Clause‘s protection of property is a property owner‘s right to repair a structure municipally deemed “unsafe” before that structure can be demolished. However, we are unaware of any court that has ever granted a property owner the fundamental right of an absolute repair option involving property that has fallen into such disrepair as to create a risk to the health and safety of the public. Indeed, that conclusion would hardly be compatible with the line of cases in which this Court and the United States Supreme Court have held that reasonableness is essential to the validity of an exercise of police power affecting the general rights of the land owner by restricting the character of the owner‘s use,47 which would include the opportunity
to repair unsafe structures. The right asserted by plaintiffs, then, cannot be considered fundamental. Therefore, to demonstrate a violation on substantive due process grounds, plaintiffs have the burden of showing that the unreasonable-to-repair presumption set forth in
Indeed, to satisfy substantive due process, the infringement of an interest that is less than fundamental, such as the right asserted here, requires no more than a reasonable relationship between the governmental purpose and the means chosen to advance that purpose. This standard allows a municipal body sufficient latitude to decide, as the City has, that certain considerations favor using one means, i.e., demolition, rather than another, i.e., repairing. Enacting an ordinance that presumes repairs will be unreasonable to undertake if the cost of those repairs exceeds 100 percent of the property‘s value before it became unsafe protects children and others from the risk of increased injury, reduces the opportunity for crime, and aids in the maintenance of property values and marketability of lands. Any one of these purposes is reasonably related to the City‘s interest in promoting the health, safety, and welfare of its citizens and it is presumed that the City acted for such reasons, or for any other valid reason, in enacting
Without question, property owners have a constitutional right of property use, but this does not translate into an absolute constitutional right to repair unsafe structures. Moreover, even assuming that plaintiffs had a protected interest in repairing the unsafe structures at issue here before that property could be subject to demolition,51
Nor have plaintiffs shown that
Plaintiffs argue, and the Court of Appeals agreed, that the unreasonable-to-repair presumption in
We find nothing arbitrary or unreasonable about the City‘s interest in demolishing unsafe structures and believe the means selected—the unreasonable-to-repair presumption in
C. PROCEDURAL DUE PROCESS
1. LEGAL FRAMEWORK
We turn now from the claim that the City may not, by virtue of
[I]dentification of the specific dictates of due process generally requires consideration of three distinct factors: First, the private interest that will be affected by the official action; second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and finally, the Government‘s interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would entail.59
2. APPLICATION
To determine whether
If the owner rejects the terms of the notice and submits a written appeal that “state[s] the basis for the appeal,” “[t]he owner or his agent shall have an opportunity to be heard by the city council at a regularly scheduled council meeting.”61 The city council then has the discretion to “affirm, modify, or reverse all or part of the determination of the city manager, or his designee.”62 If the owner receives an adverse final decision from the city council, the owner “may appeal th[at] decision to the county circuit court by filing a complaint within 20 calendar days from the date of the decision.”63
Because this is a facial constitutional challenge, plaintiffs do not argue that the City failed to properly execute or enforce this procedural system.64 Instead, plaintiffs contend that the City‘s procedural system results in an unconstitutional deprivation of a property interest absent due process of law because it fails to give the owner of an unsafe structure the procedural protection of a repair option before that property may be demolished. Because this argument is simply the substantive due process argument recast in procedural due process terms, the argument meets with the same fate.
Nevertheless, the Court of Appeals determined that although
The essence of due process is the requirement that “a person in jeopardy of serious loss [be given] notice of the case against him and opportunity to meet it.”66 All that is necessary, then, is that the procedures at issue be tailored to “the capacities and circumstances of those who are to be heard”67 to ensure that they are given a
meaningful opportunity to present their case, which must generally occur before they are permanently deprived of the significant interest at stake.68 Here, there is no dispute that if the city manager orders a structure to be demolished under
Furthermore, vital to the assessment of what process is due in this case is the tenet that substantial weight must be given to the procedures provided for by those individuals holding legislative office—including members of a city council with whom the electorate has entrusted the duty of protecting the health and safety of all citizens—for “[i]t is too well settled to require citation that a statute must be treated with the deference due to a deliberate action of a coordinate branch of our State government....” 70 This is especially so where, as here, in addition to providing the aggrieved party with an effective process for asserting his or her claim before any demolition, the prescribed procedures also ensure the right to a hearing, as well as to subsequent judicial review, before the denial of the aggrieved party‘s claim becomes final.71 For these reasons, we conclude that plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate a facial procedural due process violation where they received all the process to which they were constitutionally entitled. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals reversibly erred by holding to the contrary. We therefore conclude that affording a property owner an option to repair as a matter of right is not required before the demolition of an unsafe structure and, furthermore, existing procedures in
IV. CONCLUSION
The Court of Appeals erroneously determined that
Nor does
YOUNG, C.J., and CAVANAGH, MARKMAN, ZAHRA, MCCORMACK, and VIVIANO, JJ., concurred with KELLY, J.
Notes
“Rational basis review does not test the wisdom, need, or appropriateness of the legislation, or whether the classification is made with ‘mathematical nicety,’ or even whether it results in some inequity when put into practice.” Crego v Coleman, 463 Mich 248, 260; 615 NW2d 218 (2000). Rather, it tests only whether the legislation is reasonably related to a legitimate governmental purpose. The legislation will pass “constitutional muster if the legislative judgment is supported by any set of facts, either known or which could reasonably be assumed, even if such facts may be debatable.” Id. at 259-260. To prevail under this standard, a party challenging a statute must overcome the presumption that the statute is constitutional. Thoman v Lansing, 315 Mich 566, 576; 24 NW2d 213 (1946). [TIG Ins Co, 464 Mich at 557-558.]
The notice shall:
- Be in writing;
- Include a description of the real estate sufficient for identification;
- Specify the repairs and improvements required to be made to render the structure safe or if the city manager, or his designee, has determined that the structure cannot be made safe, indicate that the structure is to be demolished;
- Specify a reasonable time within which the repairs and improvements must be made or the structure must be demolished;
- Include an explanation of the right to appeal the decision to the city council within ten calendar days of receipt of the notice in accordance with section 18-61;
- Include a statement that the recipient of the notice must notify the city manager within ten calendar days of receipt of the notice of his intent to accept or reject the terms of the notice.
