BRAY v DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Docket No. 65164
Supreme Court of Michigan
December 1, 1983
Rehearing denied post, 1202. Certiorari denied by the Supreme Court of the United States on June 18, 1984.
418 Mich 149
Argued April 7, 1983 (Calendar No. 1).
In an opinion by Justice Brickley, joined by Chief Justice Williams and Justices Ryan, Cavanagh, and Boyle, the Supreme Court held:
The annual uninsured motorist fee was in the nature of a tax and not of a contract or a license. There was no express or implied legislative intent to refund the fee, and no refund is due to the plaintiffs.
1. In paying the annual fee required under the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act in order to register an uninsured vehicle, the plaintiffs clearly were not buying insurance or a license to operate an uninsured vehicle, nor were they securing any benefits as a class. The fund financed by the fees was for the benefit of persons injured by uninsured, underinsured, or unidentified motorists, and the authority of the Secretary of State to suspend operator‘s licenses and vehicle registrations of uninsured drivers against whom there were uncollected judgments made the class more vulnerable following adoption of the act
2. Before the enactment of the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act, motorists were permitted to drive uninsured vehicles. The act was not intended to regulate the driving of uninsured vehicles by requiring the payment of a fee for a license to drive an uninsured vehicle. Rather, the Legislature intended that the fund provided by the fees collected from uninsured motorists would be used to compensate persons injured by uninsured motorists. That fee was in the nature of a privilege tax, designed to raise revenue, payable at the time of registration of an uninsured vehicle. Events occurring after a tax is due, in the absence of legislative intent to the contrary, are irrelevant. No provision was made for refund of any portion of the tax on the basis of subsequent events.
Reversed.
Justice Levin, joined by Justice Kavanagh, dissenting, would refund any surplus remaining in the uninsured motorist fund, or any surplus which would have remained had interest due the fund been paid, to those assessed to create the fund. The fee was collected from a specific group to meet a specific problem related to that group. It could not validly have been levied either as a regulatory fee or as a tax. Rather, it was an assessment. Because the fee was not assessed for general revenue purposes, it cannot be placed in the general fund, but must be used exclusively for the purpose for which it was intended. Once the purpose was met, any surplus should have been refunded to those assessed.
1. The Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act did not provide liability insurance for uninsured motorists, although it did provide benefits for the victims of uninsured motorists akin to those provided by insurance. The fees paid by owners of uninsured vehicles did not create any contractual rights between the state and uninsured motorists. Those motorists remained primarily liable for their torts and were responsible to reimburse the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Fund fully for claims paid on their behalf.
2. The uninsured motorist vehicle fee could not have been levied validly as a regulatory fee because it exceeded the cost of registering and identifying motor vehicles. In addition, the fund was not intended to be used for regulatory purposes. There is no meaningful difference between insured and uninsured motorists in terms of the costs to the state of regulating their driving. Accordingly, a regulatory scheme charging owners of
3. Nor could the fee have been levied validly as a tax. To so characterize the fee would place the act in conflict with the constitution. Specific taxes imposed on motor vehicles were required to be used exclusively for highway purposes. The Legislature has not defined support for the victims of uninsured motorists as a highway purpose, and a tax on the registration of uninsured vehicles to provide for such victims could not be sustained under the constitution. Also, a non-ad valorem tax must be uniform upon the class on which it operates. A tax which would impose a fee of $45 on some owners and only $1 on others for a highway purpose would violate that provision.
4. An assessment of owners of uninsured vehicles for the purpose of providing a fund for the benefit of the victims of uninsured motorists could not validly be levied as a tax under the constitution. A tax is an exaction for the support of the state. The uninsured vehicle fee raised money to provide for a particular need having a sufficient nexus with those assessed to justify the imposition. The fee, collected as an assessment, was validly exacted.
5. The purposes for which funds acquired by special assessment may be spent must be rigidly defined, and the money must be segregated from all other accounts. The state was required to segregate the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Fund from the general fund. That duty was disregarded when the accumulated assets of the claims fund were transferred to the general fund. The state, additionally, had the duty to ensure that interest was paid on the monies collected for the claims fund. Money collected by special assessment is a trust fund, and the governmental body collecting the money is the trustee of the fund. The conduct of the governmental trustee is measured by the same standards as that of a private trustee. The failure of the state to pay interest on the money transferred from the claims fund to the general fund was in violation of its fiduciary duty. To allow the state to borrow money from a trust fund raised by a special assessment of a discrete group of persons without the payment of interest would enable it to do indirectly what it cannot do directly - to enlarge the general fund at the expense of the trust. It would subject the members of the discrete group to further assessment necessitated by a shortfall of funds resulting from the state‘s use of money belonging to the trust fund without the payment of interest. Had the interest been paid, the claims fund might have a surplus.
6. When the purpose of a special assessment has been met,
97 Mich App 33; 294 NW2d 236 (1980) reversed.
REFERENCE FOR POINTS IN HEADNOTES
[1-3] 71 Am Jur 2d, State and Local Taxation §§ 15-18, 612, 613.
OPINION OF THE COURT
1. AUTOMOBILES — UNINSURED MOTORISTS — MOTOR VEHICLE ACCIDENT CLAIMS ACT.
The annual fee imposed by the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act upon owners of uninsured motor vehicles at the time of registration was in the nature of a tax and not a license or insurance premium, and did not establish a contractual relation between the owners and the state; the fee was designed to raise revenue to compensate persons injured by uninsured, underinsured, or unidentified motorists, not to regulate the driving of uninsured vehicles, and was not refundable (
DISSENTING OPINION BY LEVIN, J.
2. AUTOMOBILES — UNINSURED MOTORISTS — MOTOR VEHICLE ACCIDENT CLAIMS ACT.
The annual fee imposed by the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act upon owners of insured and uninsured motor vehicles at the time of registration was not a tax or a regulatory fee, but was an assessment to provide a fund for the victims of uninsured motorists; the money collected was required to be used exclusively for that purpose, and once the purpose was met, any surplus should have been refunded to those assessed (
3. AUTOMOBILES — UNINSURED MOTORISTS — MOTOR VEHICLE ACCIDENT CLAIMS FUND.
The state, in exacting a special assessment from motorists to be paid to the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Fund, was required to segregate the money collected and to ensure that interest was paid on the assets of the fund (1971 PA 19; 1971 PA 63,
Harry S. Ellman and Barris, Sott, Denn & Driker (by Donald E. Barris and Sharon M. Woods) for the plaintiffs.
BRICKLEY, J. This is the culmination of a decade of litigation involving two trips up the judicial ladder of this state. It involves the desire of the plaintiffs, a class of some 350,000 Michigan residents, to each recover half of a $45 annual fee they were required to pay in order to register their uninsured motor vehicles in 1973, the last year uninsured motorists were permitted to operate their vehicles on Michigan roads. It is their claim that having paid for a full year‘s “privilege of driving an uninsured motor vehicle“, the inauguration of the state‘s mandatory no-fault insurance act on October 1, 1973, midway through the registration year, entitled them to a refund.
Following two separate hearings before the circuit court and corresponding review by the Court of Appeals, the case comes to us following a holding that: 1) the $45 annual fee for uninsured motorists provided for in the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act,
It is our conclusion that there is no legal or factual basis for finding that the MVACA is in the nature of an insurance policy for plaintiffs or that the required fee established any contractual rights. We find that the uninsured motorist fee is more in the nature of a tax than either a license fee or an insurance premium. We find no federal or state constitutional infringement of plaintiffs’ rights occasioned by the enactment of the no-fault insurance act. Therefore, there is no contractual, statutory, or constitutional basis for concluding that the state is liable to plaintiffs. The history of this case follows.
In 1965, the Legislature enacted the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act, 1965 PA 198. As amended, the act provided that “[e]very person registering an uninsured motor vehicle in this state shall pay annually at the time of registering, in addition to any other fee prescribed by law, a fee of $45.00“. 1971 PA 19, § 3(3). The act further provided that it would be a misdemeanor for anyone who had not paid the fee to drive an uninsured motor vehicle. 1971 PA 19, § 3(7). Insured motorists were originally required to pay a $1 fee.1 1965 PA 198, § 3(3).
On October 31, 1972, the no-fault act,
In August of 1973, nine months after the passage of the no-fault insurance act and two months before it became operational, plaintiffs commenced this action, seeking a declaration of their rights and a refund of half of the $45 uninsured motorist‘s fee paid in 1973. The suit was initiated in the Court of Claims; but, by stipulation of the parties, it was moved to the Wayne Circuit Court. The some 350,000 uninsured motorists constituting the plaintiff class claimed, from the outset, that the $45 that was required to be paid the preceding March 31 was a license fee for the privilege of driving an uninsured motor vehicle, and that they
Over a year later, in November, 1974, the trial court issued what was to be only the first opinion in this case. The trial court declared the $45 payment to be a license fee and that, as such, the plaintiffs had received only half of the “protection” under the license that they had paid for, entitling them to a refund.2 In reaching its decision, the court expressly declined to consider the various constitutional claims of plaintiffs and based its decision, apparently, on equitable principles.
In May, 1976, the Court of Appeals upheld plaintiffs’ claim for a refund, but on different grounds. Bray v Dep‘t of State, 69 Mich App 172, 178; 244 NW2d 619 (1976). The Court found that the $45 fee did not fit “neatly into either category” of license fee or tax. It found the fee to be “unique”
On remand, the trial court decided to consider the constitutional arguments raised in the first hearing. The court applied the theory of the Court of Appeals that a contractual relationship between plaintiffs and the state existed, as in the nature of an insurance policy. It found that this contractual relationship was impaired by the adoption of the no-fault insurance act and that the impairment violated the Contract Clauses of the United States and Michigan Constitutions,
The Court of Appeals affirmed the decision of the trial court, reasserting the contractual relationship and adopting the circuit court‘s constitutional findings to the extent that the adoption of the no-fault insurance act midway through the 1973 registration period amounted to a “taking” or diminution of a property interest. It also adopted the trial court‘s finding that, because the relief was constitutionally required, the right to the refund was absolute. 97 Mich App 33; 294 NW2d 236 (1980).
Leave to appeal to this Court was granted on June 8, 1981. 411 Mich 972.
We first deal with the two basic theories on which plaintiffs’ relief in the lower courts was founded. The theory propounded by the plaintiffs, with great consistency in their travels through the lower courts, was that during the automobile registration year of 1973 they paid $45 as a license fee for driving an uninsured motor vehicle for 12 months. The basic theory of the lower courts was that the effect of the plaintiffs’ payment of $45 was to engage the state in a contractual relationship, a relationship that was impaired by the adoption of the no-fault insurance act midway through the 1973 registration year. An analysis of each theory depends on an examination of the nature of the extraction of the $45 fee by the state from its uninsured motorists.
That examination indicates to us that the plaintiffs were clearly not buying anything, and, contrary to the Court of Appeals position that it was akin to the buying of insurance, we find nothing to
We next deal with the contention that the fee paid was a license fee. License fees are paid to engage in activities that the state has a right to regulate, if not prohibit. Hunting and fishing license fees, occupational fees, and driver‘s license fees are examples. Without paying these fees, citizens are normally precluded from the activities or the privileges licensed, and it is well-settled law in this state that the amount of the fees charged must be related to the costs of the regulation. Vernor v Secretary of State, 179 Mich 157; 146 NW 338 (1914); Merrelli v St Clair Shores, 355 Mich 575; 96 NW2d 144 (1959). There is considerable authority that a claim for recovery of license fees, even in cases where they were illegally collected in the first instance, is difficult to establish. See, e.g., Beachlawn Building Corp v St Clair Shores, 370 Mich 128; 121 NW2d 427 (1963). If we were to conclude that the fee was a license, it would still fall to the plaintiffs to establish a basis
The plaintiff class, prior to the enactment of the MVACA in 1965, was entitled to drive uninsured motor vehicles. There is no indication in the MVACA that the state wished to curtail driving by uninsured motorists. What the state clearly wanted to do was to raise money to solve a problem. The problem it wished to solve was the increasing number of motorists injured by uninsured and uncollectible drivers. In order to provide a fund to protect that class, money was raised from the group that caused the problem, the group represented by the plaintiff class.4 Once it was decided to raise the money from that class, what better time and way to collect it than at the time of registering the motor vehicle? There was never a showing that there was a desire on the part of the state to regulate the uninsured motorist.
In its first opinion in this case, the Court of Appeals stated:
“Although MVACA, on its face, appears to grant permission to uninsured motorists to drive their uninsured vehicles, it was not intended primarily as a registration provision. The title of
MCL 257.1101 et seq. ;MSA 9.2801 et seq. , makes this clear. It states:“‘An Act providing for the establishment, maintenance, and administration of a motor vehicle accident claims fund for the payment of damages for injury to or death of certain persons or property damage arising out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of motor vehicles in the state in certain cases and to provide penalties for violation of this act.’
“Also the fact that there is a separate statute,
MCL 257.1 et seq. ;MSA 9.1801 et seq. , which deals specifically with registration of motor vehicles, both insured and uninsured, indicates that MVACA was not intended as a licensing provision. This is further indicated by the fact that fees imposed underMCL 257.1 et seq. ;MSA 9.1801 et seq. , which are much lower than the MVACA fee, cover licensing and administration expenses.” 69 Mich App 178.
We agree. Simply because the state chose to enforce payment of the fee by suspending the licenses and registrations of the offending motorists does not transform the collection of the fee into a licensing and regulatory scheme.
We find the fee paid by plaintiffs to be in the nature of a tax.
A tax is designed to raise revenue. Merrelli v St Clair Shores, 355 Mich 575; 96 NW2d 144 (1959). As we explained in Dukesherer Farms, Inc v Dep‘t of Agriculture (After Remand), 405 Mich 1, 15-16; 273 NW2d 877 (1979):
“Exactions which are imposed primarily for public rather than private purposes are taxes. See People ex rel the Detroit & HR Co v Salem Twp Board, 20 Mich 452, 474; 4 Am Rep 400 (1870). Revenue from taxes, therefore, must inure to the benefit of all, as opposed to exactions from a few for benefits that will inure to the persons or group assessed. Knott v Flint, 363 Mich 483, 499; 109 NW2d 908 (1961); Fluckey v Plymouth, 358 Mich 447, 451; 100 NW2d 486 (1960).”
The MVACA was obviously designed to raise revenue. As we have previously explained, the revenue raised by the MVACA did not inure to the benefit of the group assessed. The fund existed for the public purpose of providing certain compensation to all those persons injured by uninsured motorists. The Legislature did not, however, by taxing
Plaintiffs argue that if the MVACA is considered a tax its collection violated the provisions of
Relying on Goodenough v Dep‘t of Revenue, 328 Mich 56; 43 NW2d 235 (1950), plaintiffs further argue that as of October 1, 1973, they were illegally taxed for a privilege that, in fact, no longer existed. Both of these arguments fail to recognize the nature of a tax.
The MVACA fee can only be viewed as a tax for the privilege of operating an uninsured motor vehicle. The obligation to pay a privilege tax is due on the date set by law. Events occurring after the tax liability is due, in the absence of legislative intent to the contrary, are irrelevant. See Holland Hitch Co v Michigan, 318 Mich 474; 28 NW2d 242 (1947); Case v Detroit, 129 Mich 298; 88 NW 626 (1902); Ecorse Screw Machine Products Co v Michigan Corp and Securities Comm, 1 Mich App 414; 136 NW2d 758 (1965), aff‘d 378 Mich 415; 145 NW2d 46 (1966).
Plaintiffs were required to pay the uninsured motorist tax at the time they registered their uninsured vehicle.
What evidence of a legislative intent that does exist shows that the Legislature considered and rejected the idea of refunding a portion of the uninsured motorist fee. HB 5215 (1973), which would have reconciled the MVACA with the then recently enacted no-fault act, provided for such a refund. Over strongly worded dissents, HB 5215 (1973) was passed by the House, but was never reported out of the Senate Committee on Commerce. See 4 Michigan House J (1973), pp 2882-2906; 3 Michigan Senate J (1973), p 2463. SB 1323 (1974), which was substantially similar to HB 5215 (1973) except that it made no provision for a refund, was passed by both houses and became 1974 PA 223. See 3 Michigan House J (1974), pp 2342-2343; 2 Michigan Senate J (1974), pp 1158, 1365, 1625. This history makes it clear that the Legislature intended no refund.5
We find Goodenough, supra, to be distinguishable. There, the plaintiffs, nonresident trustees of trusts having their situs in Pennsylvania, were subjected to an intangibles tax. This Court held that the plaintiffs could not be validly taxed on a privilege that they did not possess in this state. In this case, the tax was on uninsured vehicles. Plaintiffs are members of the class of persons who operated uninsured vehicles. They were not being taxed for a privilege or status they did not possess at the time of taxation.
We find the uninsured motorist fee to be in the nature of a tax. Because we have found that no contractual or licensing arrangement existed between plaintiffs and the state, plaintiffs’ constitutional claims are without merit. Because there is no express or implied legislative intent to refund the fee, plaintiffs are due no refund.
Reversed.
WILLIAMS, C.J., and RYAN, CAVANAGH, and BOYLE, JJ., concurred with BRICKLEY, J.
LEVIN, J. (dissenting). This cause concerns a governmental exaction that is difficult to label. The circuit court and the Court of Appeals characterized the exaction as a “license fee”1 and as an
I
We agree with the majority‘s conclusion that there is no legal or factual basis for holding that the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act provides liability insurance for the appellees or that the required fee established any contractual rights.7 Although the MVACA provided benefits to the victims of uninsured motorists akin to those provided by insurance, it was not an insurance program from the standpoint of the uninsured motorist. Uninsured motorists remained primarily liable for their torts without regard to whether the $45 annual fee had been paid and were legally responsible to reimburse the Fund fully for claims that the Fund paid on their behalf. The Secretary of State had no duty to defend uninsured motorists. Unlike insurance contracts,8 the MVACA did not provide for one party protecting another party from loss arising from named risks in return for the payment of consideration.
II
We also agree with the majority that although the authority of the state under the police power to require automobile registration is unquestioned, the exaction at issue could not have been levied 7 Ante, p 154. 8 See 1 Couch, Insurance (2d ed), § 1.2, pp 28-29.
There is no meaningful difference between insured and uninsured motorists in terms of the costs to the state of regulating their driving. Accordingly, a regulatory scheme charging owners of uninsured vehicles a $45 fee and owners of insured vehicles a $1 fee for the privilege of driving11 would not have been valid.
III
We do not agree, however, with the majority‘s characterization of this exaction as a tax. Characterizing this exaction as a tax places the MVACA in conflict with two provisions of the Michigan Constitution. This exaction from owners of uninsured vehicles, which could not have been levied validly as a regulatory fee, also could not have been levied validly as a tax.
“[a]ll specific taxes, except general sales and use taxes and regulatory fees, imposed directly or indirectly on fuels sold or used to propel motor vehicles upon highways and on registered motor vehicles shall, after the payment of necessary collection expenses, be used exclusively for highway purposes as defined by law.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The Legislature did not “define” as a “highway purpose” the payment of benefits to the victims of accidents caused by uninsured motorists. Even if it had, it is questionable that the persons who proposed and voted for this constitutional limitation intended the phrase “highway purposes” to have a meaning so collateral to the construction and maintenance of highways and bridges.12 A tax on
The majority intimates in a footnote that this exaction might conflict with
IV
“It is inaccurate and misleading to speak of the exaction from processors prescribed by the challenged act as a tax, or to say that as a tax it is subject to no infirmity. A tax, in the general understanding of the term, and as used in the Constitution, signifies an exaction for the support of the Government. The word has never been thought to connote the expropriation of money from one group for the benefit of another. We
may concede that the latter sort of imposition is constitutional when imposed to effectuate regulation of a matter in which both groups are interested and in respect of which there is a power of legislative regulation.” (Emphasis supplied.) Dukesherer Farms, pp 19-20, quoting United States v Butler, 297 US 1, 61; 56 S Ct 312; 80 L Ed 477 (1936).
or if a tax or assessment is paid under duress, no protest is required. In the instant case, appellees could not have known that the assessment was excessive until the purpose of the Fund was met and a surplus remained. Their suit for a refund was both timely and appropriate when filed.
Like Dukesherer Farms, this case involves an assessment to raise money to cover a particular need that has a sufficient nexus with the persons assessed to justify the imposition. If collected as an assessment, this exaction was valid.
V
It is a maxim of statutory construction that an act of a legislature should not be construed to be invalid if another construction is available. NLRB v Catholic Bishop of Chicago, 440 US 490, 500; 99 S Ct 1313; 59 L Ed 2d 533 (1979); Kent v Dulles, 357 US 116, 129-130; 78 S Ct 1113; 2 L Ed 2d 204 (1958); Posner, Statutory Interpretation—in the Classroom and in the Courtroom, 50 U Chi L Rev 800, 814-816 (1983) (suggesting that construing statutes to avoid unconstitutionality is the only canon of statutory interpretation that has merit). Because the exaction from owners of uninsured vehicles could have been validly collected as an assessment, but not as either a regulatory fee or as a tax, we would hold that the exaction was a variety of special assessment.
VI
Unlike general revenue-raising measures, special assessments create special funds designed to be used for a specific purpose. As this Court noted in Dukesherer Farms, supra, p 20 “the spending of
In addition to having a duty to segregate the Fund from the general fund, the state had a duty to ensure that the Fund earned interest on the moneys collected for the Fund.16 It is well established that money collected by virtue of a special assessment constitutes a trust fund and that the governmental body collecting the assessment is the trustee of the fund. See, e.g., Fidelity Trust Co v Village of Stickney, 129 F2d 506 (CA 7, 1942);
VII
“Landowners paying special assessments to a fund to pay bonds issued to cover the actual cost and expense of the improvement in excess of the sum required, due to miscalculation or mistake, are, in equity, justly entitled to have such excess refunded to them, each landowner to receive the excess paid by him, that is, the excess should be prorated among the property owners, as it may appear that each has paid. Such money, when collected from the several property owners becomes a trust fund, to be used only for the purpose specified, and when the bonds and interest and other legal expenses chargeable against such fund have been satisfied, the balance belongs to the landowners. Each lot or parcel of land in the improvement district must bear its equal share in the total cost and no more.”
Admittedly, the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Fund is somewhat different than a fund set aside
VIII
Because at this time it is unclear how much surplus will remain in the Fund after its purpose has been met and the money owed to it as interest has been paid, we would remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. If after calculating the interest owed and making provision for the benefits remaining to be paid, the circuit court finds that the Fund has a surplus, such surplus should be refunded to those from whom it was collected.
IX
Although no member of the appellee class would receive a large sum as a result of appellees’ success in this action, recognition of appellees’ rights today would prevent the state from unconstitutionally appropriating to the general fund money excessively exacted from a discrete group of persons. The power to assess, like the power to tax, “involves the power to destroy“.20 When the Attorney General defends the action of the state, it is a function of the private bar and civil litigation to hold that power in check.
We would remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
KAVANAGH, J., concurred with LEVIN, J.
Notes
Ante, p 160.
Appellees contend that they paid a $45 license fee on April 1, 1973, for the privilege of driving uninsured for one year and, on the authority of cases requiring a pro-rata refund where a license is canceled before the licensing year ends, that because the privilege was terminated midyear they are entitled to a refund of $22.50. Elsewhere in this opinion we state why this governmental exaction cannot be sustained as a regulatory fee or tax, but is valid as an assessment. Further, even if appellees did purchase for $45 a license conferring the privilege of driving uninsured, the license and privilege was not terminated midyear when the no-fault automobile liability act went into effect. The period for which such a license and privilege was granted was shortened before it began when the no-fault automobile liability act, requiring all motorists to be insured on October 1, 1973, was enacted as 1972 PA 294 and approved by the Governor on October 31, 1972. The effect of the shortening of the period for which such a license and privilege was granted was to increase the fee required to be paid annually at the time of registration of an uninsured motor vehicle to $45 for the six-month period ending September 30, 1973. (The words “for the 1966 registration year, and for each year thereafter” were eliminated by 1971 PA 19.)
The power, purpose, and intent of the Legislature to assess owners of uninsured vehicles in such amounts as was thought necessary to provide adequate money to pay the benefits mandated by the MVACA is clear. As set forth in Parts VII and VIII, to the extent the money collected exceeds the needs of the Fund, such excess should be refunded to those from whom it was excessively exacted.
In Advisory Opinion on Constitutionality of 1976 PA 295, 1976 PA 297, 401 Mich 686, 705-707; 259 NW2d 129 (1977), this Court indicated that the words “as defined by law” gave the Legislature a substantial amount of flexibility in defining the term “highway purposes“. The “as defined by law” language does not, however, confer on the Legislature unlimited power of definition.
In 1978,
“All specific taxes, except general sales and use taxes and regulatory fees, imposed directly or indirectly on fuels sold or used to propel motor vehicles upon highways and to propel aircraft and on registered motor vehicles and aircraft shall, after the payment of necessary collection expenses, be used exclusively for transportation purposes as set forth in this section.
“Not less than 90 percent of the specific taxes, except general sales and use taxes and regulatory fees, imposed directly or indirectly on fuels sold or used to propel motor vehicles upon highways and on registered motor vehicles shall, after the payment of necessary collection expenses, be used exclusively for the transportation purposes of planning, administering, constructing, reconstructing, financing, and maintaining state, county, city, and village roads, streets, and bridges designed primarily for the use of motor vehicles using tires, and reasonable appurtenances to those state, county, city, and village roads, streets, and bridges.
“The balance * * * shall be used exclusively for the transportation purposes of comprehensive transportation purposes as defined by law.”
The new language makes even more doubtful the validity of the use of a specific tax on registered motor vehicles to pay benefits to the victims of uninsured motorists.
Ante, p 164, fn 5.
The majority appears to expect omniscience from appellees by requiring them to know that a majority of this Court would characterize this exaction as a tax. Considering that this exaction would have been imposed unconstitutionally had it been a tax and that the Attorney General has several times rejected the notion that this exaction was a tax, initially expressing the opinion that this exaction could only be constitutional as a regulatory fee (letter of December 8, 1970, from the Attorney General to the Chairman of the Committee on Appropriations), and most recently expressing the view that this exaction was an assessment, see fn 4, it is understandable that appellees believed some relief other than injunction to be appropriate.
Ordinarily, the proper procedure for challenging an invalidly imposed tax or assessment is to pay the tax or assessment under protest and to commence an action for a refund. Protest is not always required, however. For example, when a tax or assessment collected is in excess of the proper amount because of a mutual mistake of fact,
