The Wayne County Treasurer appeals as of right a circuit court order denying the Treasurer’s petition for tax foreclosure against property owned by Prayer Temple of Love and setting aside a prior forfeiture against the same property. We reverse and remand.
The Prayer Temple owns a parcel of property on Woodward Avenue in the city of Highland Park in Wayne County. The parcel has a single tax assessment identity, but it contains three lots on which a church, an activity center, and an outreach center are located. The Treasurer assessed taxes against the Prayer Temple’s property for the year 2004, and that assessment apparently included delinquent water and sewerage charges. In 2006, the Treasurer commenced the instant foreclosure action under the General Property Tax Act (GPTA), MCL 211.1 et seq. The Prayer Temple raised a number of objections to entry of a foreclosure judgment, and it petitioned to set aside the past forfeiture. Among other arguments, the Prayer Temple asserted that the *110 property was used for religious purposes and was therefore exempt from property taxes, 1 and that it simply could not afford to pay the assessments. The circuit court agreed that the property was exempt from the assessed taxes, other than the delinquent water and sewerage levies. The circuit court also concluded that, because the Treasurer had not contested the Prayer Temple’s inability to pay, the delinquent water and sewerage levies should be included in the next year’s forfeiture and foreclosure proceeding if they remained unpaid.
The only issue we have been asked to address in this appeal is whether the circuit court possessed subject-matter jurisdiction to decide whether the Prayer Temple’s property was exempt. The Treasurer argues, as it did below, that the Michigan Tax Tribunal has exclusive jurisdiction. We agree.
We review this issue de novo because it concerns the circuit court’s subject-matter jurisdiction to determine exemption issues in a foreclosure action under the GPTA.
In re Petition by Wayne Co Treasurer for Foreclosure of Certain Lands for Unpaid Prop Taxes,
The Tax Tribunal has exclusive and original jurisdiction over proceedings for review of agency actions relating to property tax assessments. MCL 205.731(a). However, the circuit court is the proper forum for a foreclosure action.
2
MCL 211.78h. And in any such foreclosure action, a person claiming an interest in a tax parcel “set forth in the petition for foreclosure” is expressly permitted to “contest the validity or correctness of the forfeited unpaid delinquent taxes” on the ground that the “property was exempt from the tax in question, or the tax was not legally levied.” MCL 211.78k(2)(c). The provisions of the Tax Tribunal Act “are effective notwithstanding the provisions of any statute, charter, or law to the contrary.” MCL 205.707. Nevertheless, statutes sharing a common purpose must be read in pari materia and we must give every word or
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phrase in them some meaning while avoiding conflict, if at all possible. See
People v Webb,
Critically, the nature of arguments against forfeiture is limited. “The need to preserve the tribunal’s exclusive jurisdiction is especially great where . . . factual issues requiring the tribunal’s expertise are present.”
Michigan Consolidated Gas Co v China Twp,
Where a forfeiture challenge does not require any findings of fact, but rather only construction of law— where no factual issues requiring the tribunal’s exper
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tise are present — the circuit court has jurisdiction to consider the issue.
Joy Mgt Co v Detroit,
The Prayer Temple specifically argues that the property tax assessment is invalid because the “houses of public worship” exception, MCL 211.7s, applies. The basis for the property tax assessment in this case was the Prayer Temple’s outreach center, which had been leased to a private party at least until 2003. The Treasurer argues that the outreach center falls outside the “houses of public worship” exception in MCL 211.7s.
3
Under the circumstances, we find that resolving this challenge — to a parcel’s exemption status— involves the kind of factual issues that require the Tax Tribunal’s expertise, and it is simply a direct challenge to a tax assessment per se. It therefore falls squarely within the Tax Tribunal’s exclusive jurisdiction. Similar to the Court in
State Treasurer v Eaton,
This matter is a direct challenge to a tax bill and thus within the Tax Tribunal’s jurisdiction.
Grosse Ile Comm for Legal Taxation v Grosse Ile Twp,
The trial court’s order setting aside the forfeiture and dismissing the petition for foreclosure is reversed, and the case is remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
Notes
Pursuant to MCL 211.7s,
Mouses of public worship, with the land on which they stand, the furniture therein and all rights in the pews, and any parsonage owned by a religious society of this state and occupied as a parsonage are exempt from taxation under [the General Property Tax Act]. Houses of public worship includes buildings or other facilities-owned by a religious society and used predominantly for religious services or for teaching the religious truths and beliefs of the society.
We note that forfeiture is not the same as foreclosure. Pursuant to MCL 211.78g(l), property is forfeited to the county treasurer on March 1 of each tax year for certain delinquent taxes, but a subsequent foreclosure judgment is necessary for the county treasurer to obtain possession.
Nothing in this opinion is intended to express any view regarding whether MCL 211.7s does apply.
For proceedings commenced before January 1, 2007, a taxpayer invoked the Tax Tribunal’s jurisdiction by filing an appeal, after a proper protest before the local board of review, as provided in MCL 205.735 (subsequently MCL 205.735a).
Simmons Airlines, Inc v Negaunee Twp,
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