Plaintiff appeals as of right the trial court’s grant of summary disposition to defendant city of Ypsilanti and the resulting dismissal of plaintiffs complaint. Plaintiff owns several rental properties that are located in the city of Ypsilanti and, thus, are subject to defendant’s ordinances governing inspection and certificates of compliance. Plaintiff asserts that defendant, through its application of those ordinances, is in the practice of violating its own ordinances, state law, and his constitutional rights. The trial court disagreed. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
We first address plaintiffs argument that defendant illegally applied engineering fees to his properties as taxes and treated them as tax liens. After the complaint was filed, defendant removed those charges and argued that the issue had been resolved. The trial court agreed that no actual controversy remained, and it dismissed the claim with prejudice. Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred, and we agree.
We review de novo a trial court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition.
Maiden v Rozwood,
We find that plaintiff has done so. Plaintiff challenged defendant’s practices of assessing the fees, not merely the specific charges that defendant removed. When defendant removed those charges, it did not repudiate its practice or concede that they were unauthorized. Significantly, defendant apparently expressed a willingness to reapply the same fees in the future. A declaratory judgment is necessary to guide the parties’ conduct and to preserve the plaintiffs legal rights; this is not an instance in which the injury sought to be prevented is merely hypothetical. The trial court erred in dismissing this claim.
Plaintiff next argues that the trial court erred in its interpretation of defendant’s ordinance § 18-151, which governs expiration of certificates of compliance. That section provides, among other things, that “ [certificates of compliance shall expire two years after the date that they are issued unless earlier suspended by the building inspection department” and “[t]he date of issuance shall be indicated on the certificate.” The trial court determined that this section afforded defendant the discretion to issue certificates of compliance that expire less than two years from the date of their issuance. Plaintiff argues that the trial court’s reading is improper. We agree.
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This Court reviews de novo a trial court’s interpretation of an ordinance.
Wheeler v Shelby Charter Twp,
The word “shall” unambiguously mandates an action. Roberts, supra at 65. Thus, § 18-151 plainly provides that certificates of compliance must expire two years from their date of issuance. The first part of the relevant sentence, “Certificates of compliance shall expire two years after the date that they are issued,” could, by itself, reasonably indicate a maximum duration for the certificates without a minimum duration. However, such an interpretation is incompatible with the remainder of the ordinance. “Unless” is defined as “except under circumstances that.” Random House Webster’s College Dictionary (2000). “Suspend” means “to bring to a stop, usu. for a time,” or “to come to a stop or cease from operation, usu. temporarily” and “suspension” connotes a “temporary abrogation” or stoppage. Id. Thus, the ordinance plainly establishes a single circumstance under which a certificate would not expire two years after its issuance date: when the building department affirmatively halts an already-issued certificate that would otherwise still be in effect. In the absence of such an act by the building department, *229 certificates must remain in effect until two years after their issuance dates, at which time they will expire.
Defendant argues that § 18-151 must be read in conjunction with § 18-112, which requires defendant to inspect all rental dwellings at two-year intervals. We agree and conclude that defendant may undertake its inspection of a rental unit under § 18-112, and, if it discovers grounds to do so, it may then suspend the certificate of compliance as allowed by § 18-151. Nothing in § 18-112 addresses or governs the expiration of certificates of compliance, and nothing in § 18-151 affects or inhibits defendant’s authority to inspect a rental unit as otherwise allowed by applicable law. However, nothing in the ordinances, taken separately or together, supports a construction of § 18-151 that would render the phrase “unless earlier suspended by the building inspection department” nugatory or surplus-age. Proper construction of all pertinent language requires that a certificate of compliance must be issued with an expiration date set at two years from the date of issuance, and a certificate can only be suspended within that time by the building inspection department as allowed under defendant’s ordinance scheme.
Plaintiff next argues that the trial court erred in dismissing his claim that defendant must issue certificates of compliance for individual dwelling units within a building that is safe but that, overall, fails an inspection. We disagree. Defendant’s ordinance § 18-149 states “[a] certificate of compliance shall be issued for a multiple dwelling or one- or two-unit rental dwelling with no violations on condition that the premises remain in safe, healthful and fit condition for occupancy.” Plaintiff argues that a certificate must issue to a subunit that passes inspection, even where the overall building does not, as long as the overall building is safe. *230 However, “dwelling” means “a building or other place to live in; place of residence; abode.” Random House Webster’s College Dictionary (2000). Thus, the ordinance refers to the building, not merely individual units. Because “no violations” is unambiguously a requirement for issuance of a certifícate, if the building has any violations, § 18-149 precludes issuance of a certificate of compliance. The trial court properly dismissed this claim.
Plaintiff next argues that the trial court erred in failing to find that ordinance § 18-146, which requires an owner to obtain a certificate of compliance before renting a unit, conflicts with MCL 554.139(2) and ordinance § 58-122, both of which allow parties to leases of at least one year to modify the covenants between a landlord and a tenant. We agree with defendant and the trial court that MCL 554.139(2) and § 58-122 only address a landlord’s obligations to the landlord’s tenants. See, e.g.,
Calef v West, 252
Mich App 443;
Plaintiff next argues that the trial court erred in dismissing his claim that ordinance § 18-150 is invalid because it provides insufficient standards to guide de *231 fendant in issuing temporary certificates of compliance. We disagree. Section 18-150 provides:
A temporary certificate of compliance may be issued for a multiple dwelling or one- or two-unit rental dwelling following inspection, which is found to be substantially in compliance, provided there are no imminent life[-], health[-] or safety-threatening violations and provided that all current registration information has been provided. The temporary certificate shall state on its face any remaining violations to be corrected and state that it will expire if such violations are not corrected within the time specified by the building official or reasonable extensions thereof which shall be noted on the certificate. Failure by the owner or the owner’s agent to correct the violations within the time specified by the building official shall constitute a violation of this code and the multiple dwelling or one- or two-unit rental dwelling shall be ordered vacated.
Issuance of a temporary certificate thus depends on three specific criteria: substantial compliance, no violations that pose an imminent safety threat, and provision of all current registration information. It is not a standardless ordinance that would allow defendant to proceed at its own whim.
Osius v St Clair Shores,
Plaintiff next argues that the trial court erred in dismissing his challenge to defendant’s property inspection fee schedule. Defendant charged $45 for an initial inspection, $35 for a recertification inspection, $30 for reinspection after recertification, and $50 for failing to appear for a scheduled inspection. Plaintiff argues that charging more for failing to appear than for the actual inspection is an illegal subterfuge for raising revenue beyond defendant’s power. We disagree.
Fees charged by a municipality must be reasonably proportionate to the direct and indirect costs of provid
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ing the service for which the fee is charged.
Merrelli v St Clair Shores,
Finally, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in dismissing his claim for injunctive relief premised on his substantive claims. We agree with respect to those of his claims we have found meritorious, and we disagree with respect to those of his claims we have found properly dismissed.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
