Plaintiff 1 appeals as of right the trial court’s order granting defendant summary disposition based on plaintiffs failure to bring suit within the one-year period provided in the statute of limitations, MCL 600.308a(3). Plaintiff Morgan is the representative of a proposed class of cable subscribers whom her cable company, Comcast, charged an additional rate to recoup “franchise fees” it paid to defendant pursuant to an agreement dated July 10, 2001. Defendant routed the fee revenues into its general operating fund, giving it nearly $1,425,000 of unallocated revenue in 2002. Defendant only spent about $600,000 in 2003 on local government television programming. Plaintiff claims that the difference between the income and expenditures constitutes an illegal tax contrary to the Headlee Amendment. 2
Plaintiff first argues that she paid the charge, so her claim accrued when she received her Comcast bill. We disagree. We review de novo a trial court’s decision to grant summary disposition.
Maiden v Rozwood,
Comcast paid defendant a “franchise fee” consisting of five percent of its gross revenues. The five percent fee is specifically permitted by the federal Cable Communications Policy Act, 47 USC 521
et seg.,
which also
*515
allows cable providers to list separately in their billing statements the amount representing the subscriber’s portion of the franchise fee. 47 USC 542. However, the mere listing of the charge on a separate line does not render plaintiff the charge’s payer. Rather, plaintiff paid her entire bill according to her contractual obligation to Comcast, which paid the charge to defendant according to the franchise agreement. Defendant had no recourse against plaintiff for any unpaid portion of her bill, so this case is analogous to a sales tax scenario in which the seller passes on the sales tax obligation to the buyer but remains primarily liable to pay the tax.
World Book, Inc v Dep’t of Treasury,
In
Taxpayers Allied for Constitutional Taxation [TACT] v Wayne Co,
Like the situation described in TACT, the starting point for the limitations period depends on when the defendant did the alleged wrong. Plaintiff points to the moment she received her bill as the moment of initiation, but the inclusion of the charge on the bill was Comcast’s action, not defendant’s. Similarly, defendant’s collection from Comcast would not initiate the period, because the collection would be a wrong against Comcast, not plaintiff. Following the example in TACT, plaintiffs Headlee claim accrued when defendant first imposed the “franchise fee” on Comcast — July 10,2001. Because plaintiff failed to bring her Headlee claim within one year from that date, the trial court correctly granted defendant’s motion for summary disposition.
Affirmed.
Notes
Plaintiff Mary Morgan was never granted class certification below, so the singular term “plaintiff” refers to her individually. Furthermore, because there is no class, our holding affects all the claims and disposes of the entire suit.
Specifically, plaintiff claims that the “franchise fee” defendant charges Comcast is a new local tax levied without voter approval contrary to a Headlee provision in the Michigan Constitution. Const 1963, art 9, § 31.
