TOWNSHIP OF FRASER v HANEY
Docket No. 160991
Michigan Supreme Court
February 8, 2022
509 Mich. 18
Bridgеt M. McCormack, Chief Justice; Brian K. Zahra, David F. Viviano, Richard H. Bernstein, Elizabeth T. Clement, Megan K. Cavanagh, Elizabeth M. Welch, Justices
Argued October 6, 2021 (Calendar No. 3). Reporter of Decisions: Kathryn L. Loomis.
Syllabus
This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
Fraser Township filed a comрlaint in the Bay Circuit Court against Harvey and Ruth Ann Haney, seeking a permanent injunction to enforce its zoning ordinance and to prevent defendants from raising on their commercially zoned property hogs or other animals that would violate the zoning ordinance, to remove an allegedly nonconforming fence, and to plow and coat the ground with nontoxic material. Defendаnts brought a hog onto their property as early as 2006, and defendants maintained hogs on their property through the time this lawsuit was filed in 2016. Defendants moved for summary disposition, arguing that plaintiff‘s claim was time-barred by the six-year statutory period of limitations in
In a unanimous per curiam opinion, the Supreme Court held:
Court of Appeals judgment reversed, trial court order denying summary disposition reinstated, and case remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
TOWNSHIP OF FRASER, Plaintiff-Appellant, v HARVEY HANEY and RUTH ANN HANEY, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 160991
STATE OF MICHIGAN SUPREME COURT
FILED February 8, 2022
BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH
PER CURIAM.
Defendants, Harvey and Ruth Ann Haney, owned property in Fraser Township that is zoned for commercial use. Defendants brought a hog onto their property as early as 2006. At some point, additional hogs were brought onto the property. Plaintiff, Fraser Township, filed its complaint in May 2016, alleging that defendants’ property is not zoned for agricultural use and that defendants’ actions violate its zoning ordinance and constitute a nuisance. Plaintiff seeks a permanent injunction to enforce its ordinance and to prevent defendants from raising on their property hogs or other animals that would violate the zoning ordinance, to remove an allegedly nonconforming fenсe, and to plow and coat the ground with nontoxic material. We must decide whether plaintiff‘s action is barred by the pertinent six-year statute of limitations.1 We hold that it is not. Plaintiff has alleged a harm that has occurred every day on which defendants maintain hogs on their property. Plaintiff‘s action is timely under
I. BASIC FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Defendants began raising at least one hog on their commercially zoned property in 2006.2 Plaintiff alleges that defendants were raising approximately 20 hogs when the complaint was filed and that the property was saturated with animal waste, “creating a horrible stench and attraction for flies.” The complaint alleges that defendants had a history of illegal animal operations on the property, including a deer farm that had been ordered closed by a circuit court and Russian boar production that had been banned by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.
Plaintiff sought leave to appeal in this Court, and in lieu of granting leave, we vacated the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remanded the case to the Court of Apрeals for it to address whether defendants waived an affirmative defense under Baker v Marshall.4 On remand, the Court of Appeals distinguished Baker and explained that defendants did not waive the statute-of-limitations defense.5
Plaintiff again sought leave to appeal in this Court, and we granted leave to consider whether
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court reviews de novo a trial court‘s decision on a motion for summary disposition.7 We also review de novo questions of law and statutory interpretation.8
III. ANALYSIS
The statute of limitations at issue,
Except as otherwise expressly provided, the period of limitations runs from the time the claim accrues. The claim accrues . . . at the time the wrong upon which the clаim is based was done regardless of the time when damage results.
” ‘[T]he wrong is done when the plaintiff is harmed rather than when the defendant acted’ under § 5827 . . . .”9 “The relevant ‘harms’ . . . are the actionable harms alleged in a plaintiff‘s cause of action.”10 We thus look to plaintiff‘s complaint to determine when the wrong upon which the claim is based was done.
Plaintiff seeks to enforce its zoning ordinance through a nuisance-abatement action.
Except as otherwise provided by law, a use of land or a dwelling, building, or structure, including a tent or recreational vehicle, used, erected, altered, razed, or converted in violation of a zoning ordinance or regulation adopted under this act is a nuisance per se. The court shall order the nuisance abated, and thе owner or agent in charge of the dwelling, building, structure, tent, recreational vehicle, or land is liable for maintaining a nuisance per se.12
Plaintiff alleges that defendants have used their land in violation of the local zoning ordinances. Specifically, because defendants’ land was zoned for commercial use, rather than agricultural use, defendants cannot raise hogs or other animals on the land.
Defendants do not argue that they have used their land in conformity with the zoning ordinance. They have indeed maintained at least one hog on their property since 2006. Defendants argue that because plaintiff did not bring the present suit until 2016, this action is time-barred by the six-year period of limitations in
The wrong alleged in plaintiff‘s complaint is defendants’ keeping of hogs on their property. The presence of the hogs on the property constitutes the wrong, and that wrong, along with the attendant harms it causes, is being committed as long as the piggery operates.13 For example, the fact that defendants had hogs on their property yesterday is not a wrong that occurred until yesterday, and any claims arising from harms due to the hogs’ presence yesterday could not have accrued until then either. Therefore, because defendants had hogs on their property within the limitations period, claims accrued during that period and plaintiff‘s action is timely.14
A single property can be subject to many “uses.” The Zoning Enabling Act refers to “residential use” as one such use.16 Operation of a state-licensed residential faсility, for example, is a residential use.17 Land that is employed as a state-licensed residential facility is continuously being used for a residential purpose as long as the land is so employed. The use is not finished on the first day construction of the facility is completed or the first day someone moves in. The same is true of the use at issue here. Defendants’ use of the property to raisе hogs was not a one-time occurrence that happened in 2006. The use continues as long as the property is employed as a piggery. Under
In its initial opinion, the Court of Appeals erroneously concluded that plaintiff‘s action would be timely only under the continuing-wrongs doctrine, which has been abrogated in Michigan.19 The continuing-wrongs doctrine (or its abrogation) is not relevant to plaintiff‘s claim for relief. The doctrine allowed a plaintiff to reach back to recover for wrongs that occurred outside the statutory period of limitations. If a plaintiff could establish that a wrong or injury experienced within the permitted time period was part of a series of sufficiently related “continuing wrongs,” the plaintiff might have been able to recover damages for each wrong that was part of the series—including those that otherwise would have been time-barred.20 But even under the continuing-wrongs doctrine, a plaintiff had to establish that оne of the wrongs or injuries occurred within the statutory period of limitations.21 The doctrine
When we abrogated the continuing-wrongs doctrine in Garg, we explained that the relevant statute of limitations there,
Defendants here are not free to continue committing zоning-ordinance violations simply because plaintiff did not bring an action against their first zoning violation. Whether Michigan recognizes the continuing-wrongs doctrine has no bearing on a plaintiff‘s ability to bring an action for claims that accrued within the statutory period of limitations. Thus, Michigan‘s abrogation of the doctrine is irrelevant to this case because plaintiff does not seek a remedy fоr violations outside the limitations period. Defendants violate the law as long as they keep hogs on their property, and plaintiff seeks to remedy only violations that occurred within the statutory period of limitations in the form of an injunction.
IV. CONCLUSION
We hold that plaintiff‘s action to enforce its zoning ordinance is not barred by
Bridget M. McCormack
Brian K. Zahra
David F. Viviano
Richard H. Bernstein
Elizabeth T. Clement
Megan K. Cavanagh
Elizabeth M. Welch
