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Jackson v. Southfield Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative, No. 166320 (Mich. July 16, 2025)

The Michigan Supreme Court ruled on the case of Jackson v Southfield Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative, addressing claims of constitutional violations related to property tax foreclosures. The Court found that governmental entities committed a taking without just compensation when they retained property value exceeding what was owed, affirming that plaintiffs had actionable takings claims. The ruling clarified the retroactive application of amendments to the General Property Tax Act and established that plaintiffs could seek relief through inverse condemnation processes rather than the statutory claims process for surplus proceeds.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
110 views38 pages

Jackson v. Southfield Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative, No. 166320 (Mich. July 16, 2025)

The Michigan Supreme Court ruled on the case of Jackson v Southfield Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative, addressing claims of constitutional violations related to property tax foreclosures. The Court found that governmental entities committed a taking without just compensation when they retained property value exceeding what was owed, affirming that plaintiffs had actionable takings claims. The ruling clarified the retroactive application of amendments to the General Property Tax Act and established that plaintiffs could seek relief through inverse condemnation processes rather than the statutory claims process for surplus proceeds.

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Michigan Supreme Court

Lansing, Michigan

Syllabus
Chief Justice: Justices:
Megan K. Cavanagh Brian K. Zahra
Richard H. Bernstein
Elizabeth M. Welch
Kyra H. Bolden
Kimberly A. Thomas
Noah P. Hood

This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been Reporter of Decisions:
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. Kimberly K. Muschong

JACKSON v SOUTHFIELD NEIGHBORHOOD REVITALIZATION INITIATIVE

Docket No. 166320. Argued on application for leave to appeal April 10, 2025. Decided
July 16, 2025.

Louis Jackson, Michael C. Birac, and others filed a class action in the Oakland Circuit
Court against Southfield Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative (SNRI), Oakland County, the city
of Southfield (the city), Southfield Non-Profit Housing Corporation (SNPHC), and others, alleging
in part that their constitutional rights of procedural due process, substantive due process, and equal
protection had been violated; specifically, plaintiffs asserted that the actions of the governmental
entities violated the Takings Clauses of the Michigan and United States Constitutions, Const 1963,
art 10, § 2; US Const, Am V. Plaintiffs owned real property in the city and were delinquent on
their property taxes between 2012 and 2014. To recover the unpaid taxes, the Oakland County
Treasurer, acting as the foreclosing governmental unit (FGU), foreclosed on plaintiffs’ properties
under the General Property Tax Act (GPTA), MCL 211.1 et seq. At the time, former MCL
211.78m, as amended by 2014 PA 501, required the FGU to take title to real property to cover the
cost of unpaid tax debt and associated fees, without compensating the owners. Plaintiffs’
respective judgments of foreclosure gave them the opportunity to redeem their properties by
paying all the delinquent taxes, with interest and associated fees, by a specified date. After
plaintiffs failed to pay the specified amounts, judgments of foreclosure were entered, the FGU
took title to the properties, and none of the plaintiffs appealed the judgments. The FGU did not
put the properties to public auction because the city exercised its right of first refusal under former
MCL 211.78m(1) and purchased the properties for the minimum bid with funds from SNPHC; the
properties were then conveyed to SNRI, and plaintiffs filed suit. The court, Denise Langford
Morris, J., granted defendants summary disposition of all of plaintiffs’ claims, reasoning that the
court lacked jurisdiction to hear the lawsuit, that plaintiffs lacked standing to bring the suit, and
that the suit was barred by res judicata. On appeal, the Court of Appeals, RIORDAN, P.J., and
JANSEN and STEPHENS, JJ., affirmed the trial court’s order in an unpublished per curiam opinion
issued on December 19, 2019 (Docket No. 344058) (Jackson I). Plaintiffs sought leave to appeal,
and the Supreme Court vacated Jackson I and remanded the case to the trial court for
reconsideration in light of the Court’s decision in Rafaeli, LLC v Oakland Co, 505 Mich 429
(2020), which held that then-applicable provisions of the GPTA that permitted governmental units
to retain surplus proceeds from public tax-foreclosure sales violated the Takings Clause of the
Michigan Constitution. 507 Mich 866 (2021). On remand, the trial court again granted
defendants summary disposition, and plaintiffs appealed that decision. The Court of Appeals,
GADOLA, P.J., and CAVANAGH and K. F. KELLY, JJ., affirmed in part, reversed in part, vacated in
part, and remanded to the trial court for further proceedings. Relevant to this appeal, the Court
held that: (1) Rafaeli applies retroactively; (2) the trial court erred by holding that the federal
Takings Clause did not recognize a protected property interest in plaintiffs’ equity in their homes;
(3) the trial court erred by concluding that Rafaeli did not permit plaintiffs’ takings claims against
Oakland County under the Michigan Constitution; (4) the trial court erred by refusing to give
retroactive application to MCL 211.78m, as amended by 2020 PA 255, and MCL 211.78t, as
enacted by 2020 PA 256, both of which the Legislature added in response to Rafaeli; and (5) the
trial court erred when it summarily disposed of plaintiffs’ inverse-condemnation claims. 348 Mich
App 317 (2023). Oakland County sought leave to appeal, and the Supreme Court ordered oral
argument on whether to grant the application for leave to appeal or take other action. ___ Mich
___; 12 NW3d 600 (2024). The Supreme Court directed the parties to address the consolidated
cases Schafer v Kent Co and Hathon v Michigan, ___ Mich ___ (July 29, 2024) (Docket Nos.
164975 and 165219), which held that Rafaeli apples retroactively to claims that were not yet final
on July 17, 2020, the date the opinion was issued, and that MCL 211.78t applies retroactively to
claims that arose from public tax-foreclosure sales that occurred before Rafaeli was decided.

In a unanimous opinion by Justice BERNSTEIN, the Supreme Court, in lieu of granting leave
to appeal, held:

Under former MCL 211.78m(1), a unit of government other than the state exercising its
right of first refusal was required to pay only the minimum bid to the FGU. When a property is
not offered for public sale at an auction and instead is transferred to a governmental unit, other
than the state, that has exercised its right of first refusal under former MCL 211.78m(1) and has
paid the minimum bid to the FGU, the government commits a taking if the value of the property
retained exceeds what the government was owed. The process set forth in MCL 211.78t for
claimants to recover remaining proceeds does not apply if the additional value associated with the
real property that was acquired or retained by a governmental unit was not reduced to a monetary
amount through a sale; therefore, the value of such property interests cannot be obtained through
the MCL 211.78t claims process. Instead, in that circumstance, a claimant could seek the return
of any additional value under standard processes of inverse condemnation. MCL 211.78m, as
amended by 2020 PA 255, applies prospectively only because there is no language in the statute
indicating that the Legislature intended that it would apply retroactively, and the new provision
would impair vested rights. The Supreme Court reaffirmed its conclusion in Hathon that MCL
211.78t applies retroactively to claims that preceded its enactment, but the provision did not apply
to this case because plaintiffs’ properties were never put up for sale at public auction. Instead,
plaintiffs could seek relief through standard processes of inverse condemnation. The Court of
Appeals’ conclusion that plaintiffs had constitutionally valid takings claims against Oakland
County was affirmed, the Court of Appeals’ conclusion that amended MCL 211.78m applies
retroactively was reversed, and the case was remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.

1. Under former MCL 211.78m, when a judgment of foreclosure entered, absolute title to
the delinquent property passed to the FGU. If the FGU was not the state, the state was presented
with the opportunity to exercise the right of first refusal to purchase the property from the FGU
for the greater of the minimum bid or its fair market value. But if the state did not exercise this
right to purchase the property, the city, village, or township could purchase the property for a
public purpose from the FGU for “the minimum bid,” which was defined by former MCL
211.78m(16)(a) as including all delinquent taxes, interest, penalties, and fees due on the property,
and the expenses of administering the sale. If the city, village, or township did not purchase the
property, the county in which that property was located could purchase the property by paying the
minimum bid to the FGU. Article 10, § 2 of Michigan’s 1963 Constitution prohibits the
government from taking private property for public use without just compensation. In Rafaeli, the
Court held that when a property has been offered for sale at a public auction, just compensation
requires the FGU to return any proceeds from the tax-foreclosure sale in excess of the delinquent
taxes, interest, penalties, and fees reasonably related to the foreclosure and sale of the property—
no more, no less. The same principles apply when, as in this case, there is no sale by public auction
because a governmental unit exercises its right of first refusal under former MCL 211.78m(1); the
governmental unit still commits a taking if the value of the property retained exceeds what the
government was owed. In this case, the city exercised its right of first refusal, and there was no
possibility of surplus proceeds from a foreclosure sale because the properties were never placed
for public auction and former MCL 211.78m restricted the city’s purchase price to the minimum
bid. Therefore, the FGU did not have an opportunity to receive, let alone retain, any surplus funds.
Because the properties were purchased for the minimum bid in lieu of being made available to
purchase through public auctions, to the extent the value of plaintiffs’ respective properties
exceeded the amount plaintiffs owed in delinquent taxes and attendant fees, there was a taking
without just compensation in violation of Michigan’s Takings Clause. The Court of Appeals
therefore correctly concluded that plaintiffs had actionable takings claims.

2. After Rafaeli was decided, the Legislature amended portions of the GPTA by passing
2020 PA 255 and 2020 PA 256. Relevant here, amended MCL 211.78m(1) now provides that any
unit of government exercising its right of first refusal must pay the FGU “the greater of the
minimum bid or the fair market value of the property.” In contrast, former MCL 211.78m(1)
required any city, village, township, or county exercising its right of first refusal to pay only the
“minimum bid.” Hathon’s analysis of the retroactivity of MCL 211.78t and MCL 211.78l was a
useful framework for considering whether amended MCL 211.78m should be applied
retroactively. Like MCL 211.78l, amended MCL 211.78m does not contain a clear indication that
the Legislature intended for it to apply retroactively, and the provision does not explicitly relate to
an antecedent event. Retroactive application of amended MCL 211.78m(1) would impair vested
rights because the former version of the provision permitted a governmental unit to exercise its
right of first refusal to acquire a foreclosed property for the “minimum bid,” while amended MCL
211.78m(1) now requires the governmental unit exercising its right of first refusal to acquire
foreclosed property to pay the greater of the minimum bid or the fair market value of the property.
Retroactive application of the amended statute would impose a new financial obligation on a real-
estate transaction that took place years earlier. Accordingly, amended MCL 211.78m applies only
prospectively to claims accruing after 2020 PA 255 became effective, i.e., claims accruing on or
after January 1, 2021. The Court of Appeals erred by concluding otherwise.

3. MCL 211.78t, as enacted by 2020 PA 256, establishes the procedure under which a
claimant may seek to recover any surplus proceeds from an eventual foreclosure sale. MCL
211.78t(11) provides that § 78t is the “exclusive mechanism for a claimant to claim and receive
any applicable remaining proceeds under the laws of this state.” Under MCL 211.78t(12)(b),
“remaining proceeds” is defined as “the amount equal to the difference between the amount paid
to the foreclosing governmental unit for a property due to the sale or transfer of the property under
section 78m and the sum of” (1) the minimum bid, (2) other fees and expenses incurred by the
FGU not included in the minimum bid, and (3) a sale commission. Under former MCL
211.78m(1), the amount paid to the FGU when a governmental unit retained the property by
exercising the right of first refusal was the minimum bid, which is the amount of the tax debt along
with associated interest and fees. “Remaining proceeds” does not include the additional value
associated with the real property that was acquired or retained by a governmental unit when the
retained value was not reduced to a monetary amount through a sale. Therefore, when a
governmental unit has exercised its right of first refusal under former MCL 211.78m(1) and
purchased the property from the FGU for the minimum bid, the process outlined in MCL 211.78t
for recovering remaining proceeds does not govern a claimant’s dispute regarding the additional
value associated with the real property that was acquired or retained by the governmental unit.
Instead, such claimants should proceed through standard processes of inverse condemnation,
separate from the statutory process of MCL 211.78t, to recover that additional value. Therefore,
although the Court of Appeals properly concluded, as held in Hathon, that MCL 211.78t applies
retroactively, that statute was not applicable in this case and did not preclude plaintiffs from
seeking relief.

Court of Appeals’ judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part, and case remanded to
the trial court for further proceedings.

Justice WELCH, concurring, agreed with the Court’s holding that a taking requiring just
compensation occurred and with the Court’s resolution of the appeal. She wrote separately to
address issues that could be important in the future even though they were not necessary to resolve
this appeal, given that Oakland County conceded liability rather than arguing that the city, which
purchased plaintiffs’ properties, was instead the properly liable defendant. Justice WELCH opined
that Hall v Meisner, 51 F4th 185 (CA 6, 2022)—which held under similar facts that Oakland
County was alone responsible for the taking of the plaintiffs’ property and that the event that
constituted a taking was the vesting of absolute title to the plaintiffs’ homes in the FGU—was
wrongly decided and that its holdings conflicted with Rafaeli and Tyler v Hennepin Co, Minnesota,
598 US 631 (2023). Unlike Hall, Rafaeli and Tyler both indicate that an event that gives rise to a
compensable takings claim is the event following entry of a judgment of foreclosure when the
government fails to provide the divested property owner with the opportunity to seek compensation
for the excess monetary value of any property interest that survived the foreclosure. Clarity going
forward was necessary because (1) identifying the nature of the property interest and the moment
at which it is taken is important for calculating the value of just compensation and (2) Hall calls
into question the continued viability of tax foreclosures that convey title while the rule stated in
Tyler and Rafaeli does not. Justice WELCH also asserted that Oakland County should not have
been liable for just compensation given that the county retained nothing more than what it was
owed. Under Michigan law, a county treasurer, acting as the FGU, takes title to real property upon
entry of a final judgment of foreclosure. Once the city exercised its right of first refusal in this
case, the FGU was required to accept the money and convey title to the city. Therefore, the FGU
received nothing more than what it was owed in exchange for the foreclosed properties. The record
established that Oakland County’s treasurer did not receive any excess beyond what was owed,
and therefore, it could not have taken anything that requires payment of just compensation under
Rafaeli. In sum, Justice WELCH joined the majority because a governmental unit received and
retained more than it was owed, resulting in a taking that required just compensation, but she
worried that significant legal questions remained unresolved.

Justice HOOD did not participate because the Court considered this case before he assumed
office.
Michigan Supreme Court
Lansing, Michigan

OPINION
Chief Justice: Justices:
Megan K. Cavanagh Brian K. Zahra
Richard H. Bernstein
Elizabeth M. Welch
Kyra H. Bolden
Kimberly A. Thomas
Noah P. Hood

FILED July 16, 2025

STATE OF MICHIGAN

SUPREME COURT

LOUIS JACKSON, MICHAEL C. BIRAC,


LEE CRAFT, GAYLYNN CRAFT,
RONALD HAYES, SMFJ, LLC, EVERTT
HODGE, DONALD SWINNEY,
STEFANIE BOYD, LISA SMITH, and
KIRK BOYD,

Plaintiffs-Appellees,

v No. 166320

SOUTHFIELD NEIGHBORHOOD
REVITALIZATION INITIATIVE, FRED
ZORN, CITY OF SOUTHFIELD, KEN
SIVER, and SOUTHFIELD NON-PROFIT
HOUSING CORPORATION,

Defendants-Appellees,

and

OAKLAND COUNTY,

Defendant-Appellant,

and
E’TOILE LIBBETT, MICHAEL A.
MANDELBAUM, SUSAN WARD
WITKOWSKI, also known as SUSAN
WARD and SUSAN WITKOWSKI, and
GERALD WITKOWSKI,

Defendants.

BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH (except HOOD, J.)

BERNSTEIN, J.
This case involves questions raised in the wake of this Court’s opinion in Rafaeli,

LLC v Oakland Co, 505 Mich 429; 952 NW2d 434 (2020). In Rafaeli, we held that

then-applicable provisions of the General Property Tax Act (GPTA), MCL 211.1 et

seq., which permitted governmental units to retain surplus proceeds from tax-

foreclosure sales, violated the Takings Clause of the Michigan Constitution, Const

1963, art 10, § 2. Following this Court’s decision in Rafaeli, the Legislature amended

portions of the GPTA by passing 2020 PA 255 and 2020 PA 256, which established a

procedure by which claims for surplus proceeds from foreclosure sales would be

administered. This Court was then tasked with considering whether Rafaeli applied

retroactively to pending claims, as well as whether some of the provisions enacted by

2020 PA 256 applied retroactively. In the consolidated cases of Schafer v Kent Co and

Hathon v Michigan, ___ Mich ___, ___; ___ NW3d ___ (July 29, 2024) (Docket Nos.

164975 and 165219); slip op at 31, this Court held that Rafaeli applies retroactively to

claims that were not yet final on July 17, 2020, the date the opinion was issued. This

Court also held that MCL 211.78t, which established the procedure governing claims

for surplus proceeds, applies retroactively to claims that arose from public tax-

2
foreclosure sales that occurred before Rafaeli was decided. Id. at ___; slip op at 4, 33.

However, to pass constitutional muster, this provision could not be read to cut off claims

for relief that would otherwise have expired between the enactment of MCL 211.78t

and this Court’s decision in Schafer. Therefore, we held that the two-year limitations

period imposed by MCL 211.78l applies prospectively only. Id. at ___; slip op at 38-

39.

Rafaeli and Schafer involved claims for surplus proceeds generated by public tax-

foreclosure sales. This case, by contrast, does not arise out of any public tax-foreclosure

sales; rather, in this case, plaintiffs’ properties were foreclosed on through the GPTA—

before Rafaeli was decided—and sold for the minimum bid to another governmental unit

through the right-of-first-refusal procedure established by former MCL 211.78m, as

amended by 2014 PA 501, without having been offered for sale at a public auction. We

agree with the judgment of the Court of Appeals to the extent that it held that this

constituted a taking under the Takings Clause of the Michigan Constitution. However,

we disagree with the Court of Appeals’ conclusion that the current version of MCL

211.78m, as amended by 2020 PA 255, applies retroactively. Therefore, we affirm the

judgment of the Court of Appeals in part, reverse in part, and remand the case to the trial

court for further proceedings.

3
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiffs, 1 individuals who owned real property in the city of Southfield, each

became delinquent on their property taxes between 2012 and 2014. Defendant Oakland

County (the County), through the Oakland County Treasurer, foreclosed on these

properties in accordance with the former version of the GPTA. At the time, the GPTA

required the foreclosing governmental unit (FGU) to take title to real property to cover

the cost of the unpaid tax debt and associated fees, with no compensation available to the

former property owners. 2 See former MCL 211.78m; Rafaeli, 505 Mich at 437, 440-441

(explaining how, under the prior version of the GPTA, the FGU retained amounts of

money in excess of unpaid delinquent taxes, interest, penalties, and fees, constituting an

unconstitutional taking). Under their respective judgments of foreclosure, plaintiffs were

given opportunities to exercise their right to redeem their properties by paying all the

delinquent taxes, with interest and associated fees, by a specified date. Plaintiffs entered

into payment plans with the County’s treasurer, but each failed to make the required

payments by the specified deadlines. Judgments of foreclosure were entered as to each

property, the FGU took title to the properties, and none of the plaintiffs appealed the

judgments. The FGU did not put the properties to public auction because defendant city

of Southfield (the City) exercised its right of first refusal under former MCL 211.78m(1),

1
Louis Jackson; Michael C. Birac; Lee Craft; Gaylynn Craft; Ronald Hayes; SMFJ, LLC;
Evertt Hodge; Donald Swinney; Stefanie Boyd; Lisa Smith; and Kirk Boyd.
2
An FGU may be either the treasurer of the county in which the property is located or, if
the county treasurer has elected to have the state foreclose on the property, the state itself.
See MCL 211.78(8)(a). In this case, the Oakland County Treasurer is the FGU and took
title to the properties following the foreclosure.

4
purchasing the properties for the minimum bid with funds from defendant Southfield

Non-Profit Housing Corporation (SNPHC). 3 The properties were subsequently

conveyed by the City to defendant Southfield Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative

(SNRI).

After title to the properties was transferred to SNRI, plaintiffs filed suit against the

Oakland County Treasurer, the City and several of its employees, SNPHC, and SNRI.

Plaintiffs made a variety of allegations, including alleged violations of their constitutional

rights of procedural due process, substantive due process, and equal protection.

Specifically, plaintiffs averred that the actions of the governmental units violated the

Takings Clauses of the Michigan and United States Constitutions. Const 1963, art 10,

§ 2; US Const, Am V. Plaintiffs additionally asserted a violation of the GPTA and sought

civil damages under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18

USC 1961 et seq. In addition to declaratory and injunctive relief, plaintiffs sought

damages for the lost equity in their properties, which would be trebled under the relevant

provisions of RICO, and to quiet title to their properties. In May 2018, the trial court

granted defendants summary disposition on all of plaintiffs’ claims, reasoning that the

court lacked jurisdiction to hear the lawsuit, that plaintiffs lacked standing to bring the

suit, and that the suit was further barred by res judicata. The Court of Appeals agreed

that plaintiffs did not have standing to challenge their foreclosures because the County

had satisfied the minimum procedural due-process requirements. Jackson v Southfield

3
In June 2016, the City entered into an agreement with SNPHC to fund right-of-first-
refusal purchases so that the City could rehabilitate distressed properties to create housing
opportunities in Southfield.

5
Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of

Appeals, issued December 19, 2019 (Docket No. 344058) (Jackson I), pp 7-9.

Plaintiffs appealed that decision in this Court. In light of our recent decision in

Rafaeli, we vacated Jackson I and remanded the case to the trial court for reconsideration.

Jackson v Southfield Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative, 507 Mich 866 (2021). On

remand, the trial court granted defendants summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(7),

(8), and (10), holding that Rafaeli did not apply retroactively and, regardless, that

plaintiffs did not have protected property interests under the Takings Clauses pursuant to

Rafaeli. The trial court stated:

Rafaeli clarified the extent of the property interest available to Plaintiffs


post-foreclosure and limited it to excess proceeds from a tax foreclosure
sale. In the instant case, Plaintiffs have failed to identify a property interest
that was taken from them. The Federal Constitutional claims raised by
Plaintiffs have been routinely rejected by Federal Courts post Rafaeli.

On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed in part, reversed in part, vacated in part,

and remanded to the trial court for further proceedings, holding that: (1) Rafaeli applies

retroactively; (2) the trial court erred by holding that the federal Takings Clause did not

recognize a protected property interest in plaintiffs’ equity in their homes; (3) the trial

court erred by concluding that Rafaeli did not permit plaintiffs’ takings claims against

the County under the Michigan Constitution; (4) the trial court erred by refusing to give

retroactive application to the amended language in MCL 211.78m and MCL 211.78t; (5)

the trial court erred when it summarily disposed of plaintiffs’ inverse-condemnation

claims; (6) the trial court erred when it granted summary disposition on the claims of two

plaintiffs on the basis of res judicata; and (7) the trial court properly granted summary

6
disposition in favor of the City and corporate defendants as related to plaintiffs’ unjust-

enrichment and civil-conspiracy claims because plaintiffs could not prove causation.

Jackson v Southfield Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative, 348 Mich App 317; 18

NW3d 27 (2023) (Jackson II).

The County sought leave to appeal in this Court, and we initially held the

application in abeyance for Schafer to determine whether the holdings in Rafaeli applied

retroactively to pending claims. Following our resolution of Schafer, we ordered oral

argument on the application in this case. Jackson v Southfield Neighborhood

Revitalization Initiative, ___ Mich ___; 12 NW3d 600 (2024).

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

On remand, the trial court granted summary disposition to defendants under MCR

2.116(C)(7), (8), and (10). However, the Court of Appeals noted that the arguments

regarding the viability of plaintiffs’ takings claims under the United States and Michigan

Constitutions fell solely within the scope of MCR 2.116(C)(8). Jackson II, 348 Mich

App at 339-340. We agree with this conclusion and thus view the trial court’s decision

to grant summary disposition solely under the lens of MCR 2.116(C)(8).

In reviewing a motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8), “[a]ll

well-pleaded factual allegations are accepted as true and construed in a light most

favorable to the nonmovant.” Maiden v Rozwood, 461 Mich 109, 119; 597 NW2d 817

(1999). Summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8) is properly granted when the

claims are “so clearly unenforceable as a matter of law that no factual development

could possibly justify recovery.” Id. (quotation marks and citation omitted).

7
We review de novo a decision on a motion for summary disposition, id. at 118,

as well as questions of constitutional law, Sidun v Wayne Co Treasurer, 481 Mich 503,

508; 751 NW2d 453 (2008), and questions concerning the interpretation and

retroactivity of amended statutes, Buhl v Oak Park, 507 Mich 236, 242; 968 NW2d 348

(2021).

III. ANALYSIS

A. THE TAKINGS CLAIMS

The protection of privately owned property from undue governmental

interference is a deeply entrenched right enshrined in both the federal and state

Constitutions. The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution, as applied to

the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, provides, in relevant part: “[N]or shall

private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” US Const, Am V.

Michigan’s Takings Clause provides, in relevant part:

Private property shall not be taken for public use without just
compensation therefore being first made or secured in a manner prescribed
by law. If private property consisting of an individual’s principal
residence is taken for public use, the amount of compensation made and
determined for that taking shall be not less than 125% of that property’s
fair market value, in addition to any other reimbursement allowed by
law. . . .

“Public use” does not include the taking of private property for
transfer to a private entity for the purpose of economic development or
enhancement of tax revenues. Private property otherwise may be taken
for reasons of public use as that term is understood on the effective date
of the amendment to this constitution that added this paragraph. [Const
1963, art 10, § 2.]

8
Michigan’s Takings Clause has been interpreted to provide greater protection to private

property owners than its federal counterpart in some circumstances. Rafaeli, 505 Mich

at 454.

In Rafaeli, this Court held that

[the] plaintiffs, former property owners whose properties were foreclosed


and sold to satisfy delinquent real-property taxes, have a cognizable,
vested property right to the surplus proceeds resulting from the tax-
foreclosure sale of their properties. . . . [Therefore, the] defendants’
retention and subsequent transfer of those proceeds into the county general
fund amounted to a taking of plaintiffs’ properties under Article 10, § 2 of
our 1963 Constitution. [Id. at 484-485.]

This Court has since held that Rafaeli applies retroactively to claims that were not yet

final when Rafaeli was issued. Schafer, ___ Mich at ___; slip op at 21.

In this case, the operative question is whether a taking occurs when property was

not offered for sale at a public auction because a governmental unit other than the state

purchased the property from the FGU for a minimum bid through the right-of-first-refusal

process outlined in former MCL 211.78m. The Court of Appeals concluded that these

property transfers constituted a taking under the same principles outlined by this Court

in Rafaeli. Jackson II, 348 Mich App at 360-362. We agree that this scenario constitutes

a taking under the Michigan Constitution.

Rafaeli provides context to our decision here. In Rafaeli, 505 Mich at 456-473,

this Court undertook a comprehensive review of the historical principles underlying this

state’s jurisprudence related to claims for surplus proceeds following a tax-foreclosure

sale. Considering common-law principles dating back to the Magna Carta that have been

repeatedly reaffirmed in both statutory and common law, we explained:

9
It is clear that our 1963 Constitution protects a former owner’s
property right to collect the surplus proceeds following a tax-foreclosure
sale under Article 10, § 2. This right existed at common law; was
commonly understood to exist in the common law before the 1963
ratification of our Constitution; and continues to exist after 1963, as our
decision in Dean [v Dep’t of Natural Resources, 399 Mich 84; 247 NW2d
876 (1976),] demonstrates. Because this common-law property right is
constitutionally protected by our state’s Takings Clause, the Legislature’s
amendments of the GPTA could not abrogate it. While the Legislature is
typically free to abrogate the common law, it is powerless to override a
right protected by Michigan’s Takings Clause. [Id. at 473.]

This Court’s Rafaeli decision was couched in our specific consideration of the

right to recover any surplus funds the FGU might receive from a public tax-foreclosure

sale. Rafaeli did not present this Court with the opportunity to consider a scenario in

which the GPTA mandated that no public foreclosure sale take place. Under former MCL

211.78m, when a judgment of foreclosure entered, absolute title to the delinquent

property passed to the FGU. If the FGU was not the state, the state was presented with

the opportunity to exercise the right of first refusal to purchase the property from the FGU

for “the greater of the minimum bid or its fair market value . . . .” Former MCL

211.78m(1). If the state did not exercise this right to purchase the property, the city,

village, or township could purchase the property “for a public purpose” from the FGU

for “the minimum bid.” Id. If the city, village, or township did not purchase the property,

the county in which that property was located could purchase the property by payment to

the FGU of the minimum bid. Id. The “minimum bid” was defined as including “[a]ll

delinquent taxes, interest, penalties, and fees due on the property,” former MCL

211.78m(16)(a)(i), and “[t]he expenses of administering the sale,” former MCL

211.78m(16)(a)(ii). If none of these governmental units exercised their right to purchase

the foreclosed property, the FGU or an agent for the FGU was required to attempt to sell

10
the property by public auction. Former MCL 211.78m(2). Therefore, under former MCL

211.78m, a foreclosure sale would commence only if neither the state nor the city, village,

township, or county in which the property was located purchased the property from the

FGU. Once a right of first refusal had been exercised, however, the FGU had no

discretion and was required to sell the property to the governmental unit that had invoked

the right. Former MCL 211.78m.

Here, the state declined to purchase plaintiffs’ foreclosed properties, but the City

exercised its right of first refusal. Under former MCL 211.78m(1) and former MCL

211.78m(16)(a), there was no possibility of surplus proceeds from a foreclosure sale

because the properties were never placed for public auction and the statute restricted the

City’s purchase amount upon exercise of its right of first refusal to the “minimum bid.” 4

Accordingly, there was no opportunity for the FGU to receive, let alone retain, any

surplus funds. See Rafaeli, 505 Mich at 437 (“[D]efendants’ retention of . . . surplus

proceeds is an unconstitutional taking . . . .”).

4
We take no position on the validity of a right of first refusal exercised under former
MCL 211.78m by the state because former MCL 211.78m instead required the state to
purchase a property for “the greater of the minimum bid or [the property’s] fair market
value” and such a scenario is not before our Court. Former MCL 211.78m(1) (emphasis
added). We note that, under the amended version of MCL 211.78m, the state still has the
initial right to purchase a foreclosed property from the FGU for the greater of either the
minimum bid or the fair market value. If the state does not exercise its right to purchase
the property, the other governmental units may still purchase the property under a right of
first refusal. If there has been no claim for remaining proceeds, the governmental unit may,
as before, purchase the property for the minimum bid. However, if a claim for remaining
proceeds has been filed, the governmental unit must pay the greater of the minimum bid or
the fair market value. MCL 211.78m(1).

11
Despite this distinction, the same principles that underpinned this Court’s

decision in Rafaeli hold true in the scenario presented by the case before us. In the

foreclosure-sale context of Rafaeli, we explained:

As the foreclosing governmental unit under the GPTA, defendants


were entitled to seize plaintiffs’ properties to satisfy the unpaid delinquent
real-property taxes as well as any interest, penalties, and fees associated
with the foreclosure and sale of plaintiffs’ properties. But defendants could
only collect the amount plaintiffs owed and nothing more. [Rafaeli, 505
Mich at 474.]

This remains true even when a property is not offered for sale at a public auction; the

only distinction is how we determine whether the government collected more than it was

owed “to satisfy the unpaid delinquent real-property taxes as well as any interest,

penalties, and fees associated with the foreclosure and sale of plaintiffs’ properties.” Id.

Where a public foreclosure sale occurs, the government commits a taking only if it retains

any surplus proceeds received from the sale of the property. Id. at 483-484; see also Yono

v Ingham Co, ___ Mich ___, ___; ___ NW3d ___ (July 16, 2025) (Docket No. 166791);

slip op at 6-8. But where, as here, there are no sales by public auction, the government

commits a taking if the value of the property retained exceeds what the government was

owed. The government cannot evade long-established methods of disposing of

foreclosed properties through public sale and simply keep highly valuable property for

itself, avoiding paying any compensation to homeowners. Such a practice would allow

governments to circumvent Rafaeli and render its constitutional holding inert for property

owners affected by similar takings. As stated in Rafaeli, governments have long been

prohibited from taking “property in excess of what is owed.” Rafaeli, 505 Mich at 480.

12
We reiterate our conclusion from Rafaeli that, when a property has been offered

for sale at a public auction, “just compensation requires the foreclosing governmental

unit to return any proceeds from the tax-foreclosure sale in excess of the delinquent taxes,

interest, penalties, and fees reasonably related to the foreclosure and sale of the

property—no more, no less.” Id. at 483-484. This is because “the property improperly

taken was the surplus proceeds, not plaintiffs’ real properties,” and “plaintiffs are largely

responsible for the loss of their properties’ value by failing to pay their taxes on time and

in full.” Id. at 482. It remains true that when a surplus results from a public auction, “[i]f

plaintiffs were entitled to collect more than the amount of the surplus proceeds, not only

would they be taking money away from the public as a whole, but they would themselves

benefit from their tax delinquency.” Id. 5

But this analysis is not applicable to properties that were not offered for public

sale and instead were transferred to another governmental unit for the minimum bid under

former MCL 211.78m(1). Because these properties were purchased for the minimum bid

in lieu of being made available to purchase through public auctions, to the extent the

value of plaintiffs’ respective properties exceeded the amount plaintiffs owed in

delinquent taxes and attendant fees, we conclude that there was a taking without just

5
Consistently with this holding, we also reaffirm the Rafaeli Court’s rejection of the full
fair market value of plaintiffs’ properties as the appropriate measure of damages for a tax-
foreclosure taking when a property was offered for sale at a public auction. Rafaeli, 505
Mich at 483.

13
compensation in violation of the Michigan Constitution. 6 We remand to the trial court

for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. 7

6
Because we have concluded that the activity here constituted a taking under the Takings
Clause of the Michigan Constitution, and because the Michigan Constitution provides more
expansive protection against takings than its federal counterpart, Rafaeli, 505 Mich at 454,
we do not address the question of whether the facts of this case present a taking under the
Takings Clause of the United States Constitution.

With that said, we acknowledge that the federal courts have addressed issues like
those present in both Rafaeli and this case. In Tyler v Hennepin Co, Minnesota, 598 US
631; 143 S Ct 1369; 215 L Ed 2d 564 (2023), the Supreme Court of the United States
addressed the same situation that faced this Court in Rafaeli and reached broadly the same
conclusion—that a county’s retention of money remaining after the foreclosure sale of a
condominium was a classic taking in violation of constitutional protections. Id. at 639. In
reaching this conclusion, the Supreme Court relied on much of the same historical
precedent underpinning this Court’s conclusion in Rafaeli. Id. at 637-648.

Germane to this case, in Hall v Meisner, 51 F4th 185 (CA 6, 2022), the United States
Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit addressed a situation nearly identical with the one
here and involving several of the same parties. Addressing the same right-of-first-refusal
issue present in this case, the Sixth Circuit held that a taking had occurred even in the
absence of a foreclosure sale at public auction, in violation of the Fifth Amendment of the
United States Constitution. The Hall court stated:

The defendants, for their part, insist throughout their briefing that,
under Michigan law, a homeowner’s equitable interest in her property is
limited to any “surplus” proceeds after a foreclosure sale conducted by the
“ ‘foreclosing governmental unit.’ ” See Rafaeli, 505 Mich at 462 . . . . (Of
which there were none here, because there was no public foreclosure sale.)
But that proposition, as shown above, overlooks the very reasons why a
property owner has a right to the surplus. That right does not arise in manner
akin to quantum mechanics, materializing suddenly without any apparent
connection to anything that existed before. The owner’s right to a surplus
after a foreclosure sale instead follows directly from her possession of
equitable title before the sale. The surplus is merely the embodiment in
money of the value of that equitable title. [Id. at 195.]
7
We decline to address the question, raised by the Michigan Association of County
Treasurers in its brief amicus curiae, of whether the FGU (here, the County) or the

14
B. RETROACTIVITY OF MCL 211.78m AND MCL 211.78t

This Court asked the parties to address whether the Court of Appeals correctly

concluded that MCL 211.78m, as amended by 2020 PA 255, and MCL 211.78t, as enacted

by 2020 PA 256, both apply retroactively. Prior to the amendments, MCL 211.78m(1)

stated that a unit of government other than the state exercising its right of first refusal was

required to pay only the “minimum bid.” Under amended MCL 211.78m(1), any unit of

government exercising its right of first refusal must pay the FGU “the greater of the

minimum bid or the fair market value of the property.” The newly enacted MCL 211.78t

sets forth a detailed procedure for a claimant to seek any surplus proceeds from an eventual

foreclosure sale. We reaffirm our recent holding in the companion case Hathon that

MCL 211.78t applies retroactively to existing claims, Schafer, ___ Mich at ___; slip op

at 37, but hold that the statute is not applicable in this case. We further conclude that

MCL 211.78m, as amended by 2020 PA 255, does not apply retroactively to the claims

presented by this case.

In considering whether a statute applies retroactively, we are above all driven by the

Legislature’s intent. “ ‘All other rules of construction and operation are subservient to this

principle.’ ” Buhl, 507 Mich at 244 (quotation marks omitted), quoting Frank W Lynch &

Co v Flex Technologies, Inc, 463 Mich 578, 583; 624 NW2d 180 (2001). “Statutes are

presumed to apply prospectively unless the Legislature clearly manifests the intent for

retroactive application.” Johnson v Pastoriza, 491 Mich 417, 429; 818 NW2d 279 (2012).

governmental unit exercising the right of first refusal (here, the City) is the party liable for
the taking. This argument was not raised or briefed by the parties, and we will not opine
on it here.

15
This Court has enumerated additional factors to consider in assessing whether the

Legislature intended for a statute to apply retroactively:

First, we consider whether there is specific language providing for retroactive


application. Second, in some situations, a statute is not regarded as operating
retroactively merely because it relates to an antecedent event. Third, in
determining retroactivity, we must keep in mind that retroactive laws impair
vested rights acquired under existing laws or create new obligations or duties
with respect to transactions or considerations already past. Finally, a
remedial or procedural act not affecting vested rights may be given
retroactive effect where the injury or claim is antecedent to the enactment of
the statute. [LaFontaine Saline, Inc v Chrysler Group, LLC, 496 Mich 26,
38-39; 852 NW2d 78 (2014) (citations omitted).]

Our recent discussion of the retroactivity of MCL 211.78t and MCL 211.78l in

Hathon both addresses one of the questions before us and acts as a useful framework for

considering the other question. Schafer, ___ Mich at ___; slip op at 33-37. Hathon

involved the retroactivity of newly enacted MCL 211.78t, which sets forth a detailed

procedure for a claimant to seek any surplus proceeds from an eventual foreclosure sale.

This Court concluded that MCL 211.78t applies retroactively to claims arising from

foreclosure sales prior to Rafaeli “by its plain terms.” Id. at ___; slip op at 36. We

explained that the plain language of the statute clearly indicated that the Legislature

intended for it to apply retroactively:

MCL 211.78t(1)(b)(i) explicitly allows litigation prior to Rafaeli to


proceed “only if” the Michigan Supreme Court holds the decision to be
retroactive. It also expressly identifies the claims to which it applies as those
deriving from “foreclosed property transferred or sold . . . before” a specific
date prior to the enactment of the statute, i.e., the date Rafaeli was issued on
July 18, 2020. The statute establishes a specific and detailed process for
administrating those claims if and when this condition triggering relief is
met. To hold that such a statute itself is prospective borders on misnomer.
It is well accepted that “retroactively” means application of a law to
“transactions or considerations already past.” All sales of property occurring

16
prior to the date of Rafaeli occurred definitionally prior to the date of the
statute; MCL 211.78t unambiguously applies to events and occurrences in
the past. [Id. at ___; slip op at 33-34 (citations omitted; ellipsis in original).]

The Hathon Court observed that the only logical reading of MCL 211.78t requires it to be

applied retrospectively.

By its very terms, MCL 211.78t(1)(b) applies to and bars claims that were
based on foreclosures sold “before July 18, 2020.” The statute expressly
identifies a date certain and specifically states that certain legal rights can be
pursued, while others cannot. Further, the statute was enacted after Rafaeli;
it must by its plain terms apply retroactively to events and occurrences that
predated enactment. [Id. at ___; slip op at 35-36.]
We reaffirm Hathon’s analysis of MCL 211.78t. The plain language of MCL

211.78t is a clear manifestation of the Legislature’s intent that the provision apply

retroactively. Because the Legislature’s intent is reflected in the plain language of the

statute, the factors discussed in LaFontaine need not be further addressed. Therefore, we

affirm the Court of Appeals’ holding that MCL 211.78t applies retroactively.

Although MCL 211.78t is retroactive, it does not govern relief in this dispute, nor

does it preclude plaintiffs from seeking relief. The language of this provision indicates that

it was drafted with an understanding that it would grant relief for remaining proceeds only

(1) after a public foreclosure sale or (2) after a transfer for fair market value under MCL

211.78m(1), as amended, when a claimant has filed a claim for remaining proceeds from

the foreclosed property under MCL 211.78t(2). The provision does not on its face account

for a situation in which a city purchases the property for the minimum bid under former

MCL 211.78m(1).

MCL 211.78t is the “exclusive mechanism for a claimant to claim and receive any

applicable remaining proceeds under the laws of this state.” MCL 211.78t(11). However,

17
“remaining proceeds” as employed in MCL 211.78t does not encompass all excess value

held by the government following a foreclosure. MCL 211.78t(12)(b) defines “remaining

proceeds,” the relief obtainable under the statute, as

the amount equal to the difference between the amount paid to the foreclosing
governmental unit for a property due to the sale or transfer of the property
under section 78m and the sum of all of the following:

(i) The minimum bid under section 78m.

(ii) All other fees and expenses incurred by the foreclosing


governmental unit pursuant to section 78m in connection with the forfeiture,
foreclosure, sale, maintenance, repair, and remediation of the property not
included in the minimum bid.

(iii) A sale commission payable to the foreclosing governmental unit


equal to 5% of the amount paid to the foreclosing governmental unit for the
property.

The amount “paid” to the FGU in this case—and in any other case in which a

governmental unit retains the property by exercising a right of first refusal under former

MCL 211.78m(1)—is the “minimum bid,” i.e., the amount of the tax debt along with any

associated interest and fees. Former MCL 211.78m(1) (“[A] city, village, or township may

purchase . . . [the property] by payment to the foreclosing governmental unit of the

minimum bid.”) (emphasis added). “Paid,” as used in the definition of “remaining

proceeds,” clearly encompasses the transfer of money, especially in the context of the

foreclosure-sale statute, MCL 211.78m. But the definition of the term “remaining

proceeds” does not appear to include the additional value associated with the real property

that was acquired or retained by a governmental unit when the retained value was not

reduced to a monetary amount through a sale. The value of such property interests could

not be obtained through the MCL 211.78t claims process. Regarding plaintiffs’ claims,

18
then, “remaining proceeds” would be “the amount equal to the difference between the

amount paid to the” FGU and the minimum bid. MCL 211.78t(12)(b). For each plaintiff,

the amount paid to the FGU was the minimum bid, so the difference between these figures

is zero. Because MCL 211.78t does not provide plaintiffs with any possibility of relief,

MCL 211.78t does not govern this dispute and claimants should proceed through standard

processes of inverse condemnation, separate from the statutory process of MCL 211.78t.

We next address whether amended MCL 211.78m applies retroactively. Plaintiffs

argue that amended MCL 211.78m, requiring that a governmental unit pay “the greater of

the minimum bid or the fair market value of the property,” applies retroactively, while the

County argues that it does not. Consistently with our adherence to the plain language of

the relevant statute in Hathon as well as the first LaFontaine factor, we initially ask whether

there is any language specifically providing for retroactive application. In considering the

retroactivity of one of the other amended provisions of the GPTA, MCL 211.78l, which

provided a new two-year limitations period for claims for surplus proceeds, the Court in

Hathon explained:

By contrast to MCL 211.78t, MCL 211.78l includes no similar language


expressly identifying and applying its standard to actions and events prior to
enactment. Statutes are generally presumed to apply prospectively, and
statutes of limitations specifically have long been presumed to apply
prospectively absent “clear and unequivocal manifestation of a legislative
preference for retroactive application.” Moreover, if MCL 211.78l applied
retroactively, it would cut off the rights of numerous individuals whose
claims accrued prior to the creation of a shortened two-year limitations
period. Statutes cannot constitutionally eliminate relief by retroactively
shortening a period of limitations without also providing a reasonable period
of time for claimants to commence litigation. To avoid interpreting a
statutory provision in a manner that would place it in serious constitutional
jeopardy, and correspondingly in line with its plain text and established
methods of statutory interpretation, the proper reading of MCL 211.78l is to

19
apply the new two-year statute of limitations prospectively. [Schafer, ___
Mich at ___; slip op at 38-39 (citations omitted).]

Like MCL 211.78l, MCL 211.78m does not contain MCL 211.78t’s clear indication that

the Legislature intended for it to apply retroactively. Rather, MCL 211.78m is silent as to

whether its new standard is applicable to events that occurred prior to the amendment. In

the absence of such language, the presumption is that the statute applies solely

prospectively. Frank W Lynch, 463 Mich at 583. Amended MCL 211.78m also does not

explicitly relate to an antecedent event, rendering the second LaFontaine factor irrelevant.

The remaining LaFontaine factors consider the effect of applying an amended

statute on existing rights or obligations. Retroactive application of amended MCL

211.78m would be particularly suspect according to the third LaFontaine factor, which

addresses whether retroactive application of a statute would impair vested rights. Former

MCL 211.78m(1) permitted a governmental unit to exercise its right of first refusal to

acquire a foreclosed property for the “minimum bid,” while amended MCL 211.78m(1)

now requires the governmental unit exercising its right of first refusal to acquire foreclosed

property to pay the greater of the minimum bid or the fair market value of the property. 8

8
At the time of these transactions, MCL 211.78m(16)(a) provided:

“Minimum bid” is the minimum amount established by the


foreclosing governmental unit for which property may be sold under this
section. The minimum bid shall include all of the following:

(i) All delinquent taxes, interest, penalties, and fees due on the
property. If a city, village, or township purchases the property, the minimum
bid shall not include any taxes levied by that city, village, or township and
any interest, penalties, or fees due on those taxes.

20
If the amended version of MCL 211.78m were to be applied to a case like the one before

us, in which the foreclosures and the City’s exercise of its right of first refusal occurred

prior to the enactment of the amendment of MCL 211.78m (and indeed, prior to this Court’s

decisions in Rafaeli and Schafer), it would impose a new financial obligation on a real-

estate transaction that had already taken place. That is, plaintiffs’ foreclosed properties

were already exchanged for the minimum bid—the amount of outstanding tax debt, plus

interest, fees, and applicable penalties—under the former version of MCL 211.78m.

Retroactive application of the amended version would require the local governmental unit

exercising its right of first refusal to pay the greater of the minimum bid or the fair market

value of the property, even though the property transfers were completed several years ago.

This is precisely the concern taken into consideration by the third LaFontaine factor, which

urges us to “keep in mind that retroactive laws impair vested rights acquired under existing

laws or create new obligations or duties with respect to transactions or considerations

(ii) The expenses of administering the sale, including all preparations


for the sale. The foreclosing governmental unit shall estimate the cost of
preparing for and administering the annual sale for purposes of prorating the
cost for each property included in the sale.

As amended by 2020 PA 255, MCL 211.78m(16)(c) now provides:

“Minimum bid” is the minimum amount established by the


foreclosing governmental unit for which property may be sold or transferred
under subsections (1) to (3). The minimum bid must include all of the
delinquent taxes, interest, penalties, and fees due on the property, and may
include any additional expenses incurred by the foreclosing governmental
unit in connection with the forfeiture, foreclosure, maintenance, repair, or
remediation of the property or the administration of this act for the property,
including, but not limited to, foreclosure avoidance, mailing, publication,
personal service, legal, personnel, outside contractor, and auction expenses.

21
already past.” LaFontaine, 496 Mich at 39. 9 Because vested rights would be impaired in

this manner, the fourth LaFontaine factor also weighs against retroactive application of

MCL 211.78m even if the statute is remedial or procedural in nature. 10

Given the absence of any language in MCL 211.78m that the Legislature intended

the provision to apply retroactively, and the fact that retroactive application of amended

MCL 211.78m would create new duties with respect to completed transactions, we

conclude that MCL 211.78m applies only prospectively to claims accruing after 2020 PA

255 became effective, i.e., claims accruing on or after January 1, 2021. We reverse the

judgment of the Court of Appeals to the extent that it concluded otherwise.

IV. CONCLUSION

For the foregoing reasons, we hold that a violation of the Takings Clause of the

Michigan Constitution occurs when there are no surplus funds from a public auction but

instead the government obtains surplus value from foreclosed properties that were

transferred between governmental units for the minimum bid under the right-of-first-

refusal process set forth in former MCL 211.78m without ever offering the property for

sale at a public auction. We reaffirm our conclusion in Hathon that MCL 211.78t, as

9
Although not couched in the LaFontaine framework, arguably a corollary is this Court’s
observation in Hathon that retrospective application of MCL 211.78l would have
eliminated an avenue of relief for some would-be claimants whose claims had accrued prior
to the imposition of the new, shorter two-year limitations period. Schafer, ___ Mich at
___; slip op at 38.
10
This Court has never taken a position as to whether the fourth consideration under
LaFontaine should be weighed differently if only statutory rights and governmental parties
are involved, and no party to this case has requested consideration of such a distinction.
We decline to consider any possible distinction sua sponte.

22
enacted by 2020 PA 256, applies retroactively to claims that preceded its enactment, but

we hold that it is inapplicable in this case. Finally, we conclude that MCL 211.78m, as

amended by 2020 PA 255, applies prospectively only. We accordingly affirm the judgment

of the Court of Appeals in part, reverse in part, and remand to the trial court for further

proceedings not inconsistent with this decision. We do not retain jurisdiction.

Richard H. Bernstein
Megan K. Cavanagh
Brian K. Zahra
Elizabeth M. Welch
Kyra H. Bolden
Kimberly A. Thomas

23
STATE OF MICHIGAN

SUPREME COURT

LOUIS JACKSON, MICHAEL C. BIRAC,


LEE CRAFT, GAYLYNN CRAFT,
RONALD HAYES, SMFJ, LLC, EVERTT
HODGE, DONALD SWINNEY,
STEFANIE BOYD, LISA SMITH, and
KIRK BOYD,

Plaintiffs-Appellees,

v No. 166320

SOUTHFIELD NEIGHBORHOOD
REVITALIZATION INITIATIVE, FRED
ZORN, CITY OF SOUTHFIELD, KEN
SIVER, and SOUTHFIELD NON-PROFIT
HOUSING CORPORATION,

Defendants-Appellees,

and

OAKLAND COUNTY,

Defendant-Appellant,

and

E’TOILE LIBBETT, MICHAEL A.


MANDELBAUM, SUSAN WARD
WITKOWSKI, also known as SUSAN
WARD and SUSAN WITKOWSKI, and
GERALD WITKOWSKI,

Defendants.
WELCH, J. (concurring).
I agree with the Court’s holding that a taking requiring just compensation occurred

in this case and with the Court’s resolution of the present appeal. I write separately to

address issues that, although not necessary to resolve this appeal, could be important in the

future.

Among other things, this Court’s order directed the parties to brief “whether there

was a violation of either [the federal or state] Takings Clause by Oakland County under

the facts of this case[.]” Jackson v Southfield Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative, ___

Mich ___; 12 NW3d 600, 601 (2024). As the majority observes, defendant-appellant

Oakland County conceded liability and has not argued that defendant city of Southfield,

which purchased the properties at issue, is instead the properly liable defendant.

This is not surprising, considering that at oral argument, Oakland County noted that

as far as the federal constitutional claims are concerned, it is bound by Hall v Meisner, 51

F4th 185, 196 (CA 6, 2022). In Hall, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth

Circuit held under nearly identical facts that Oakland “County alone is responsible for the

taking of the plaintiffs’ property.” Id. In contrast, the Michigan Association of County

Treasurers argues in its amicus brief that Hall erred on this point and that only the city of

Southfield committed a taking because neither the County nor the county treasurer—acting

as the foreclosing governmental unit (FGU)—received or retained anything beyond the

taxes and fees that were owed. The Hall court also held that the “event” that constituted a

taking was the vesting of “ ‘absolute title’ to the plaintiffs’ homes.” Id. Although I concur

with the Court’s decision not to wade into these debates today because of the County’s

concession of liability, I believe that the Hall court erred as to both points of law and that

2
its holdings conflict with Rafaeli, LLC v Oakland Co, 505 Mich 429; 952 NW2d 434

(2020), calling into question the legality of tax foreclosure as a mechanism of tax

collection. 1

I. RIPENING OF A TAKINGS CLAIM FOLLOWING FORECLOSURE

The event that was identified in Hall as triggering a taking requiring just

compensation was the vesting of absolute title to the foreclosed property in the FGU.

Under Michigan’s statutory scheme, that event occurs in every noncontested tax-

foreclosure matter “on the March 31 immediately succeeding the entry of a judgment

foreclosing the property” if the redemption price was not paid. MCL 211.78g(2), as

amended by 2020 PA 33. 2 Notably, that date precedes any other governmental unit’s

statutory right of first refusal under MCL 211.78m, as well as any postforeclosure public

auction under MCL 211.78k. Stated differently, absolute title in the foreclosed property

will always vest in the FGU before it is clear what will ultimately happen with the

foreclosed real property or any residual property interest retained by the taxpayer following

tax foreclosure.

This Court acknowledged in Rafaeli that taxing governmental units are “entitled to

seize” property “to satisfy the unpaid delinquent real-property taxes as well as any interest,

penalties, and fees associated with the foreclosure and sale of” the property at issue.

1
The analysis in Hall only addressed tax-foreclosure schemes in which title to the
foreclosed property is transferred following the foreclosure. It did not address tax liens
that result from foreclosure, which presumably would be subject to a different analysis.
2
The same remains true under the current version of the statute. See MCL 211.78g(2), as
amended by 2020 PA 256.

3
Rafaeli, 505 Mich at 474. But the government “could only collect the amount [the

taxpayers] owed and nothing more.” Id. The Court then explained that after the FGU

“foreclosed on [the property owners’] properties, obtained title to those properties, and sold

them to satisfy” the taxpayers’ “unpaid taxes, interest, penalties, and fees related to the

foreclosure, any surplus resulting from those sales belonged to” the taxpayers. Id.

The taking in Rafaeli occurred when the surplus funds were retained by the FGU

after distribution of the tax-foreclosure-sale proceeds under the relevant statutes. The act

of retaining the surplus “amount[ed] to a taking of a vested property right requiring just

compensation.” Id. The taxpayers’ property interest in surplus proceeds was “a separate

property right that survive[d] the foreclosure process” and was not extinguished by “the

vesting of fee simple title to the real property . . . .” 3 Id. at 476. This Court observed that

3
The Hall court labeled the taken residual property interest as “equitable title,” but I find
it notable that this Court did not use the same legal term of art when describing the taken
property interest that required compensation in Rafaeli. Compare Hall, 51 F4th at 194-
196, with Rafaeli, 505 Mich at 459-479. This distinction is significant for purposes of state
property law. Under Michigan law, equitable title has typically been described as a
property right obtained by the vendee under a land contract, and the vendor retains legal
title to the real estate until the vendee’s contractual obligations have been fulfilled. Graves
v American Acceptance Mtg Corp (On Rehearing), 469 Mich 608, 614; 677 NW2d 829
(2004). Equitable title in that context is a property right created by contract that can be
sold, devised, or encumbered. Id. Graves held that because of the legal relationship and
rights created by a land contract, a “mortgage, the proceeds of which are used to pay off a
land contract, is not a purchase money mortgage.” Id. at 616. This Court has also
recognized that, in the context of a foreclosure on a mortgage and the postforeclosure sale
of property before expiration of the redemption period, the property interest obtained and
held by the purchaser until expiration of the redemption period can be described as
equitable title. Dunitz v Woodford Apartments Co, 236 Mich 45, 49-50; 209 NW 809
(1926). The Hall court seemed to recognize that it was expanding on what Michigan courts
had previously recognized as equitable title. Hall, 51 F4th at 195. Most of the cases cited
by Hall discussed equitable title in the context of different kinds of land contracts under
Michigan law and addressed differences between the rights and liabilities associated with
equitable and legal title to the land. See Marquette v Mich Iron & Land Co, 132 Mich 130;

4
the taxpayers’ “takings claim was not compensable until their properties sold for an amount

in excess of their tax debts” and that “a former property owner has a compensable takings

claim if and only if the tax-foreclosure sale produces a surplus.” Id. at 476-477.

These aspects of Rafaeli seem to be incompatible with Hall’s statement that the

event giving rise to a compensable takings claim is the vesting of title that occurs every

time a tax-foreclosure judgment becomes final. After all, “Rafaeli made clear that seizing

real property to collect unpaid taxes does not per se implicate Michigan’s Takings Clause.”

Yono v Ingham Co, ___ Mich ___, ___; ___ NW3d ___ (July 16, 2025); slip op at 7.

Rather, “[t]he government commits a taking only if—when attempting to collect delinquent

taxes—it ‘appropriates property in excess of what is owed.’ ” Id. at ___; slip op at 7

(citation and brackets omitted). But under Hall, Rafaeli’s holding—that a taking occurs

only as to excess proceeds—would not be possible if the takings claim occurred as soon as

a tax-foreclosure judgment becomes final. This is because the “excess proceeds” are not

determined until after the judgment of foreclosure is issued.

If Hall is correct, then our holding in Yono (released the same day as this decision)

would also be suspect because the property in that case was in foreclosure, but we held that

92 NW 934 (1903); Kerzka v Farr, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of
Appeals, issued September 10, 2013 (Docket No. 310938); Cardinal v United States, 26
F3d 48, 49 (CA 6, 1994). Hall also cited one case concerning division of marital assets
under Michigan law, Reeves v Reeves, 226 Mich App 490; 575 NW2d 1 (1997), which
made the uncontroversial proposition that marital assets are subject to equitable division,
but under the appropriate circumstances, separate assets, including the value of real estate
purchased before the marriage, are not. Thus, there seems to be a conflict between the
nature of the state-law-based property right recognized by Hall and the right recognized by
this Court in Rafaeli. Additionally, it appears that Hall may have expanded the concept of
equitable title in a manner that is inconsistent with Michigan property law.

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there was no taking because the property failed to sell at a public auction. In other words,

we reaffirmed what we determined in Rafaeli: a taking occurs when the government retains

an amount over what is otherwise due—the foreclosure judgment alone is not a taking.

Hall also seems to conflict with the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Tyler

v Hennepin Co, Minnesota, 598 US 631; 143 S Ct 1369; 215 L Ed 2d 564 (2023). 4 Like

Michigan’s statutes, the Minnesota tax scheme states that if the tax debt owed is not paid

before the expiration of a statutory redemption period, then “absolute title vests in the State,

and the tax debt is extinguished.” Id. at 635, citing Minn Stat 273.01 (2022). Like we did

in Rafaeli, the Tyler Court recognized a constitutionally protected property interest in any

surplus proceeds obtained from a tax-foreclosure sale that must be justly compensated if

taken pursuant to the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution. Tyler, 598 US

at 644-645.

The conflict between Hall’s holding as to the event that gives rise to a compensable

taking and this Court’s decisions and Tyler appears to be linked to how one defines the

state-law-based property right that has been taken. In Rafaeli and Tyler, neither this Court

nor the United States Supreme Court concluded that the prior property owner’s interest in

surplus proceeds was the same as “equitable title” 5 in the real estate itself. But Hall labeled

4
I acknowledge, however, that the United States Supreme Court declined a petition for
writ of certiorari that was filed in the Hall case. See Hall v Meisner, ___ US ___; 143 S
Ct 2638 (2023)
5
Both Tyler and Rafaeli relied on Nelson v City of New York, 352 US 103, 108-110; 77 S
Ct 195; 1 L Ed 2d 171(1956), a case that the Hall court distinguished. One might surmise
that a relevant distinction is that in Nelson, the taxing authority obtained a mere tax lien
rather than title to the real property. But no such distinction was analyzed in Hall, with the

6
the residual property interest owed to the prior property owner as “equitable title,” which

was extinguished at the time of the foreclosure. Hall, 51 F4th at 196.

In summary, Rafaeli and Tyler both indicate that an event that gives rise to a

compensable takings claim is the event following entry of a judgment of foreclosure when

the government fails to provide the divested property owner with the opportunity to seek

compensation for the excess monetary value of any property interest that survived the

foreclosure. 6 The need for clarity is significant for two reasons. First, identifying the

nature of the property interest and the moment at which it is taken is important for

calculating the value of just compensation. Second, Hall calls into question the continued

viability of tax foreclosures that convey title while the rule stated in Tyler and Rafaeli does

not.

II. OAKLAND COUNTY SHOULD NOT BE LIABLE FOR JUST COMPENSATION

My second concern with Hall is its conclusion that only the County, as a

governmental unit levying taxes, was liable to pay just compensation for the plaintiffs’

takings claims even though the County retained nothing more than it was owed. The Hall

court reached this result because of its conclusion that the act that constituted the taking

Hall court instead focusing on a statutory mechanism to collect surplus sale proceeds that
the property owner did not avail themselves of. See Hall, 51 F4th at 196.
6
A residual interest in the monetary value associated with foreclosed real property beyond
the tax debt owed would seem to be better recognized as a personal property interest. See,
e.g., Alisa A Peskin-Shepherd, LLC v Blume, 509 Mich 1046, 1047 (2022) (noting that
“proceeds of a real-estate sale are personal property”); Bowles v Sabree, 121 F4th 539,
549-550 (CA 6, 2024) (stating that the property interest taken by the retention of surplus
proceeds following a tax-foreclosure sale was a personal property interest that was separate
from the real property interest). This also seems to be the conclusion reached in Freed v
Thomas, 81 F4th 655 (CA 6, 2023).

7
was the vesting of absolute title upon finality of the foreclosure judgment, which took the

plaintiffs’ “equitable title.” See Hall, 51 F4th at 196 (“ ‘The act of taking is the event

which gives rise to the claim for compensation.’ ”) (brackets omitted), quoting Knick v

Scott Twp, Pennsylvania, 588 US 180; 139 S Ct 2162; 204 L Ed 2d 558 (2019). But if Hall

selected the wrong moment in time to determine the “act of taking,” then its identity of the

governmental unit liable for the taking is likely incorrect too.

Under Michigan law, a county treasurer—acting as the FGU—takes title to real

property upon entry of a final judgment of foreclosure. 7 MCL 211.78(8); MCL 211.78g(8)

as amended by 2020 PA 33; MCL 211.78k(5)(b), as amended by 2016 PA 433. In this

case, as well as in Hall, a governmental unit unrelated to the County (here, the city of

Southfield) purchased the foreclosed real property after exercising its statutory right of first

refusal under MCL 211.78m(1), as amended by 2014 PA 501. Once the City exercised

that right, the FGU had no discretion and was required to accept the money and convey

title to the real property to the City “within 30 days” of the purchase. Id.

The FGU received nothing more than it was owed in exchange for the foreclosed

property. In fact, the FGU was not statutorily entitled to receive or retain any additional

money unless the following provision was triggered:

If property purchased by a city, village, township, or county under this


subsection is subsequently sold for an amount in excess of the minimum bid
and all costs incurred relating to demolition, renovation, improvements, or
infrastructure development, the excess amount shall be returned to the

7
Putting respondeat superior liability aside, Hall inaccurately suggested that Oakland
County itself (as opposed to its treasurer) acted as the FGU under Michigan law and that
Oakland County received title to the foreclosed real properties. Compare Hall, 51 F4th at
194, with MCL 211.78(8).

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delinquent tax property sales proceeds account for the year in which the
property was purchased by the city, village, township, or county or, if this
state is the foreclosing governmental unit within a county, to the land
reutilization fund created under section 78n. Upon the request of the
foreclosing governmental unit, a city, village, township, or county that
purchased property under this subsection shall provide to the foreclosing
governmental unit without cost information regarding any subsequent sale or
transfer of the property. [MCL 211.78m(1), as amended by 2014 PA 501.]

It does not appear that the quoted statutory provision was triggered. The facts in

this case (and in Hall) show that the foreclosed properties were transferred by the

purchasing city to the city-related defendant Southfield Neighborhood Revitalization

Initiative (SNRI). Unless the second transaction between the City and SNRI was for “an

amount in excess of the minimum bid,” MCL 211.78m(1), as amended by 2014 PA 501,

neither Oakland County nor its treasurer would have received anything beyond the taxes,

fees, and interest that were lawfully owed. If that is true, then it would appear that the city

of Southfield and SNRI are the only entities that received more than what was owed. The

record before us shows that Oakland County’s treasurer did not receive any excess beyond

what was owed; therefore, it could not have taken anything that requires payment of just

compensation per our decision in Rafaeli.

But because a governmental unit received and retained more than it was owed, I

join the majority in holding that a taking requiring just compensation occurred. The

“government” is not a monolithic entity for purposes of legal liability. Although I

understand the County’s decision to concede liability to pay compensation following the

ruling in Hall, I worry that important questions of jurisprudential significance for Michigan

property and constitutional law are being left unresolved. I suspect that nuanced conflicts

9
like those I have discussed will need to be worked out in the future given the proliferation

of takings claims based on tax foreclosures in Michigan and across the country.

Elizabeth M. Welch

HOOD, J., did not participate because the Court considered this case before he
assumed office.

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