Dennis D Walker v. Wayne County Board of Commissioners ( 2001 )


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  •                                                                        Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan 48909
    ____________________________________________________________________________________________
    C hief Justice                   Justices
    Maura D. Cor rigan	              Michael F. Cavanagh
    O pinion
    Elizabeth A. Weaver
    Marilyn Kelly
    Clifford W. Taylor
    Robert P. Young, Jr.
    Stephen J. Markman
    ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
    FILED JULY 17, 2001
    MICHAEL LEE, BRYAN DUNCIL, MARY
    DUNCIL on behalf of herself and
    JOSEPH DUNCIL, BRYAN DUNCIL, KENNETH
    DUNCIL, and JON DUNCIL, as their
    Next Friend, and the class of all
    others similarly situated,
    Plaintiff-Appellees,
    v	                                                                             No.          114700
    THE MACOMB COUNTY BOARD OF
    COMMISSIONERS, and the COUNTY OF
    MACOMB,
    Defendant-Appellants.
    ____________________________________
    DENNIS D. WALKER, on behalf of
    himself and DAWNELL J. WALKER and
    MELANIE WALKER, their Next Friend,
    and DWAYNE STEAGALL, ERNEST GROCE,
    JERRY GRAY, PAUL ECKLEY, DUANE GORE,
    KENNETH JONES, MORRIS BARTOLOTTA, and
    the class of all others similarly
    situated,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v
    No. 115259
    THE WAYNE COUNTY BOARD OF
    COMMISSIONERS and THE COUNTY
    OF WAYNE,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    _____________________________
    BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH
    TAYLOR, J.
    At issue in these two cases coming to us from Macomb and
    Wayne counties is whether these plaintiffs have standing to
    pursue actions to compel their respective county board of
    commissioners to levy a tax to establish a veterans’ relief
    fund in accordance with the soldiers’ relief fund act, MCL
    35.21 et seq.    It is uncontested that none of the plaintiffs
    actually had sought relief under the act.            Because of this,
    the counties asserted that these litigants had suffered no
    injury and, accordingly, that plaintiffs (1) were without
    standing to sue and (2) had failed to exhaust statutory
    remedies.     In Lee, the Macomb County case, the trial court
    granted summary disposition for the county on those grounds.
    In Walker, the Wayne County case, the trial court denied the
    county’s    motion   for   summary    disposition,   concluding   that
    plaintiffs had standing and were not required to exhaust
    statutory remedies because they alleged a complete failure to
    comply with the act.       The Court of Appeals consolidated the
    appeals and largely reversed in Lee and affirmed in Walker.
    
    235 Mich. App. 323
    ; 597 NW2d 545 (1999).           It concluded that
    2
    plaintiffs had standing to sue to compel implementation of the
    act and that mandamus was a proper remedy.       We reverse.
    Statutory Analysis
    In   these   actions,   plaintiffs   seek   to   compel    the
    legislative branch of the county government, the board of
    commissioners, to levy a tax to establish a veterans’ relief
    fund pursuant to the soldiers’ relief fund act.        MCL 35.21
    provides in pertinent part:1
    The county board of commissioners of each
    county shall annually levy, a tax not exceeding
    1/10 of a mill on each dollar, to be levied and
    collected as provided by law, upon the taxable
    property of each township and city, for their
    respective counties, for the purpose of creating a
    fund for the relief of honorably discharged
    indigent members of the army, navy, air force,
    marine corps, coast guard, and women's auxiliaries
    of all wars or military expeditions in which the
    United States of America has been, is, or may
    hereafter be, a participant . . . and the indigent
    spouses, minor children, and parents of each such
    indigent or deceased member. . . . If any money in
    the fund is not necessary for the purpose for which
    it was raised, the money shall remain in the
    treasury of the county as a soldiers' relief fund,
    and shall be considered in raising future sums
    therefor.
    As can be seen, this section requires that the board of
    commissioners create a soldiers’ relief fund by a tax levy.
    It also, however, requires the commissioners to consider the
    amount existing in the fund when determining the amount, if
    1
    This act was initially enacted in 1899 and amended in
    1984 to update antiquated language.
    3
    any, of the annual levy for the fund.2
    Having thus established the funding mechanism, the act
    then continues by providing a procedure in MCL 35.23 for
    initiating and determining the amount of relief to be granted.
    This section states:
    The supervisor of each township and ward in
    each of the counties of this state, and where there
    is no ward supervisor the aldermen of the several
    wards of every incorporated city in this state,
    shall, on or before the last Monday in September in
    each year, make and place in the hands of the
    soldiers' relief commission of the county, a list
    of all the persons entitled to relief under the
    provisions of this act, and the soldiers' relief
    commission, on the first Monday in October in each
    year, shall proceed to determine the amount
    necessary for aid and relief to be granted such
    persons under this act, which shall be then and
    there recorded in the books to be kept by the
    secretary of said soldiers' relief commission. The
    commission may determine not only the sum to be
    paid, but the manner of paying the same, and may
    discontinue the payment of such relief in their
    discretion. Appeal may be taken therefrom to the
    circuit court of such county, by certiorari by
    filing application therefor with the clerk within
    fifteen days following the making of such decision.
    The court shall hear the case de novo and its
    decision shall be final.
    What       is   established,   then,    is   a   scheme   whereby   it   is
    2
    In response to the dissent, we note that, once the fund
    is created, the act provides the commissioners with discretion
    regarding the amount of the annual tax levy in light of any
    amount existing in the fund.      Moreover, at oral argument,
    plaintiffs’ counsel conceded that the record did not establish
    whether Macomb County had, at some time in the past, created
    a fund by levying a tax in compliance with the act.
    Presumably, the record is similarly unclear regarding whether
    Wayne County, at some time in the past, created a fund by
    levying a tax in compliance with the act.
    4
    anticipated that the township supervisor or ward aldermen will
    annually prepare a list of persons eligible for relief and
    provide this list to the soldiers’ relief commission.3       That
    commission then, in its discretion, determines the amount of
    relief, if any, to grant to the indigent, honorably discharged
    veteran   or   dependent   applicant.   Moreover,   the   statute
    provides that aggrieved applicants can appeal the commission’s
    decision to the circuit court.
    Facts and Proceedings
    Here, without ever having sought relief under the act,
    plaintiffs filed suit to compel Macomb and Wayne Counties to
    levy the annual tax in order to create the fund of which the
    act speaks.    Further, they, and presumably others, will soon
    seek damages for those years in which the counties allegedly
    3
    The statute requires the supervisor or alderman to
    create such a list, but it does not specify the means for
    identifying eligible persons.     Clearly, the supervisor or
    alderman can only place persons on this list if aware or made
    aware that an eligible person is in need. The supervisor or
    alderman can obviously act sua sponte and include on the list
    any known eligible persons. However in order to fulfill the
    duty to “make . . . a list of all the persons entitled to
    relief under the provisions of this act,” he is also obligated
    to add to the list any eligible person who asks to be included
    on it. (Emphasis added.) This reading of the statute, rather
    than one reposing veto power with the supervisor or alderman
    regarding who will be included on the list, expands the
    opportunities for eligible veterans who, for whatever reason,
    have not been included on the list. We opt for this expansive
    reading because this is a remedial statute and we are
    obligated to read it liberally in favor of the indigent
    veterans it is intended to benefit. See Chandler v Dowell
    Schlumberger Inc, 
    456 Mich. 395
    , 398; 572 NW2d 210 (1998).
    5
    failed to comply with the act.
    Macomb      County,    in   the     Lee     case,    moved      for   summary
    disposition,      claiming,      inter        alia,   lack    of    standing   and
    failure to exhaust administrative remedies.                        In support, it
    provided the 1994 affidavit of its Department of Veterans
    Affairs Director, which indicated that the department had,
    through county budget appropriations, maintained a fund of
    $1000 for veterans relief for several years and that no claims
    for such relief had been filed for the past ten years.                         The
    trial    court    granted    Macomb       County’s       motion      for   summary
    disposition, concluding that plaintiffs lacked standing and
    failed to exhaust administrative remedies because they had not
    requested relief from the local government.
    Wayne    County,    in   the     Walker       case,    sought      summary
    disposition on similar grounds.                   It provided documentary
    evidence indicating that, in 1994, the Wayne County Commission
    approved an appropriation of $1,146,042 for Veterans’ Affairs
    expenditures and that the Wayne County Soldiers Relief Program
    had been operational since February 1995.                          In this case,
    however, the trial court denied Wayne County’s motion for
    summary disposition, concluding that plaintiffs had standing
    because they were in the class intended to be benefitted by
    the act and had been harmed by noncompliance with it and that
    they were not required to exhaust administrative remedies to
    challenge a wholesale failure to comply with the act.
    6
    These   two     cases   were      consolidated        in     the   Court   of
    Appeals,    which     largely      reversed      in   Lee    and    affirmed     in
    Walker.4      The    Court    of    Appeals      majority        concluded   that
    plaintiffs had standing because they are “members of the class
    for whose benefit the Act was enacted” and because they are
    “detrimentally affected in a manner different from the public
    generally.”        
    235 Mich. App. 332
    .          The panel held that mandamus
    was an appropriate remedy here because plaintiffs were seeking
    compliance with the act, not the levy of a particular amount
    or   the   grant     of   particular         benefits.       Id.    at    333-334.
    Finally, it concluded that plaintiffs’ actions could not be
    dismissed     on    the   basis    of   failure       to    exhaust      statutory
    remedies because they were alleging a wholesale failure to
    implement and comply with the act.                Id. at 335.
    In dissent, former Justice John Fitzgerald, sitting by
    assignment, disagreed with the majority regarding standing:
    [P]laintiffs have not alleged any specific
    injury as a result of defendants' failure to
    establish a mechanism for evaluation of a claim for
    benefits or of defendants' underfunding of their
    respective veterans' relief funds. [Id. at 337.]
    Explaining further he said:
    [P]laintiffs have not alleged a distinct and
    palpable injury resulting from defendants' failure
    to fully comply with the statute, and consequently
    their claims cannot be differentiated from those of
    4
    The Court of Appeals ruled that government immunity
    precluded plaintiffs’ negligence and gross negligence claims
    in both cases.
    7
    any other citizen. As a prudential matter, courts
    must exercise their jurisdiction to address
    tangible, personal, threatened interests, not
    generalized grievances.  I am not persuaded that
    plaintiffs, as private citizens whose individual
    rights under the statute have not been abridged,
    have standing . . . . [Id. (citations omitted).]
    Regarding mandamus, he stated that it was inappropriate,
    assuming standing existed, because plaintiffs were “seeking to
    compel defendants’ exercise of discretion in a particular
    manner” that is beyond the scope of mandamus         Id. at 338-339.
    This Court granted leave to appeal. 
    462 Mich. 912
     (2000).
    Standard of Review
    Whether a party has standing is a question of law.             This
    Court reviews questions of law de novo.             Stitt v Holland
    Abundant Life Fellowship, 
    462 Mich. 591
    , 595; 614 NW2d 88
    (2000).
    Standing
    It   is   important,    initially,     to   recognize   that    in
    Michigan, as in the federal system, standing is of great
    consequence    so   that    neglect    of   it   would   imperil     the
    constitutional architecture whereby governmental powers are
    divided between the three branches of government.
    Standing, as a requirement to enter the courts, is a
    venerable doctrine in the federal system that derives from US
    Const, art III, § 1, which confers only “judicial power” on
    the courts and from US Const, art III, § 2's limitation of the
    8
    judicial power to “Cases” and “Controversies.”5       In several
    recent cases, the United States Supreme Court has discussed
    the close relationship between standing and separation of
    powers.     In Lewis v Casey, 
    518 U.S. 343
    , 349; 
    116 S. Ct. 2174
    ; 
    135 L. Ed. 2d 606
     (1996), Justice Scalia, writing for the majority,
    said:
    [T]he    doctrine   of    standing   [is]    a
    constitutional principle that prevents courts of
    law from undertaking tasks assigned to the
    political branches. It is the role of courts to
    provide relief to claimants, in individual or class
    actions, who have suffered, or will imminently
    suffer, actual harm; it is not the role of courts,
    but that of the political branches, to shape the
    institutions of government in such fashion as to
    comply with the laws and the Constitution.
    [Citations omitted.]
    Lewis was foreshadowed in Lujan v Defenders of Wildlife,
    
    504 U.S. 555
    , 559-560; 
    112 S. Ct. 2130
    ; 
    119 L. Ed. 2d 351
     (1992),
    5
    The first clause of US Const, art III, § 2 states:
    The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases,
    in Law and Equity, arising under this Constitution,
    the Laws of the United States, and Treaties made,
    or which shall be made, under their Authority;—to
    all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public
    Ministers and Consuls;—to all Cases of admiralty
    and maritime Jurisdiction;—to Controversies to
    which the United States shall be a Party;—to
    Controversies between two or more States;—between a
    State and Citizens of another State;—between
    Citizens of different States;—between Citizens of
    the same State claiming Lands under Grants of
    different States, and between a State, or the
    Citizens thereof, and foreign States, Citizens or
    Subjects.
    9
    where Justice Scalia, again speaking for the Court, explained:
    [T]he Constitution's central mechanism of
    separation of powers depends largely upon common
    understanding of what activities are appropriate to
    legislatures, to executives, and to courts. . . .
    One of those landmarks, setting apart the "Cases"
    and "Controversies" that are of the justiciable
    sort referred to in Article III—"serv[ing] to
    identify those disputes which are appropriately
    resolved through the judicial process,"—is the
    doctrine of standing. Though some of its elements
    express merely prudential considerations that are
    part   of  judicial   self-government,   the   core
    component   of standing    is   an  essential   and
    unchanging    part  of    the   case-or-controversy
    requirement of Article III. [Citations omitted.]
    In Plaut v Spendthrift Farm, Inc, 
    514 U.S. 211
    , 219-225;
    
    115 S. Ct. 1447
    ; 
    131 L. Ed. 2d 328
     (1995), Justice Scalia, in
    another majority opinion, provided a detailed analysis of the
    concern with preserving the separation of powers between the
    legislative and judicial branches, that traced its history
    back to the framers of the U.S. Constitution.
    Finally, Chief Justice Rehnquist even more dramatically
    stated the case in his majority opinion in Raines v Byrd, 
    521 U.S. 811
    , 818, 820; 
    117 S. Ct. 2312
    ; 
    138 L. Ed. 2d 849
     (1997):
    “No principle is more fundamental to the
    judiciary's proper role in our system of government
    than the constitutional limitation of federal-court
    jurisdiction to actual cases or controversies.”
    * * *
    “[T]he law of Art III standing is built on a
    single basic idea—the idea of separation of
    powers.”
    In Michigan, standing has developed on a track parallel
    10
    to the federal doctrine, albeit by way of an additional
    constitutional underpinning.           In addition to Const 1963, art
    6, § 1, which vests the state “judicial power” in the courts,
    Const 1963, art 3, § 2 expressly directs that the powers of
    the     legislature,      the   executive,      and    the    judiciary    be
    separate.6 Concern with maintaining the separation of powers,
    as in the federal courts, has caused this Court over the years
    to be vigilant in preventing the judiciary from usurping the
    powers    of    the   political     branches.     Early      on,   the   great
    constitutional scholar Justice Thomas M. Cooley discussed the
    concept of separation of powers in the context of declining to
    issue     a    mandamus   against    the    Governor    in    Sutherland     v
    Governor, 
    29 Mich. 320
    , 324 (1874):
    Our government is one whose powers have been
    carefully   apportioned   between  three   distinct
    departments, which emanate alike from the people,
    have their powers alike limited and defined by the
    constitution, are of equal dignity, and within
    their   respective   spheres   of  action   equally
    independent. One makes the laws, another applies
    the laws in contested cases, while the third must
    see that the laws are executed. This division is
    accepted as a necessity in all free governments,
    and the very apportionment of power to one
    department is understood to be a prohibition of its
    6
    The powers of government are divided into
    three    branches:  legislative,    executive   and
    judicial. No person exercising the powers of one
    branch shall exercise powers properly belonging to
    another branch except as expressly provided in this
    constitution.
    11
    exercise by either of the others. The executive is
    forbidden to exercise judicial power by the same
    implication which forbids the courts to take upon
    themselves his duties.
    This position followed from the even earlier iteration of the
    standing doctrine by Justice Campbell in 1859 when, speaking
    for this Court, he said:
    By the judicial power of courts is generally
    understood the power to hear and determine
    controversies   between   adverse   parties,   and
    questions in litigation. [Daniels v People, 
    6 Mich. 381
    , 388 (1859)(emphasis added).]
    Later, in Risser v Hoyt, 
    53 Mich. 185
    , 193; 
    18 N.W. 611
     (1884),
    this Court explained:
    The judicial power referred to is the
    authority to hear and decide controversies, and to
    make binding orders and judgments respecting them.
    [Emphasis added.]
    More recently, Johnson v Kramer Bros Freight Lines, Inc, 
    357 Mich. 254
    , 258; 98 NW2d 586 (1959), reaffirmed this concept by
    quoting this portion of Risser.
    In fleshing out the tests that a litigant must meet to
    establish standing, the most recent majority iteration from
    this Court7 is found in House Speaker v Governor, 
    441 Mich. 547
    , 554; 495 NW2d 539 (1993):
    Standing is a legal term used to denote the
    existence of a party's interest in the outcome of
    litigation that will ensure sincere and vigorous
    advocacy.   However, evidence that a party will
    7
    This Court addressed standing in Detroit Fire Fighters
    Ass’n v Detroit, 
    449 Mich. 629
    ; 537 NW2d 436 (1995), but a
    majority did not agree on a standing test.
    12
    engage in full and vigorous advocacy, by itself, is
    insufficient to establish standing.        Standing
    requires a demonstration that the plaintiff's
    substantial interest will be detrimentally affected
    in a manner different from the citizenry at large.
    House Speaker provided a general description of standing and
    articulated the requirement of an interest distinct from that
    of the public.   However, further explication of the essential
    elements of standing has proven difficult as demonstrated by
    this Court’s experience in attempting to fashion a clear
    majority in Detroit Fire Fighters Ass’n v Detroit, 
    449 Mich. 629
    ; 537 NW2d 436 (1995). In that case, the separate opinions
    suggested different inquiries as being central to determining
    standing.    Some   focused   on     whether   the   plaintiff   could
    establish an injury distinct from that of the public, others
    on whether the plaintiffs were in the zone of interest the
    statutory or constitutional provision at issue is designed to
    regulate.   Perhaps the clearest template was set forward by
    Justice Cavanagh who, along with Justice Boyle, advocated
    adopting the United States Supreme Court’s Lujan test.           Lujan
    held:
    Over the years, our cases have established
    that the irreducible constitutional minimum of
    standing contains three elements.       First, the
    plaintiff must have suffered an "injury in fact"—an
    invasion of a legally protected interest which is
    (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) "actual or
    imminent, not 'conjectural' or 'hypothetical.' "
    Second, there must be a causal connection between
    the injury and the conduct complained of—the injury
    has to be "fairly . . . trace[able] to the
    challenged action of the defendant, and not . . .
    13
    th[e] result [of] the independent    action of some
    third party not before the court."    Third, it must
    be "likely," as opposed to merely     "speculative,"
    that the injury will be "redressed   by a favorable
    decision."
    The party invoking . . . jurisdiction bears
    the burden of establishing these elements. [
    504 U.S. 560
    -561 (citations omitted).]
    In our view, the Lujan test has the virtues of articulating
    clear criteria and of establishing the burden of demonstrating
    these elements.   Moreover, its three elements appear to us to
    be fundamental to standing; the United States Supreme Court
    described them as establishing the “irreducible constitutional
    minimum” of standing.    We agree.   Accordingly, we now join
    Justice Cavanagh’s view and adopt the Lujan test, which should
    be seen as supplementing the holding in House Speaker, as well
    as this Court’s earlier standing jurisprudence, e.g., Daniels
    and Risser, supra.
    Applying this test in the present case, it is clear that
    plaintiffs lack standing.   In Lujan terms, they have not yet
    suffered any “injury in fact.” See 
    504 U.S. 560
    . Specifically,
    they have shown no “invasion of a legally protected interest
    which is (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) actual or
    imminent, not ‘conjectural’ or ‘hypothetical.’”   Id. at 560.
    Both groups of plaintiffs have alleged and argued only that
    they “should receive” and “should have received, the benefit
    of the property tax levy required by MCL 35.21,” and that the
    failure to levy and collect the tax set forth in the soldiers’
    14
    relief   fund    act   “has    caused,    and   continues   to    cause,
    plaintiffs great harm and damage.”         Even if accepted as true,
    these allegations cannot satisfy the Lujan injury in fact
    requirement     because   it   is   not   readily   apparent     how   the
    collection of a tax pursuant to the act would have benefitted
    plaintiffs in a concrete and particularized manner. MCL 35.23
    provides that the soldiers’ relief commission is to determine
    the amount and manner of any relief thereunder and that it may
    discontinue such relief in its discretion.           Thus, the amount
    of relief, if any, that plaintiffs might have received under
    this act is solely within the discretion of the commission.8
    “[G]reat harm and damage” is not concrete or particularized.
    Plaintiffs also fail to explain, with particularity, what is
    meant by “the benefit of the property tax levy required by MCL
    8
    The dissent argues that it is “inescapable” that relief
    under that act would have benefitted the indigent plaintiffs
    in a concrete and particularized manner. Slip op, p 8. We
    surmise that the idea is that any claimant would be better off
    with more money. Yet this verity misses the point. The issue
    is whether plaintiffs can demonstrate a concrete and
    particularized injury arising out of the alleged failure of
    the counties to levy a tax in accordance with the act.
    Moreover, even if we jump ahead, as the dissent would, to the
    point where fund distribution to plaintiffs was at issue, it
    is not “inescapable” that plaintiffs would receive funds
    because the commission would likely exercise its discretion to
    avoid duplicating other government and private social welfare
    programs. Thus, the commission could, even if plaintiffs were
    indigent, decide not to award funds to them.
    Thus, for all these reasons, what might be received, if
    anything, far from being concrete and particularized, is
    simply uncertain.
    15
    35.21.”    At most, we can only speculate how the existence of
    a fund would have helped plaintiffs.             Accordingly, plaintiffs
    lack standing to pursue the present actions.
    In   the     absence   of    standing,      we   will     not   address
    plaintiffs’ substantive claims.
    Conclusion
    Plaintiffs do not have standing to bring the present
    actions.      We    accordingly      reverse     the   Court     of   Appeals
    determination that they have standing and remand these actions
    to   the   respective    circuit       courts    for    entry    of    orders
    dismissing    plaintiffs’     actions       on   the   basis    of    lack   of
    standing.
    CORRIGAN , C.J., and YOUNG , and MARKMAN , JJ., concurred with
    TAYLOR, J.
    16
    S T A T E      O F   M I C H I G A N
    SUPREME COURT
    MICHAEL LEE, BRYAN DUNCIL, MARY
    DUNCIL on behalf of herself and
    JOSEPH DUNCIL, BRYAN DUNCIL, KENNETH
    DUNCIL, and JON DUNCIL, as their
    Next Friend, and the class of all
    others similarly situated,
    Plaintiff-Appellees,
    v                                                    No.   114700
    THE MACOMB COUNTY BOARD OF
    COMMISSIONERS, and the COUNTY OF
    MACOMB,
    Defendant-Appellants.
    ____________________________________
    DENNIS D. WALKER, on behalf of
    himself and DAWNELL J. WALKER and
    MELANIE WALKER, their Next Friend,
    and DWAYNE STEAGALL, ERNEST GROCE,
    JERRY GRAY, PAUL ECKLEY, DUANE GORE,
    KENNETH JONES, MORRIS BARTOLOTTA, and
    the class of all others similarly
    situated,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v                                                     No. 115259
    THE WAYNE COUNTY BOARD OF
    COMMISSIONERS and THE COUNTY
    OF WAYNE,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    ____________________________________
    WEAVER, J. (concurring).
    I concur in the majority’s decision to reverse the
    judgment of the Court of Appeals. I write separately because
    I disagree with the majority’s decision to adopt the Lujan1
    standing requirements. I would find that the plaintiffs have
    standing.   However, I agree with the decision to reverse;
    because the relief requested is a discretionary act, I would
    find that mandamus is not an appropriate remedy in this case.
    Although I would hold that no relief can be granted in
    this case, I am still cognizant of the great debt that our
    society owes to its veterans.        The soldiers’ relief act was
    first enacted in   1899, “to provide relief outside of the
    soldiers’ home for honorably discharged indigent soldiers,
    sailors and marines, and the indigent wives, widows and minor
    children of such indigent or deceased soldiers, sailors and
    marines . . . .” 
    1899 PA 214
    . I think it is appropriate to
    consider the last paragraph of the report on the Spanish-
    American War included in the Michigan Legislative Manual and
    Official Directory for the years 1899-1900, p 693:
    The forces that went into the war with Spain,
    from Michigan, were actuated by the highest
    motives. They came from every employment and walk
    of life, yet none entered that service without a
    sacrifice.      All  left   peaceful   homes   with
    comfortable surroundings and sure sources of income
    to risk their lives in battle or in camp in
    1
    Lujan v Defenders of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    ; 
    112 S. Ct. 2130
    ; 
    119 L. Ed. 2d 351
     (1992).
    2
    response to the call of duty and patriotism. Some
    were killed in battle, others died of diseases
    incident to life in camp under new and untried
    conditions. Some came home comparatively unharmed,
    while others, and very many others, came bringing
    with them the seeds of disease and infirmities from
    which they will always suffer. There is but one
    proposition to make.    The people of Michigan in
    common with the people of this great nation owe a
    debt of gratitude and love to those who in any way
    represented them in the glorious contest for
    humanity so happily and successfully ended by our
    treaty of peace with Spain, and we should not
    forget now or hereafter any of the obligations
    imposed on us by this debt.
    I
    Unlike   constitutional   cases   in   federal   courts,   the
    Michigan standing requirements have been based on prudential,
    rather than constitutional, concerns. See, generally, House
    Speaker v State Administrative Bd, 
    441 Mich. 547
    , 559, n 20;
    495 NW2d 539 (1993), and Justice R ILEY ’s dissent in Detroit
    Fire Fighters Ass’n v Detroit 
    449 Mich. 629
    ; 537 NW2d 436
    (1995).   Both this Court and the United States Supreme Court
    have recognized that we are not required to comply with the
    federal rules regarding standing.2     I believe that adopting
    2
    In House Speaker we stated that “this Court is not bound
    to follow federal cases regarding standing,” pointing out that
    “[o]ne notable distinction between federal and state standing
    analysis is the power of this Court to issue advisory
    opinions. Const 1963, art 3, §8. Under Article III of the
    federal constitution, federal courts may issue opinions only
    where there is an actual case or controversy.” Id., p 559,
    including n 20. Justice Kennedy, writing for the Court in
    ASARCO Inc v Kadish, 
    490 U.S. 605
    , 617; 
    109 S. Ct. 2037
    ; 104 L Ed
    (continued...)
    3
    the federal standing test as set forth in Lujan v Defenders of
    Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    ; 
    112 S. Ct. 2130
    ; 
    119 L. Ed. 2d 351
     (1992),
    is unnecessary; therefore I decline to supplement the current
    standing doctrine of this Court.
    Applying Michigan’s traditional rules of standing, I
    would find that the plaintiffs have standing to bring the
    present action. In Michigan, it is well settled that all
    disgruntled citizens do not automatically have standing to sue
    a public body. In House Speaker, supra at 554, we said:
    Standing is a legal term used to denote the
    existence of a party’s interest in the outcome of
    litigation that will ensure sincere and vigorous
    advocacy.   However, evidence that a party will
    engage in full and vigorous advocacy, by itself,
    is insufficient to establish standing.     Standing
    requires a demonstration that the plaintiff’s
    substantial interest will be detrimentally affected
    in a manner different from the citizenry at large.
    The usual rule has been that a private citizen has no standing
    to vindicate a public wrong or enforce a public right where
    that citizen has not been hurt in any manner different than
    the citizenry at large.   Waterford Sch Dist v State Bd of Ed,
    
    98 Mich. App. 658
    , 662; 296 NW2d 328 (1980).
    2
    (...continued)
    2d 696 (1989), acknowledged:
    We have recognized often that the constraints
    of Article III do not apply to state courts, and
    accordingly the state courts are not bound by the
    limitations of a case or controversy or other
    federal rules of justiciability . . . .
    4
    However, while a private suit is generally precluded when
    a violation of a public duty is claimed, a private action can
    be maintained if the public duty also was intended to benefit
    private individuals.     Taylor v Lake Shore & M S R Co, 
    45 Mich. 74
    , 77; 
    7 N.W. 728
     (1881).       Justice C OOLEY , speaking for the
    Court, explained that “[t]he nature of the duty and the
    benefits to be accomplished through its performance must
    generally determine whether it is a duty to the public in part
    or exclusively, or whether individuals may claim that it is a
    duty imposed wholly or in part for their especial benefit.”
    Id. See also Gardner v Wood, 
    429 Mich. 290
    ; 414 NW2d 706
    (1987).
    The plain language of the soldiers’ relief fund act3
    unequivocally supports the notion that the statute was enacted
    solely    to   benefit   citizens        in   the   same   class   as   the
    plaintiffs, i.e., honorably discharged, indigent veterans.
    Clearly, the plaintiffs possess an interest in the soldiers’
    relief fund that is “different from the public at large.”
    Moreover, the relief sought does indeed more directly and
    3
    The county board of commissioners of each
    county shall annually levy, a tax not exceeding
    1/10 of a mill on each dollar . . . for the purpose
    of creating a fund for the relief of honorably
    discharged indigent members of the army, navy, air
    force, marine corps, coast guard, and women’s
    auxiliaries    of    all     wars    or    military
    expeditions . . . . See MCL 35.21.
    5
    tangibly benefit the plaintiffs than it does the public at
    large.    In this case, the plaintiffs made a proper showing
    that they were injured in a manner distinct from the citizenry
    at large.   Therefore, I would find that the plaintiffs have
    standing to pursue the instant action.
    II
    Plaintiffs ask that the defendant counties be ordered to
    begin assessing taxes to maintain their soldiers’ relief
    funds. However, this particular duty, which is covered by MCL
    35.21, is discretionary, and therefore is not a proper subject
    for mandamus. Because I would find that mandamus is not an
    appropriate remedy in this case, I agree with the majority’s
    result.
    It is well settled that an order of mandamus will be
    issued only if the plaintiffs have a clear legal right to the
    performance of the specific duty sought to be compelled and
    the defendant has a clear legal duty to perform the same.
    State Bd of Ed v Houghton Schs, 
    430 Mich. 658
    , 666; 425 NW2d 80
    (1988).     The   act   sought   to    be   compelled   must   not   be
    discretionary.    It must be of a ministerial nature, and it
    must be prescribed by law with such precision and certainty as
    to leave nothing to the exercise of discretion or judgment.
    If any reasonable doubts exist regarding the question of
    6
    discretion or want of discretion, the courts will hesitate to
    interfere.   See In re MCI Telecommunications, 
    460 Mich. 396
    ;
    596 NW2d 164 (1999), Oakland Schs Bd of Ed v Sup’t of Pub
    Instruction, 
    401 Mich. 37
    ; 257 NW2d 73 (1977) and Taylor v
    Ottawa Circuit Judge, 
    343 Mich. 440
    ; 72 NW2d 146 (1955).
    Here, the county board of commissioners is given the
    authority and the discretion to determine the amount of the
    tax to be levied; the only limit it is given is that it not
    exceed 1/10 of a mill.      The first sentence of MCL 35.21
    provides:
    The county board of commissioner of each
    county shall annually levy, a tax not exceeding
    1/10 of a mill on each dollar, to be levied and
    collected as provided by law, upon the taxable
    property of each township and city, for their
    respective counties, for the purpose of creating a
    fund for the relief of honorably discharged
    indigent . . . .
    Further, the last sentence of MCL 35.21 states
    If any money in the fund is not necessary for
    the purpose for which it was raised, the money
    shall remain in the treasury of the county as a
    soldiers' relief fund, and shall be considered in
    raising future sums therefor.
    Additionally, the soldiers’ relief commission is required to
    make an annual report of the money on hand, the money it is
    expending, and how much it believes will be needed for the
    next year.   Therefore the relief requested by the plaintiffs,
    7
    that the defendant counties be ordered to begin    assessing
    taxes under the statute, is a discretionary act, and mandamus
    is not an appropriate remedy.
    There is no specific relief the Court could provide, as
    we cannot require the county to assess a specific amount.
    Accordingly, I concur with the majority opinion’s result
    reversing the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
    8
    S T A T E    O F   M I C H I G A N
    SUPREME COURT
    MICHAEL LEE, BRYAN DUNCIL, MARY
    DUNCIL on behalf of herself and
    JOSEPH DUNCIL, BRYAN DUNCIL,
    KENNETH DUNCIL, and JON DUNCIL,
    as their Next Friend, and the class
    of all others similarly situated,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v                                                   No. 114700
    THE MACOMB COUNTY BOARD OF
    COMMISSIONERS, and the COUNTY OF
    MACOMB,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    ___________________________________
    DENNIS D. WALKER, on behalf of
    himself and DAWNELL J. WALKER and
    MELANIE WALKER, their Next Friend,
    and DWAYNE STEAGALL, ERNEST GROCE,
    JERRY GRAY, PAUL ECKLEY, DUANE GORE,
    KENNETH JONES, MORRIS BARTOLOTTA,
    and the class of all others similarly
    situated.
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v                                                   No. 115259
    THE WAYNE COUNTY BOARD OF
    COMMISSIONERS and the COUNTY OF
    WAYNE,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    ___________________________________
    KELLY, J. (dissenting).
    I disagree with the majority's reversal of the Court of
    Appeals decision. I believe plaintiffs have standing to bring
    the   current       actions   and   mandamus      has    been    appropriately
    sought.      I would affirm the Court of Appeals decision that
    reversed summary disposition in favor of Macomb County and
    affirmed      denial    of    Wayne    County's         motion       for    summary
    disposition.
    I.    THE STATUTES
    Plaintiffs alleged in their complaints that defendants
    violated the soldiers' relief fund act1 by failing to comply
    with their duty to levy and collect a tax and perform other
    obligations.        Section 1 of the act creates a relief fund by
    mandating      an   annual    tax   levy    and    payment      of    the    moneys
    collected to the county treasurer.                MCL 35.21.
    The method for disbursing moneys from the fund appears at
    § 3 of the act.         This section mandates the compilation of a
    list of persons entitled to relief under the act and a
    1
    MCL 35.21 et seq.
    2
    determination of the amount of relief to be granted to such
    persons.    MCL 35.23.2
    In summary, a relief fund was to be established and an
    annual compilation of the names of persons entitled to monies
    from the fund was to be made.           Many of the actions of the
    county board of commissioners, the township supervisors and
    the soldiers' relief commission that are described in the
    statute    are   mandatory,   as   evidenced   by   use   of   the   word
    "shall."
    Under the act, the county board of commissioners has a
    duty to levy a tax annually.       The supervisor of each township
    and ward is obligated to make a list of persons eligible for
    relief and give that list to the soldiers' relief commission.
    The soldiers' relief commission must determine the amount of
    money to be distributed to the persons on the list.                   The
    county board of commissioners is obligated to pay the money
    from the taxes to the county treasurer, who disburses the
    money at the order of the soldiers' relief commission.
    The majority focuses on the discretion that the act gives
    the soldiers' relief commission to set the amount to be
    distributed.      However, plaintiffs do not allege that the
    2
    Pursuant to MCL 35.622, the soldiers' relief commission
    was declared inoperative and its duties and powers transferred
    to the county department of veterans' affairs. This opinion
    will continue to refer to the soldiers' relief commission for
    the sake of consistency.
    3
    soldiers' relief commission failed to comply with the act, nor
    do they request money from it.      Rather, plaintiffs seek to
    compel the creation of a relief fund through the levy and
    collection of an annual tax.   The majority's reliance on the
    discretion of the soldiers' relief commission ignores the fact
    that the act gives no discretion whatsoever regarding whether
    taxes are levied and a fund created.     It mandates these acts
    and directs the board of commissioners to accomplish them.
    In the cases before us, plaintiffs claim that the county
    boards of commissioners failed to comply with the act and
    perform their nondiscretionary duties.    Plaintiffs alleged in
    their complaints that the county boards of commissioners had
    not at any time levied a tax for the soldiers' relief fund.3
    This failure to comply with the nondiscretionary obligations
    3
    It appears that the allegation regarding the Macomb
    County Board of Commissioners may have been overstated.
    Plaintiffs' counsel conceded during oral argument that the
    record does not establish whether a fund was created in Macomb
    County at sometime in the past and later eliminated.
    Nevertheless, it must be remembered that these cases challenge
    rulings made on motions for summary disposition brought under
    MCR 2.116(C)(8).     In ruling on these motions, only the
    pleadings are considered. Maiden v Rozwood, 
    461 Mich. 109
    ,
    119-120; 597 NW2d 817 (1999). Therefore, the concession is
    not relevant to the resolution of this appeal.
    Moreover,   plaintiffs' complaints   alleged  ongoing
    violations of the act. Whether a fund went into and out of
    existence during the last century has no bearing on the
    allegation that the Macomb County Board of Commissioners
    failed to comply with the act at the time plaintiffs filed
    their complaint.
    4
    of the act is the basis of plaintiffs' claims.                   Hence, the
    majority's focus on the discretionary nature of the soldiers'
    relief commission's duties camouflages the relevant fact:                 no
    discretion    exists       that     permits    the   county      boards   of
    commissioners not to levy taxes for a soldiers' relief fund.4
    II.    STANDING
    The trial court decisions in these matters were made on
    motions for summary disposition and are reviewed de novo.
    Maiden v Rozwood, 
    461 Mich. 109
    , 118; 597 NW2d 817 (1999).                  In
    both cases, defendants challenged plaintiffs' standing under
    MCR 2.116(C)(8).      Such motions test the legal sufficiency of
    the   complaint,    and,    when    ruling    on   them,   the   court    may
    consider only the pleadings.          A trial judge may grant summary
    disposition     where   the       claims   alleged    are     "so   clearly
    unenforceable as a matter of law that no factual development
    could possibly justify recovery."             Id. at 119.
    The majority has concluded that summary disposition was
    properly granted to Macomb County and improperly denied to
    Wayne County.      It adopts the test for standing articulated in
    Lujan v Defenders of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    ; 
    112 S. Ct. 2130
    ; 119
    4
    As noted by the majority and the concurrence, the act
    gives the county boards of commissioners discretion in
    determining the amount of the annual tax levy. However, this
    fact does not in any way undermine plaintiffs' claims. As
    evidenced by the word "shall," there is no discretion
    regarding whether to levy an annual tax.
    
    5 L. Ed. 2d 351
     (1992).       It then finds that plaintiffs failed to
    establish standing under the test.
    While I agree with the majority's adoption of the Lujan
    test, I cannot agree that plaintiffs lack standing.                     That
    conclusion     ignores     the   nature    of    plaintiffs'       claims.
    Plaintiffs did not appeal from the denial of benefits under
    the act.    Instead, they sought to compel defendants to comply
    with the act.    That the amount of relief "is solely within the
    discretion of the commission" is irrelevant to a determination
    of the injury plaintiffs sustained from defendants' failure to
    establish a relief fund in compliance with the act.
    To    withstand    summary   disposition        on   the   basis    of
    standing, plaintiffs must plead that they suffered an injury
    in   fact   through     defendants'    failure   to    comply    with    the
    mandates of the soldiers' relief fund act. They have done so.
    They have alleged that they are members of the class of
    persons for whose benefit the fund was intended.                 They have
    alleged that defendants failed to (1) levy a tax to establish
    the relief fund, and (2) pay the collected moneys to the
    county treasurer, both of which were for the benefit and
    relief of plaintiffs.       Plaintiffs have asserted that, because
    defendants failed to comply with the act and establish the
    fund, plaintiffs could not apply for or receive benefits to
    which the act entitled them.
    6
    Because plaintiffs have alleged failure to establish a
    relief fund and denial of the opportunity to apply for or
    receive its benefits, they have sufficiently asserted an
    injury in fact.      There is no need for them to allege precisely
    how the fund would have helped them. Had it been established,
    plaintiffs have alleged that they would have applied for
    financial assistance.
    It is inescapable that the creation of a fund and the
    opportunity for indigents to receive its financial assistance
    would     have     benefitted     plaintiffs          in     a    concrete     and
    particularized manner. By definition, to be indigent is to be
    "needy and poor, or one who has not sufficient property to
    furnish him a living nor anyone able to support him to whom he
    is entitled to look for support." Black's Law Dictionary (6th
    ed).    Through their assertions, plaintiffs have sufficiently
    alleged       "specific,   concrete     facts    demonstrating          that   the
    challenged practices harmed [them], and that [they] personally
    would     benefit     in     a   tangible       way        from   the    court's
    intervention."       Warth v Seldin, 
    422 U.S. 490
    , 508; 
    95 S. Ct. 2197
    ;
    
    45 L. Ed. 2d 343
     (1975).
    The    majority    determines    that    plaintiffs'        claims     are
    "uncertain" because plaintiffs do not allege a likelihood that
    the soldiers' relief commission would have granted funds to
    them. Under this test, no plaintiffs could ever have standing
    7
    to contest defendants' failure to establish a relief fund. No
    plaintiff could know how a soldiers' relief commission would
    have exercised its discretion.          If plaintiffs' had sought
    relief     within    the   discretion   of     the    soldiers'   relief
    commission, what could they be required to allege to defeat a
    motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8)?                  I
    submit that it is only that, under a reasonable exercise of
    discretion, the soldiers' relief commission would have granted
    them relief.       Plaintiffs in these cases made that showing by
    alleging their eligibility, as veterans and as indigents.
    However, that the amount of relief distributed was solely
    within the discretion of the soldiers' relief commissions is
    in no way related to whether plaintiffs suffered an injury in
    fact.      Since    plaintiffs   alleged     injury   from   defendants'
    failure to establish funds in accordance with the act, the
    issue of discretion in administering the funds is irrelevant.
    Plaintiffs also adequately pleaded facts that established
    the second element of the Lujan test.           The causal connection
    between their alleged injuries and defendants' alleged conduct
    or failure to act is illustrated in the reasoning above.              If
    defendants had complied with the requirements of the act,
    plaintiffs have asserted that they would have applied for
    benefits.     There is no indication that the failure to comply
    8
    with   the   provisions     of   the    act   was   the   result   of     the
    independent action of a third party.
    Finally, plaintiffs have pleaded facts sufficient to
    fulfill the third element of the Lujan test.                 They seek to
    compel defendants' full compliance with the soldiers' relief
    fund act.     On the basis of the pleadings, plaintiffs have
    alleged sufficient facts to establish that their injuries
    would be redressed if these cases were returned for further
    proceedings.
    For these reasons, I would conclude that plaintiffs have
    standing under the test in Lujan.
    III.       MANDAMUS
    Mandamus   is   an   extraordinary      remedy     that   cannot    be
    invoked to compel discretionary actions.              Teasel v Dep't of
    Mental Health, 
    419 Mich. 390
    , 409-410; 355 NW2d 75 (1984).
    However, an order of mandamus can be issued where "a body or
    an officer [is] charged with a duty to take action in the
    matter, notwithstanding the fact that the execution of that
    duty may involve some measure of discretion."               Id. at 410.
    Therefore, mandamus can compel a body or officer to
    exercise discretion, but cannot compel the manner in which the
    discretion is exercised.         Id.    To issue an order of mandamus,
    9
    a defendant must have a clear legal duty and a plaintiff must
    have a clear legal right to have the duty performed.                    Toan v
    McGinn, 
    271 Mich. 28
    , 33; 
    260 N.W. 108
     (1935).
    The relevant parts of the soldiers' relief fund act are
    phrased in terms of clear legal duties that are applicable to
    defendants.      Under the act, the county board of commissioners
    is charged with the duty of levying taxes on an annual basis.
    It is the exercise of duty that plaintiffs seek to compel, a
    proper purpose for the issuance of an order of mandamus.
    The act also imposes a legal duty on defendants to create
    a   fund   for   the   relief       of   honorably      discharged     indigent
    veterans and their indigent spouses, minor children, and
    parents.     It establishes a clear legal right to relief for
    certain persons, including the class that plaintiffs seek to
    represent.       Whether persons eligible under the act receive
    relief     is    dependent      on       compliance      by    defendants    in
    establishing a relief fund.                  Defendants have clear legal
    duties     and   plaintiffs     have     a     clear   legal   right   to   have
    defendants perform their duties.                 Mandamus is appropriately
    sought.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    The soldiers' relief fund act, however arcane, is valid
    and binding law.       The Legislature could have chosen to repeal
    it at any time during the last century, but did not do so.
    10
    Moreover, it is apparent from the fact that the Legislature
    amended the act in 1984 that it made a conscious decision not
    to repeal it.
    The majority's reliance on that portion of the act giving
    the soldiers' relief commission discretion in granting relief
    ignores the nature of plaintiffs' claims.           Plaintiffs did not
    contend that the soldiers' relief commission failed to comply
    with the act.     Nor did plaintiffs seek relief within the
    discretion of that commission.            Therefore, the fact that the
    amount of relief "is solely within the discretion" of the
    soldiers' relief commission, as the majority points out, is
    irrelevant to the claims presented here. What plaintiffs seek
    is to compel the county boards of commissioners to comply with
    their mandatory obligation to annually levy taxes and to
    create relief funds.
    As noted by the majority, the soldiers' relief fund act
    is   remedial   and   should   be    read     liberally   in   favor   of
    plaintiffs, its intended beneficiaries. See Chandler v Dowell
    Schlumberger Inc, 
    456 Mich. 395
    , 398; 572 NW2d 210 (1998).
    Plaintiffs alleged that they suffered an injury in fact
    through defendants' failure to establish relief funds and
    denial of the opportunity to apply for or receive benefits
    under the act.    These claims are not so unenforceable as a
    matter of law that no factual basis could possibly justify
    11
    recovery.
    Plaintiffs have satisfied the criteria under the Lujan
    test, establishing standing.     The soldiers' relief fund act
    charges defendants with the duty to take action in plaintiffs'
    interest.     Hence, the Court of Appeals correctly determined
    that plaintiffs had standing to bring suit and that mandamus
    was a proper remedy. Accordingly, I would affirm the decision
    of the Court of Appeals.
    CAVANAGH , J., concurred with KELLY , J.
    12