Martha Cares Olsen v. Chikaming Township , 325 Mich. App. 170 ( 2018 )


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  •                            STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    MARTHA CARES OLSEN, FRITZ OLSEN,                                 FOR PUBLICATION
    ROBERT E. LEHRER, SHERIBEL F.                                    July 3, 2018
    ROTHENBERG, STEPHEN CASEY,                                       9:05 a.m.
    KATHLEEN CASEY, ERNEST LEWIS
    MACVICAR III, JANICE MACVICAR,
    RONALD DEVLAM, and MICHELLE
    DEVLAM,
    Appellees,
    v                                                                No. 337724
    Berrien Circuit Court
    JUDE AND REED, LLC,                                              LC No. 16-000059-AA
    Appellant.
    MARTHA CARES OLSEN, FRITZ OLSEN,
    ROBERT E. LEHRER, SHERIBEL F.
    ROTHENBERG, ZWIER FAMILY TRUST,
    STEPHEN CASEY, KATHLEEN CASEY,
    ERNEST LEWIS MACVICAR III, JANICE
    MACVICAR,
    Appellees,
    v                                                                No. 337726
    Berrien Circuit Court
    JUDE AND REED, LLC,                                              LC No. 16-000059-AA
    Appellant.
    Before: MURRAY, C.J., and HOEKSTRA and GADOLA, JJ.
    GADOLA, J.
    In Docket No. 337724, appellant appeals by leave granted the order of the circuit court
    reversing the determination of the Chikaming Township Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA)
    -1-
    granting appellant’s application for a nonuse zoning variance. In Docket No. 337726, appellant
    appeals as of right the same order of the circuit court. In both appeals, appellant challenges
    whether appellees1 are aggrieved parties who may contest the final order of the ZBA. We
    reverse and remand.
    I. FACTS AND BACKGROUND
    In 1957, Preston and Doris Sweet platted a 17-lot subdivision near Lake Michigan called
    the Merriweather Shores subdivision. In the following years, the Sweets conveyed some of the
    lots to buyers, while retaining other lots. This case involves Lot 6 of the subdivision. Lot 6 has
    118 feet of frontage along Huntington Drive, is 82 feet deep, and has a total area of 9,676 square
    feet.
    The subdivision is located in Chikaming Township. At the time Merriweather Shores
    was platted, the township did not have a zoning ordinance. The township thereafter enacted a
    zoning ordinance in 1964, and in 1981 enacted a new zoning ordinance. The parties agree that at
    some point after enactment of the 1981 ordinance, Lot 6 was rendered nonconforming because
    the ordinance required all lots to have a minimum area of 20,000 square feet for buildability.
    Regarding nonconforming lots, § 4.02 of the 1981 ordinance provided:
    If two or more lots or combination of lots and portions of lots with
    continuous frontage in single ownership are of record at the time of passage or
    amendment of this ordinance, and if all or part of the lots do not meet the
    requirements established for lot width and area, the lands involved shall be
    considered to be an undivided parcel for the purposes of this ordinance and no
    portion of said parcel shall be used or sold in a manner which diminishes
    compliance with lot width and area requirements established by this ordinance,
    nor shall any division of any parcel be made which creates a lot with width or area
    less than the requirements stated in this ordinance.
    In 1982, Doris Sweet, as survivor of Preston Sweet, conveyed the remaining lots to
    herself and to David Sweet as joint tenants with rights of survivorship. The parties do not
    dispute that in 1989, David Sweet, as survivor of Doris Sweet, conveyed Lots 8 through 10 to
    unrelated parties but maintained ownership of Lots 6 and 7. In 1996, a prospective buyer, David
    Zilke, was interested in purchasing Lots 6 and 7 from David Sweet. Combined, Lots 6 and 7 had
    an area of 19,352 square feet, and Zilke requested a variance from the 20,000 square foot
    minimum for buildability, and from the rear and side setback requirements. The ZBA denied the
    variance application, and Zilke declined to purchase the property.
    1
    In Docket No. 337724, this Court granted the motion of appellees Ronald DeVlam and
    Michelle DeVlam to be substituted as successors in interest for the Zwier Family Trust. Olsen v
    Twp of Chickaming, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered May 11, 2017 (Docket
    No. 337724).
    -2-
    In 1998, the township adopted a new zoning ordinance, which remained in effect at the
    times relevant to this case. In 2011, the Berrien County Treasurer foreclosed on David Sweet’s
    interest in Lot 7 for nonpayment of property taxes, and T&W Holdings, LLC purchased Lot 7 at
    a tax foreclosure sale. In 2013, the Berrien County Treasurer foreclosed on David Sweet’s
    interest in Lot 6 for nonpayment of property taxes, and appellant purchased Lot 6 at a tax
    foreclosure sale.
    Seeking to build a residential cottage on Lot 6, appellant filed an application with
    Chickaming Township for a nonuse variance under § 4.02(C) of the zoning ordinance. Appellant
    requested a nonuse dimensional variance under § 14.02, which requires all R-1 lots to have a
    minimum lot area of 20,000 square feet and a rear setback of 50 feet. Lot 6 had square footage
    of 9,676, and would require a rear setback of 30 feet. Appellant argued that as a nonconforming
    lot, Lot 6 was eligible for a variance pursuant to § 4.02 and § 4.06 of the zoning ordinance and
    that without the variance, Lot 6 would be rendered unusable.
    Before the ZBA held a hearing to address appellant’s application, the township sent
    notice to property owners who owned property within a 300-foot radius of Lot 6.2 At the ZBA
    hearing, some of the neighboring property owners appeared by counsel to argue against the
    variance. Following public comment and extensive discussion by the ZBA members, the ZBA
    voted to approve the variance request.
    Appellees appealed the ZBA’s decision to the circuit court, and the circuit court
    permitted appellant to intervene in the circuit court action. The ZBA moved to dismiss the
    circuit court action for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, arguing that appellees lacked standing
    to challenge the ZBA’s decision to grant the variance. Appellant joined the ZBA in the motion.
    Appellant and the ZBA argued that only an “aggrieved” party could appeal the ZBA’s decision
    and that appellees were not aggrieved because they could not show that they suffered special
    damages. At the conclusion of the hearing on the motion, the trial court found that appellees had
    standing to appeal the ZBA decision to the circuit court, explaining:
    I find in this circumstance that the Legislature has a scheme that implies it
    intended to confer standing on these litigants. The Zoning Enabling Act provides,
    in section 3103, that notice shall be given to persons—all persons who have real
    property that is assessed within 300 feet of the property that is [the] subject of the
    request, and it seems to me that in the context of the [appellees] challenging the
    actions of the Zoning Board of Appeals, I—I must find that this notice
    requirement implies that the Legislature intended to confer standing to those
    individuals so as to qualify as aggrieved part[ies] for the purposes of the appeal
    under 3606. . . . [W]ere this not true . . . only an applicant who’s denied a variance
    would have standing to appeal save . . . they can show themselves to otherwise
    have a special interest, the door would be open to those individuals. But, again, is
    that only individuals within the 300 feet, or is that any ole person that can show
    2
    MCL 125.3103 requires notice of the public hearing to persons to whom property is assessed
    within 300 feet of the subject property.
    -3-
    some other—some other interest . . . . [M]y interpretation is that the Legislature
    wouldn’t intend that result to only confer the—the appeal status, particularly as I
    said, within the context of the Statute indicating that they must give notice to
    these folks within 300 feet. And also specifically indicating what that notice has
    to have when and where written comments will be received concerning the
    request.
    The circuit court also noted that the ordinance generally required a 50-foot setback for a septic
    system, and the ZBA provided appellant with a 20-foot variance for the septic system. The
    circuit court noted, “that seems to me that arguably there may be a special interest with respect to
    that, particularly with the contiguous properties.” The circuit court denied the motion to dismiss,
    concluding that “given the notice Statute, it seems that . . . [t]he Statute implies an intent to
    confer standing on [appellees].”
    After further proceedings, the circuit court reversed the ZBA’s decision. The circuit
    court held that the ZBA did not have authority to grant the variance because appellant did not
    satisfy § 23.04 of the township’s zoning ordinance, which permits the ZBA to grant a variance
    under specific conditions. Specifically, the circuit court found that any hardship was self-
    created, explaining:
    In the instant case, this Court finds that the hardship was self-created.
    Although [appellant and the ZBA] insist that “it was the passage of time and
    application of the Zoning Ordinance to the existing lots of record that created the
    hardship,” the analysis in [Johnson v Robinson Twp, 
    420 Mich 115
    ; 359 NW2d
    526 (1984)] does not support that argument. When the 1964 Zoning Ordinance
    went into effect, Lot 6 was under common ownership and held continuous
    frontage with Lots 7, 8, 9 and 10 and thus, the lots were deemed as one lot for
    purposes of the Zoning Ordinance. Accordingly, Lot 6 was not a standalone lot
    and could not be considered a grandfathered nonconforming lot of record. The
    Sweets, the prior owners, then violated the Zoning Ordinance when they split Lot
    6 and Lot 7 from the remaining lots and as a result, Lot 6 and Lot 7 could not be
    developed as standalone building sites. Like the plaintiff in Johnson, the zoning
    ordinance preceded the division of the property . . . . Moreover, it is worth noting
    that the Owner was a sophisticated buyer who was aware of the limitation on Lot
    6 when it purchased the property for $6,054.00. The property remains available
    for use in conjunction with an adjacent parcel. Therefore, the Zoning Board of
    Appeals erred when they granted the variance because the practical difficulty was
    one that was produced by the Sweets, the Owner’s predecessor in title, and
    accordingly, Section 23.04.D. was not satisfied.
    Appellant claimed an appeal to this Court (Docket No. 337726), challenging the circuit
    court’s determination that appellees were aggrieved parties able to appeal the decision of the
    ZBA to the circuit court. Appellant also sought leave to appeal the same order of the circuit
    -4-
    court (Docket No. 337724), raising additional challenges to the circuit court’s ruling. This Court
    granted appellant’s application for leave to appeal and consolidated the appeals.3
    II. ANALYSIS
    Appellant first contends that appellees lacked standing to challenge the decision of the
    ZBA before the circuit court because they are not “aggrieved parties” within the meaning of the
    Michigan Zoning Enabling Act (MZEA), MCL 125.3101 et seq. We agree that appellees are not
    aggrieved parties within the meaning of the MZEA, and therefore were not able to invoke
    judicial review by the circuit court of the ZBA’s decision granting appellant a nonuse variance.
    Municipalities have no inherent power to regulate land use through zoning. Whitman v
    Galien Twp, 
    288 Mich App 672
    , 679; 808 NW2d 9 (2010). Our state’s Legislature, however,
    has granted this authority to municipalities through enabling legislation. Sun Communities v
    Leroy Twp, 
    241 Mich App 665
    , 669; 617 NW2d 42 (2000). In 2006, our Legislature
    consolidated three previous zoning enabling acts for cities and villages, townships, and counties
    into the MZEA. Whitman, 288 Mich App at 679. The MZEA grants local units of government
    authority to regulate land development and use through zoning. Maple BPA, Inc v Bloomfield
    Charter Twp, 
    302 Mich App 505
    , 515; 838 NW2d 915 (2013).
    The MZEA also provides for judicial review of a local unit of government’s zoning
    decisions. Specifically, § 605 of the MZEA, MCL 125.3605, provides that a decision of a
    zoning board of appeals is final, subject to appellate review by the circuit court. The circuit
    court is authorized under the MZEA to review the decision of a ZBA to determine whether the
    decision of the ZBA (a) complied with the constitution and laws of this state, (b) was based upon
    proper procedure, (c) was supported by competent, material, and substantial evidence, and (d)
    represented the ZBA’s reasonable exercise of discretion. MCL 125.3606(1); Edward C Levy Co
    v Marine City Zoning Bd of Appeals, 
    293 Mich App 333
    , 340; 810 NW2d 621 (2011).
    Our review of a circuit court’s decision in an appeal from a decision of a zoning board of
    appeals is de novo to determine whether the circuit court “applied the correct legal principles and
    whether it misapprehended or grossly misapplied the substantial evidence test to the [ZBA’s]
    factual findings.” Hughes v Almena Twp, 
    284 Mich App 50
    , 60; 771 NW2d 453 (2009), quoting
    Boyd v Civil Serv Comm, 
    220 Mich App 226
    , 234; 559 NW2d 342 (1997). In addition, we
    review de novo issues involving the construction of statutes and ordinances. Soupal v Shady
    View, Inc, 
    469 Mich 458
    , 462; 672 NW2d 171 (2003).
    We also review de novo the legal question whether a party has standing. Barclae v Zarb,
    
    300 Mich App 455
    , 467; 834 NW2d 100 (2013). We note, however, that the term “standing”
    generally refers to the right of a plaintiff initially to invoke the power of a trial court to
    adjudicate a claimed injury. Federated Ins Co v Oakland Co Road Comm, 
    475 Mich 286
    , 290;
    3
    Olsen v Twp of Chikaming, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered July 14, 2017
    (Docket No. 337724); Olsen v Twp of Chikaming, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals,
    entered July 14, 2017 (Docket No. 337726).
    -5-
    715 NW2d 846 (2006). In this case, appellees did not seek initially to invoke the power of the
    circuit court, but rather sought appellate review by the circuit court of the decision of the ZBA
    under § 605 of the MZEA. Section 605 of the MZEA provides:
    The decision of the zoning board of appeals shall be final. A party
    aggrieved by the decision may appeal to the circuit court for the county in which
    the property is located as provided under section 606. [MCL 125.3605.]
    Thus, under the MZEA, a party seeking relief from a decision of a ZBA is not required to
    demonstrate “standing” but instead must demonstrate to the circuit court sitting in an appellate
    context that they are an “aggrieved” party. MCL 125.3605.
    In discussing the similar provision of MCR 7.203(A), which provides that this Court has
    jurisdiction of an appeal of right filed by an “aggrieved party,” our Supreme Court observed the
    difference between standing and the comparable interest in an appellate context of being an
    “aggrieved party,” stating that “[t]o be aggrieved, one must have some interest of a pecuniary
    nature in the outcome of the case and not a mere possibility arising from some unknown and
    future contingency.” Federated Ins Co, 
    475 Mich at 291
     (citations omitted). “An aggrieved
    party is not one who is merely disappointed over a certain result. Rather, to have standing on
    appeal, a litigant must have suffered a concrete and particularized injury, as would a party
    plaintiff initially invoking the court’s power. The only difference is a litigant on appeal must
    demonstrate an injury arising from either the actions of the trial court or the appellate court
    judgment rather than an injury arising from the underlying facts of the case.” 
    Id. at 291-292
    .
    Thus, the question in this case is more properly framed as not whether appellees had
    “standing,” but specifically whether appellees were “parties aggrieved by the decision” of the
    ZBA within the meaning of the MZEA, and thereby empowered by the MZEA to invoke
    appellate review of the ZBA’s decision by the circuit court. To answer that inquiry, we look first
    to the provisions of the MZEA. Because the MZEA does not define the term “party aggrieved,”
    we must engage in statutory interpretation, adhering to the well-settled rules governing such an
    inquiry. In doing so, our “primary goal is to discern the intent of the Legislature by first
    examining the plain language of the statute.” Driver v Naini, 
    490 Mich 239
    , 246-247; 802
    NW2d 311 (2011). “Statutory provisions must be read in the context of the entire act, giving
    every word its plain and ordinary meaning.” 
    Id.
     “When the language is clear and unambiguous,
    we will apply the statute as written and judicial construction is not permitted.” 
    Id.
    The relevant statutory language provides that a “party aggrieved by the decision [of the
    ZBA] may appeal to the circuit court . . . .” MCL 125.3605. We do not assume that language
    chosen by the Legislature was inadvertent, Bush v Shabahang, 
    484 Mich 156
    , 169; 772 NW2d
    272 (2009), and when interpreting statutory language that previously has been subject to judicial
    interpretation,4 we presume that the Legislature used the words in the sense in which they
    4
    We emphasize that we are not referring to the doctrine of “legislative acquiescence,” which is
    highly disfavored in Michigan as an indicator of legislative intent. See Ray v Swager, 
    501 Mich 52
    , 78 n 63; 903 NW2d 366 (2017), citing Donajkowski v Alpena Power Co, 
    460 Mich 243
    , 258;
    -6-
    previously have been interpreted. People v Wright, 
    432 Mich 84
    , 92; 437 NW2d 603 (1989);
    People v Powell, 
    280 Mich 669
    , 703; 
    274 NW 372
     (1937).
    In other contexts, this Court has defined the term “aggrieved party” as “one whose legal
    right is invaded by an action, or whose pecuniary interest is directly or adversely affected by a
    judgment or order.” Dep’t of Consumer & Indus Servs v Shah, 
    236 Mich App 381
    , 385; 600
    NW2d 406 (1999) (citation omitted). In the context of zoning, but before enactment of the
    MZEA, this Court interpreted and applied the phrase “aggrieved party” in cases arising under
    former zoning enabling acts. In doing so, this Court consistently concluded that to be a “party
    aggrieved” by a zoning decision, the party must have “suffered some special damages not
    common to other property owners similarly situated.” Unger v Forest Home Twp, 
    65 Mich App 614
    , 617; 237 NW2d 582 (1975), citing Joseph v Grand Blanc Twp, 
    5 Mich App 566
    , 571; 147
    NW2d 458 (1967). Generally, a neighboring landowner alleging increased traffic volume, loss
    of aesthetic value, or general economic loss has not sufficiently alleged special damages to
    become an aggrieved party, Village of Franklin v Southfield, 
    101 Mich App 554
    , 557; 300 NW2d
    634 (1981), because those generalized concerns are not sufficient to demonstrate harm different
    from that suffered by people in the community generally.
    In Unger, the township granted a building permit for the construction of a condominium.
    The appellant appealed the decision to the circuit court, and the circuit court dismissed the appeal
    finding that the appellant was not an “aggrieved party.” This Court affirmed, explaining that the
    appellant had not alleged facts sufficient to show special damages, alleging only the possibility
    of increased traffic on the lake and an effect on property values. Unger, 65 Mich App at 618.
    This Court concluded:
    In order to have any status in court to challenge the actions of a zoning
    board of appeals, a party must be “aggrieved.” The plaintiff must allege and
    prove that he has suffered some special damages not common to other property
    owners similarly situated. . . .
    It has been held that the mere increase in traffic in the area is not enough
    to cause special damages. Nor is proof of general economic and aesthetic losses
    sufficient to show special damages. [Id. at 617.]
    In Western Mich Univ Bd of Trustees v Brink, 
    81 Mich App 99
    ; 265 NW2d 56 (1978), the
    Kalamazoo Zoning Board of Appeals granted the defendant’s petition to expand a
    nonconforming use and for variances to accommodate the expansion. The plaintiff university
    owned property within 300 feet of the defendant, and sought in the circuit court to set aside the
    596 NW2d 574 (1999). Under the doctrine of legislative acquiescence, a court assumes that the
    Legislature tacitly approves a judicial interpretation if the Legislature does not thereafter correct
    the interpretation by the enactment of new legislation. By contrast, we apply here the established
    precept of statutory interpretation that when our Legislature enacts a statute including language
    that already has been subject to judicial interpretation, the Legislature intends the established
    interpretation of those words.
    -7-
    petition. This Court affirmed the circuit court’s holding that the plaintiff was not an “aggrieved
    party” entitled to challenge the board’s decision, rejecting plaintiff’s argument that because it
    was entitled to notice under the former zoning legislation, it had standing to challenge the
    board’s decision. Id. at 103. This Court also rejected the plaintiff’s argument that it had
    standing because it was an adjoining property owner, stating:
    We see little reason for abandoning the general rule that third parties will be
    permitted to appeal to the courts as persons aggrieved if they can show that
    * * * their property will suffer some special damages as a result of the decision
    of the board complained of, which is not common to other property owners
    similarly situated. . . . If the board’s decision does not pose a threat of unique
    harm to the neighbor, then the courts would be ill-served by a rule allowing his
    suit. [Id. at 103 n 1 (quotation marks and citations omitted).]
    In Village of Franklin, the defendant city council approved a site plan for a residential
    and commercial development. The village and a property owner challenged the decision in the
    circuit court, but the circuit court granted summary disposition to the defendant after concluding
    that the plaintiffs were not aggrieved parties under the former zoning legislation. On appeal, this
    Court expressly rejected the argument of the plaintiff property owner that she had standing
    because she owned land that adjoined the proposed development, holding that the property
    owner “failed to allege or prove special damages.” Village of Franklin, 101 Mich App at 557.
    This Court explained:
    In order for a party to have standing in court to attack the actions of a
    zoning board of appeals, the party must be an aggrieved party, and standing
    cannot be based solely on the fact that such party is a resident of the city. In the
    present case, the circuit court relied on [MCL 125.590], which authorizes an
    appeal to circuit court by a “party aggrieved” by a Board of Zoning Appeals
    decision. We agree with the circuit court’s decision that the present plaintiffs
    lacked standing because they were not aggrieved parties. [Id. at 556-557
    (citations omitted).]
    Given the long and consistent interpretation of the phrase “aggrieved party” in Michigan
    zoning jurisprudence, we interpret the phrase “aggrieved party” in § 605 of the MZEA consistent
    with its historical meaning. Therefore, to demonstrate that one is an aggrieved party under MCL
    125.3605, a party must “allege and prove that he [or she] has suffered some special damages not
    common to other property owners similarly situated.” Unger, 65 Mich App at 617. Incidental
    inconveniences such as increased traffic congestion, general aesthetic and economic losses,
    population increases, or common environmental changes are insufficient to show that a party is
    aggrieved. See id.; Joseph, 5 Mich App at 571. Instead, there must be a unique harm, dissimilar
    from the impact that other similarly situated property owners may experience. See Brink, 81
    Mich App at 103 n 1. Moreover, mere ownership of an adjoining parcel of land is insufficient to
    show that a party is aggrieved, Village of Franklin, 101 Mich App at 557-558, as is the mere
    entitlement to notice. Brink, 81 Mich App at 102.
    A review of the record in this case indicates that, contrary to the holding of the circuit
    court, appellees failed to demonstrate that they were aggrieved parties within the meaning of the
    -8-
    MZEA. Appellees argued before the circuit court that they were aggrieved because (1) they
    relied upon the 1996 variance denial concluding that Lot 6 was unbuildable, (2) they relied upon
    the zoning ordinance to be enforced as it is written, (3) they were entitled to receive notice of the
    public hearing before the ZBA as owners of real property within 300 feet of Lot 6, and (4) they
    would suffer aesthetic, ecological, practical, and other alleged harms from the grant of the zoning
    variance. These alleged injuries, however, do not establish appellees as aggrieved parties under
    MCL 125.3605. Aesthetic, ecological, and practical harms are insufficient to show “special
    damages not common to other property owners similarly situated.” Unger, 65 Mich App at 617.
    Similarly, appellees’ expectations that the 1998 zoning ordinance would be interpreted in the
    same manner as the 1981 zoning ordinance, or that the ZBA would arrive at the same decision as
    the 1996 denial of an altogether different variance request, were not sufficient to show special
    damages. Because appellees failed to show that they suffered a unique harm different from
    similarly situated community members, they failed to establish that they are parties aggrieved by
    the decision of the ZBA.
    Although the circuit court noted that septic systems and setback requirements specifically
    affected the property of neighboring landowners, there is no evidence that such damages are
    more than speculation or anticipation of future harm. Presumably, appellant would not be
    permitted to install a septic system that did not pass all of the requisite county health codes and
    building requirements. Thus, assuming that appellant obtained the requisite permits, there is
    nothing to support the conclusion that adjoining landowners would suffer the harm they
    anticipate.
    The circuit court also held that appellees had standing to challenge the issuance of the
    nonuse variance because they owned real property within 300 feet of Lot 6 and therefore were
    entitled to notice under the MZEA. MCL 125.3103 provides in relevant part:
    (1) Except as otherwise provided under this act, if a local unit of
    government conducts a public hearing required under this act, the local unit of
    government shall publish notice of the hearing in a newspaper of general
    circulation in the local unit of government not less than 15 days before the date of
    the hearing.
    (2) Notice required under this act shall be given as provided under
    subsection (3) to the owners of property that is the subject of the request. Notice
    shall also be given as provided under subsection (3) to all persons to whom real
    property is assessed within 300 feet of the property that is the subject of the
    request and to the occupants of all structures within 300 feet of the subject
    property regardless of whether the property or structure is located in the zoning
    jurisdiction.
    This statutory notice provision does not confer the status of aggrieved party on appellees.
    In Brink, this Court addressed and rejected this argument, explaining:
    Plaintiff, as an owner of land located within 300 feet of defendant Brink’s
    premises, was entitled to and did receive notice of the proceedings before the
    Zoning Board of Appeals . . . .
    -9-
    However, plaintiff argues that [notice under] § 11 not only made plaintiff
    a proper party to any appeal taken by an aggrieved party, but also gave plaintiff
    itself standing to institute such an appeal, regardless of whether it was an
    aggrieved party.
    Plaintiff cites no authority for this construction of the statute, and we do
    not find it persuasive. The “aggrieved party” requirement is a standard limitation
    in state zoning acts providing for review of zoning board of appeals decisions.
    This requirement has repeatedly been recognized and applied in the decisions of
    this Court. Had the Legislature meant to unshoulder this burden from parties in
    plaintiff’s status it could have done so in simple terms. However, section 11 does
    not speak in terms of standing to seek review, but only of notice and a right to
    appear . . . . We do not read this language as broadening the class of parties
    privileged to begin such reviews. [Brink, 81 Mich App at 102 (citations
    omitted).]
    As in Brink, appellees’ entitlement to notice under MCL 125.3103 of the ZBA
    proceedings does not create “aggrieved party” status for appellees under MCL 125.3105.
    Nothing in the MZEA or in Michigan’s zoning jurisprudence supports reading “aggrieved party”
    status into the MZEA’s notice requirement. Indeed, this reading of the notice provision runs
    contrary to this Court’s decisions establishing that mere ownership of adjoining property is
    insufficient to establish a property owner as an aggrieved party. Accordingly, the circuit court
    erred in holding that appellees achieved status as “aggrieved parties” merely because they were
    entitled to notice under MCL 125.3103.
    Appellees point to Brown v East Lansing Zoning Bd of Appeals, 
    109 Mich App 688
    ; 311
    NW2d 828 (1981), to support their “aggrieved” status, but a review of that case indicates that
    this argument is misguided. In Brown, the defendant East Lansing Zoning Board of Appeals
    granted the intervenor a variance to permit the construction of a duplex. The plaintiffs were
    neighboring landowners who objected to the construction of the duplex, and they appealed the
    decision to the circuit court. 
    Id. at 690-691
    . The circuit court held that the plaintiffs were not
    parties aggrieved by the decision of the board. 
    Id. at 693
    . On appeal, this Court held that the
    neighboring landowners had standing to appeal the defendant’s grant of the variance, explaining:
    In [Village of Franklin, 101 Mich App at 556] this Court expressly relied
    on the fact that the appeal in that case was taken under [MCL 125.590], which
    requires a party to be “aggrieved” in order to have standing to appeal. In the
    present case, on the other hand, plaintiffs’ appeal was taken under [MCL
    125.585(6)], which requires only that a person have “an interest affected by the
    zoning ordinance.” The fact that plaintiffs have an interest affected by
    defendant’s decision to grant the variance is manifest in their active opposition to
    the variance and their participation in the different hearings. [Id. at 699 (emphasis
    added).]
    Brown is unpersuasive here because it involved the application of a more permissive
    threshold for standing under a previous enabling statute that a person “have an interest affected
    by the zoning ordinance.” In contrast, the cases discussed above—Unger, 65 Mich App at 616;
    -10-
    Brink, 81 Mich App at 99; and Village of Franklin, 101 Mich App at 556—applied the
    “aggrieved person” threshold. Because the MZEA incorporated the “aggrieved person”
    threshold, see MCL 125.3605, we align our decision interpreting that language in the MZEA
    with the body of caselaw interpreting the “aggrieved person” threshold.
    We next address appellees’ contention that appellant waived the issue of standing by not
    raising it before the ZBA. Appellees argue that they appeared before the ZBA together with
    counsel and presented their arguments in that forum without appellant challenging their right to
    do so, and that appellant therefore waived any challenge to appellees’ standing to pursue the
    appeal in the circuit court. Appellees rely upon this Court’s opinion in Glen Lake-Crystal River
    Watershed Riparians v Glen Lake Ass’n, 
    264 Mich App 523
    , 695 NW2d 508 (2005), and also in
    Frankling v Van Buren Charter Twp, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals,
    issued July 15, 2008 (Docket No. 271228). We conclude that appellees’ reliance upon these
    cases is misplaced.
    Glen Lake does not involve an appeal from a zoning decision of a local unit of
    government. Rather, Glen Lake involved a dispute under the inland lake levels part of
    Michigan’s Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act, MCL 324.30701. In that case,
    the Glen Lake Association, which earlier had been ordered by the trial court to operate the dam
    in question so as to maintain the water level of the lake at the ordered level, completely shut off
    the water flow into the Crystal River while constructing a new dam. A group of riparian
    property owners and a canoe livery on the river filed suit against the Glen Lake Association.
    After the trial court entered its order modifying the established lake level, the Association
    appealed to this Court arguing that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because the
    property owners did not have standing to bring the action. This Court identified that the
    Association’s challenge was actually a challenge to the property owners’ legal capacity to sue,
    and that as such, the Association should have raised the challenge in its first responsive pleading
    in the trial court, but instead had acquiesced in the proceedings, then later attempted to assert the
    challenge. This Court concluded that because the Association had not raised the legal capacity to
    sue challenge in its first responsive pleading, it had waived the issue. The Glen Lake decision
    was thereafter cited by this Court in its unpublished opinion in Frankling for the proposition that
    “[c]hallenges to standing are waived if not timely raised.” Id. at 3, citing Glen Lake, 264 Mich
    App at 528.
    We find these cases inapplicable here. Initially, we note that neither of these cases
    involved application of the MZEA nor the same language used in the MZEA. Glen Lake did not
    involve an appeal from a zoning decision of a local unit of government. Frankling5 involved
    application of MCL 125.293a, a provision of the now-repealed township zoning act, which
    provided that “a person having an interest affected by the zoning ordinance may appeal” a
    decision of the board of zoning appeals to the circuit court. Neither Glen Lake nor Frankling
    5
    We also note that Frankling is unpublished, and this Court’s unpublished opinions are not
    binding upon this Court. MCR 7.215(C); Paris Meadows, LLC v Kentwood, 
    287 Mich App 136
    ,
    145 n 3; 783 NW2d 133 (2010).
    -11-
    persuade us that appellant in this case was obligated to challenge appellees’ right to appeal to the
    circuit court before appellees actually appealed.
    Appellees argue that appellant should have challenged their standing when they appeared
    before the ZBA. Appellant, however, is not challenging the appellees’ right to appear at the
    public hearing before the ZBA and make public comments; rather, appellant is challenging the
    ability of appellees to thereafter appeal the decision of the ZBA to the circuit court. The ZBA
    was not the appropriate forum to address whether appellees were empowered to appeal the
    ZBA’s decision as aggrieved parties. The question who may seek review of the ZBA decision
    before the circuit court is a question for initial determination by the circuit court, not by the
    ZBA. Moreover, at the time of the proceedings before the ZBA, the ZBA had not yet granted the
    variance and thus any challenge to appellees’ ability to appeal that future decision would have
    been premature.6 So, although appellees had a right to participate in the ZBA’s public hearing,
    the issue whether appellees were parties “aggrieved by the decision” of the ZBA under the
    MZEA with the right to appeal the decision of the ZBA to the circuit court was a question
    properly raised for the first time before the circuit court. Indeed, it could not have been raised
    any earlier.
    Lastly, we address appellees’ reliance on our Supreme Court’s opinion in Lansing
    Schools Educ Ass’n v Lansing Bd of Educ, 
    487 Mich 349
    ; 792 NW2d 686 (2010). Appellees
    argue that based upon Lansing Schools, they have standing to challenge the decision of the ZBA
    in this case. We disagree. Lansing Schools involved the question whether the teachers in that
    case had standing to sue the school board for refusing to expel certain students who allegedly had
    physically assaulted the teachers. In that case, our Supreme Court stated:
    We hold that Michigan standing jurisprudence should be restored to a limited,
    prudential doctrine that is consistent with Michigan’s longstanding historical
    approach to standing. Under this approach, a litigant has standing whenever there
    is a legal cause of action. . . . Where a cause of action is not provided at law, then
    a court should, in its discretion, determine whether a litigant has standing. A
    litigant may have standing in this context if the litigant has a special injury or
    right, or substantial interest, that will be detrimentally affected in a manner
    different from the citizenry at large or if a statutory scheme implies that the
    Legislature intended to confer standing on the litigant. [Id. at 372 (footnotes
    omitted).]
    Lansing Schools7 is inapplicable here. As discussed, this case involves not general
    notions of standing, that is, a plaintiff’s right to invoke the power of the trial court regarding a
    6
    And while before the ZBA, appellant could not possibly know of, and object to, the entire
    universe of possible parties who might in the future appeal a future decision of the ZBA.
    7
    It has been notably observed that in Lansing Schools, our Supreme Court overruled the
    previous understanding of standing in this state, establishing in its place a “ ‘limited, prudential
    doctrine’ that uncoupled standing from its constitutional moorings,” thereby creating a standing
    doctrine that should itself be overruled. Ader v Delta College Bd of Trustees, 
    493 Mich 887
    ; 822
    -12-
    claimed injury by another party, but instead application of a specific statutory provision of the
    MZEA that permits appellate review of a local unit of government’s zoning decision when
    review is sought by a “party aggrieved” by the decision of that local tribunal. That is, the inquiry
    whether there is a “legal cause of action” that would justify finding that a plaintiff has standing
    to initiate an action, see id. at 372, is not relevant where, as here, our inquiry is whether a party is
    empowered to seek appellate review under a particular statutory scheme.
    But we note that even if the Lansing Schools analysis were applicable here, appellees
    would nonetheless lack standing because, just as they have not demonstrated that they are
    “aggrieved” within the meaning of the MZEA, they have not demonstrated “a special injury or
    right, or substantial interest, that will be detrimentally affected in a manner different from the
    citizenry at large,” under Lansing Schools. See id. at 372. In either scenario, a party must
    establish that they have special damages different from those of others within the community.
    Appellees have not done so, asserting only the complaints of anticipated inconvenience and
    aesthetic disappointment that any member of the community might assert.
    But we reiterate that the inquiry here involves not an application of concepts of standing
    generally, but a specific assessment of whether, under the MZEA, appellees have established
    their status as aggrieved parties empowered to challenge a final decision of the ZBA. We
    conclude that appellees are not parties “aggrieved” under MCL 125.3605, having failed to
    demonstrate special damages different from those of others within the community. Accordingly,
    appellees did not have the ability to invoke the jurisdiction of the circuit court, and the circuit
    court erred in denying the township’s and appellant’s motion to dismiss the circuit court action.
    In light of our conclusion that appellees were not properly able to invoke the jurisdiction of the
    circuit court, it is unnecessary to address appellant’s additional contentions of error in the circuit
    court’s ruling.
    Reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain
    jurisdiction.
    /s/ Michael F. Gadola
    /s/ Christopher M. Murray
    /s/ Joel P. Hoekstra
    NW2d 221 (2012) (MARKMAN, J., dissenting). As Justice Corrigan in her dissent in Lansing
    Schools observed, the standard for standing established in that case is a “broad and amorphous
    principle that promises to be nearly impossible to apply in a society that operates under the rule
    of law.” Lansing Schools, 487 Mich at 417 (CORRIGAN, J., dissenting).
    -13-