Title: Estate of Pearce v. Eaton Cty. Road Comm'n. (Opinion - Leave Granted)
Citation: N/A
Docket Number: 158069
State: Michigan
Issuer: Michigan Supreme Court
Date: June 4, 2021

ESTATE OF BRENDON PEARCE v EATON COUNTY ROAD COMMISSION 
BRUGGER v MIDLAND COUNTY BOARD OF ROAD COMMISSIONERS
 
Docket Nos. 158069 and 158304.  Argued November 12, 2020 (Calendar No. 1).  Decided 
June 4, 2021.   
 
 
In Docket No. 158069, the estate of Brendon Pearce filed a negligence action in the Eaton 
Circuit Court against the Eaton County Road Commission and others, arguing, in part, that the 
commission breached its duty under MCL 691.1402 of the governmental tort liability act (GTLA), 
MCL 691.1401 et seq., to maintain the road on which the accident occurred.  Lynn Pearce, acting 
as the personal representative of Brendon’s estate, served notice on the commission fewer than 60 
days after Brendon was killed in the accident.  The commission moved for summary disposition, 
arguing that the notice was deficient under MCL 224.21(3) of the County Road Law, MCL 224.1 
et seq., because the estate did not serve the notice on the county clerk.  Edward J. Grant, J., on 
assignment from the State Court Administrative Office, denied the motion.  Thereafter, the court, 
John D. Maurer, J., affirmed the denial for the reasons set forth in Judge Grant’s opinion.  The 
commission appealed, and the estate moved to affirm the trial court’s written opinion, arguing that 
the notice was sufficient.  The Court of Appeals granted the estate’s motion to affirm in an 
unpublished order, entered October 25, 2016, and the commission sought leave to appeal in the 
Supreme Court.  The Supreme Court denied leave to appeal.  500 Mich 1021 (2017).  In the interim, 
the Court of Appeals issued Streng v Bd of Mackinac Co Rd Comm’rs, 315 Mich App 449 (2016), 
holding that MCL 224.21(3)—a provision of the County Road Law that requires notice to the clerk 
and the board of county road commissioners within 60 days after an injury occurs—controls the 
timing and content of presuit notices to a county road commission for injuries caused by an alleged 
highway defect, not MCL 691.1404(1) of the GTLA, which requires presuit notice to a 
governmental agency within 120 days after the injury occurs.  The commission returned to the trial 
court and moved for summary disposition, arguing that the estate’s notice was insufficient under 
MCL 224.21(3).  The parties disputed whether Streng applied retroactively and whether MCL 
224.21(3), as applied in Streng, or MCL 691.1404(1) governed the estate’s notice.  Judge Maurer 
denied the commission’s motion, concluding that Streng did not apply retroactively.  The Court of 
Appeals, O’CONNELL, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and RIORDAN, JJ., affirmed in part and reversed in 
part the trial court’s order, concluding that Streng applied retroactively; that the notice provisions 
of MCL 224.21(3) applied to the action; and that, even though the estate’s notice was properly 
filed within the 60-day period in MCL 224.21(3), the notice was deficient because the estate did 
not serve it on the county clerk as required by that statute.  324 Mich App 549 (2018). 
 
 
Michigan Supreme Court 
Lansing, Michigan 
Syllabus 
 
Chief Justice: 
Bridget M. McCormack 
 
 
Justices: 
Brian K. Zahra 
David F. Viviano 
Richard H. Bernstein 
Elizabeth T. Clement 
Megan K. Cavanagh 
Elizabeth M. Welch 
This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been  
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. 
Reporter of Decisions: 
Kathryn L. Loomis 
 
 
In Docket No. 158304, Tim E. Brugger II filed a negligence action in the Midland Circuit 
Court against the Midland County Board of Road Commissioners, alleging that he was injured in 
a motorcycle accident that was caused by a defect in a highway under the jurisdiction of the board 
and that the board was liable under MCL 691.1402, the highway exception of the GTLA.  Brugger 
had notified the board of his injuries and the alleged highway defect 110 days after the crash in 
accordance with the GTLA’s 120-day presuit-notice requirement.  The board moved for summary 
disposition, arguing that under Streng, the County Road Law’s 60-day presuit-notice provision 
applied and the notice was not sufficient.  The court, Michael J. Beale, J., denied the board’s 
motion, concluding that Brugger had correctly filed his notice within 120 days in accordance with 
MCL 691.1404(1).  The court reasoned that the 60-day period set forth in MCL 224.21(3) did not 
apply because Streng applied prospectively only.  The board appealed.  In a split decision, the 
Court of Appeals, SHAPIRO, P.J., and M. J. KELLY, J. (O’BRIEN, J., dissenting), affirmed the trial 
court, agreeing that Streng applied prospectively only.  324 Mich App 307 (2018). 
 
The Supreme Court granted the separate applications for leave to appeal filed by the Pearce 
estate and the Midland County Board of Road Commissioners.  505 Mich 1033 (2020). 
 
 
In an opinion by Chief Justice MCCORMACK, joined by Justices VIVIANO, BERNSTEIN, 
CLEMENT, and CAVANAGH, the Supreme Court held: 
 
 
The Court of Appeals erred in Streng when it concluded that the presuit-notice 
requirements in the County Road Law apply when a plaintiff sues a county road commission under 
the highway exception to the GTLA.  In Brown v Manistee Co Rd Comm, 452 Mich 354 (1996), 
the Michigan Supreme Court held that the GTLA’s notice provisions control.  That holding in 
Brown was never overruled and was binding on the Court of Appeals.  Accordingly, Streng’s 
holding that the County Road Law’s notice provisions govern in negligence actions against county 
road commissions was overruled.  Because the issue was not raised by the parties, the question 
whether Brown was correctly decided was saved for another day. 
 
 
1.  MCL 691.1404(1) of the GTLA provides that as a condition to recovery, a person 
injured on a defective highway must notify the governmental agency of the injury and the defect 
within 120 days from the time the injury occurred.  In contrast, MCL 224.21(3) provides that a 
person injured on a defective county road must notify the clerk and the board of county road 
commissioners of the occurrence within 60 days after the occurrence of the injury.   
 
 
2.  To determine whether Streng was correctly decided, it was necessary to consider the 
caselaw related to presuit-notice statutes.  In Brown, the Court held that the GTLA’s 120-day 
presuit-notice requirement controlled negligence actions brought against county road 
commissions, not the County Road Law’s 60-day presuit-notice requirement because there was no 
rational basis for the County Road Law’s shorter notice provision for actions against a county road 
commission as opposed to those against other governmental agencies.  The Brown Court declined 
to overrule Hobbs v Dep’t of State Highways, 398 Mich 90 (1976), which required the government 
to show actual prejudice before a statutorily required presuit-notice provision was enforced to 
preclude an action.  Thirty years later, in Rowland v Washtenaw Co Rd Comm, 477 Mich 197 
(2007), the Court overruled Hobbs and Brown, holding that the GTLA did not contain an actual-
prejudice requirement before enforcement of the notice provision, that the earlier cases had 
improperly engrafted that requirement onto the statute, and that a governmental agency did not 
have to show actual prejudice before the 120-day notice provision could be enforced.  As a result, 
the Court stated that nothing could be saved from Hobbs and Brown because the analysis in those 
cases was deeply flawed.  In Streng, the Court of Appeals held that the County Road Law’s 60-
day notice deadline applied to actions involving defects in county roads, not the GTLA’s 120-day 
notice deadline, reasoning that because the Rowland Court repudiated Hobbs and Brown, the Court 
of Appeals was free to address whether the GTLA or the County Road Law notice provision 
applied when a plaintiff was injured on a county road.  However, Rowland addressed whether 
courts should continue to apply the Hobbs actual-prejudice requirement in negligence cases against 
the government.  Rowland did not address MCL 224.21(3) or Brown’s holding that the GTLA’s 
notice provision governed rather that of the County Road Law; therefore, any statements in the 
case not related to Hobbs’s prejudice requirement were nonbinding obiter dicta.  Thus, Rowland 
did not overrule Brown’s holding that in actions against a county road commission, the GTLA’s 
notice provision governed rather than the County Road Law’s.  In Streng, the Court of Appeals 
was required to follow Brown’s conclusion that the GTLA notice provision applied to actions 
brought against county road commissions; the Streng Court’s conclusion otherwise was erroneous 
and was overruled.  Because Streng was overruled, it was unnecessary in this case to determine 
whether Streng applied retroactively or prospectively.  
 
 
Judgments of the Court of Appeals vacated and cases remanded to the respective trial 
courts. 
 
 
Justice ZAHRA, dissenting, disagreed with the majority’s conclusion that Rowland did not 
overrule all aspects of Brown.  Rowland clearly stated that nothing could be saved from Hobbs and 
Brown, expressly conveying that all aspects of Brown were overruled, including application of the 
GTLA’s notice provisions to actions brought against county road commissions; the portion of 
Rowland applying the GTLA notice provision was not obiter dictum.  Instead, Brown’s holding as 
to the validity of the County Road Law’s 60-day notice provision was tied up with the Court’s 
conclusion in Carver v McKernan, 390 Mich 96 (1973), that actual prejudice must be shown before 
notice requirements could be enforced.  Rowland repudiated both Brown and Carver, holding that 
notice requirements had to be enforced as written, and that holding applied to the entirety of Brown.  
As Brown is no longer good law, the Court of Appeals in Streng was permitted to apply MCL 
224.21.  
 
 
Justice WELCH did not participate in the disposition of these cases because the Court 
considered them before she assumed office. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
FILED  June 4, 2021 
 
 
 
S T A T E  O F  M I C H I G A N 
 
SUPREME COURT 
 
 
ESTATE OF BRENDON PEARCE, by 
LYNN PEARCE, Personal Representative, 
 
 
Plaintiff-Appellant, 
 
 
v 
No. 158069 
 
EATON COUNTY ROAD COMMISSION, 
 
 
Defendant-Appellee, 
 
 
 
and 
 
ESTATE OF MELISSA SUE MUSSER, by 
LAWRENCE BENTON, Personal 
Representative, and PATRICIA JANE 
MUSSER, 
 
 
Defendants. 
 
 
 
Michigan Supreme Court 
Lansing, Michigan 
OPINION 
 
Chief Justice: 
Bridget M. McCormack  
 
 
Justices: 
Brian K. Zahra 
David F. Viviano 
Richard H. Bernstein 
Elizabeth T. Clement 
Megan K. Cavanagh 
Elizabeth M. Welch 
 
 
2 
TIM EDWARD BRUGGER II, 
 
 
Plaintiff-Appellee, 
 
 
v 
No. 158304 
 
MIDLAND COUNTY BOARD OF ROAD 
COMMISSIONERS, 
 
 
 
Defendant-Appellant. 
 
 
 
BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH (except WELCH, J.) 
 
MCCORMACK, C.J.  
In these consolidated cases, we consider whether the Court of Appeals correctly 
decided Streng v Bd of Mackinac Co Rd Comm’rs, 315 Mich App 449; 890 NW2d 680 
(2016), and, if so, whether it should apply retroactively to all cases pending on appeal.  In 
Streng, the Court of Appeals concluded that the presuit-notice requirements in the County 
Road Law, MCL 224.1 et seq., apply when a plaintiff sues a county road commission under 
the “highway exception” to the governmental tort liability act (GTLA), MCL 691.1401 et 
seq.  We hold that Streng was wrongly decided because in Brown v Manistee Co Rd Comm, 
452 Mich 354; 550 NW2d 215 (1996), this Court decided that the GTLA’s notice 
provisions control, and we have not overruled that holding.  
The Streng panel erred by failing to follow Brown.  We therefore overrule Streng, 
vacate the decisions of the Court of Appeals, and remand these cases to the respective 
circuit courts for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. 
 
3 
 
I.  FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY 
One hundred and ten days after plaintiff Tim Brugger was injured in an automobile 
accident, he served on the Midland County Board of Road Commissioners a notice of his 
intent to sue.  Fewer than 60 days after Brendon Pearce was killed in an automobile 
accident, his mother, Lynn Pearce, acting as the personal representative of Brendon’s 
estate, served on the Eaton County Road Commission a “Notice to Eaton County of Fatal 
Injuries due to Defective Highway.”  Both Brugger’s and Pearce’s notices complied with 
the GTLA, which requires people making claims under the highway exception to give 
notice of the alleged injury and defective highway within 120 days of the injury.  MCL 
691.1404(1).  But neither notice was adequate under the County Road Law, because 
Brugger’s notice was filed more than 60 days after the accident and Pearce did not serve 
her notice on the Eaton County Clerk.  See MCL 224.21(3) (providing that “a board of 
county road commissioners is not liable for damages . . . unless the person serves or causes 
to be served within 60 days after the occurrence of the injury a notice in writing upon the 
clerk and upon the chairperson of the board of county road commissioners”). 
While both cases proceeded in the trial courts, the Court of Appeals issued its 
decision in Streng.  The Court of Appeals concluded that the County Road Law’s 60-day 
provision governed the timing and content of a presuit notice directed to a county road 
commission rather than the GTLA’s 120-day provision.  Streng, 315 Mich App at 462-463. 
Following that decision, the Midland County Road Commission relied on Streng to 
move for summary disposition in Brugger, arguing that Brugger’s presuit notice was 
ineffective because it was not served within 60 days of Brugger’s injury.  The trial court 
denied the motion, concluding that Streng should apply prospectively only.  In turn, the 
 
4 
 
Eaton County Road Commission moved for summary disposition in Pearce, arguing that 
Pearce’s presuit notice was insufficient because it was not served on the county clerk.  The 
trial court denied that motion and, like the trial court in Brugger, concluded that Streng 
applied prospectively only.  Both defendants appealed in the Court of Appeals the trial 
courts’ denial of their motions for summary disposition. 
The Brugger panel held that Streng applied prospectively only.  Brugger v Midland 
Co Bd of Rd Comm’rs, 324 Mich App 307, 316; 920 NW2d 388 (2018).  But the Pearce 
panel held that Streng applied retroactively to all cases.  Pearce Estate v Eaton Co Rd 
Comm, 324 Mich App 549, 553; 922 NW2d 391 (2018).  Both opinions were published. 
This Court granted leave to resolve the conflict.  Besides asking whether Streng 
applied retroactively, we asked the parties to brief whether Streng was correctly decided.  
See Brugger v Midland Co Bd of Rd Comm’rs, 505 Mich 1033 (2020).  We review these 
questions de novo.  People v Maxson, 482 Mich 385, 387; 759 NW2d 817 (2008) (whether 
a court’s ruling applies retroactively is a question reviewed de novo); Page v Klein Tools, 
Inc, 461 Mich 703, 709; 610 NW2d 900 (2000) (questions of law are reviewed de novo).   
II.  THE EVOLUTION OF MICHIGAN’S PRESUIT-NOTICE DOCTRINE 
This Court’s presuit-notice jurisprudence is the foundation for determining whether 
the Court of Appeals correctly decided Streng.  It is against this backdrop that the Streng 
panel concluded that it was free to decide which notice provision applied. 
A.  HOBBS 
We begin with Hobbs v Dep’t of State Highways, 398 Mich 90; 247 NW2d 754 
(1976).  There, the plaintiff failed to file her presuit notice within 120 days as required by 
 
5 
 
the GTLA.  Id. at 94.  In deciding whether the plaintiff’s claim was barred, the Hobbs Court 
relied on two cases: Reich v State Hwy Dep’t, 386 Mich 617; 194 NW2d 700 (1972), and 
Carver v McKernan, 390 Mich 96; 211 NW2d 24 (1973).  In Reich, the Court held that an 
earlier version of the GTLA’s notice provision violated equal-protection guarantees by 
treating plaintiffs injured by the government differently from plaintiffs injured by private 
tortfeasors.  Reich, 386 Mich at 623.  But Carver—a case involving the Motor Vehicle 
Accident Claims Act—held that a presuit-notice requirement for claims against the 
government could be constitutional as long as the requirement served a legitimate purpose.  
Carver, 390 Mich at 100.  Carver observed that preventing prejudice to the government 
can be a legitimate purpose and held that a claim against the Motor Vehicle Accident 
Claims Fund could be dismissed on notice grounds only if the government showed that it 
was prejudiced by the plaintiff’s inadequate notice.  Id. 
The Hobbs Court found Carver’s rationale to be “equally applicable” to cases 
brought under the GTLA and concluded that actual prejudice to the government because 
of an untimely notice was “the only legitimate purpose” the Court could identify to uphold 
the GTLA’s notice requirement.  Hobbs, 398 Mich at 96.  Thus, Hobbs held, an untimely 
notice would not bar a claim under the GTLA absent a showing of actual prejudice.  Id. 
B.  BROWN 
Twenty years later, this Court revisited Hobbs in Brown v Manistee Co Rd Comm, 
452 Mich 354; 550 NW2d 215 (1996).  In Brown, the plaintiff alleged that he was injured 
on a county road when he tried to avoid a pothole.  Sixty-one days after the accident, the 
Manistee County Road Commission resurfaced the road, including the alleged pothole.  
 
6 
 
Without filing a presuit notice, the plaintiff sued the road commission almost two years 
later.  The road commission moved for summary disposition, arguing that the plaintiff 
violated the County Road Law’s 60-day notice requirement set forth in MCL 224.21(3).  
Id. at 357.  The trial court agreed, holding that MCL 224.21(3) governed and that the road 
commission was prejudiced by the plaintiff’s failure to file a timely notice.  Id.  This 
seemed to be the type of prejudice the Hobbs Court envisioned; if the plaintiff had notified 
the road commission of his intent to sue during the 60-day period, the commission would 
have been able to preserve evidence about the pothole before it resurfaced the road. 
The Court of Appeals affirmed.  Brown v Manistee Co Rd Comm, 204 Mich App 
574; 516 NW2d 121 (1994).  First, the majority held that the County Road Law’s notice 
provision controlled because it exclusively governed boards of county road commissioners.  
Id. at 577.  Next, the majority, citing Hobbs, held that the road commission had been 
prejudiced by the lack of notice and thus the plaintiff’s case had been properly dismissed.  
Id. at 577-578. 
This Court granted leave to appeal to decide these questions: 
1.  Whether the plaintiff’s action was governed by the County Road Law’s 60-day 
notice provision, MCL 224.21(3), or the GTLA’s 120-day notice provision, MCL 
691.1404(1); 
2.  Whether Hobbs’s rule requiring a showing of prejudice should be overruled; and 
3.  If Hobbs remained good law, whether there was a showing of prejudice in this 
case.   
Brown, 452 Mich at 356. 
 
7 
 
To the first question, Brown held that the GTLA’s 120-day notice provision applies 
in a negligence action against a county road commission.  Id.  Because the Legislature 
intended “to provide uniform liability and immunity to both state and local governmental 
agencies,” the Brown Court believed that having two distinct notice periods in two statutes 
was suspect.  Id. at 361 (quotation marks and citation omitted).  “By providing different 
notice periods,” the Court explained, “the legislation divides injured persons into two 
classes: those injured on a defective road controlled by a county road commission and those 
injured on a defective road controlled by other governmental agencies.”  Id.   
The Court analyzed the two statutes under rational-basis review and cited Hobbs to 
acknowledge that the only purpose it articulated for a notice requirement was to prevent 
prejudice to the government.  Id. at 362.  The Court concluded that it was “unable to 
perceive a rational basis for the county road commission statute to mandate notice of the 
claim within sixty days.”  Id. at 363.  “Accordingly,” the Court held, “the distinct sixty-
day notice provision required for claims against a county road commission is 
unconstitutional.”  Id. at 363-364.  But the Court also held that the GTLA’s 120-day notice 
provision was reasonable and, therefore, constitutional because it “provide[d] a claimant 
sufficient time to serve the governmental agency with notice of an alleged injury and 
corresponding defect.”  Id. at 364.  Finally, Brown declined to overrule Hobbs and 
reaffirmed its requirement that the government show actual prejudice before a statutory 
presuit-notice provision would be enforced.  Id. at 365.  
Justice RILEY dissented.  But while she would have overruled Hobbs’s prejudice 
requirement because she believed the Court lacked the power to engraft it onto the GTLA, 
 
8 
 
she agreed “with the majority’s conclusion that plaintiff must comply with the 120-day 
notice requirement[.]”  Brown, 452 Mich at 369 (RILEY, J., dissenting).  
C.  ROWLAND 
In Rowland v Washtenaw Co Rd Comm, 477 Mich 197; 731 NW2d 41 (2007), this 
Court once again granted leave to appeal to consider overruling Hobbs.  There, the plaintiff 
served the county road commission with notice of her claim 140 days after her accident.  
The trial court denied the road commission’s motion for summary disposition, finding that 
there was a genuine issue of material fact about whether the road commission was 
prejudiced by the untimely notice, and the Court of Appeals affirmed.  Rowland v 
Washtenaw Co Rd Comm, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued 
December 13, 2005 (Docket No. 253210). 
This Court’s grant order made clear that it had Hobbs in its sights; it directed the 
parties to brief whether Hobbs and Brown should be overruled and, if so, whether a decision 
doing so would apply retroactively.  Rowland v Washtenaw Co Rd Comm, 474 Mich 1099, 
1099-1100 (2006).   
We answered both questions yes.  Rowland, 477 Mich at 200.  Because we held that 
MCL 691.1404(1) should be enforced as written, we overruled Hobbs’s and Brown’s 
prejudice engraftment.  Id.  We concluded that Hobbs and Brown were “wrongly decided 
and poorly reasoned” because they presumed that governmental notice requirements were 
unconstitutional if the government was not prejudiced by an untimely notice.  Id. at 210 
(capitalization omitted).  This reasoning, we explained, was indefensible and could not be 
saved by the Hobbs Court’s belief that the “ ‘only legitimate purpose’ ” of the GTLA’s 
 
9 
 
notice provision was to protect the government from being prejudiced.  Id., quoting Hobbs, 
398 Mich at 96. 
Rowland held that the GTLA’s notice requirement was constitutional and 
enforceable.  Rowland, 477 Mich at 213.  After describing Hobbs and Brown as remarkable 
examples of “judicial usurpation of legislative power,” the Court announced that “[n]othing 
can be saved from Hobbs and Brown because the analysis they employ is deeply flawed.”  
Id. at 213-214.  As a result, we held that “MCL 691.1404 is straightforward, clear, 
unambiguous, and not constitutionally suspect.  Accordingly, we conclude that it must be 
enforced as written.”  Id. at 219.  That meant that a plaintiff suing a county road commission 
had to serve a notice within 120 days that identified the location and nature of the highway 
defect, the injury suffered, and the known witnesses to the accident.  Id.  The GTLA itself 
does not require that the government demonstrate prejudice to enforce its notice provision.  
Id.  Thus, we explained, “the notice provision is not satisfied if notice is served more than 
120 days after the accident even if there is no prejudice.”  Id. 
D.  STRENG 
Nine years after Rowland, the Court of Appeals was asked to decide whether the 
County Road Law or the GTLA controlled presuit notices in a negligence action filed 
against a county road commission.  Streng, 315 Mich App 449.  The Streng panel 
approached the question as if it were working off a blank slate.  It explained that Rowland 
“repudiated the entirety of” Hobbs and Brown and that Brown was the only precedential 
case that “substantively considered the potential conflicts between [the County Road Law] 
and the GTLA.”  Id. at 459-460.  The panel acknowledged that Rowland did not address 
 
10 
 
the County Road Law, noting correctly that Rowland “expressed neither approval nor 
disapproval” with the application in Hobbs and Brown of the GTLA’s notice requirement 
and, instead, “simply focused on the lack of statutory language in MCL 691.1404 allowing 
exceptions to the time limit.”  Id. at 459-460.  
The Streng panel conducted its own analysis about which notice provision would 
govern and held that the County Road Law’s 60-day notice deadline applied.  Id. at 463.  
“In sum,” the panel concluded, “appellate courts appear to have overlooked the time limit, 
substantive requirements, and service procedures required by MCL 224.21(3) when the 
responsible body is a county road commission.”  Id. 
III.  ANALYSIS 
Streng’s fundamental flaw was its conclusion that Rowland had done away with 
Brown in its entirety.  This error is understandable given Rowland’s declaration that 
“[n]othing can be saved from Hobbs and Brown because the analysis they employ is deeply 
flawed.”  Rowland, 477 Mich at 214. 
But “[t]he Court of Appeals is bound to follow decisions by this Court except where 
those decisions have clearly been overruled or superseded . . . .”  Associated Builders & 
Contractors v Lansing, 499 Mich 177, 191; 880 NW2d 765 (2016).  Even after a decision 
has been overruled in part, its holdings left untouched remain binding precedent.  In fact, 
courts often cite decisions for still valid legal principles even though the decision has been 
overruled in part on other grounds.  See, e.g., McDonald v Farm Bureau Ins Co, 480 Mich 
191, 203; 747 NW2d 811(2008) (citing Mich Millers Mut Ins Co v Bronson Plating Co, 
445 Mich 558, 568; 519 NW2d 864 (1994), overruled in part on other grounds by Wilkie v 
 
11 
 
Auto-Owners Ins Co, 469 Mich 41, 63 (2003), for the proposition that “legal action” is 
synonymous with “lawsuit”).  Despite Rowland’s broad swipe at Brown, it did not clearly 
overrule Brown’s holding on the competing notice provisions of the County Road Law and 
the GTLA.  And whether the Rowland Court would have overruled this holding, had it been 
properly presented with the opportunity to do so, is neither here nor there. 
The question Rowland answered was whether courts should continue to apply 
Hobbs’s prejudice requirement in negligence cases against the government.  The grant 
order did not mention the County Road Law at all, even though the case concerned a county 
road accident; instead, the Court asked the parties to brief whether Hobbs’s prejudice 
requirement should be overruled.  Rowland, 474 Mich at 1099-1100.  And the opening 
sentence of the opinion confirms the scope of the Court’s work: “The issue in this case is 
whether a notice provision applicable to the defective highway exception to governmental 
immunity, MCL 691.1404(1), should be enforced as written.”  Rowland, 477 Mich at 200.  
Rowland’s one-sentence summary of Brown focused exclusively on Brown’s decision not 
to overrule Hobbs.  Id. at 209.  Not surprisingly therefore, Rowland never addressed MCL 
224.21(3) or Brown’s holding that the GTLA’s notice provision governed rather than the 
County Road Law’s.   
Rowland’s reasoning for overruling Brown is more evidence that it did not displace 
Brown’s holding that the GTLA’s notice provision applied: “The simple fact is that Hobbs 
and Brown were wrong because they were built on an argument that governmental 
immunity notice statutes are unconstitutional or at least sometimes unconstitutional if the 
government was not prejudiced.”  Id. at 210.  The Court considered and overruled only 
Brown’s holding affirming Hobbs, and therefore necessarily left Brown’s first holding—
 
12 
 
that the GTLA governed because the County Road Law’s notice provision was 
unconstitutional—in place. 
Because the issue before the Rowland Court was whether to overrule Hobbs’s 
prejudice requirement, any statements Rowland made that were unnecessary to decide that 
question were nonbinding obiter dicta.  Unlike holdings, “[o]biter dicta are not binding 
precedent.  Instead, they are statements that are unnecessary to determine the case at hand 
and, thus, lack the force of an adjudication.”  People v Peltola, 489 Mich 174, 190 n 32; 
803 NW2d 140 (2011) (quotation marks and citation omitted).  Weighing in on the validity 
of Brown’s first holding was unnecessary for the Rowland Court to dispose of Hobbs’s 
prejudice engraftment.  The only reason Brown was at issue at all in Rowland was because 
it reaffirmed Hobbs.  Thus, Rowland’s declaration that “[n]othing can be saved from Hobbs 
and Brown because the analysis they employ is deeply flawed” is nonbinding obiter dictum.  
Rowland, 477 Mich at 214. 
And there is more evidence that Rowland did not wipe Brown’s slate clean.  
Rowland involved an action against a county road commission, and it held that the GTLA’s 
120-day notice provision applied.  It concluded that “notice of the injuries sustained and of 
the highway defect must be served on the governmental agency within 120 days of the 
injury.”  Id. at 200 (emphasis added).  Throughout the opinion, the Rowland Court 
emphasized that the GLTA’s notice period controlled.  For example, the Rowland majority 
observed that “in Brown the road commission was prejudiced because it, unaware that there 
had been an accident, repaved the road where the accident happened before the 120-day 
notice period expired.”  Id. at 219 n 16.  And it called the GTLA the “controlling legal 
authority.”  Id. at 222.  Finally, Rowland, 477 Mich at 210-211, quoted Justice RILEY’s 
 
13 
 
dissent in Brown approvingly without challenging her explicit agreement “with the 
majority’s conclusion that plaintiff must comply with the 120-day notice requirement,” 
Brown, 452 Mich at 369 (RILEY, J., dissenting).  Any reader (with or without a law degree) 
would have to presume that the GTLA’s 120-day notice requirement continued to control.   
The Streng panel should have followed this Court’s decision in Brown and applied 
the GTLA’s presuit requirements, not the requirements provided in the County Road Law; 
it could not decide this question for itself.  Brown’s holding on that point survived this 
Court’s decision in Rowland, and it was therefore binding on the Streng panel.  Whether 
Brown correctly decided this question is for this Court to decide.  But because it was not 
raised by the parties here, we save it for another day. 
IV.  CONCLUSION 
We overrule Streng’s holding that the County Road Law’s notice provision governs 
in negligence actions against county road commissions rather than the GTLA’s.  Therefore, 
we need not address the matter of Streng’s retroactive application.  We vacate the decisions 
of the Court of Appeals and remand these cases to the respective circuit courts for further 
proceedings. 
 
 
Bridget M. McCormack 
 
David F. Viviano 
 
Richard H. Bernstein 
 
Elizabeth T. Clement 
 
Megan K. Cavanagh 
S T A T E  O F  M I C H I G A N 
 
SUPREME COURT 
 
 
ESTATE OF BRENDON PEARCE, by 
LYNN PEARCE, Personal Representative, 
 
 
Plaintiff-Appellant, 
 
 
v 
No. 158069 
 
EATON COUNTY ROAD COMMISSION, 
 
 
Defendant-Appellee, 
 
 
and 
 
ESTATE OF MELISSA SUE MUSSER, by 
LAWRENCE BENTON, Personal 
Representative, and PATRICIA JANE 
MUSSER, 
 
 
Defendants. 
 
 
 
 
TIM EDWARD BRUGGER II, 
 
 
Plaintiff-Appellee, 
 
 
v 
No. 158304 
 
MIDLAND COUNTY BOARD OF ROAD 
COMMISSIONERS, 
 
 
 
Defendant-Appellant. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2 
 
ZAHRA, J. (dissenting). 
I respectfully dissent.  It should not be that one needs a law degree to understand the 
opinions of this Court.  In Rowland v Washtenaw Co Rd Comm,1 this Court expressly 
overruled its prior decision in Brown v Manistee Co Rd Comm.2  In doing so, the Court 
held that “[n]othing can be saved from . . . Brown because the analysis [it] employ[s] is 
deeply flawed.”3  This holding is clear, concise, and unambiguous.  I surmise that virtually 
all people of ordinary intelligence who read these words would conclude that nothing from 
the Brown opinion remains good law.  Yet today the majority concludes that when this 
Court proclaimed that “nothing can be saved from . . . Brown,” it simply didn’t mean it.  
Calling this clear, concise, and unambiguous holding obiter dictum, the Court today 
proclaims that aspects of Brown have somehow survived.  Because the Court 
“save[s] . . . for another day” its view of whether Brown was rightly decided, I offer no 
opinion on its correctness.  But on the question of whether any aspect of Brown is still good 
law, Rowland resoundingly answers that it is not. 
Michigan has two presuit notice statutes that, by their terms, apply to accidents 
involving allegedly defective highways maintained by a county government.  The 
governmental tort liability act (GTLA), MCL 691.1401 et seq., requires notice to any 
governmental defendant within 120 days of an injury, MCL 691.1404(1), while the County 
Road Law, MCL 224.1 et seq., requires notice to a county road commission within 60 days 
after the occurrence of the injury involving a highway within its jurisdiction, MCL 
                                              
1 Rowland v Washtenaw Co Rd Comm, 477 Mich 197; 731 NW2d 41 (2007). 
2 Brown v Manistee Co Rd Comm, 452 Mich 354; 550 NW2d 215 (1996). 
3 Rowland, 477 Mich at 214. 
 
 
 
3 
 
224.21(3).  This Court’s Brown opinion set forth two pertinent holdings.  First, the Court 
held that there was no rational basis to require that county road commissions receive notice 
within 60 days if 120 days is adequate notice for other units of government.  Second, the 
Court reaffirmed past precedent holding that the only legitimate purpose for presuit notice 
requirements of the sort at issue in Brown is to prevent prejudice to the defendant, meaning 
that the requirements are unenforceable unless the government can show it was prejudiced 
by the failure to provide timely notice.  The majority holds that Rowland only overruled 
this second holding, leaving the first holding intact.  Thus, the majority reasons, the Court 
of Appeals was not free to deviate from that aspect of Brown in Streng v Bd of Mackinac 
Co Rd Comm’rs.4  But the majority’s holding obscures the fact that both of Brown’s 
holdings were premised on the same skepticism toward notice requirements that Rowland 
discarded. 
Rowland provided a detailed “history of this Court’s caselaw involving notice 
statutes”5 that illustrated the common themes in both of Brown’s holdings.  Over time, this 
Court moved from enforcing governmental-immunity notice provisions as plainly written, 
to engrafting upon such statutes legal analysis unsupported by a traditional understanding 
of Michigan’s principles of constitutional interpretation and statutory construction.  
Rowland returned the Court to its original understanding that governmental-immunity 
notice provisions should be enforced as plainly written. 
                                              
4 Streng v Bd of Mackinac Co Rd Comm’rs, 315 Mich App 449; 890 NW2d 680 (2016). 
5 Rowland, 477 Mich at 205-210 (capitalization omitted). 
 
 
 
4 
 
“From its earliest years this Court, evidently detecting no constitutional 
impediments, . . . enforced governmental immunity mandatory notice provisions 
according to their plain language.”6  This began to change in 1970, when in Grubaugh v St 
Johns,7 this Court addressed whether the 60-day notice requirement of § 8 of Chapter 22 
of the general highway statute8 (the predecessor of the GTLA’s highway exception), was 
constitutionally infirm as applied to incapacitated plaintiffs.9  Grubaugh reasoned that “[t]o 
take away [an incapacitated plaintiff’s] cause of action on the sixty-first day because he 
could not meet the notice provisions of the act would deprive him of a vested right of action 
without due process of law.”10  Therefore, this Court held “that the notice provisions of § 8 
of chapter 22 of the general highway statute are constitutionally void as depriving claimant 
of due process of law.”11 
Two years later in Reich v State Hwy Dep’t,12 this Court determined that the 60-day 
provision newly enacted in the GTLA was unconstitutional as applied to minors.  Relying 
on the reasoning in Grubaugh, the Court held that the notice requirement violated the due-
process rights of minors.  Further, the Court held that the notice provision violated the 
                                              
6 Id. at 205. 
7 Grubaugh v St Johns, 384 Mich 165; 180 NW2d 778 (1970). 
8 1948 CL 242.8. 
9 Id. at 167. 
10 Id. at 175. 
11 Id. at 176. 
12 Reich v State Hwy Dep’t, 386 Mich 617; 194 NW2d 700 (1972). 
 
 
 
5 
 
plaintiffs’ right to equal protection of the laws because it treated a class of plaintiffs who 
filed a negligence claim against the government differently than it treated plaintiffs filing 
a cause of action against a private tortfeasor.13  Reich further explained that the “diverse 
treatment of members of a class along the lines of governmental or private tortfeasors bears 
no reasonable relationship under today’s circumstances to the recognized purpose of the 
act.  It constitutes an arbitrary and unreasonable variance in the treatment of both portions 
of one natural class and is, therefore, barred by the constitutional guarantees of equal 
protection.”14  This Court in Rowland quoted Justice BRENNAN’s dissent in Reich, in which 
he identified his concerns with the majority’s equal-protection analysis: 
The legislature has declared governmental immunity from tort liability.  The 
legislature has provided specific exceptions to that standard.  The legislature 
has imposed specific conditions upon the exceptional instances of 
governmental liability.  The legislature has the power to make these laws.  
This Court far exceeds its proper function when it declares this enactment 
unfair and unenforceable.[15]  
Although the statute at issue in Reich was the GTLA, in Crook v Patterson,16 the 
Court of Appeals recognized that Reich’s reasoning applied with equal force to the County 
Road Law, holding that the 60-day notice provision in MCL 224.21(3) was also 
unconstitutional. 
                                              
13 Id. at 623-624. 
14 Id. at 623. 
15 Id. at 626 (BRENNAN, J., dissenting); see Rowland, 477 Mich at 207 (quoting Reich, 386 
Mich at 626 (BRENNAN, J., dissenting). 
16 Crook v Patterson, 42 Mich App 241, 241; 201 NW2d 676 (1972). 
 
 
 
6 
 
Thereafter, the GTLA was amended to require notice within 120 days, rather than 
within 60,17 but the County Road Law was not so amended.18  Further, with the increased 
notice period, the Court apparently thought better of a per se rule invalidating notice 
requirements.  This re-evaluation occurred in two steps.  In Carver v McKernan,19 the 
Court examined the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act,20 which required that a claimant 
provide notice within six months of the accrual of the cause of action.  As the fund was 
exclusively a benefits program provided by the government, the case did not present the 
same circumstance as in Reich of dividing a “natural class” into “subclasses.”  
Nevertheless, Carver acknowledged “that statutes which [sic] limit access to the courts by 
people seeking redress for wrongs are not looked upon with favor by us.”21  While the 
Court expressed a willingness to “acquiesce in the enforcement of statutes of limitation 
when we are not persuaded that they unduly restrict such access,” the Court made clear that 
“we look askance at devices such as notice requirements which have the effect of 
shortening the period of time set forth in such statutes.”22  The Court concluded that a 
                                              
17 MCL 691.1404, as amended by 1970 PA 155. 
18 MCL 691.1404 was amended by 1970 PA 155 before our decision in Reich was issued 
but after the underlying events of the case.  Accordingly, the new 120-day notice provision 
was inapplicable to the case. 
19 Carver v McKernan, 390 Mich 96; 211 NW2d 24 (1973). 
20 MCL 257.1101 et seq. 
21 Carver, 390 Mich at 99. 
22 Id. 
 
 
 
7 
 
notice requirement could be enforced only if the government could show it was prejudiced 
by a lack of timely notice.23 
Thereafter, in Hobbs v Mich State Hwy Dep’t,24 the Court applied the logic of 
Carver to the GTLA.  Applying Carver’s willingness to “ ‘acquiesce in the enforcement 
of statutes [limiting access to the courts] when we are not persuaded that they unduly 
restrict such access,’ ” the Court held that MCL 691.1404(1)’s notice requirement was not 
necessarily unconstitutional.25  Consistently with Carver, however, the Court said that 
“actual prejudice to the state due to lack of notice within 120 days is the only legitimate 
purpose we can posit for this notice provision[.]”26 
While these cases did not implicate the County Road Law, Brown involved a suit 
against a county in which the county invoked the 60-day notice requirement of MCL 
224.21(3).  Thus, this Court in Brown addressed head on whether the 60-day notice 
provision under MCL 224.21(3) or the 120-day notice provision under MCL 691.1404(1) 
applied in cases involving county road commissions.27  The Court also addressed whether 
the prejudice requirement in Hobbs should be overruled.28  Brown first recognized the 
competing provisions under the GTLA and the County Road Law, and retreated to an 
                                              
23 Id. at 100. 
24 Hobbs v Dep’t of State Hwys, 398 Mich 90; 247 NW2d 754 (1976). 
25 Id. at 96, quoting Carver, 390 Mich at 99. 
26 Hobbs, 398 Mich at 96.  
27 Brown, 452 Mich at 356. 
28 Id. 
 
 
 
8 
 
equal-protection analysis similar to that used in Reich to find the 60-day notice provision 
of MCL 224.21(3) unconstitutional.  The Court explained that “[b]y providing different 
notice periods, the legislation divides injured persons into two classes: those injured on a 
defective road controlled by a county road commission and those injured on a defective 
road controlled by other governmental agencies.”29  The Court believed that the two 
provisions treated persons of a similar class differently: 
[A] person injured in a county in which there is no county road commission 
would be required to file notice of the claim within 120 days, whereas an 
identical person injured in a county that has a county road commission would 
be required to provide notice within sixty days to the county road 
commissioner.[30]   
The Court concluded, “[D]espite a presumption of constitutionality, we are unable to 
perceive a rational basis for the county road commission statute to mandate notice of a 
claim within sixty days.”31  Therefore, Brown held that “the distinct sixty-day notice 
provision required for claims against a county road commission is unconstitutional.”32  The 
Brown Court also reaffirmed Hobbs and the prejudice requirement as it related to the 120-
notice required under the GTLA, and it held that the road commission was not prejudiced 
by the defective notice.33 
                                              
29 Id. at 361. 
30 Id. at 363. 
31 Id. 
32 Id. 363-364. 
33 Id. at 365-366, 368-369. 
 
 
 
9 
 
This Court’s trend to view with disfavor statutory governmental-immunity notice 
provisions stopped with Rowland.  Rowland reverted back to the more traditional analysis 
employed for more than 100 years before Grubaugh, Reich, Carver, Hobbs, and Brown; 
one that provides deference to the Legislature’s lawmaking function.  The facts in Rowland 
were straightforward.  There was no dispute that the plaintiff failed to file her notice with 
the road commission until 140 days after the accident.  The defendant invoked MCL 
691.1404(1), and the Court concluded that the notice provision passed constitutional 
muster.  The Court explained: 
We reject the hybrid constitutionality of the sort Carver, Hobbs, and 
Brown engrafted onto our law.  In reading an “actual prejudice” requirement 
into the statute, this Court not only usurped the Legislature’s power but 
simultaneously made legislative amendment to make what the Legislature 
wanted—a notice provision with no prejudice requirement—impossible.  
Hobbs and Brown are remarkable in the annals of judicial usurpation of 
legislative power because they not only seized the Legislature’s amendment 
powers, but also made any reversing amendment by the Legislature 
impossible.[34]   
Rowland continued even further, overruling entirely, in no uncertain terms, these two 
decisions: “Nothing can be saved from Hobbs and Brown because the analysis they employ 
is deeply flawed,” and “we are persuaded that [those cases] were wrongly decided.”35  
Notably, when Rowland overruled Brown, it repudiated both the specific notion that 
avoiding prejudice to the government was the only rationale for notice requirements, as 
                                              
34 Rowland, 477 Mich at 213-214. 
35 Id. at 214-215. 
 
 
 
10 
 
well as the general notion that the judiciary may “look askance” at notice statutes.36  
Rowland noted that “legislation invariably involves line drawing and social legislation 
involving line drawing does not violate equal protection guarantees when it has a ‘rational 
basis,’ i.e., as long as it is rationally related to a legitimate governmental purpose.”37  The 
Court upheld the constitutionality of notice requirements without regard to prejudice to the 
government: “Hobbs and Brown were wrong because they were built on an argument that 
governmental immunity notice statutes are unconstitutional or at least sometimes 
unconstitutional if the government was not prejudiced.”38  Brown could not be “rescued by 
musings to the effect that the justices ‘ “look askance” ’ at devices such as notice 
requirements[.]”39  In rejecting the specific notion that avoiding prejudice to the 
government is the sole rationale for notice requirements, Rowland listed many others—
“allowing time for creating [cash] reserves . . . , reducing the uncertainty of the extent of 
future demands, or even . . . forc[ing] the claimant to an early choice regarding how to 
proceed.”40  Rowland also noted that “common sense counsels that inasmuch as the 
Legislature is not even required to provide a defective highway exception to governmental 
                                              
36 Id. at 210 (quotation marks and citations omitted). 
37 Id. at 207 (citation omitted). 
38 Id. at 210. 
39 Id. (citations omitted). 
40 Id. at 212. 
 
 
 
11 
 
immunity, it surely has the authority to allow such suits only upon compliance with rational 
notice limits.”41 
This reasoning completely undermined the entirety of Brown’s analysis.  Both of 
Brown’s holdings were built upon the specific presumption that the only legitimate 
rationale for notice requirements was to avoid prejudice to the government, which was an 
instantiation of Carver’s general rule of skepticism toward notice requirements.  By 
repudiating both the specific presumption and the general rule, Rowland eliminated both 
of Brown’s holdings. 
More specifically, Brown acknowledged that MCL 224.21(3)’s 60-day notice 
requirement only needed to survive rational-basis review, but based on the premise that 
avoiding prejudice to the government was the notice requirement’s only legitimate 
purpose, held that there was no rational basis to believe counties needed such prompt 
notice.  Rowland eliminated this premise—in its place, the Court offered numerous 
additional interests besides preventing prejudice to find a rational basis for a notice 
requirement.  Brown also asserted that there was no legitimate reason to treat claims against 
county governments differently from claims against other levels of government.  But as 
Rowland made clear, notice laws need not prove their own validity.  “ ‘It being optional 
with the legislature whether it would confer upon persons injured a right of action therefor 
or leave them remediless, it could attach to the right conferred any limitations it chose.’ ”42  
In short, Brown’s equal-protection and prejudice holdings were inextricably intertwined, 
                                              
41 Id. 
42 Id., quoting Moulter v Grand Rapids, 155 Mich 165, 168-169; 118 NW 919 (1908) 
(emphasis added). 
 
 
 
12 
 
and the reasoning employed by the Rowland Court in rejecting Brown’s analysis of the 
potential rational legislative purposes of notice provisions applies with equal force to 
Brown’s analysis of the competing notice provisions of the County Road Law and the 
GTLA.  It follows that Rowland’s repudiation of Brown’s reasoning dismantled Brown’s 
holding rejecting the shorter notice period for road commission claims as 
unconstitutional.43  Both of Brown’s holdings are no longer good law, and the Court of 
Appeals in Streng was therefore permitted to apply MCL 224.21. 
                                              
43 Notably, the bulk of Brown’s “rational basis” analysis supported its equal-protection 
holding, not its prejudice holding.  In fact, Brown’s analysis of the prejudice issue did not 
contain an in-depth rational-basis analysis but, instead, relied largely on stare decisis and 
legislative acquiescence in upholding Hobbs.  Consequently, in rejecting Brown’s rational-
basis reasoning, the Rowland Court would not have considered its analysis as pertaining 
only to Brown’s prejudice holding.  Indeed, there are additional indications in the Rowland 
opinion that the Court understood that it was opining on much more than prejudice.  For 
example, the Rowland majority explicitly disagreed with the majority’s analysis in Reich, 
which is notable because Reich was an equal-protection decision in which the majority 
concluded that the 60-day notice provision “clearly violates the equal protection guarantees 
of our state and Federal Constitutions.”  Reich, 386 Mich at 623.  Reich did not refer to a 
prejudice requirement because that concept was developed years later in our caselaw.  Yet 
the Rowland majority called Reich’s equal-protection analysis “simply incorrect,” 
elaborating that “[p]rivate and public tortfeasors can be treated differently in the fashion 
they have been treated here by the Legislature.  It does not offend the constitution to do so 
because with economic or social regulation legislation, such as this statute, there can be 
distinctions made between classes of persons if there is a rational basis to do so.”  Rowland, 
477 Mich at 207.  Rowland then proceeded to quote Justice BRENNAN’s dissent in Reich, 
which the Rowland majority described as “pithily” pointing out the problems with the 
Reich majority’s analysis.  Id., citing Reich, 386 Mich at 626 (BRENNAN, J., dissenting).  If 
Rowland intended to address only Brown’s prejudice requirement, it need not have 
explicitly rejected the Court’s equal-protection reasoning in Reich.  Moreover, footnote 9 
of the Rowland opinion notes that the “vast majority of jurisdictions that have considered 
such a constitutional challenge [have] concluded that notice-of-claim and statute-of-
limitations rules placed on persons bringing tort actions against governmental entities are 
rationally related to reasonable legislative purposes and thus do not violate equal 
protection.”  Rowland, 477 Mich at 213 n 9 (emphasis added).  The Rowland Court then 
explicitly “agree[d] with the majority rule.”  Id.  At the very least, these statements suggest 
 
 
 
13 
 
The majority notes that Rowland discussed only the GTLA without mentioning the 
County Road Law.  But this is not surprising because MCL 691.1404(1) was the only 
statute the defendant invoked, and while that defendant would apparently have also been 
eligible to rely upon the County Road Law, defendant did not do so.  Defendant’s litigation 
strategies are not a legitimate basis to cabin our Rowland holding to say less than it did.  
The reasoning of Rowland—its repudiation of Carver’s skepticism toward notice laws—
is equally applicable to Brown’s treatment of the County Road Law and the GTLA.  It is 
not appropriate to write off Rowland’s repudiation of Carver’s skepticism toward notice 
requirements as mere obiter dictum—it is, rather, the essence of our Rowland opinion, 
which said the Carver principle “ha[d] no claim to being defensible constitutional theory,” 
was “entirely indefensible,” and “usurped the Legislature’s power . . . .”44  The majority 
also notes that Rowland cited with approval Justice RILEY’s partial dissent in Brown and 
observes that Justice RILEY concurred as to the portion of Brown that held that MCL 
224.21(3) is unconstitutional.  But the fact that there was language from her partial dissent 
that the Rowland majority thought was well-put does not mean it adopted her position in 
toto.45 
                                              
that the Rowland majority did not view its analysis as speaking only to the prejudice 
requirement. 
44 Id. at 210, 211, 213. 
45 Although not dispositive, I also find it telling how novel the majority’s conclusions are 
to the other jurists who are implicated in this proceeding.  Including Streng and the instant 
cases, eight Court of Appeals judges on three different panels have reviewed these issues 
and none of them concluded that Rowland had not overruled Brown—including the judge 
who argued that Streng was wrongly decided.  See Brugger v Midland Co Bd of Rd 
Comm’rs, 324 Mich App 307, 318-321; 920 NW2d 388 (2019) (SHAPIRO, P.J., concurring) 
 
 
 
14 
 
In sum, within the four corners of Rowland, this Court said in no uncertain terms 
that “[n]othing can be saved from Hobbs and Brown because the analysis they employ is 
deeply flawed.”46  This expressly communicated that Brown had been totally eradicated 
above and beyond its consequences for the GTLA.  The majority erroneously writes this 
off as mere obiter dictum.  But Brown’s holding as to the validity of MCL 224.21(3) was 
bound up with Carver’s requirement that special justifications must be provided to enforce 
notice requirements.  Rowland repudiated Brown and Carver, holding that notice 
requirements are to be enforced as written, a holding that applies to the entirety of Brown.  
The current state of our caselaw is clear and provides no basis to overrule Streng.  For these 
reasons, I dissent. 
 
 
Brian K. Zahra 
 
 
 
WELCH, J., did not participate in the disposition of these cases because the Court 
considered them before she assumed office. 
 
                                              
(arguing that under Apsey v Mem Hosp, 477 Mich 120; 730 NW2d 695 (2007), the plaintiffs 
should have had the option of proceeding under either MCL 691.1404(1) or MCL 
224.21(3)).  Indeed, even one of the plaintiffs here, the estate of Brendon Pearce, in this 
Court forthrightly concedes that Streng was rightly decided—a concession that has 
contained within it an acknowledgment that Rowland overruled Brown. 
46 Rowland, 477 Mich at 214.