                                                                                                 10/25/2017


                                           DA 16-0716
                                                                                             Case Number: DA 16-0716

                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

                                           2017 MT 258


ELAINE MITCHELL, and all others
similarly situated,

              Plaintiffs and Appellants,

         v.

GLACIER COUNTY, and STATE OF
MONTANA,

              Defendants and Appellees.


APPEAL FROM:            District Court of the First Judicial District,
                        In and For the County of Lewis and Clark, Cause No. ADV-2015-631
                        Honorable Mike Menahan, Presiding Judge


COUNSEL OF RECORD:

                For Appellants:

                        Lawrence A. Anderson (argued), Attorney at Law, P.C., Great Falls,
                        Montana

                For Appellees:

                        Kirk D. Evenson (argued), Marra, Evenson & Bell, P.C., Great Falls,
                        Montana
                        (Attorney for Glacier County)

                        Gary M. Zadick, James R. Zadick (argued), Ugrin, Alexander, Zadick
                        & Higgins, P.C., Great Falls, Montana
                        (Attorneys for State of Montana)

                                                               Argued: August 9, 2017
                                                             Submitted: August 22, 2017
                                                              Decided: October 25, 2017

Filed:

                        __________________________________________
                                          Clerk
Justice Beth Baker delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1     Elaine Mitchell, a resident of Glacier County, began paying her property taxes under

protest in 2015 in response to an independent audit that revealed deficiencies in the

County’s budgeting and accounting practices. Mitchell, on behalf of herself and other

County residents, sued the County over its alleged financial mismanagement and the State

over its failure to take legal action against the County. The District Court dismissed the

suit on the ground that Mitchell and the putative class (collectively Taxpayers) did not have

standing to sue either the County or the State. Taxpayers appeal. We affirm.

                 PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶2     Taxpayers own real property and pay property taxes in Glacier County. They have

been paying their taxes under protest in response to a March 2015 independent audit of the

County’s finances for fiscal years 2013 and 2014. The audit identified budget deficits in

numerous County funds and stated that the County had exceeded its budgetary authority in

many of those funds. A subsequent County Treasurer’s report showed ongoing deficit

balances in a number of the County’s funds.

¶3     Taxpayers sued Glacier County and the State of Montana, alleging that both entities

had failed to comply with budgeting and accounting laws. They asked the District Court

for numerous forms of relief, including: (1) permission to prosecute the case as private

attorneys general; (2) a declaration that the County had failed to comply with generally

accepted governmental accounting standards; (3) a declaration that the County was in

violation of laws designed to ensure “strict accountability” of government finances; (4) a

                                          2
declaration that County officials who incurred financial obligations in excess of

appropriations were personally liable for the resulting budget deficits; (5) an order

requiring the State to withhold public funds from the County under the Single Audit Act

until the County complied with its budgeting obligations; (6) an order requiring the State

to hold County officials personally liable for their failure to ensure strict accountability;

(7) an order appointing a receiver for the County; (8) permission to prosecute the case as a

class action; (9) an order allowing Taxpayers to continue paying their taxes under protest

until the County complied with its budgetary duties; and (10) a determination that the

County violated Taxpayers’ right to know under the Montana Constitution.

¶4     In their Second Amended Complaint, Taxpayers made the following assertion

regarding their alleged injury:

       Based on the 2013 and 2014 Audits of the county, and the deficiencies
       described therein, it is foreseeable that the county’s residents and taxpayers
       would be injured as a result of the State’s failure to enforce the terms of the
       Single Audit Act to “insure strict accountability of all revenues received and
       money spent” by the county.

Taxpayers moved for partial summary judgment, and the State and County challenged

Taxpayers’ standing to sue.

¶5     The District Court denied Taxpayers’ motion for partial summary judgment, denied

class certification, and dismissed the case for lack of standing. It explained that Taxpayers

had “failed to demonstrate [they have] suffered a concrete injury to [their] property or to

[their] individual constitutional or statutory rights sufficient to establish standing under

Montana law.” It reasoned that Taxpayers’ “vague, speculative statement” that it was

                                          3
“foreseeable that the county’s residents and taxpayers would be injured” was insufficient

to establish the injury requirement for standing. The court noted that the legal provisions

under which Taxpayers alleged injury—Article VIII, Section 12, of the Montana

Constitution and the Single Audit Act, Title 2, chapter 7, Part 5, MCA—did not establish

private rights and did not grant Taxpayers the right to judicial relief. Taxpayers appeal the

court’s dismissal of their case.

                                   STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶6     Standing is one of several justiciability doctrines that limit Montana courts to

deciding only cases and controversies. Heffernan v. Missoula City Council, 2011 MT

91, ¶ 29, 360 Mont. 207, 255 P.3d 80. The determination of a party’s standing to maintain

an action is a question of law that we review de novo. Heffernan, ¶ 28.

                                       DISCUSSION

¶7     Taxpayers argue that they have standing to sue the County over its alleged financial

mismanagement and to sue the State over its failure to hold County officials accountable

for their unlawful actions. They contend that the County and the State violated Montana

budgeting and accounting laws and that it is “foreseeable” that these violations will cause

Taxpayers to “suffer additional property tax burdens because of the County’s unauthorized

deficit spending, accounting failures, and disregard of audits.” They assert also that they

should be permitted to pursue this suit under the private attorney general doctrine and the

Declaratory Judgments Act.




                                          4
¶8     Taxpayers seek the following specific remedies on appeal: (1) a declaration that

they may continue to pay taxes under protest until the County complies with its statutory

duties; (2) a declaration that the County is in violation of the laws that implement the “strict

accountability” provision of the Montana Constitution; (3) an order requiring the State to

withhold public funds from the County under the Single Audit Act until the County

complies with its responsibilities; (4) an order requiring the State to hold County officials

accountable under the law for their financial mismanagement; (5) an order appointing a

receiver for the County; and (6) a declaration that the County has violated their right to

know under the Constitution.1

¶9     Courts lack “power to resolve a case brought by a party without standing—i.e., a

personal stake in the outcome—because such a party presents no actual case or

controversy.”    Heffernan, ¶ 29.       Standing is a threshold jurisdictional requirement.

Heffernan, ¶ 29. “There are two elements to standing: the case-or-controversy requirement

imposed by the Montana Constitution, and judicially created prudential limitations

imposed for reasons of policy.” Schoof v. Nesbit, 2014 MT 6, ¶ 15, 373 Mont. 226,

316 P.3d 831 (citing Heffernan, ¶ 31).




1
  Although Taxpayers state on appeal that the County violated their constitutional right to know,
they make no argument as to how the County violated this right. “[W]e are not obligated to
develop arguments on behalf of parties to an appeal, nor are we to guess a party’s precise position,
or develop legal analysis that may lend support to his position.” McCulley v. Am. Land Title Co.,
2013 MT 89, ¶ 20, 369 Mont. 433, 300 P.3d 679. We therefore decline to address Taxpayers’
contention that the County violated their right to know.
                                             5
¶10    Under the constitutional case-or-controversy requirement, the plaintiff must show,

“at an irreducible minimum,” that he or she “has suffered a past, present, or threatened

injury to a property or civil right, and that the injury would be alleviated by successfully

maintaining the action.” Schoof, ¶ 15 (citation and internal quotations omitted); accord

Chipman v. Nw. Healthcare Corp., 2012 MT 242, ¶¶ 26-27, 366 Mont. 450, 288 P.3d 193.

The alleged injury must be “concrete” rather than “abstract.” Schoof, ¶ 20 (citation and

internal quotations omitted). To qualify as “concrete,” an injury must be “actual or

imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.” Heffernan, ¶ 32. In other words, “the plaintiff

must show that he has sustained, or is in immediate danger of sustaining some direct

injury . . . and not merely that he suffers in some indefinite way in common with people

generally.” Schoof, ¶ 20 (citation and internal quotations omitted).

¶11    A plaintiff’s standing may arise from an alleged violation of a constitutional or

statutory right.   See Schoof, ¶ 23 (holding that plaintiff’s allegation that County

Commissioners violated his constitutional and statutory rights to know and to participate

by adopting a policy at an unannounced meeting satisfied standing requirements). The

Legislature “may enact statutes creating legal rights, the invasion of which creates

standing, even though no injury would exist without the statute.” Heffernan, ¶ 34 (citation

and internal quotations omitted). If the alleged injury “is premised on the violation of

constitutional and statutory rights, standing depends on whether the constitutional or

statutory provision . . . can be understood as granting persons in the plaintiff’s position a

right to judicial relief.” Schoof, ¶ 21 (citation and internal quotations omitted). “[I]n all

                                          6
events,” however, “the standing requirements imposed by the Constitution”—i.e., a

showing of an alleged injury—“must always be met.” Heffernan, ¶ 34.

¶12    Article VIII, Section 12, of the Montana Constitution provides, “The legislature

shall by law insure strict accountability of all revenue received and money spent by the

state and counties, cities, towns, and all other local governmental entities.” The Legislature

responded to this directive by enacting the Single Audit Act, §§ 2-7-501 to -522, MCA,

and the Local Government Budget Accounting Act, §§ 7-6-4001 to -4036, MCA.

¶13    The Local Government Budget Accounting Act requires local government officials

to not “make a disbursement or an expenditure or incur an obligation in excess of the total

appropriations for a fund.” Section 7-6-4005(1), MCA. Further, “A local government

official who violates subsection (1) is liable for the amount of the excess disbursement,

expenditure, or obligation personally.” Section 7-6-4005(2), MCA. “[T]he governing

body, each county or municipal official, and the district courts are limited to the amount of

appropriations and by the classifications in the annual appropriation resolution provided

for in 7-6-4030 when making disbursements or expenditures or incurring liabilities.”

Section 7-6-4033, MCA.

¶14    The Legislature enacted the Single Audit Act in part to “improve the financial

management of local government entities with respect to federal, state, and local financial

assistance.” Section 2-7-502(2)(a), MCA. This Act directs the Montana Department of

Administration (Department) to “prescribe by rule the general methods and details of

accounting for the receipt and disbursement of all money belonging to local government

                                          7
entities” and to establish a uniform financial reporting system for such entities. Sections

2-7-503(2), -504(1), MCA. Local government entities must “conform with the accounting

standards prescribed by the department.” Section 2-7-504(1), MCA.

¶15    Under the Single Audit Act, local government entities must submit to independent

financial audits every two years. Section 2-7-503(3), MCA. Once an entity receives a

completed audit report, the entity must file the report with the Department and inform the

Department what corrective actions it plans to take in response to “deficiencies or

recommendations contained in the audit report.” Sections 2-7-514(1), -515(1), MCA.

Local government entities must “adopt measures to correct the report findings” and submit

a “corrective action plan to the department.” Section 2-7-515(3), MCA.

¶16    If a local government entity fails “to resolve findings or implement corrective

measures,” the Act provides that such failure “shall result in the withholding of financial

assistance in accordance with rules adopted by the department pending resolution or

compliance.” Section 2-7-515(3), MCA. If an officer or employee of a local government

entity violates the law or fails to perform a duty, that individual “must be proceeded against

by the attorney general or county, city, or town attorney as provided by law.” Section

2-7-515(4), MCA. “If the county, city, or town attorney fails or refuses to prosecute the

case, the department may refer the case to the attorney general to prosecute the case.”

Section 2-7-515(4), MCA. The Department also may withhold financial assistance from

or issue fines to a local government entity that fails to comply with financial reporting

requirements. Section 2-7-517(1)-(2), MCA.

                                          8
¶17    Pursuant to the Single Audit Act, the County submitted to an independent audit of

its finances for fiscal years 2013 and 2014. The audit report begins with a statement of the

County’s “Net Position.” For 2013, the report lists the County’s total assets at $17,356,224,

its total liabilities at $6,349,818, and its resulting “Total net position” at $11,006,406. The

report states further that, for 2014, the County’s total assets were $16,626,470, its total

liabilities were $6,036,077, and its “Total net position” was $10,590,393. The report also

summarizes the County’s revenues and expenditures for each fiscal year. The County’s

total combined expenditures among its various funds exceeded revenues by $384,256 in

2013 and by $216,434 in 2014.

¶18    The audit report proceeds with a discussion of the financial state of the County’s

individual funds. For 2013, the report notes that the General fund, the Road fund, the

Ambulance fund, and “Other Governmental Funds” had positive fund balances, while the

Public Safety (Law Enforcement) fund, the Glacier County Transit fund, the Sheriff Law

Enforcement Grant, the Community Transportation Enhancement Program (CTEP), and

the DEQ/DOE/ARRA Grant posted deficit fund balances. For 2014, the report again

identifies the General fund, the Ambulance fund, and “Other Governmental Funds” as

having positive balances; the Road fund, the Public Safety (Law Enforcement) fund, CTEP,

the Museum fund, the Glacier County Transit fund, the Sheriff Law Enforcement Grant,

the Glacier County Ambulance Capital fund, and the DEQ/DOE/ARRA Grant all had

deficit balances. The report notes that the funds with deficit balances “will not have

adequate amount of resources to cover expenditures or pay liabilities” and that the County

                                           9
had exceeded its budgetary authority with respect to many of those funds. Despite these

deficit balances in many of the County’s individual funds, the report states that the

County’s “Total Government Funds” balance stood at $4,208,721 for 2013 and at

$4,038,997 for 2014.

¶19    The audit report includes findings of “certain deficiencies in internal control” that

the auditors considered “material weaknesses.” The report highlights instances of different

County departments or funds failing to maintain accurate ledgers or proper records of assets

or cash transactions. The report also discusses the County’s efforts at compliance with its

financial obligations and its attempts to correct the deficiencies that the audit identified.

The report notes that the “County complies with generally accepted accounting principles”

and with relevant “Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) pronouncements.”

For each fund that the report identifies as having a negative balance, it contains brief

descriptions under the heading, “How Deficit will be Eliminated,” of the County’s plans to

balance that fund’s budget.

¶20    In the “Schedule of Findings and Questioned Costs,” the report notes the County’s

budgeting and accounting deficiencies with regard to specific funds, departments, and

financial practices. In response to each deficiency listed, the report summarizes the

County’s planned response under the heading, “Views of Responsible Officials and

Planned Corrective Action.” For instance, with respect to the report’s finding that the

Ambulance Fund inadequately accounted for its revenues, the report states, “The County

plans to implement policies and procedures requiring the entry of revenues when report is

                                         10
received from EMS, and performing a monthly reconciliation to determine if error exists.”

Finally, the audit notes that the “prior audit report contained twenty five recommendations”

for improving the County’s financial management. The audit reports that, of those twenty-

five recommendations, the County has “implemented” eighteen. The audit lists seven

recommendations as “repeated” from the previous audit, meaning that the County has yet

to implement those recommendations.

¶21    Taxpayers assert that the audit demonstrates the County’s financial mismanagement

and their threatened injury from the State and local entities’ failures to address this

mismanagement.

       A. Taxpayers’ Standing to Sue the State.

¶22    Taxpayers argue that they have standing to sue the State because the State has failed

to enforce the law against the County for its alleged financial mismanagement. They

contend that the State has not fulfilled its fiduciary duty to ensure “strict accountability”

under the Constitution and that the State has abdicated its enforcement obligations under

the Single Audit Act. In Taxpayers’ view, these alleged failures violate their rights and

grant them standing to sue the State.

¶23    We have held that “non-self-executing clauses of constitutions are non-justiciable

political questions.” Columbia Falls Elem. Sch. Dist. No. 6 v. State, 2005 MT 69, ¶ 15,

326 Mont. 304, 109 P.3d 257 (hereafter Columbia Falls). A constitutional provision that

is “addressed to the Legislature” is “non-self-executing.” Columbia Falls, ¶ 16. Article

VIII, Section 12, of the Montana Constitution addresses the Legislature and requires it to

                                         11
take action to ensure “strict accountability.” For this reason, the “strict accountability”

clause of Article VIII, Section 12, is not self-executing. Friends of the Wild Swan v. Dep’t

of Natural Res. & Conservation, 2005 MT 351, ¶ 25, 330 Mont. 186, 127 P.3d 394 (citing

Reep v. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs, 191 Mont. 162, 169, 622 P.2d 685, 689 (1981)). The clause

therefore is non-justiciable. See Columbia Falls, ¶ 15.

¶24    Taxpayers nonetheless argue that, according to our holding in Columbia Falls, the

State’s alleged violations of the legislation implementing the “strict accountability”

clause—namely the Single Audit Act—grant them standing. In Columbia Falls, we held

that the plaintiffs had standing to sue the State over its administration and funding of public

schools, which allegedly violated Article X, Section 1(3), of the Montana Constitution.

Columbia Falls, ¶ 19. That provision mandates that the Legislature “provide a basic system

of free quality public elementary and secondary schools.” Mont. Const. art. X, § 1(3). We

explained that this constitutional provision “must be read in conjunction with Section 1 of

Article X, which guarantees a right to education.” Columbia Falls, ¶ 19. The constitutional

provision at issue in Columbia Falls thus implicated the express constitutional right to an

education. Columbia Falls, ¶ 19. We noted that once the Legislature has “executed” a

constitutional provision “that implicates individual constitutional rights, courts can

determine whether that enactment fulfills the Legislature’s constitutional responsibility.”

Columbia Falls, ¶ 17 (citation and internal quotations omitted).

¶25    By contrast to Columbia Falls, the “strict accountability” clause does not implicate

specific “individual constitutional rights.” Columbia Falls, ¶ 17. It directs the Legislature

                                          12
to pass legislation ensuring strict accountability of revenue. Mont. Const. art. VIII, § 12.

Unlike with Article X, Section 1(3), which, when “read in conjunction” with the

Constitution’s right to an education, grants individual constitutional rights, there is no

separate individual constitutional right to “strict accountability” of revenues. Columbia

Falls, ¶ 19. The “strict accountability” clause therefore cannot “be understood as granting

persons in [Taxpayers’] position a right to judicial relief.” Schoof, ¶ 21.

¶26    Taxpayers’ reliance on Columbia Falls would be more apropos to an argument that

the Legislature’s enactments under Article VIII, Section 12—i.e., the Single Audit Act and

the Local Government Budget Accounting Act—failed to “fulfill[ ] the Legislature’s

constitutional responsibility” of ensuring “strict accountability of all revenue.” Columbia

Falls, ¶ 17; Mont. Const. art. VIII, § 12; see Friends of the Wild Swan, ¶ 25. Taxpayers do

not allege that the Legislature failed to comply with its constitutional mandate when it

enacted these Acts. Their allegations of violations of the “strict accountability” clause

therefore are not justiciable and do not establish standing.

¶27    Taxpayers respond that “the implementing statutes confer rights” and that the Court

must hold the Executive Branch accountable as a co-equal branch for carrying out its

obligations under the Constitution. Yet the Legislature defines the Executive Branch’s

accountability through its legislative enactments. See, e.g., Friends of the Wild Swan, ¶ 25.

Here, the Legislature enacted laws—such as the Single Audit Act—that set forth the

Executive Branch’s responsibility for enforcing the “strict accountability” clause of the

Constitution.   See §§ 2-7-501 to -522, MCA.         That clause does not allow a claim

                                          13
independent of the statutes that implement it. See Friends of the Wild Swan, ¶ 25. We thus

turn to the legislative enactment implementing the “strict accountability” clause—the

Single Audit Act—of which Taxpayers claim the State has run afoul.

¶28   Taxpayers argue that the State violated the terms of the Single Audit Act and that

they may sue the State to redress these alleged violations. Taxpayers do not argue that the

Single Audit Act expressly confers private rights of action on individuals in Taxpayers’

position. See generally §§ 2-7-501 to -522, MCA. They contend instead that the Act

obligated the State to withhold financial assistance from the County and that they may sue

to compel the State to take legal action against local officials because “every person who

suffers detriment from the unlawful act of another has a remedy” under Montana law.

(Citing § 27-1-202, MCA.)

¶29   The Act provides that, when a local government entity fails to comply with financial

reporting requirements, “the department may issue an order stopping payment of any state

financial assistance to the local government entity.” Section 2-7-517(1), MCA (emphasis

added). It provides further that, after an entity submits a corrective action plan to the

Department, “Failure to resolve findings or implement corrective measures shall result in

the withholding of financial assistance in accordance with rules adopted by the department

pending resolution or compliance.” Section 2-7-515(3), MCA. Under the corresponding

Department rule,

      If the department does not receive an acceptable response or corrective action
      plan [from the local government entity] . . . it can request, pursuant to
      2-7-515, MCA, that state agencies withhold payments of financial assistance
      from the local government entity pending receipt of an acceptable response
                                        14
       or corrective action plan. The department, after consultation with the
       appropriate state agency or agencies, may designate the financial assistance
       payments to be withheld.

Admin. R. M. 2.4.409(12).

¶30    The plain language of the Single Audit Act gives the Department authority to review

a local government’s audit response and to determine whether to withhold financial

assistance. The Act’s directive that an entity’s “[f]ailure to resolve findings or implement

corrective measures shall result in the withholding of financial assistance” is followed by

language bestowing discretion on the Department to craft rules determining the

circumstances under which such withholding will occur. Section 2-7-515(3), MCA. The

statute does not dictate the Department’s sufficiency review, does not impose a time limit

or specific requirements for an entity’s submission of a corrective action plan to the

Department, and does not direct the manner in which the local government entity must

“resolve findings or implement corrective measures.” Section 2-7-515(3), MCA. The

Department’s corresponding rule states that it may withhold financial assistance if it “does

not receive an acceptable response or corrective action plan” from the County.

Admin. R. M. 2.4.409(12). Taxpayers do not challenge the validity of the rule. Read in

conjunction, § 2-7-515(3), MCA, and Admin. R. M. 2.4.409(12), provide the Department

discretion to determine whether and how to withhold financial assistance from local

government entities.

¶31    The Single Audit Act provides:

       In cases where a violation of law or nonperformance of duty is found on the
       part of an officer, employee, or board, the officer, employee, or board must
                                         15
       be proceeded against by the attorney general or county, city, or town attorney
       as provided by law . . . If the county, city, or town attorney fails or refuses to
       prosecute the case, the department may refer the case to the attorney general
       to prosecute the case.

Section 2-7-515(4), MCA (emphases added). Taxpayers argue that this language requires

the State to prosecute County officials. The plain language of the statute, however, states

that the Department may refer officials for prosecution if the local attorney declines to

prosecute the case. Section 2-7-515(4), MCA. And prosecuting authorities are “provided

by law,” § 2-7-515(4), MCA, with broad discretion to determine when to undertake

criminal actions, State v. Strong, 2015 MT 251, ¶ 23, 380 Mont. 471, 356 P.3d 1078 (“[W]e

afford prosecutors ‘broad discretion to determine whether to prosecute an offender and

what offense to charge.’”) (quoting State v. Tichenor, 2002 MT 311, ¶ 26, 313 Mont. 95,

60 P.3d 454). The statute thus does not mandate the Department’s prosecution of local

government officials.

¶32    Although the Single Audit Act grants the Department authority to take enforcement

action against local government entities that fail to comply with their financial duties, it

affords the Department wide latitude in determining when and under what circumstances

to take action. See §§ 2-7-515(3), (4), MCA. A party in Taxpayers’ position cannot compel

the State to take discretionary action. See Doty v. Mont. Comm’r of Political Practices,

2007 MT 341, ¶ 15, 340 Mont. 276, 173 P.3d 700 (holding that a writ of mandamus cannot

“compel performance of a discretionary function”). Taxpayers therefore cannot show that

their claims against the State assert a legally cognizable injury to a civil right sufficient to

confer standing. See Schoof, ¶ 15.
                                           16
¶33    In addition, § 27-1-202, MCA, does not support Taxpayers’ argument for standing.

It reflects established principles of standing by requiring that a person “suffer[ ] detriment”

in order to be entitled to a remedy. For the reasons discussed below, we conclude that

Taxpayers have not demonstrated that their claimed potential for increased property taxes

in response to the County’s financial situation constitutes a concrete injury sufficient to

confer standing in this case.

       B. Taxpayers’ Standing to Sue the County.

¶34    Taxpayers assert that the County is running a budget deficit and that it does not have

sufficient financial resources to meet its obligations. They allege that this deficit threatens

them with economic injury because it is “foreseeable” that the County will raise property

taxes to compensate for its imbalanced budget. Taxpayers argue further that the County

has violated statutes that implement the “strict accountability” clause of the Montana

Constitution—including the Single Audit Act and the Local Government Budget

Accounting Act—and that these violations confer standing on them. Taxpayers assert that

the County’s financial violations are ongoing.

¶35    Taxpayers argue that our holding in Helena Parents Commission v. Lewis and Clark

County Commissioners, 277 Mont. 367, 922 P.2d 1140 (1996), supports their contention

that the County’s financial deficiencies threaten them with increased property taxes and

give them standing to sue. The plaintiffs in Helena Parents Commission sued the county

and the school district, alleging that the defendants had improperly invested public funds.

Helena Parents Comm’n, 277 Mont. at 370, 922 P.2d at 1142. The plaintiffs’ complaint

                                          17
specifically alleged that the county’s and the school district’s actions had resulted in a loss

of approximately $5.5 million, as a result of which the local government would need to

raise revenues and reduce public services in order to compensate for the loss. Helena

Parents Comm’n, 277 Mont. at 370, 922 P.2d at 1142. In holding that the plaintiffs had

standing to sue, we explained that “plaintiffs alleged that the government will impose tax

burdens on them as it seeks to recoup losses and that the investments will result in a

lessening of governmental services. These allegations of an economic injury satisfy the

injury requirement.” Helena Parents Comm’n, 277 Mont. at 372, 922 P.2d at 1143.

¶36    This case differs significantly from Helena Parents Commission.              First, the

contested issue—and the focus of our analysis in that case—was on the second requirement

for standing: whether the alleged injury was distinguishable from the injury to the public

generally. Helena Parents Comm’n, 277 Mont. at 372-74, 922 P.2d at 1143-44. Second,

unlike the Helena Parents plaintiffs, Taxpayers did not specifically allege in their

complaints that the County’s financial mismanagement resulted in a quantifiable amount

of overspending that would require an increase in property taxes. Taxpayers’ second

amended complaint states only that, based on the “deficiencies” described in the audit, “it

is foreseeable that the county’s residents and taxpayers would be injured.” (Emphasis

added.) Taxpayers have not made concrete allegations that the County squandered a

specific amount of money that it would need to recoup through increased property taxes.

See Helena Parents Comm’n, 277 Mont. at 372, 922 P.2d at 1143. Helena Parents

Commission is not analogous.

                                          18
¶37    The audit findings would not support such allegations in any event. The audit report

notes the County’s financial deficiencies, including budget deficits in numerous individual

funds and expenditures in excess of revenues. Yet the report shows that the County’s

“Total Government Funds” balance stood at $4,208,721 for 2013 and at $4,038,997 for

2014. Its “Total net position”—the difference between its assets and its liabilities—was

$11,006,406 for 2013 and $10,590,393 for 2014. The report thus shows that the County

has more than adequate financial resources to meet its liabilities. The fact that the County

has inadequately budgeted for certain funds does not require it to raise revenue to balance

those funds. It conceivably could use its overall surplus in assets and its excess “Total

Government Funds” balance to redistribute money across its individual funds so that all

are balanced. Whether such actions would comply with State budgetary laws or recognized

accounting principles is not the issue here. The threshold problem is that Taxpayers cannot

show, based on the audit report, that the threat of the County raising property taxes is

“actual or imminent,” rather than “conjectural or hypothetical.” Heffernan, ¶ 32; see

Schoof, ¶ 20.

¶38    Taxpayers contend, however, that the County’s failure to take corrective action to

cure its alleged financial violations supports their position that tax increases are

foreseeable. The report, though, summarizes the County’s responses to its financial

deficiencies and reflects its continuing efforts to implement proper financial management

strategies. For each deficiency in the County’s funds, departments, and financial practices

that the report identifies, it describes the County’s planned corrective action. The report

                                         19
states that County officials were aware of negative cash balances in some of the County’s

major funds and that the County had “implemented a more conservative plan in making

only the essential expenditure transactions.” It notes further that the County has adopted

eighteen of the twenty-five recommendations from the prior audit report. The face of the

audit demonstrates where the County has taken and continues to take corrective action to

remedy its deficiencies. Again, the allegations fall short of the concrete injury needed to

demonstrate standing.     Taxpayers’ alleged foreseeable economic injury therefore is

insufficient to satisfy the constitutional “case-or-controversy” requirement for standing to

sue the County. Schoof, ¶ 15.

¶39    Taxpayers argue further that the County would be immunized for its alleged

violations of the Single Audit Act and the Local Government Budget Accounting Act if

the Court fails to grant them standing to seek judicial review of the County’s financial

mismanagement. Taxpayers rely in part on our holding in Grossman v. Department of

Natural Resources, 209 Mont. 427, 682 P.2d 1319 (1984), for their contention that the

County’s alleged statutory violations are sufficient to establish standing. They highlight

our statement that “[w]e will recognize the standing of a taxpayer, without more, to

question the state constitutional validity of a tax or use of tax monies where the issue or

issues presented directly affect the constitutional validity of the state or its political

subdivisions acting to collect the tax, issue bonds, or use the proceeds thereof.” Grossman,

209 Mont. at 438-39, 682 P.2d at 1325. As the District Court observed, Taxpayers do not

“challenge the constitutional validity of Glacier County’s collection of taxes nor its use of

                                         20
the funds.” Taxpayers allege that the County committed errors in its budgeting and

accounting of revenues, not that its collection or expenditures of the funds was

unconstitutional. Grossman therefore does not apply.

¶40    Instead, the above analysis resolves Taxpayers’ claim. As Taxpayers implicitly

acknowledge, neither the Single Audit Act nor the Local Government Budget Accounting

Act contains any express provision granting private rights of action to individuals in

Taxpayers’ position. But even if the County violated one or more provisions of these

Acts—a question that we do not decide here—Taxpayers have not shown, “at an

irreducible minimum,” that they have “suffered a past, present, or threatened injury” that

“would be alleviated by successfully maintaining the action.” Schoof, ¶ 15. Without

demonstrating a concrete injury, Taxpayers cannot establish standing to sue for violations

of the Single Audit Act or the Local Government Budget Accounting Act. See Schoof, ¶ 20.

       C. Taxpayers’ Additional Standing Theories.

¶41    Finally, Taxpayers invoke the private attorney general doctrine and the Declaratory

Judgments Act as additional bases for standing. The private attorney general doctrine

allows parties in certain cases to recover attorney fees “when the government, for some

reason, fails to properly enforce interests which are significant to its citizens.” Clark Fork

Coalition v. Tubbs, 2017 MT 184, ¶ 14, 388 Mont. 205, 399 P.3d 295 (citation and internal

quotations omitted). The private attorney general doctrine entitles a party to seek and

recover attorney fees. See Clark Fork Coalition, ¶¶ 15-16. It is not a cause of action.




                                          21
Taxpayers cite no authority that the doctrine establishes a right to judicial relief

independent of recognized standing requirements.

¶42    The Declaratory Judgments Act provides, “Any person . . . whose rights, status, or

other legal relations are affected by a statute . . . may have determined any question of

construction or validity arising under the . . . statute . . . and obtain a declaration of rights,

status, or other legal relations thereunder.” Section 27-8-202, MCA. We have held that

“the requirement of justiciable controversy [ ] applies to declaratory judgment actions.”

Marbut v. Sec’y of State, 231 Mont. 131, 135, 752 P.2d 148, 150 (1988). As discussed

earlier in this Opinion, Taxpayers have not adequately alleged a concrete, threatened injury,

and therefore have not established standing. Without an independent ground for standing,

they cannot assert a claim under the Declaratory Judgments Act. See Marbut, 231 Mont.

at 135-36, 752 P.2d at 151 (“[W]e have found no case granting standing to a complainant

or applicant who shows no injury or threatened injury.”). Neither the private attorney

general doctrine nor the Declaratory Judgments Act grants Taxpayers standing to seek

relief in this case.

                                       CONCLUSION

¶43    The District Court determined correctly that Taxpayers lack standing to sue either

the County or the State. The judgment is affirmed.


                                                    /S/ BETH BAKER


We Concur:

                                           22
/S/ MIKE McGRATH
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
/S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
/S/ JIM RICE



Justice Michael E Wheat, dissenting.

¶44     I respectfully dissent from the majority. I would reverse and remand because the

Taxpayers have standing to go forward with the lawsuit against Glacier County. In my

opinion, the majority improperly finds that the Taxpayers have failed to allege an injury.

¶45     The majority’s attempt to distinguish Helena Parents Commission is unavailing.

The majority distinguishes the case at hand from Helena Parents Commission on two

grounds: (1) the foremost issue in Helena Parents Commission was not whether an alleged

injury had occurred, and (2) the plaintiffs in Helena Parents Commission alleged a

quantifiable injury. Opinion, ¶ 36. As to the first ground, whether the issue was the

foremost issue in the case is irrelevant. The Court in Helena Parents Commission

concluded that the plaintiffs had alleged an injury to satisfy the standing requirement.

Helena Parents Comm’n, 277 Mont. at 372, 922 P.2d at 1143.

¶46     As to the second ground, Helena Parents Commission’s conclusion that the

plaintiffs had standing is akin to the case at hand. The Court stated “plaintiffs alleged that

the government will impose tax burdens on them as it seeks to recoup losses and that the

investments will result in a lessening of governmental services. These allegations of an

economic injury satisfy the injury requirements.” Helena Parents Comm’n, 277 Mont. at

                                          23
372, 922 P.2d at 1143. Here, Taxpayers alleged a similar economic injury. Taxpayers

alleged that the mismanagement of public funds by the County will impose additional tax

burdens on them or reductions in public services to compensate for any deficits. In my

opinion, based on Helena Parents Commission, the Taxpayers have alleged an actual

threatened injury sufficient to allow them to proceed with their case.

¶47    To justify their reasoning, the majority picks and chooses specific facts from the

audits. The majority focuses only on the “Total Government Funds” balance but does not

consider any other part of the audits. Opinion, ¶ 37. The majority concludes based on this

that the Taxpayers have not met the injury requirement to have standing. Such analysis is

misleading. For example, the audits revealed “material weaknesses” and “significant

deficiencies” in the County’s management of public funds that provide public services.

The audits specifically stated, “[f]or fiscal year 2014, the County does not have adequate

resources to meet current liabilities causing a deficit fund balance.” Additionally, the

Taxpayers point to eight serious deficiencies highlighted in the audits that have continued

throughout several years in their complaint.

¶48    The majority’s conclusions about the validity of the audit should be left to a jury,

not a judge. Based on the deficiencies found within the audits, the Taxpayers should be

afforded the opportunity to fully explore and develop the alleged mismanagement of public

funds. Standing requirements should not be barriers to justice. Thus, in my opinion, based

on Helena Parents Commission and the deficiencies noted in the audits, the Taxpayers




                                         24
have alleged an injury that is not so speculative that we should reject it outright so as to

deny Taxpayers the opportunity to purse their claims.

¶49    For these reasons, I dissent.


                                                 /S/ MICHAEL E WHEAT




                                         25
