Detroit Dropped to CCC, Mayor Orders City Lawyer to Drop Suit that Threatens Payment

CHICAGO – Fitch Ratings slapped a beleaguered Detroit with a downgrade to CCC Tuesday as Mayor Dave Bing ordered the city’s top lawyer to drop a lawsuit challenging the two-month old consent agreement between the city and Michigan.

Bing warned earlier in the week that the city is poised to miss a $34.2 million bond payment due Friday unless Corporation Counsel Krystal Crittendon drops the lawsuit. In a letter obtained and published by local Detroit media outlets Tuesday, Bing challenges Crittendon’s authority to take such legal action on her own.

“By taking this action, you have exceeded your authority under the charter and have put the city’s financial at substantial risk of serious financial consequences,” the letter reads. It argues that her action violates the city charter which requires that she prosecute all actions or proceedings to which the city has a legal interest in “when directed to do so by the mayor.”

Bing informs the corporation counsel that he has consulted with outside legal experts on the matter.

The mayor has hired Miller, Canfield, Paddock and Stone PLC to intervene on his behalf, according to published reports. A hearing is set for Wednesday morning before an Ingham County judge on Crittendon’s lawsuit.

The mess prompted Fitch on Tuesday to downgrade further into junk bond territory $511 million of unlimited tax general obligation bonds to CCC from B, about $453 million of limited tax GOs to CC from B-minus; and $1.5 billion of pension obligation certificates of participation issued through the Detroit Retirement Systems Funding Trust to CC from B. The pension debt is on Rating Watch Negative.

“Yesterday, the city stated the possibility that it would not make a debt service payment due on June 15 on its pension COPs,” Fitch wrote in its Tuesday report, adding that it “believes there are actions available to both the city and the state of Michigan that would insure the payment is made but that the current level of uncertainty so close to a bond repayment date is consistent with a higher probability of default than the prior B-category ratings implied.”

In addition to the near-term debt service payment, the litigation threatens the city’s much-needed refinancing of bond anticipation notes issued by the Michigan Finance Authority to avoid depletion of general fund cash balances.

“Fitch’s belief that the inability to refinance increases the prospects of a cash crisis is supported by the city CFO’s assertion that cash will be depleted once the next payroll is met,” Fitch wrote.

Crittendon recently filed the lawsuit in the state court of claims arguing that the consent decree signed in April between the state and the city was invalid because the state owes the city money.

The city’s top officials said the government would run out of cash by June 15 and be operating at a $67 million deficit by next week if a standoff between the state and the city’s corporation counsel is not resolved.

Michigan Treasury officials last week told Detroit that the state would not release roughly $35 million held in escrow from a recent privately placed bond sale unless the city’s corporation counsel, Krystal Crittendon, dropped the challenge to the consent decree.

The state also said it would not allow the city to complete a planned $137 million bond deal set for next week that would pay off the $80 million and raise badly needed new money for the cash-strapped city, and that Detroit would lose all its state revenue aid through December so that the state could pay off the privately placed debt.

Michigan officials argue that Crittendon’s lawsuit destabilizes all contracts between the city and the state, including bond financings. Bing wants the suit dropped, but he alone can’t force the dismissal under the city’s charter. The mayor said he spent the weekend negotiating with both state officials and Crittendon, but without resolution.

New chief financial officer Jack Martin said unless Michigan releases $35 million from the escrow account — which it has said it will not do — then the city can’t make the payment.

Last week state officials told Martin that they believe the city charter allows Bing to order Crittendon to drop the suit, but city officials said that is no longer true under a recent expansion of the legal department’s powers aimed at giving city attorneys more independence from the executive and legislative branches.

Michael McGee, an attorney with Miller Canfield, appeared with Bing at the Monday emergency council session. McGee, who is special counsel to the city, argued that Crittendon’s lawsuit challenged state law — not the city charter, as she contends — and that she does not have the authority to challenge state law without the mayor’s direct order. “This is a state law question and can only be brought by the corporation counsel at the direction of the mayor,” McGee said.

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