Court Opinion

ID: 3499094
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:06:24.704993+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:05:16.780841
License: Public Domain

Defendant city of Grand Rapids is a municipal corporation with a home rule charter which vests all legislative and administrative power in a city commission. The latter in turn appoints a city manager, who is charged with the administration of the municipality under the direction and provisions of the city commission. He has the power to appoint and remove all subordinate officers and employees of the city. Appointments must be made upon merit and fitness in compliance and in accordance with the civil service provisions of the charter. The charter provides that:*
"No employee * * * shall be discharged or reduced in rank or compensation until he has been presented with the reasons for such discharge or reduction specifically stated in writing, and has been given an opportunity to be heard in his own defense. * * * Any employee * * * who is suspended, reduced in rank or dismissed, may appeal to the civil service board."
We have italicized the word "appeal" as its proper construction presents the real question in the case.
Plaintiff William P. Babcock was assistant building inspector, a position that came under the civil service provisions of the charter. Charges of misconduct were made against him, and written notice *Page 414 
thereof was served upon him. He was granted a hearing by the city manager in accordance with his demand. He attended it with his counsel who examined witnesses and the testimony was taken down stenographically and reduced to writing. The manager found him guilty of a number of the charges preferred and notified him of his dismissal. He filed notice of appeal to the civil service board and demanded a hearing de novo. The board ordered a transcript of the proceedings served on them and had a committee examine the evidence. On February 1, 1943, plaintiff's petition for a hearing de novo was denied, the civil service board finding the action of the manager legal and regular. Petition for mandamus was filed in the superior court of Grand Rapids on February 25, 1943, and the court ordered a hearing de novo.
Defendant city of Grand Rapids appeals.
The real question presented on appeal is whether plaintiff is entitled to such hearing de novo before the civil service board. Appellant city of Grand Rapids contends that the word "appeal" has an indefinite meaning, that after a hearing such as plaintiff has had, it can be reviewed only by certiorari, that the term "appeal" as used means only a review and, where the testimony has been taken down in a regular proceeding before the board, the plaintiff is precluded from raising any other questions than those of law. While it is true that in more recent times the term "appeal" is frequently applied to appeals in the nature of certiorari, mandamus or other methods of review, this does not enlarge the nature of the review.
Upon examining the cases, we conclude that the correct and true meaning of the word "appeal" is a review of a case by a higher tribunal in a trial de novo. In Re Manufacturer's FreightForwarding *Page 415 Co., 294 Mich. 57, 70 (36 P.U.R. [N.S.] 329), the court said:
"The term `appeal' was unknown to the common law. It belonged wholly to courts of chancery, and means in its technical and appropriate sense the removal of a suit, and its final determination, from an inferior court, after final judgment in that court, to a superior court, and placing the case in the latter court, to be again tried de novo upon its merits, just as though it had never been tried in the inferior court. Fouse
v. Vandervort, 30 W. Va. 327 (4 S.W. 298)."
We believe that when the word "appeal" is used without any limitations as to the nature or method of review, in a statute or charter, it means a trial de novo. In Commissioner ofCorporations and Taxation v. J.G. McCrory Co., 280 Mass. 273
(182 N.E. 481), which referred to the Massachusetts law, which in this particular respect is similar to that of this State, the court said:
"The word `appeal' in our statutes usually has been interpreted to mean a full new trial or an entire hearing upon all matters of fact and questions of law. It is used in contrast to the word `review' which signifies a reexamination of proceedings already had."
  Appellants cite Fricke v. City of Grand Rapids, 278 Mich. 323;  Delaney v. Detroit Board of Fire Commissioners,244 Mich. 64; Public Welfare Commission of Detroit v. CivilService Commission, 289 Mich. 101, as being contrary to the foregoing statement. We find on examination that the wording of the acts in these cases or the charters involved do not support appellant's contentions. Reading the charter of the city of Grant Rapids in its entirety, we find that when an appeal is taken, the city civil *Page 416 
service board must hold de novo hearings and form their own judgments. The charter provides under title 7, § 1, that no employee shall "be dismissed except by the affirmative vote of a majority of the members elect." Further, in title 7, § 9, it provides:
"The judgment of such board shall be final and not subject to review in the courts."
These provisions clearly indicate that the board may render judgments. From the very definition of the word, it must try the case de novo to ascertain the facts and arrive at a judgment. See 2 Bouvier's Law Dictionary (Rawle's 3d Rev.), p. 1718; Black's Law Dictionary (3d Ed.), p. 1024. The decision of the city manager is final unless there is an appeal. However, if there is an appeal, the hearing must be de novo and not by certiorari.
The writ of mandamus issued by the trial judge is herewith affirmed, but without costs, a public question being involved.
SHARPE and REID, JJ., concurred with BUTZEL, J. WIEST and BUSHNELL, JJ., concurred in the result.
* Grand Rapids Charter, title 7, § 9. — REPORTER.