Court Opinion

ID: 3498469
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:05:53.134085+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:56:55.929222
License: Public Domain

This is a quo warranto proceeding instituted by the attorney general in behalf of the people of the State of Michigan on the relation of Sherman M. Bean. The resignation on January 25, 1943, of the former incumbent of the office of circuit court commissioner in Genesee county created a vacancy in that office. Immediately following such resignation the two probate judges of Genesee county, the county clerk and the prosecuting attorney assembled and, assuming to act under statutory authority (1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 3369 [Stat. Ann. § 6.715]), appointed defendant Dale Showley as circuit court commissioner; although the prosecuting attorney declined to take any part in such appointment because he was of the opinion that the appointive power was vested in the governor of the State. Following such appointment defendant qualified to fill the office, and since so doing he has held and exercised the office and still continues to do so.
Later the governor of the State appointed Sherman M. Bean to the office of circuit court commissioner in Genesee county, the secretary of State issued a commission accordingly, and the appointee duly qualified.
The meritorious question is whether the appointive power to fill a vacancy in the office of circuit court commissioner is under the above-cited statute in the named county officials or whether under 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13718 (Stat. Ann. § 27.241), such power is in the governor of the State. The statutory provision which purports to vest the appointive power in the governor is a reenactment of Act No. 204, § 27, Pub. Acts 1881. It was embodied in the 1915 judicature act and reads as follows:
"Whenever a vacancy shall occur, for any cause, in the office of circuit court commissioner of any *Page 692 
county, the governor may fill such vacancy by the appointment of a person eligible to such office."
The conflicting and more recent statutory provision found in 1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 3369 (Stat. Ann. § 6.715), first above cited is Act No. 199, § 5, Pub. Acts 1923, which is entitled: "An act to provide for the filling of vacancies in appointive and elective public offices." The pertinent portion of section 5 reads:
"When a vacancy shall occur in an elective or appointive county office, it shall be filled in the following manner:
"1. If the vacancy shall be in the office of county clerk or prosecuting attorney it shall be filled by appointment by the judge or judges of that judicial circuit. * * *
"2. If the vacancy shall be in any other county office, either elective or appointive, the judge of probate, the county clerk and the prosecuting attorney shall appoint some suitable person to fill such vacancy."
While it is obvious that the statutory provision just above quoted applies only to county offices, we have no hesitancy in holding that the office of circuit court commissioner is a county office as contradistinguished from a State office. InMcClintock v. Laing, 19 Mich. 300, it was held, quoting syllabus: "The office of circuit court commissioner is a constitutional county office." There is at least a strong presumption that circuit court commissioners should be held to be county officers by such statutory provisions as that in the general election law wherein it is provided that at every general November election there shall be elected: "in each county a sheriff, a clerk, a treasurer, a register of deeds, a prosecuting attorney, a circuit court commissioner or *Page 693 
commissioners, a drain commissioner, two coroners and a surveyor." See 1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 2997 (Stat. Ann. § 6.264). Further, the constitutional provision, while it does not use the words "circuit court commissioners" but clearly applies to those offices, provides for the election of such officers "in each county," thereby indicating quite conclusively that the office is a county office. The constitutional provision reads:
"The legislature may provide by law for the election of one or more persons in each organized county who may be vested with judicial powers not exceeding those of a judge of the circuit court at chambers." Const. 1908, art. 7, § 21.
On this appeal the controlling issue is this: Does the later act (1923) vesting the designated county officials with power to fill vacancies in some of the county offices by implication
repeal the earlier (1915) statutory provision which vested in the governor the power to fill a vacancy in the office of circuit court commissioner? There has been no express repeal of the earlier act.
Our former decision in Attorney General, ex rel. Whitcomb, v.Lau, 256 Mich. 13, is in this same field of the law and controlling of decision in the instant case. In the Lau Case he had been appointed to fill a vacancy in the office of county treasurer by the designated county officials acting under the 1923 statute; and one A.C. Whitcomb was purportedly appointed by the board of supervisors to fill the same vacancy. The board of supervisors in making the appointment assumed to act under an earlier statute which vested the board with such power. This earlier statutory provision (1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 1264 [Stat. Ann. § 5.684]) was a part of the general statutes having to do with county affairs, duties of county officers, et cetera. In theLau Case *Page 694 
we held that both this earlier statute and the statute of 1923 were general statutes, that the latter by necessary implication repealed the former, and that the appointment to fill the vacancy in the office of county treasurer by the county officials named in the 1923 statute was valid.
In testing the applicability of the foregoing ruling to the instant case it becomes necessary to consider whether each of the two conflicting statutory provisions is found in a general
statute; or, as is asserted by plaintiff, is the statute under which his appointment was made a special enactment, and therefore not repealed by implication by the subsequently enacted general statutory provision, as was held in Attorney General, exrel. Owen, v. Joyce, 233 Mich. 619.
As hereinbefore noted, the provision under which plaintiff's purported appointment was made (3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13718 [Stat. Ann. § 27.241]) is found in the 1915 judicature act. Surely this act, which has to do in the most general manner with the judicial branch of our State government, must be held to be a general act. The section under which plaintiff asserts the validity of his appointment is a single section embodied in this general act, just the same as in the Lau Case wherein the appointment of the relator Whitcomb was sought to be made by virtue of the provisions in a single section embodied in the general statute having to do with county affairs. So in the instant case it must be held, as it was held in the Lau Case, that the more recent of the two general statutes repeals by implication the conflicting provisions of the earlier statute. It follows that the appointment of the defendant made by the designated county officials under 1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 3369 (Stat. Ann. § 6.715), *Page 695 
was valid, and he is in lawful possession of the office of circuit court commissioner of Genesee county.
Because of our holding herein that each of the two statutes involved are general statutes, it is obvious that our decision in Attorney General, ex rel. Owen, v. Joyce, supra, is not in point in the instant case. Mr. Justice SHARPE disagrees with the foregoing statement. Instead, while he does not expressly so state, he evidently is of the opinion that the instant case falls within the reasoning of the Owen Case. By quoting from that case he notes the reasons why the statute there involved was held to be so-called "special" or specific legislation governing an isolated single subject matter. Then by pointing out some parallels between the highway statute involved in the Owen Case
and the judicature act involved in the instant case, Justice SHARPE seems to have arrived at the conclusion that the judicature act can be classified as a special or specific act, rather than as general legislation. I am not in accord with this conclusion. Instead the judicature act is about as good an example of a broad and general act as can be found in the Michigan statutes. Rather than pertaining exclusively or mainly to the power of the governor to fill by appointment vacancies in judicial offices, as Justice SHARPE seems to contend, the general scope of the judicature act and the various aspects of statutory law included therein are plainly disclosed by the title to the act, which we quote:
"An act to revise and consolidate the statutes relating to the organization and jurisdiction of the courts of this State; the powers and duties of such courts, and of the judges and other officers thereof; the forms of civil actions; the time within which civil actions and proceedings may be brought in said courts; pleading, evidence, practice and procedure *Page 696 
in civil actions and proceedings in said courts; to provide remedies and penalties for the violation of certain provisions of this act; and to repeal all acts and parts of acts inconsistent with, or contravening any of the provisions of this act."
If, as I hold, each of the two conflicting statutes involved in the instant appeal is a general statute, there being an irreconcilable conflict between the two, the well-settled rule of statutory construction necessitates holding that the later of the two enactments must prevail. To hold otherwise involves a rather uncomplimentary assumption that the members of the 1923 legislature did not know of the existing statutory law which controlled the very subject on which they were then legislating. And further, by holding that the 1915 act controls instead of the 1923 act, one must wholly ignore, as to circuit court commissioners, the provision in section 5 of the 1923 act which reads in substance as follows: "If the vacancy shall be in anyother county office (other than county clerk or prosecuting attorney), either elective or appointive, the judge of probate, the county clerk and the prosecuting attorney" shall fill the vacancy. But the italicized phrase clearly includes the office of circuit court commissioner, as much as that of county treasurer, register of deeds or sheriff.
It is difficult to conceive of the legislature choosing plainer words than those just above quoted. And reference to preceding provisions in the 1923 act discloses that the legislature when passing it was mindful of the necessity, because of constitutional provisions, of leaving the appointive power in the governor to fill vacancies in courts of record. With that in mind section 4 of the 1923 act provided: "Whenever a vacancy shall occur in the office of a judge of a court of record, the governor shall fill such vacancy." (As amended, see Act No. 236. Public *Page 697 
Acts 1931 [Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 3368, Stat. Ann. § 6.714]). Mr. Justice SHARPE says: "In my opinion, the act (1915) which gives the governor power of appointment is a part of the law governing matters pertaining to the administration of justice." Obviously such was and still is the case as to courts ofrecord. The legislature specifically so restricted the appointing power of the governor in the 1923 act. Obviously the legislature could not deprive the governor of the power of appointment in cases of vacancy in the office of a judge of a court of record, because the Constitution vests that power in the governor. Const. (1908), art. 7, § 20. But the legislature does have the power to designate the appointing authority to fill vacancies in the office of circuit court commissioner; and it clearly exercised that power in the 1923 act. It is a fair inference that the change in the statutory provision as to filling a vacancy in the office of circuit court commissioner was prompted by a desire on the part of the legislature to vest the appointive power in the local authorities of the county wherein the vacancy existed, rather than to leave it in the hands of the governor who, as a State officer, might be less well advised as to the qualifications of a prospective appointee.
At most a circuit court commissioner is only a quasi-judicial officer, and the circuit court commissioner's court is not a court of record. It seems quite impossible that the legislature did not mean what it plainly said in the 1923 act. It therein said: "If the vacancy shall be in any other county office" except that of county clerk or prosecuting attorney the vacancy shall be filled by appointment made by the designated county officers. This provision is irreconcilably in conflict with the 1915 legislative act which placed such appointing power as to circuit court commissioners in the governor. The two are *Page 698 
inconsistent and cannot stand together. The later act of the legislature should be held to be controlling; notwithstanding the draftsman of this 1923 act may have overlooked the formality of including therein a general repealing clause as to prior inconsistent statutory provisions.
Other questions than those hereinbefore considered which the respective parties have presented on this appeal need not be considered because they do not have a decisive bearing upon decision of the controlling issue. Relator's information in the nature of quo warranto is dismissed; but because a somewhat perplexing and public question is involved no costs will be awarded.
CHANDLER, STARR, and BUTZEL, JJ., concurred with NORTH, J.