107 Mich. 181 | Mich. | 1895
Hitherto each ward in the city of Grand Bapids has annually, at the spring election, elected a supervisor and an alderman, the latter for two years and the former for one year. Taxes have been assessed and spread by the supervisors, and the charter provided for a board of review and equalization, composed of three members, one of whom has been elected annually by the city at large. The charter was amended in 1895 (Act No. 444, Local Acts 1895), with a view to the election of six aldermen by the city at large, the reduction of the number of the aldermen to one from each ward, but at the same time to preserve the term of two years and the practice of electing but one-half of the aldermen each year, the creation of a board of assessors, and the abolishment of the office of supervisor. To accomplish these ends, the amended charter provides for the election by the city at large, at the next spring election, of three aldermen for the term of two years and three for the term of one year, and, at each succeeding election, of three aldermen for the term of two years; that at the same election one alderman shall be elected in each ward designated by an even number for a term of two- years, and in each- ward designated by an odd number the alderman whose term is unexpired -shall hold his
Sections 26 to 30 of title 11 of the act are as follows:
"Sec. 26. In all matters not herein specially provided for, the provisions of the original charter of the said city of Grand Rapids, as revised and amended, and now in force, relating to the assessment of taxes within the corporate limits of said city, and the collection of the same, and the disposal of the moneys received therefrom, shall be and remain in full force and effect, if not inconsistent with the provisions of this act.
“Sec. 27. All of the provisions of the general State laws in relation to the making of assessment rolls, and the persons or property to be therein taxed, not inconsistent with the provision® of this act, which at present are performed and executed by the respective supervisors of the several wards of said city, shall, upon the taking effect of this act, be performed and executed by the board of assessors herein created, and the members of said board of assessors shall be ex-officio members of the board of supervisors of the county of Kent.
"Sec. 28. On the first day of October, eighteen hundred ninety-five, the members of the board of review and equalization, as now constituting the present board of review and equalization of said city, shall become vested, for the time being-, with all the powers herein conferred on such board of assessors, and it shall discharge all the*185 duties of such board of assessors herein provided for until such time as is specified in the following section.
“Sec. 29. Whenever the term of office for which any member of the present board of review and equalization-of said city was elected shall expire, a member thereof shall be appointed in his place, for the term hereinbefore provided, by the mayor of said city, and be confirmed by the common council thereof; and such member of said board of assessors shall act in conjunction with the remaining member or members of the present board of review and equalization, as hereinbefore constituted such-board of assessors of said city, in discharging all the duties of such board of assessors herein provided for. Af-ter the expiration of the term of office of the last remaining member of the present board of review and equalization, the members of such ■ board of assessors, herein provided for, shall continue to be appointed as above provided.
“Sec. 30. At the expiration of the term of office of the several supervisors of the respective wards of said city of Grand Rapids, or as soon as said board of assessors is appointed and its members have qualified, said supervisors shall each of them deliver all of the original assessment rolls in their possession by virtue of their office to said board of assessors, and thereafter such assessment rolls shall remain in the office of said board of assessors, and become a part of the official record of the same.”
It is insisted by respondents that the supervisors continue in office under the act until the expiration of their respective terms. The spring election is held on the first Monday of April. City officers, both elective and appointive, hold their offices, under the charter, from the first Monday in May. The value of property subject to taxation is, by the new act, to be ascertained and fixed before the second Monday in April; and the amended charter expressly provides that the board of assessors created by the act shall make the assessment for the year 1896, and shall publish notice of the completion of the assessment 10 days prior to the first Monday in April. Section 3 of title 1 provides that—
*186 “The alderman in each ward, after the annual election in April, eighteen hundred ninety-six, shall represent their several wards upon the hoard of supervisors of the county, and perform all the duties pertaining to supervisors of the townships upon such board, and shall have all the rights, privileges, and powers of the several members of such board of supervisors. They shall select and return lists of grand and petit jurors to- the clerk of the county in the same manner and within the same time as the like duty i.s required to be performed by township officers. * * The ward supervisors in office at the date this act takes effect shall, until the expiration of their term of office for which they were elected, continue to act as members of the board of supervisors of the county of Kent, after which date the ward aldermen shall be such supervisors from the wards as above specified, and perform all the duties pertaining to their offices, except that, when a board of assessors shall be appointed, said supervisors shall cease to perform such duties as are conferred on said board of assessors and heretofore performed by said supervisors.”
Evidently the conversion of the board of review and equalization into a board of assessors was not contemplated when this act was originally prepared, but the appointment of a new board was designed, and the difficulty grows out of a change of purpose in this respect, and the failure to change the text of section 30. The act clearly defines the duties which are to be performed by the supervisors after the act shall take effect, and before the expiration of their terms of office. On the other hand, the act fixes the date when the board of review and equalization shall become vested with the powers conferred upon .such board of assessors. It is significant that the date given is fixed immediately prior to the session of the board of supervisors, and prior to the time when the State and county taxes are spread upon the rolls. The language used in section 30, “as soon as said board of assessors is appointed, and its members have qualified,” cannot be held to mean after the members of the present board of review and equalization have retired, and their successors have qualified, but
It is, however, insisted on behalf of the supervisors, who have been allowed to intervene, that the amendatory act is unconstitutional, in that it interferes, with the right of local self-government. It is said that in the eAren-numbered wards aldermen elected for two years from the first Monday in May, 1895, are removed from office after one year’s service, yet the office of aider-man is not abolished; that in the odd-numbered wards persons elected as aldermen are made ex-officio members of the board of supervisors; that the legislature has undertaken to divest duly-elected supervisors of certain of the functions of their office, and confer the same upon a board, the members of which were elected for another purpose.
The office of supervisor in our cities is created by the legislature. It may either exist or not, at the legislative will. Having this authority, the right of the legislature to abolish that office and confer its functions upon another officer cannot be questioned. A supervisor in a city is not as essential as in a township, and the mere fact that an officer of the city government is denominated a “supervisor” does not take away from the legislature the power to abolish the office, or transfer its functions to another city official. The title to the office may indicate the measure or scope of the duties of the officer, but it does not afford the officer any protection from legislative interference that is not afforded to other city officials. The Constitution nowhere requires the election by cities of a supervisor, but it makes it the duty of the legislature to provide for the incorporation and organization of cities and villages, and gives to cities such representation in the board of supervisors as the legislature
There is no force in the contention that the legislature has discriminated in favor of the odd-numbered wards. Offices are created for the public, and not for private, benefit. To reduce the number of aldermen, and at the same time preserve the term, the legislature, instead of providing for the election of an entire new. board, in which the aldermen elected in the odd-numbered wards should serve for one year and those in the even-numbered wards should serve for two years, enacted that the aider-men in the odd-numbered wards should serve out their terms, and in the even-numbered wards the term of the aldermen elect should be two years. The even-numbered wards have no cause to complain because an election was not ordered in the other wards. They have been deprived, it is true, of the services of experienced aldermen, but they possess the power to re-elect.
The writ must issue as prayed.