253 N.W. 240 | Mich. | 1934
Albert A. Carroll was formerly superintendent of police of the city of Grand Rapids. There was a change of city administration. Charges were preferred against Carroll and he was summarily removed by defendants. The proceedings for his removal were brought to this court by certiorari and December 5, 1933, this court filed an opinion (
"The office of a certiorari is not however to review questions of fact, but questions of law. And in examining into the evidence the appellate court does so not to determine whether the probabilities preponderate one way or the other but simply to determine whether the evidence is such that it will justify the finding as a legitimate inference from the facts proved, whether that inference would or would not have been drawn by the appellate tribunal." Jackson v. People,
It is not a flexible remedy. "All we can do under it is to quash or refuse to quash the proceedings." Whitbeck v. CommonCouncil, Village of Hudson,
"The sole question presented by the writ is, Was the action valid? The only order that could be entered was one of affirmation or reversal, quashing the proceedings."Dubois v. Riley Township Board,
"On certiorari questions of law only are reviewable, and it is the general rule that, when an order or judgment is reversed in certiorari proceedings, the whole case falls. It is an end to the case." Van Dyke v. Doughty,
The only thing this court could do when the case was brought here by certiorari was to determine whether it should sustain or affirm the proceedings or whether it would reverse or quash the proceedings. This court, by its opinion, found there was no material testimony sustaining the determination and findings of defendant and upon the filing of the opinion an order was entered that, "The determination of the city commission of Grand Rapids acting as a civil service board in sustaining the charges, or any of them, made against the appellant is vacated and the removal of appellant from the office of superintendent of police is set aside and held for naught." The result of the order of this court was to quash the proceedings of the city commission of Grand Rapids acting as a civil service board. No affirmative order was made. The city commission of Grand Rapids, acting as a civil service board, were not ordered to do or not to do any particular thing. This court, on certiorari, was without power or authority to make any order for affirmative action upon the part of the city commission of Grand Rapids acting as a civil service board. There being no order of the court requiring the performance of any affirmative act by the city commission of Grand Rapids acting as a civil service board, action by such city commission acting as a civil service board, subsequent to the quashing of the proceedings heretofore in this court, cannot be contempt. If new proceedings were instituted against Mr. Carroll by the city commission of Grand Rapids, acting as a civil *127 service board, or if he was subsequently removed from the office of the superintendent of police of Grand Rapids without proper proceedings taken, such action is undoubtedly subject to be reviewed by him, but such action upon the part of the city commission of Grand Rapids, acting as a civil service board, cannot be construed to be contempt of this court when there was no affirmative order of this court requiring the city commission of Grand Rapids, acting as a civil service board, to do or not to do anything. There having been no affirmative order of this court outstanding at the time of the action by the city commission acting as a civil service board, complained of, contempt proceedings cannot be maintained.
The petition for an order committing defendants for contempt is dismissed.
NELSON SHARPE, C.J., and NORTH, FEAD, WIEST, BUTZEL, BUSHNELL, and EDWARD M. SHARPE, JJ., concurred.