The particular facts in this case are important in deciding the issues involved. Warren is a home-rule city and for a number of years its treasurers, without any objection from the city council, determined what investments should be made with temporarily surplus city funds. Finally one treasurer made some extremely questionable and completely inappropriate investments which ended in the city’s losing large sums of money. Fortunately for the city, these losses were repaid by the brokerage house that handled the improper financial transactions. The state and bonding authorities were aghast and steps were taken to prevent the recurrence of investments of this nature.
The city council then adopted an investment policy with the concurrence of the defendant who was then a council member. When the defendant was elected treasurer, she made it clear that she would follow the policy guidelines only insofar as they did not interfere with the powers and duties imposed by statute and charter on the Office of Treasurer. She then proceeded to make investments obviously outside the guidelines. She also took it upon herself to refuse to pay some obligations authorized by the city council.
The city attorney and the attorney general both clearly opined that the city council alone had the authority to decide where city monies were to be *655 invested. The defendant looked at the city charter and the long history of the treasurers making such determinations and decided she disagreed with their legal opinions. On April 29, 1980, she asked the council if it would provide an attorney for her if the matter were litigated as the city proposed. The council said it would consider the matter on May 13 after proper notice.
On May 7, 1980, the city and the city council commenced a mandamus action in circuit court and had an order to show cause issued against the defendant for hearing on May 12, 1980. On that day the hearing was adjourned at plaintiffs’ request. On May 13, 1980, the council denied the defendant monies for an attorney. She thereupon retained the law firm which she had already consulted as to what her charter responsibilities were. Thereafter, the show cause was dismissed by the plaintiffs, the resolution setting the guidelines was converted to a city ordinance, and the plaintiffs amended their complaint to ask for a declaratory judgment. On the motion of the plaintiffs for summary judgment, the trial court concluded that the council had authority to impose limitations on the investment of city funds and that the treasurer’s duties relative to investments and the releasing of checks to cover council appropriations were purely ministerial.
Thereafter, the defendant asked the city for attorney fees to reimburse her privately retained attorneys. After five days of trial the court directed a verdict of liability for attorney fees and the jury awarded the amount billed of $47,788.66. The trial court refused to add interest thereto.
The plaintiffs appeal from the directing of a verdict of liability for attorney fees. The defendant appeals from the failure to grant investment re *656 sponsibilities to her office and a failure to award interest.
We affirm the trial court in all respects.
Relative to investment responsibilities, the defendant relies on § 7.12(c) of the city charter and the long history of its interpretation by usage to permit the treasurer to decide matters of investment. Section 7.12 of the city charter provides in pertinent part:
"(b) [The treasurer] shall receive all moneys belonging to and receivable by the city, that may be collected by any official or employee, including license fees, taxes, assessments, and all other charges belonging to and payable to the city and also moneys available to the city from the state, county, or federal government, or any court, and shall have custody of all public funds belonging to or under the control of the city. He shall deposit all such funds in such depositories as may be designated by the council in accordance with law and shall pay no money out of the treasury, except pursuant to authority of the council signed by the secretary of the council and countersigned by the controller.
"(c) He shall have custody of all investments and invested funds of the city or in its possession in a fiduciary capacity and shall have and be responsible for the safekeeping of all bonds and notes of the city and for the receipt and delivery of city bonds and notes for transfer, registration, or exchange.”
These sections in effect make the treasurer the custodian of funds and investments. That officer keeps the passbooks, the checks, the CDs, the bonds, and other memorabilia of investments, but the officer does not have the power to determine which kind of investments can be made. That is determined by the city council under § 3.1(b):
"The city shall have power to manage and control the *657 finances, rights, interests, buildings, and property, to enter into contracts, to do any act to advance the interests, good government, and prosperity of the city and its inhabitants, and to protect the public peace, morals, health, safety, and general welfare. In the exercise of such powers, the city may enact ordinances, rules, and regulations, and take such other action as may be required, not inconsistent with law.”
Generally, the authority of the city to invest public funds is set forth in MCL 129.91; MSA 3.843(1):
"The legislative or governing body of a county, city, * * * by resolution, may authorize its treasurer * * * to invest surplus funds belonging to and under the control of the political subdivision * * *.”
Thereafter follows the type of investments the legislative body may authorize the treasurer to invest in.
Courts, in interpreting ambiguous laws, do take note of and often rely on the practical construction given to those laws.
Union School Dist of Owosso v Goodrich,
"The principle that a long-standing interpretation of a statute by the agency which administers it is entitled to great weight does not control when the interpretation is clearly wrong. Schuhknecht v State Plumbing Board,277 Mich 183 , 186-187;269 NW 136 (1936).”
*658 Did the treasurer have the right to refuse to sign checks to pay debts when the disbursements had been duly authorized by the city council?
The answer is "no”. The city charter granted the city attorney the authority to review the validity of council action. Section 7.10(a), subds (3) and (4) of the charter stated those duties:
"(3) Prosecuting charter and ordinance violations and conducting such cases in court and before other legally constituted tribunals as the council may direct;
"(4) Preparing or reviewing all ordinances, contracts, bonds, and other written instruments which are submitted by the council or by the officers and boards in matters of legal nature relating to the affairs of the city.”
Moreover, under Chapter 7, § 7.15(5), the city controller was required to "[cjheck all proposed expenditures and, before any contract which requires the expenditure of public money shall be effective, certify to the availability of appropriated funds therefor”.
Besides § 7.12(b) already quoted, the charter in § 8.8 provided:
"Unless otherwise provided by law or by ordinance, all funds drawn from the treasury shall be drawn pursuant to the authority and appropriation of the council. The controller, where necessary to expedite operating procedures, may authorize in writing, other officers and employees of the city to make minor disbursements from petty cash accounts.”
There is no section of the charter granting the treasurer the power to refuse to disburse funds as authorized by the council. The treasurer had no such authority. In issuing checks per council orders she would act in a ministerial capacity.
*659 On the issue of the defendant’s right to reimbursement of attorney fees, our appellate courts have long tried to consider the need for public officials to reasonably exercise their discretion in what they in good faith believe is the exercise of the powers and responsibilities of their office. Sometimes this requires legal advice and assistance in this modern world of ours so full of litigation. The courts have likewise been concerned with officials who obstinately in bad faith and without good reason set themselves contrary to and above the law and then require public funds for their defense. There must be a fine balance line between these positions.
We look at the principal Michigan cases. In
Smedley v Grand Haven,
In
Exeter Twp Clerk v Exeter Twp Bd,
In our case the record clearly establishes that the defendant was acting in her official capacity. She, like the members of the city council, was an elected official bound to act under the guidelines of the statutes, charter, and ordinances. She was performing what she firmly believed was an obligation required of her by the charter. The city had not refused legal advice but the city attorney, selected by the mayor, was actively, diametrically opposed to her legal position. She had secured advice from a competent law firm before the city refused her permission to hire an attorney. The city obviously was in an adversary position to the defendant but still wanted the defendant to rely on her adversaries’ attorney’s advice. If there is a good-faith disagreement, this is hardly the way to encourage public officials to act as they honestly believe the law requires them to act in the performance of their duties.
We are a bit concerned with the fact that the attorney general’s opinion indicates that the city’s legislative body was authorized to direct the treasurer in the investment of funds. The defendant knew of this opinion before her adamant refusal to follow the city’s resolution relative to guidelines. We do note, of course, that the attorney general’s opinion does not necessarily bind city treasurers or courts of record. In addition, the question asked of the attorney general was, "Does the action of the Warren City Council in establishing an Investment Policy Committee amount to an illegal delegation of power under the Warren City Charter, Section 7.12?” He was, therefore, directly concerned with an issue not germane to this lawsuit. The trea *662 surer was not necessarily bound to follow this opinion.
Exeter did not raise the question of whether good faith and reasonableness of action on behalf of the public official were necessary before the official would be entitled to reimbursement of attorney fees. It was abundantly evident in that case that the clerk acted reasonably and in good faith in hiring an attorney to assist her. Those elements were not in issue. We believe that a public official who acts arbitrarily, completely without good faith in a dogmatic, unreasonable manner, clearly contrary to the dictates of his official responsibilities under statute, charter or ordinance, certainly shouldn’t be able to recover attorney fee reimbusement after he loses his lawsuit. Smedley hints at this.
In our case, those issues really weren’t raised on this appeal, but good faith and the reasonableness of a public official’s actions are proper elements to consider in determining whether the official should be indemnified for attorney fees incurred to assist in the performance of official duties. Here the record speaks of great antagonism between the council and the treasurer but it does not indicate such arbitrary and unreasonable posturing by the treasurer as to deny her the right of indemnification. We note that there are Michigan appellate cases which seem to support her position relative to the investments of money. It was not an open and shut issue.
Should interest be added to the judgment? An award of interest on a money judgment is mandatory.
State Highway Comm v Great Lakes Express Co,
Under the facts of this case we affirm.
