On February 9, 1972, plaintiff-appellee filed a complaint against Wayne County for an injunction restraining the county from paying salaries of the recorder’s court judges. The City of Detroit was added as a party defendant and judges of the recorder’s court intervened as defendants. Wayne Circuit Judge Blair Moody, Jr., rendered summary judgment for defendants. The Court of Appeals reversed the summary judgment in an opinion by two members of a three-judge panel (the third not participating by reason of illness) finding summary judgment for plaintiff Wayne County was enjoined from assessment for payment of salaries of recorder’s court judiciary. Defendants-appellants, judges of the recorder’s court, appealed. This Court granted leave to appeal and entered an order staying the Court of Appeals order. We reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate the trial court’s order of summary judgment in favor of defendants, judges of the recorder’s court and the City of Detroit.
Issue
Was the municipal courts of record act,
I
In 1824 criminal jurisdiction in the City of Detroit was in the mayor’s court for ordinance viola
*262
tions, in the justice of the peace court for state misdemeanors and preliminary examinations and in the Wayne Circuit Court for all other state law offenses. 2 Territorial Laws, p 226.
Recorder’s court was created in 1857 by
*263
The instant case concerns provisions for recorder’s court found in the 1883 (as amended by
Section 6 of
"Each of said judges shall receive from the treasury of the State of Michigan the same annual salary as may be payable to circuit judges. They shall also each receive from the treasury of the city of Detroit such additional salary as shall be sufficient, with the sum so received from the State, to make the salary of each of said judges five thousand dollars.” 3
However, § 13 of
"Each judge of said court, including the presiding judge, shall receive an annual salary from the county in which said court is located in the same amount as that paid by the State to circuit judges * * * .” 4
Section 7 of
Plaintiff and Wayne County argue that the 1919 act was never validly adopted, therefore, the 1883 act as amended controls on salaries of recorder’s court judges and Wayne County is not responsible for those salaries. They contend the 1919 act is a local act requiring a referendum under Const 1908, art 5, § 30, which provides:
"The Legislature shall pass no local or special act in *264 any case where a general act can be made applicable, and whether a general act can be made applicable shall be a judicial question. No local or special act, excepting acts repealing local or special acts in effect January one, nineteen hundred nine and receiving a two-thirds vote of the Legislature shall take effect until approved by a majority of the electors voting thereon in the district to be affected.”
Plaintiff and Wayne County argue that the district affected by § 13 of
Judges of the recorder’s court argue that recorder’s court performs a state function and § 13 of
The City of Detroit argues that establishment and funding of a municipal court is a state legislative function under Const 1850, art 6, § 1 and not subject to local control. Moreover, this state legislative function is not affected by Const 1908, art 5, §30.
Other arguments made by the parties are not necessary to resolution of this case.
Wayne Circuit Judge Moody held that recorder’s court performs a state, not local, function and it is reasonable for the Legislature to charge the county for part of the salaries of the recorder’s court judges. The 1919 act was partly a local act and partly a general state funding act. The general funding section did not require referendum approval under Const 1908, art 5, § 30.
The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that
*265
II
In
Attorney General, ex rel Cotter v Lindsay,
The Court held that the 1921 act (amending the 1919 act) was a local act. Therefore, it was unconstitutional because of lack of compliance with the referendum requirement. The Court’s reasoning worked in two steps: (1) The 1919 act is a local act because it amended local acts, its object as expressed in its title indicates a local act, the entirety of the act indicates a local act and the § 7 referendum requirement indicates a local act; and (2) Since the 1921 act amended the 1919 act which is a local act, the 1921 act is a local act requiring referendum approval under the 1908 Constitution.
As the Court of Appeals noted, the Lindsay Court conceded validity of the 1919 act. This would seemingly end the instant litigation in favor of the judges, and the parties have so argued. However, the Court of Appeals did not find that this foreclosed the present challenge to the 1919 act because its constitutionality was not squarely before the Lindsay Court. Rather, focus was on the 1921 act.
Similarly, the question of whether the funding section of the 1919 act is a local act has never been squarely presented to this Court. It is true that the Lindsay Court generally characterized the *266 1919 act as a local act. However, the funding section is a unique section of the act and it has not been the point of discussion. Therefore, Lindsay does not control the instant case.
In
Common Council of Detroit v Engel,
The Court classified the 1915 amendment as a local act, requiring a referendum under Const 1908, art 5, § 30.
The Court rejected the argument that the act was not local because it was concerned with education. The fact that it pertained only to Detroit made the act local. The subject of education did not place the Legislature above and beyond constitutional limitations (Const 1908, art 5, § 30).
In discussing the relation between Const 1908, art 5, § 30 and the Legislature’s authority to legislate on education, the Court said:
"It cannot in reason be otherwise than that all powers of the legislature, whatever they may be, are, under and by virtue of the Constitution, subject to general constitutional mandates and limitations imposed on legislation without reservation.” (p 543.)
Engel raises a serious question, i.e., is the subject of judicial funding above and beyond constitutional limitations? Engel is more "on point” in declaring that a subject of general legislation is not exempted from the local act referendum requirement where the challenged statute pertains to a particular location. However, several cases *267 have held the local act designation inappropriate even in those circumstances.
In
Attorney General, ex rel Eaves v State Bridge Commission,
In
City of Ecorse v Peoples Community Hospital Authority,
"We have here a matter of health, which is a question of Statewide concern and in which the legislature has a large area of discretion. The defendant authority is a State agency and, as such, is not a municipal corporation or a body created by the municipalities here involved but by the State itself. See the
Huron-Clinton Case, supra
[
In
W A Foote Memorial Hospital, Inc v City of Jackson Hospital Authority,
*268 W A Foote, Peoples Community Hospital and State Bridge Commission indicate that Engel is not the sole authority on exempting a general subject of legislation from the local act referendum requirement where the challenged statute pertains to a particular location. More importantly, funding of the judiciary is a unique situation presenting overriding state concerns. Engel does not apply in the instant case.
In
People, ex rel Schmittdiel v Board of Auditors of Wayne County,
"The office of the police court is to perform, within the city of Detroit, the duties performed by justices of the peace in townships, in the examination and trial of offenders against the criminal laws of the state, the police justice and the clerk sharing between them the duties elsewhere performed by justices alone. They are in no sense county officers; they are rather city officials, so far as place is concerned. Their duties relate entirely to the enforcement of criminal law, against offenders charged with violating the peace and dignity of the state, whose offenses are committed in Detroit. The only circumstances which connect these officers with the county, are the facts that offenses are tried in counties and that the officers are paid by the counties. But otherwise, the counties are no more directly affected than the state at large. They have no control over the *269 appointment or conduct of justices, nor over the prosecutions themselves, which are all conducted in obedience to state laws, and in which the county, as a public body, has no voice whatever.
"Upon examination of our state policy, before and since the adoption of the new constitution, it will be found that many charges have been laid on counties, as such, where no beneñt accrued to them in their corporate capacity, but where it was, doubtless, deemed a fair way of apportioning the public expenses. It would be difficult to perceive what advantage a county derives from the civil proceedings between parties in the courts of justice, or why, if there be any advantage, the services of the judge, as well as of jurors and witnesses should not be deemed services rendered for the counties where they respectively sit. It is an advantage to have justice accessible to all, and to have evil-doers punished, but acts which do not affect the interests and security of the public at large have not usually been classed as crimes (although the distinctions are somewhat arbitrary), and the advantages in all these cases result to the community generally.” (Emphasis added.) (pp 234-235.)
Therefore, Wayne County was required to pay the salary of a Detroit police court clerk whose duties related to trying state offenses committed in Detroit. The rationale was that this system was "deemed a fair way of apportioning the public expenses”. 6
In
Robison v Wayne Circuit Judges,
"The care of juvenile delinquents might well be and often is committed to the county rather than the city authorities. Their care and trial is the subject of police regulation, and cannot be said to be of the private concern of one municipality rather than another.” (p 321.)
The Court cited Schmittdiel in support.
The Court in
Murtha v Lindsay,
"It is exercised by the person inducted into the office of recorder, not as an incident to a local office held by him, nor as an imposition upon a local officer of the performance of State duties. The office is inseparable from the entire jurisdiction of the officer, a jurisdiction conferred by the legislature with the sanction of the Constitution in force when jurisdiction was established. It is by virtue of State authority alone that the office exists.
"The serious question, or part of the question, is: Does the person taking the office do so by virtue of 'any other State authority,’ within the meaning of the Constitution? In a sense, all justices of the peace, constables, and judges of courts of record are appointed — hold office — by virtue of State authority. The recorder’s court is, when exercising jurisdiction to try persons accused of crimes, under the general laws of the State, a State *271 court; its judges exercising the powers of a circuit judge.” (Emphasis added.)
In
Civil Service Commission v Engel,
"The recorder’s court is a court established by the legislature, although its creation is evidenced by the charter of the city, which is a local law. It is a court of record, with jurisdiction to try persons accused of crimes committed within the city. The execution of the criminal laws of the State is a matter of State concern, and in this respect the court possesses a jurisdiction which the electors of the city cannot confer. Power to amend the charter the electors have, but not power to interfere with the jurisdiction of this court, in so far as it relates to matters of State concern. It follows, logically, that the electors may not, by amendment of the charter, interfere with the incidental powers possessed by the recorder in exercising the jurisdiction which the court possesses, such as the appointment of necessary clerks of the court. ’’(Emphasis added.) (pp 87-88.)
In
People v De Meaux,
"The office of justice of the peace is a part of the *272 judicial system of this State, and in the exercise of the important functions of this office the persons filling it cannot be said to be performing duties local in character, but must rather be said to be performing duties in behalf of the entire State.
"Chief Justice Campbell, in the case of
People v Goodwin,
" 'The judicial department of every civilized government is one of the three co-ordinate parts of the sovereignty which acts for the State in expounding the laws and enactments in which the other departments have acted for the people as legislators and the approvers of legislation. It represents only the law by which the people have, by their proper agents, bound themselves. It cannot, therefore, in any of its duties, be said to serve any county, or circuit, or district. Its services are all performed on behalf of the State, as the sovereignty from which all the law emanates. We held in the case of
People, ex rel Schmittdiel, v Board of Auditors of Wayne County,
Recorder’s court is a state court performing a state function, not a local function. Funding of the state judicial system is a legislative function. And, as noted in
Schmittdiel
and
Robison,
it is not unusual to charge the counties for these services as a fair way of apportioning public expenses. Because recorder’s court is a state function, the Legislature has authority to determine its funding. Therefore, § 13 of
Moreover, as noted by the trial court and City of Detroit, it is reasonable for the Legislature to charge the county for part of recorder’s court judge’s salaries because recorder’s court absorbs *273 part of the Wayne Circuit Court load. The City of Detroit notes that its share of the 1975-1976 budget for recorder’s court is in excess of $9,000,-000 while the county pays approximately $600,000 towards judicial salaries.
Ill
Further support for classifying
Const 1908, art 5, § 30 provides that the "Legislature shall pass no local or special act in any case where a general act can be made applicable, and whether a general act can be made applicable shall be a judicial question”. If recorder’s court requires a local act, a general act cannot be used.
However, Const 1908, art 7, § 1, gives the Legislature the right to establish "such other courts of civil and criminal jurisdiction, inferior to the supreme court * * * , by a two-thirds vote of the members elected to each house”. Thus, the Legislature has authority to pass a general act establishing recorder’s court.
Because the 1908 Constitution gave the Legislature the right, by general act, to establish courts (art 7, § 1), the intent of the 1908 Constitution was that the Legislature should be able to establish and modify recorder’s court without a local act referendum. Article 7, § 1 concerns a specific subject, the court system, while art 5, § 30 concerns a general subject, local acts.
7
Therefore, art 7, § 1
*274
prevails when dealing with the state judicial system.
8
McDonald v Schnipke,
Legislative revisions of recorder’s court are general acts.
The Court of Appeals is reversed and the trial court’s summary judgment for defendants is reinstated.
No costs, this being a public question.
Notes
MCLA 726.1 et seq.; MSA 27.3551 et seq. (the recorder’s court act).
MCLA 725.1 et seq.; MSA 27.3941 et seq. (the municipal courts of record act).
MCLA 726.6; MSA 27.3556.
MCLA 725.13; MSA 27.3953.
MCLA 725.7; MSA 27.3947 provides in part:
"This act, or any amendment thereto, other than this section shall not become operative in any municipality of this state unless and until it is submitted to a vote of the qualified electors thereof and ratified by a majority of the electors voting thereon.”
See, also, People, ex rel Knox v Treasurer of Wayne,
“The rule to be followed when there is a conflict between general and specific provisions in the Constitution is as follows:
“ 'In such a case, if there is a conflict between a general and a special provision in a constitution, the special provision must prevail in respect of its subject matter, since it will be regarded as a limitation on the general grant, but the general provision will be left to control in cases where the special provision does not apply.’ 16 Am Jur 2d, Constitutional Law, § 69, p 247, and cases there cited.”
McDonald v Schnipke,
If it were to be held otherwise, the result would be incongruous. Article 5, § 30 allowed the Legislature to repeal local acts in effect on January 1, 1909 by a 2/3 vote of the Legislature. If the 1919 act were held to be a local act, the Legislature would be able to repeal part of the state’s judicial system (recorder’s court), but it could not revise it unless local voters approved.
