The County of Wayne has funded portions of the salaries of Detroit Recorder’s Court judges for 55 years. The legality of that well-established practice is challenged in this appeal.
Appellant can hardly take credit for this, however. He has failed to submit a brief in accordance with GCR 1963, 813. We have been given a sheaf of papers labeled "brief’, but careful and repeated readings of its contents have as yet served no purpose. Appellant’s one-paragraph "argument” is simply a series of unsupported conclusions. If this were the usual case, we would hold that appellant’s failure to file a brief constitutes issue abandonment. Mitcham v Detroit,
But this is not the usual case. The trial judge, the principal defendants, and the intervening defendants have done an excellent job in developing, researching, and analyzing the troublesome issues presented here. We have also been favored with a comprehensive, scholarly opinion by the trial judge. Because this case involves the important question of the constitutionality of a state statute, because its resolution affects all of the residents of Wayne County, and because it has been properly prepared for decision, plaintiffs failure to shoulder his appellate burden should be ignored.
The parties agree that this case involves solely a question of law and can appropriately be disposed of by summary judgment. We proceed to consider whether the trial judge erred in entering summary judgment on behalf of defendants rather than plaintiff.
Prior to 1920, the judges of the Recorder’s Court of the City of Detroit were paid pursuant to MCLA 726.6; MSA 27.3556, which provides, in pertinent part:
"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. * * * ” (Emphasis added.)
In 1919, the Michigan Legislature enacted PA No. 369. This act was enabling legislation designed to permit our cities to establish municipal courts and to allow municipalities already possessing municipal courts to adopt the procedural alterations it contained. Section 13 of the 1919 act
"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 * * * .”2 (Emphasis supplied.) On April 5, 1920 the 1919 act was approved by a majority of the electorate of the City of Detroit.3
Since Recorder’s Court is the municipal court for the City of Detroit, People v Buckley,
II.
Plaintiff attacks the assessment of Wayne County residents for payment of part of the salaries of the judges of the Recorder’s Court.
We have concluded that
At the time of the passage of the 1919 act and the 1920 referendum held in the City of Detroit to consider its adoption, the Constitution of 1908 governed. Article 5, § 30 of that Constitution provided, in pertinent part, as follows:
"No local or special act * * * shall take effect until approved by a majority of the electors voting thereon in the district to be affected.”6
"Whether we consider the object of the act of 1919 as expressed in its title, consider the act in its entirety, or consider the limitations placed on the referendum found in section 7,7 we are irresistably forced to the conclusion that the act is amendatory of local legislation and is local in character.”
In concluding that
The question remaining is whether Wayne County residents inhabit a portion of the "district to be affected” by the 1919 act such that they were constitutionally entitled to vote for or against its adoption before it could become effective.
Defendants argue that the City of Detroit is the only "district affected” by the act, because it primarily reorganized and improved the Recorder’s Court for the City of Detroit. This "local court refurbishing”
However, we face here a local law which seeks to impose on Wayne County residents a financial burden without their majority approval as required by the Constitution.
"Considering the history of legislation under the Constitution of 1850, it is apparent that there had grown up a pernicious practice on the part of the legislature in passing local acts. The practice was bad in two very important particulars. In the first place, much of the legislation thus enacted constituted a direct and unwarranted interference in purely local affairs and an invasion of the principles of local self-government. In the second place, such legislation affecting as it did certain limited localities in the [s]tate, the senators and representatives from unaffected districts were usually complaisant, and agreed to its enactment without the exercise of that intelligence and judgment which all legislation is entitled to receive from all the members of the legislature. This course led to many abuses (principally in amendments to city charters), some of which found their way into the courts, and were there redressed so far as the Constitution then in force would permit.
"With these evils in mind, the Constitution of 1909 [sic] was formulated and adopted by the people. From a reading of the provisions above quoted and others of a similar character, it is, we think, entirely clear that it was the settled purpose of the framers of the new instrument and of the people who adopted it to forever insure to the people the right to control their affairs purely local, and to secure for all general legislation grave attention and the application of the collective wisdom of the legislators.”
Because
We are asked nevertheless to ignore this clear constitutional infirmity and legitimate the 55-year-old practice of assessing Wayne County taxpayers a portion of the cost of Recorder’s Court judges’ salaries.
This is not a case involving the construction of the statute whose legislative purpose is in doubt and where a long-standing legislative interpretation would properly be accorded considerable weight. People v Detroit, G H & M R Co,
A situation similar to that presented in the instant case was before our Supreme Court in Dearborn Township v Dearborn Township Clerk,
The Court, in overturning the statute, said:
"Our reluctance to overturn an action of the legislature increases when we are confronted by an enactment of such ancient vintage. For over 100 years justices of the peace have sat upon township boards within the State of Michigan without any question being raised as to their eligibility. If we were confronted with a matter*199 of construction of a statute containing some claimed ambiguity or with a mere technical objection, long acquiescence in a certain interpretation of such statute might be binding on us. But neither contemporaneous construction nor long acquiescence can prevail over the plain language of the Constitution when the constitutional question is presented to us for the first time. Repetition of error does not correct it nor can acquiescence for a very long time legalize a clear usurpation of power. * * * ”
The violation asserted here, even more than the breach of the separation of powers clause found in Dearborn Township, strikes at the very foundation of our constitutional system. Taxation without the consent of the governed is hardly an alien doctrine. A revolution was fought to guarantee this protection to our citizens. It is important that we reaffirm our allegiance to this principle, embodied in art 5, § 30 of the 1908 Constitution, on the eve of the bicentennial celebration.
Accordingly, we hold that Wayne County is not empowered to assess its taxpayers any part of the salary costs of the judges of the Recorder’s Court. Wayne County officials are hereby restrained from making any further such assessments.
The order granting summary judgment in favor of defendant is reversed. Summary judgment is entered in behalf of plaintiff. No costs, a public question being involved.
Judge Garland did not participate due to illness.
Notes
Former circuit judge, sitting on the Court of Appeals by assignment pursuant to Const 1963, art 6, § 23 as amended in 1968.
MCLA 725.13; MSA 27.3953.
The italicized word "county” is inexplicably and erroneously made "city” in the MSA version. This may reflect a codification of
Counter-affidavit of James Jackson, Jr., Deputy City Clerk for the City of Detroit.
Plaintiffs standing to assert the arguments discussed here is established by Menendez v Detroit,
For a similar provision in the 1963 Constitution, see Const 1963, art 4, § 29.
"Sec. 7. This act other than this section shall not become operative in any municipality of the 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. The legislative body of any city now having a municipal court of record may by a majority vote thereof submit to the qualified electors the question of adopting the provisions of this act or said questions may be submitted by initiatory petition in the same manner and with like effect as is or may be provided by law for the proposal and submission of amendments to the charter of any such city. All proceedings with reference to the submission of the question shall conform as nearly as may be to the requirements of the State law governing the submission of charter amendments; and the votes cast on the question shall be counted, canvassed and returned and the result declared in the same manner. A recount of the votes so cast may also be had in the same manner as is or may be provided for a recount of the ballots cast on proposed charter amendments.”
The constitutionality of
See n 7, supra.
This term was coined by the trial judge.
Though the referendum held in Detroit included the funding portion of the act, the vote on that portion is said to have been superfluous since the Legislature is claimed to possess the authority to require Wayne County taxpayers to pay the salaries in any event.
One would think that the efficiency of the Recorder’s Court has a serious impact on all Wayne County residents.
We do not decide whether the Legislature can ever allow one group of citizens to impose fiscal burdens on another group of citizens without the latter’s having a voice in the decision. That delegation problem is not before us.
In addition, Wayne County residents who, like plaintiff, are not also residents of the City of Detroit are prohibited from voting in a Recorder’s Court judges’ election, MCLA 168.426c; MSA 6.1426(3). Their residency also makes them unqualified to run for the office of Recorder’s Court judge. MCLA 168.426b; MSA 6.1426(2).
This request comes mainly from defendant Wayne County, whose corporation counsel has prepared a legal opinion which agrees with our conclusion that
See, e.g.,
Const 1908, art 4, §§ 1 and 2.
