36 Mich. 377 | Mich. | 1877
A mandamus is sought for to compel provision to be made by taxation to pay certain warrants issued in June and November, 1874, and January, 1875, purporting to be dated at Crawford’s Quarry, and to have been issued by order of the board of supervisors, signed by J.-- Burnham, chairman, and Frederick Denny Larke, clerk.
The answer, which is not controverted by the relator, denies that the county had any legal organization until after the act of 1875, which made adequate provision for it, and treated it as then unorganized; that in 1870 a single township, of Rogers, not embracing the whole county, was organized by the supervisors of Alpena, to which Presque Isle county was then attached. A statute was passed in 1871, providing for its separate organization, but creating no new townships. This statute provided for election of county officers during that spring, or at any future time, on' ten days’ notice, given by the clerk of Rogers, and fixed the county seat at Rogers City until lawfully removed. On the
In 1875 the legislature, treating Presque Isle county as still unorganized, divided it into townships, and made the other necessary arrangements to give it legal existence.
In 1874 Frederick Burnham and Leonard C. Crawford, as supervisors, held a meeting at Crawford’s Quarry (and not at Rogers City), and adjourned from the 13th to the 28th of February, when they passed a resolution declaring it expedient to remove the county seat from Rogers City to Crawford’s Quarry, and for submitting the question of removal to a vote of the inhabitants of the several townships in the county on the 6th of April. The meeting of February 13th is averred to have been illegal, and without notice to the clerk, or his deputy, neither of whom attended that or the adjourned meeting.
The warrants in. question, amounting to twenty-six hundred and forty dollars, were issued upon a contract for county buildings, and all issued within seven months. The question of raising or borrowing money was never submitted to a vote of the people. The statute requires all sums beyond one thousand dollars, for building purposes, to be authorized by a popular vote. — O. L., § 477.
It also appears that no notice was given of the place to which it was proposed to remove the county seat, which is the especial question on which the vote of the people is to be taken. — G. L., § 483.
It also appears that there are no orders or resolutions in the records of the board of supervisors authorizing the issue of the warrants in question. It further appears that while the warrants are issued nominally to Samuel Boggs, payable to him or bearer, he being nominal contractor for said buildings, yet the relator was the real party in interest,
Under these circumstances we are not disposed to discuss the question when the county of Presque Isle was organized, or to enter upon the examination of the other questions concerning the townships.
A mandamibs will not issue to enforce any doubtful right. The answer, for the purposes of the present controversy, is taken as true; and if true, it shows that these warrants were issued without authority, to a party having notice of their invalidity, and for a purpose which was illegal. It cannot be claimed, as this record stands, that the county buildings were lawfully contracted for, nor that the county seat had been removed, if the county itself was in existence. There has been no legislative recognition of the removal, and even if lawfully removed, the contract for buildings for more than one thousand dollars was unauthorized.
Acting .upon this answer as admitted, we must deny the mandamus, with costs against the relator.