Dеfendant pled guilty to unarmed robbery in Wayne County Circuit Court on May 17, 1971, and was sentenced to prison for a term of *312 3 to 15 years. She was placed in the custody of the Detroit House of Correction.
A claim of appeal was filed on July 17, 1971. On September 27, 1971, defendant filed a motion to remand for an evidentiary hearing on the question of whether her sentence constituted cruel and unusual punishment and a denial of equal protеction of the law. The motion was granted October 11, 1971. On October 21, 1971, defendant filed in the sentencing court a motion to vacate her sentence. The prosecutor came to the Court of Appeals on November 11, 1971, and requested a rehearing of this Court’s remand and a stay of the proceedings below. The stay was granted November 19, 1971. This Court requested that two issues be briefed: first, where was the proper forum for determining issues raised by defendant and second, what was the proper procedure for raising the issues, i.e., whether the proper procedure was a motion to set aside the sentence, a motion for a new trial or a writ of habeas corpus. A rehearing on the motion to remand to the trial judge was granted and briefs filed, with the Attorney General responding on behalf of the people. The Attorney General’s motion to set aside the order of remand was granted February 23, 1972. Subsequently, a motion to dismiss defendant’s appeal was filed by the Attorney General on August 22, 1972, but it was denied September 15,1972.
Ten issues are raised by defendant on her appeal, but we have cause to discuss only the last four issues raised. The first six issues 1 concern the *313 quality of the living conditions in the Detroit House of Correction and the character of defendant’s confinement, matters that we cannоt adequately assess because a proper record has not been made. As to a determination of those issues, defendant may bring an original action in a proper court.
Issues VII through X are primarily legal ones concerned with the constitutionality of the statutes creating the Detroit House of Correction, and these are matters with which we can now deal as briefed on appeal. Our authority to rеview the legal question surrounding defendant’s sentence is derived from our power to review sentences generally. See,
e.g., People v Tanner,
Defendant frames issue VII as follows:
"Because the statutes establishing the Detroit House of Correction and mandating that females be incarcerated there, promulgate standards which irrationally and capriciously discriminate against women prisoners, defendant was denied the equal protection of the law when she was sеnt to DeHoCo, , and hence the statutes establishing DeHoCo and requiring that women be sent there are unconstitutional on their face.”
Defendant contends that there is a Federal and
*314
state constitutional and a Michigan case law basis for the proposition that legislation which irrationally discriminates against women is violative of equal protection guarantees. US Const, Am XIV; Const 1963, art 1, §2. She concludes that the statutes
2
establishing the Detroit House of Correction discriminate against women prisoners who must be committed there because the statutory provisions governing good-time credit, parole and superintendent qualifications at DeHoCo differ substantially from statutory provisions on the same points for male prisoners in other state penal institutions. For purposes of our decision, it will be conceded that legislation which makes an unreasonable and arbitrary classification оn the basis of sex violates the equal protection guarantee of the Federal constitution. See,
Reed v Reed,
Defendant contends that women prisoners can earn only three days per month deduction from their sentences for good behavior while in DeHoCo, pursuant to § 20 of the Detroit House of Correction Act,
"It is said finally that upheld liability of the state to *316 plaintiff will 'lead to chaos insofar as fixing responsibility for management of Detroit House of Correction.’ Our response is that the Legislature has created the Department of Corrections for the purpose of concentrаting with that department the primary (but not exclusive of course) responsibility for the well-being as well as the disciplinary rehabilitation of state-sentenced prisoners, whenever such prisoners are held in any penal institution over which Corrections has jurisdiction and the power — whether exercised or not — to promulgate rules and standards relating thereto. No matter where Corrections may choose lawfully or need lawfully to incarcerate or permit incarceration of any such prisoner, its duty to him remains constant and may not be subjected to delegation; whether or not others are concurrently accountable for breach of the same or a corresponding legal duty.”386 Mich 465 ;192 NW2d 494 .
Equal treatment of male and female inmates of state penal institutions with respect to good-time computation is also mandated by
"All laws nоw in force, applicable to persons confined in the state prison, shall be and are hereby made applicable to all persons who are, or hereafter shall be confined in said house of correction, who have been transferred to said house from the state prison, or who shall be sentenced to confinement in said house, on conviction of any offense punishable by confinement in the state prison.”
OAG, 1925-1926, p 208 (March 6, 1926) ruled that good time for DeHoCo inmates could be computed only under
Defendant further contends that women prisoners in DeHoCo are treated differently for parole considеration than are male prisoners in other state penal institutions. Her claim is premised on
Finally, defendant contends that women state prisoners confined in BeHoCo are discriminated against because the superintendent of DeHoCo is not required to meet any of the qualifications that wardens of state prisons are required to meet under the provisions of MCLA 800.5, 800.9; MSA 28.1375, 28.1379. If those statutes ever еstablished qualifications and responsibilities for state prison wardens different from the qualifications for the superintendent of DeHoCo, they no longer do. Both statutes were repealed by
The eighth issue on appeal is:
"Since the statutes requiring Detroit to establish DeHoCo and requiring Detroit to provide facilities for all women prisoners who are eligible to be sent to state prison are special and local legislation in violation of Const 1963, art 4, §29, they are unconstitutional on their face.”
Defendant specifically contends that the acts establishing the Detroit House of Correction,
The ninth issue on appeal is:
"The State Legislature unconstitutionally delegаted power to the City of Detroit when it required the city council and its appointees to finance the jail and provide for the administration and maintenance of state prisoners.”
The gist of defendant’s contention is that the statutes concerning the Detroit House of Correction constitute an improper delegation of legislative authority to the City of Detroit, contrary to Const 1963, art 3, §2, because the city allegedly has almost total control over the management and policies of the facility and because the city allegedly is solely responsible for the financing of the institution.
Our discussion of the applicable statutes during consideration of defendant’s seventh issue shows clearly that her contention is untenable. Defendant says that, "the state department of corrections is permitted to inspect DeHoCo and tо promulgate standards for it. MCLA 791.262; MSA 28.2322. This, however, is the extent of the state’s involvement with DeHoCo.” However, the statute cited by defendant charges the Department of Corrections, Bureau of Prisons, with the duty, not only to inspect the Detroit House of Correction, but also to *320 supervise it. On the basis of that statute, inter alia, this Court concluded in Green, supra, pp 652-653, that the Detroit House of Correction is a state penal institution subject to the management and supervision of the State Department of Corrections:
"In addition, the Corrections Commission is empowered to appoint a director, who is in turn empowered to make rules and regulations 'for the management and control of penal institutions * * * and prison labor and industry’, MCLA 791.206; MSA 28.2276.
"MCLA 791.161; MSA 28.2322 provides in pertinent part that the Corrections Commission through its assistant director for penal institutions
" 'shall supervise and inspect local jails and houses of correction for the purpose of оbtaining facts in any manner pertaining to the usefulness and proper management of said penal institutions and of promoting proper, efficient and humane administration thereof and shall promulgate rules and standards with relation thereto.’
"Although the Detroit House of Correction is managed by a superintendent appointed by the City of Detroit, it, as a prison facility within this state, is subject to the same standard of supervision and inspection by the Corrections Commission as is applicable to all other state prison facilities. MCLA 802.1 et seq; MSA 28.1811 et seq”
See also, similar language from the Supreme Court’s affirmance of
Green, supra,
Defendant’s assertions that the city, not the state, is required to meet the expenses of the Detroit House of Correction and that it is the city which has the ultimate responsibility for paying the upkeep of prisoners, including state prisoners like defеndant, is not true. Although MCLA 802.14; MSA 28.1824, makes the maintenance expenses of the facility charges against the city, other statutes spread the cost of maintaining the facility among the state and counties using it. Thus, for example, MCLA 802.8a; MSA 28.1818(1), authorizes county boards of commissioners to contract with city officials for confinement of accused persons prior to trial or sentence. The section concludes with the provision that "the agreement shall provide that the county shall pay all reasonable expenses incurred by the city for such custodial incarceration”. MCLA 802.11; MSA 28.1821, authorizes state penal authorities to contract with the city to lodge certain state prisoners, including women, at the Detroit facility. As originally enacted, the section provided for a weekly maintenance fee of no more than $1 to be paid by the state tо the city. MCLA 802.181; MSA 28.1891, however, allows the city to demand payment for its expenses incurred in caring for state prisoners sent to the Detroit House of Correction by any Michigan court of competent jurisdiction. Similarly, MCLA 802.21; MSA 28.1830, authorizes the city and the County of Wayne to settle between themselves the city’s charges for keeping Wayne County convicts at DeHoCo.
In view of the substantial authority and control *322 exercised by state penal authorities over the management аnd policies of the Detroit House of Correction and in light of the clear statutory scheme for spreading costs of operating the facility among city, county and state users, we find no validity in defendant’s argument that the Legislature has unconstitutionally delegated the majority of DeHoCo’s operational functions to the city or that the Legislature has improperly imposed the entire financial burden of maintaining the fаcility on the City of Detroit.
The final issue X raised by defendant on appeal is:
"Because the statute requiring defendant to be committed to the Detroit House of Correction contains more than one subject, and because the various subjects expressed in the statute’s purview are not expressed in its title, the statute violates Const 1963, art 4, § 24.”
The pertinent part of Const 1963, art 4, §24 provides: "No law shall embrace more than one object, which shall be expressed in its title”. Defеndant contends that
"While the object must be expressed in the title, it is to the body of the law that we must look to determine whether it embraces more than one object.” Board of Supervisors v Reed,243 Mich 120 , 122;219 NW 656 , 657 (1928).
See also,
Attorney General v Union Guardian Trust Co,
"It is not required, however, that the title be an index to, or a tablе of contents of, the provisions of the act, or set out the details thereof, but it need only indicate the general contents and scope of the act, and a title is sufficient if it gives reasonable notice of the subject of the statute, so as to clearly apprize the Legislature and the public generally of the purposes of the act and the interests likely to be affected thereby.” 21 Michigan Law & Practice, Statutes, § 33, p 45.
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The provisions of
In summary, we find no constitutional deficiencies with the statutes creating and sustaining the continued existence of the Detroit House of Correction.
Affirmed.
Notes
The first six issues raised were:
"I. The people of the state of Michigan have deprived Myra Andrea of equal protection of the law by incarcerating her in the Detroit House of Correction.
"II. The conditions of confinement at the Detroit House of Correction deprived defendant of her rights as protected by the United States Constitution.
"ÜL The totality of the conditions of defendant’s incarceration *313 constitute cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the 8th and 14th Amendments to the United States Constitution.
"IV. The deprivation of defendant’s constitutional rights by her sentence and by the conditions of incarceration require that this Court immediately resentence defendant to such punishment as will not deprive her of her constitutional rights.
"V. Defendant is deprived of 1st Amendment freedom by the conditions of incarceration at the Detroit House of Correction.
"VI. Defendant has been subject to a prison disciplinary process which does not comply with the due process standards of the 14th Amendment.”
Acts concerning the Detroit House of Correction referred to in defendant’s brief are:
The present Department of Corrections was established by a transfer under §277 of the Executive Organization Act of 1965, MCLA 16.377; MSA 3.29(277).
