Aller v. Detroit Police Department Trial Board

15 N.W.2d 676, 309 Mich. 382, 1944 Mich. LEXIS 344
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1944
DocketDocket No. 48, Calendar No. 42,698.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 15 N.W.2d 676 (Aller v. Detroit Police Department Trial Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aller v. Detroit Police Department Trial Board, 15 N.W.2d 676, 309 Mich. 382, 1944 Mich. LEXIS 344 (Mich. 1944).

Opinion

Bushnell, J.

Thirty-three police officers of the city of Detroit, who had been indicted by the so-called one-man grand jury conducted by Circuit Judge Homer Ferguson, were subsequently tried together with John Roxborough and Elmer Ryan. See People v. Roxborough 307 Mich 575, and People v. Ryan, 307 Mich. 610 They were either found not guilty or the information which had been filed against them was dismissed on motion. Immediately after the conclusion of the criminal trials, written charges were filed with the superintendent of police, charging each of them with conduct unbecoming an officer.

Under the provisions of title 4, chap. 21, §§16 and 17 of the charter of the city of Detroit, the trial board1 of the Detroit police department consists of the commissioner of police, or deputy commissioner of police, the chief of detectives, or such assistant as he may appoint, and the chief inspector of police. In these cases, John H. Witherspoon, commissioner of police, acted as chairman of the board, Paul H. *385 Wencel, chief of detectives, and Lonis L. Berg, superintendent of police, acting-in the capacity of chief inspector, sat with the commissioner as members.

Separate hearings were had before the trial board of the Detroit police department and five of the officers were found not guilty and ordered' reinstated; 28 were found guilty and1 dismissed from the department. Twenty-three of the officers dismissed filed petitions for writs of certiorari in the circuit court for the county of Wayne, 21 of which petitions were granted.

Each petition was heard separately and separate orders were entered vacating the orders of the trial board dismissing the 21 petitioners from the Detroit police department. As to these petitioners the trial judge found that their “trials” were unfair, and the action of the trial board in dismissing them from the force was arbitrary and capricious. In each instance the trial board filed a claim of appeal and the officer concerned filed a claim of cross-appeal. By stipulation, the 21 cases were consolidated on appeal.

The trial court’s conclusions were based principally upon the fact that the trial board permitted witnesses to be questioned by reading to them, not the entire transcript of the testimony they gave in the criminal cases, but only portions thereof, and asking them whether their answers were true; and in some instances by reading such transcript in the total absence of the witness who gave such testimony. The trial court held that this use of transcripts was without precedent in the law and that such testimony was pure hearsay and of no evidentiary value even though no objection was made by the- officers concerned to the introduction of such transcripts before the trial board.

Title 4, chap. 21, § 16, of the charter of the city of Detroit reads in part as follows:

*386 “No member of the police force shall be removed from the force except upon written charges preferred against him to the commissioner and after opportunity of being heard in his defense, but the commissioner may suspend any member of the force pending the hearing of the charges against him. Any member of the force deeming himself excessively penalized may demand a hearing.”

Petitioners contended before the trial court and contend here that the trial board does not have original jurisdiction to hear and determine charges against a police officer, and that their rights under the charter were denied because they were not afforded an opportunity to be heard in their defense before the commissioner, nor were they penalized by him; and they contend, therefore, that the proceedings before the trial board were a nullity.

The trial judge did not agree with this interpretation of the charter although he characterized the section as “a masterpiece of ambiguity which practically defies judicial or other interpretation.”

Appellants contend that the hearings were had in accordance with long-established practice and that, since no procedural objections were made at the hearing before the trial board, which took many weeks, the procedure followed should be approved under the theory of practical construction.

It is well settled that the construction placed upon statutory provisions by any particular department of government for a long period of time, although not binding upon the courts, should be given considerable weight. Board of Education of the Union School District of the City of Owosso v. Goodrich, 208 Mich. 646, 652, and People v. Robinson, 241 Mich. 497. It does not appear that appellees’ and cross-appellants’ rights were prejudiced by an original hearing before the trial board.

*387 The controlling question is whether the trial judge was correct in applying to police trial hoards the general rules of procedure and evidence as are applied in a trial at law. The court said in Mapley v. City of Pontiac, 288 Mich. 396, in discussing certain provisions of the charter of the city of Pontiac:

“Trial before the police and fire trial board1 supplanted the former method of power of dismissal of police and firemen without formal charges and a public hearing, but the purpose thereof in conception and operation is wholly administrative. The charter provision checks hasty and inconsiderate action, prevents autocratic tendencies and publicizes the proceedings. The hearing or trial before the board is not a trial at law but a proceeding in the nature of an administrative inquiry or inquisition and the purpose thereof is accomplished if there is a fair hearing upon specific charges supported by evidence. The action of the board is-open to public consideration but not to judicial review in the sense of an appeal nor by certiorari, except it is made to appear as matter of law the essentials of jurisdiction have not been followed. The proceeding was administrative and, under the terms of the Charter, the finding of the fact by the board is final if supported by evidence.”

A similar view was.expressed by the United States supreme court in Federal Communications Commission v. Pottsville Broadcasting Co., 309 U. S. 134 (60 Sup. Ct. 437, 84 L. Ed. 656), as summed up in the headnote of the reported case in 84 L. Ed. as follows:

“The differences in origin and function of courts and of administrative agencies preclude the wholesale transportation to administrative proceedings of the rules of procedure, trial and review which have evolved, from the history and experience of courts.”

*388 And the court said:

“To be sure, the laws under which these agencies operate prescribe the fundamentals of fair play. They require that interested parties be afforded an opportunity for hearing and that judgment must express a reasoned conclusion.”

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15 N.W.2d 676, 309 Mich. 382, 1944 Mich. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aller-v-detroit-police-department-trial-board-mich-1944.