Attorney General v. Chisholm

222 N.W. 761, 245 Mich. 285, 1929 Mich. LEXIS 955
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1928
DocketDocket No. 176, Calendar No. 33,725.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 222 N.W. 761 (Attorney General v. Chisholm) 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
Attorney General v. Chisholm, 222 N.W. 761, 245 Mich. 285, 1929 Mich. LEXIS 955 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

Fellows, J.

Section 1 of chapter 37 of Act No. 319, Pub. Acts 1927, entitled:

“An act to provide a system of public instruction and primary schools; to provide for the classification, organization, regulation and maintenance *287 of schools and school districts; to prescribe their rights, powers, duties and privileges; to prescribe penalties for violations of the provisions of this act; and to repeal all acts inconsistent herewith,”

by its terms repeals Act No. 174, Pub. Acts 1915 (2 Comp. Laws 1915, § 5767 et seq.), commonly called “the teachers’ pension act.” Defendants are members .of the board created by the act of 1915, as amended,-to administer its provisions, and assumed to function after the act of 1927 became effective, claiming that the repealing act is unconstitutional. The attorney general filed this information in the nature of quo warranto to determine that question.

The record discloses that the fund to be administered by defendants now amounts to around $700,000. Some of this has come from the school districts from teachers’ salaries, some has come from bequests and donations, some from contributions by teachers to render them eligible to participation in the benefits of the act. What proportion has come from each source does not appear. Defendants, of course, must at some time and in some proceeding account for the fund under their control. This, however, is not the proper case to settle that question as it is only here sought to have determined whether they may function under the • act. If the provision repealing the act of 1915 is unconstitutional, they may continue to act; if not, judgment of ouster should be entered.

Briefly stated, it is contended on behalf of defendants, (1) that the relations between the State and the teachers are contractual and beyond the power of the legislature to impair; (2) that the title to the act of 1927 is not broad enough to permit the provision; and (3) that the repeal was due to a clerical error.

*288 A careful examination of the opinion in Attorney General v. Connolly, 193 Mich. 499, together with the record and hriefs in that case, disclose that this court in sustaining the act of 1915 there committed itself to doctrines contrary to those now contended for in behalf of the teachers, and that it so committed itself upon the argument and insistence of those then representing the teachers. Indeed, it is very doubtful if this court had then accepted the views now advanced on behalf of the teachers that the act of 1915 could have been sustained. It was urged against the law that it deprived the teacher of his or her property without due process of law. This was replied to by the claim that the contributions exacted by section 6 of the act were not from the money of the teacher, but were appropriations of public money, and the court sustained this contention. It was urged against the act that, if it was public money, it could not be appropriated for a private purpose. This was combated by the claim that the purpose was a public purpose, a part of the general scheme of educational development to encourage persons to make teaching their life work for the benefit of the cause of education, and this court accepted such contention.

Now, if the contributions to the fund provided for by section 6 of the act are not contributions by the teachers of their money, but are appropriations of public money, and this court so held in the Connolly Case, it must be manifest that a contract has not been made between the State and the teacher, and the question of impairment of contracts must be deemed to be settled by that case. While we are doubtless committed by the Connolly Case, attention should be called to the recent case of People, ex rel. Donovan, v. Benefit Fund, 326 Ill. 579 (158 N. E. *289 220), and the valuable and exhaustive note following the report of the case in 54 A. L. R. beginning at page 943.

In so far as teachers have made payments from their individual funds to render them eligible to retirement, their right to an interest in the fund, if such right existed, may, as we have indicated, be taken care of in an accounting by defendants as trustees. It is apparent that it must be but an insignificant part of the fund of $700,000, which defendants are claiming the right to administer by virtue of the act of 1915, which they insist is still in force, and the exercise of which right is here involved and should be determined.

It is insisted that the act of 1927,' in so far as it repeals the act of 1915, offends the following provision found in section 21, article 5, of the Constitution :

“No law shall embrace more than one object, which shall be expressed in its title.”

Pew provisions of our Constitution are called tb our attention more frequently than is this provision, and our decisions dealing with it are numerous. Its purpose has been pointed out in many cases, to a few of which attention will be called. In Commerce-Guardian Trust & Savings Bank v. State of Michigan, 228 Mich. 316, it was held (quoting from the syllabus):

“The purpose of Art. 5, § 21, of the State Constitution, requiring that ‘no law shall embrace more than one object, which shall be expressed in its title,’ was, first, to prevent the bringing together into one bill subjects diverse in their nature and having no necessary connection, with a view to combine in their favor the advocates of all, and, second, to challenge the attention of those affected by the act to its provisions.”

*290 In People v. Blumrich, 183 Mich. 133, it was held (again quoting from the syllabus):

11 That the title of an act is general, is not ground of -objection to it so long as the enactment does not cover legislation that is incongruous, or that cannot be construed to be connected with it, by fair intendment.”

And in Westgate v. Township of Adrian, 161 Mich. 333, the holding was-thus expressed in the syllabus:

“Any provisions germane to the' subject expressed in the title may properly be included in the act or added thereto by amendment, and it is sufficient if the title fairly expressed the subject or is sufficiently comprehensive to include the several provisions relating to or connected with that subject.”

Mr. Justice Steere, speaking for the court in Loomis v. Rogers, 197 Mich. 265, 271, said:

“A title is but a descriptive caption, directing attention to the subject-matter which follows.

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222 N.W. 761, 245 Mich. 285, 1929 Mich. LEXIS 955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-v-chisholm-mich-1928.