Johnson v. Gibson

215 N.W. 333, 240 Mich. 515, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 929
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1927
DocketDocket No. 20.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 215 N.W. 333 (Johnson v. Gibson) 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
Johnson v. Gibson, 215 N.W. 333, 240 Mich. 515, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 929 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

*517 Snow, J.

Township unit school district, No. 1, of Hematite township, Iron county, decided upon the construction of a schoolhouse. Defendants Gibson, Thompson, Burge, Gill, and Olson were members of the board of education, and it is claimed by plaintiffs that, while holding this office, they performed services in connection with the construction of the school building for which they received various sums of money from the board in payments, that this was in violation of section 4 of chapter 3 of the primary school laws, being section 5671, 2 Comp. Laws 1915, and of section 9, chapter 13, of the primary school laws, being section 5759, 2 Comp. Laws 1915, and subjected them to the penalty therein provided.

The bill of complaint was filed by Thomas E. Johnson in his official capacity as superintendent of public instruction, together with a group of taxpayers of the township, against the school district, the offending directors thereof, and also members of the new school board who had succeeded the former ones, resigned, before the commencement of the suit. In view; of our conclusion that none of the plaintiffs can maintain the action, we deem it unnecessary, at this point, to make further reference to the facts in the case.

The relief prayed in the bill of complaint was for an accounting by the defendants who were paid money for services in connection with and growing out of the building of the schoolhouse, and that they be ordered and decreed to pay and return the sums so found to have been unlawfully received by them, and therefore due the school district. Decree was entered dismissing the bill, and plaintiffs appeal.

We are met at the outset with the disputed question of the right of taxpayers to file a 'bill in equity in behalf of themselves and other taxpayers to redress the grievance complained of; and if no such right exists in the taxpayer, has it in any way been accorded the superintendent of public instruction. Our attention *518 has been directed to numerous authorities which each of the counsel contends establishes his position. We will attempt their analysis.

It seems to be the settled rule in Michigan that a taxpayer whose interest is sufficient to confer jurisdiction may maintain a bill in equity to enjoin the unlawful expenditure of public funds. See prevailing opinion on rehearing in Carrier v. State Administrative Board, 225 Mich. 571, and cases there cited; also Thomas v. Board of Sup’rs of Wayne County, 214 Mich. 91; Attorney General v. City of Detroit, 26 Mich. 263. Thus holding may also be classed Curtenius v. Hoyt, 37 Mich. 583, sustaining the right of a resident owner of real and personal property subject to taxation to maintain a bill to enjoin the issue of unlawful railroad aid bonds under a resolution of the township board; Savidge v. Village of Spring Lake, 112 Mich. 91, where a resident taxpayer was permitted to maintain an action to restrain a village from unlawfully constructing waterworks; Callam v. City of Saginaw, 50 Mich. 7, where a taxpayer properly filed a bill to restrain the issue of bonds for the erection of a courthouse for Saginaw county at the sole expense of Saginaw city; Putnam v. Grand Rapids, 58 Mich. 416, permitting taxpayers to file a bill to restrain a contract between the city and the electric light company concerning the erection of a large number of electric light towers; Bates v. City of Hastings, 145 Mich. 574, where the taxpayer restrained the city from issuing bonds because of an unlawful conspiracy to use the money for bonuses to manufacturing institutions.

It is principally upon this line of decisions that plaintiffs’ counsel claim the right to maintain the bill in the case under consideration. They also cite a number of authorities dealing with the rights of stockholders in private corporations, which they contend to be analogous in principle. But we think otherwise. The right, granted an injured member of a private *519 concern, to complain of the misconduct of its officers is vastly different from that claimed here, viz., the right of a private taxpayer, with no grievance peculiar to himself, to attempt redress of one which afflicts the entire body politic. We are also cited to authorities from other jurisdictions which counsel for plaintiffs contend should be controlling. These have been examined, but we do not refer to them in detail, because we believe the question adversely settled by our own decisions.

The question first came before this court in Miller v. Grandy, 13 Mich. 540, where it was held that private persons could not assume to themselves the right to institute chancery proceedings to redress grievances on behalf of the public. We quote from the opinion of Mr. Justice Campbell:

“We will next consider the case in the aspect which we think is its proper one, as a suit to protect the public interest. The complainant does not set up any grievance which is not of the same nature with the grievances impending over the rest of the community. The injurious attempt which was threatened is a public grievance of the same nature as a threatened! public nuisance. It affects alike every taxpayer. It is an expected piece of official misconduct, whereby the municipality in the charge of the official persons will be made to suffer by their ill behavior. If the case made by the bill can be considered as a joint agreement to violate what they supposed to be the law, it would be an indictable conspiracy. If not designedly illegal, it would be a mistake committed in the exercise of duty, which would be void if exceeding their jurisdiction, but which, if not an excess of jurisdiction, must be corrected by such means as the law may have furnished for that purpose. And if no such means have been furnished, it must go uncorrected, and each private injury resulting must be remedied by itself.
“This bill can only be sustained by holding that every private citizen has the right to call public officers to account for their official misconduct, affecting the body politic, and not specially one man more than another. There were a few cases decided in the supreme court *520 of New York, which recognized such a right; but they have been overruled repeatedly, and the doetrine is now well settled that a private taxpayer, suffering under no special grievance, is not even a proper party to a bill filed to restrain threatened misconduct. * * *
“The interests of men in good government are joint, and not several. The single voter or taxpayer has no voice in public affairs. He can only exercise his influence as one of a lawful majority, and then only by his vote. The men whom he aids in electing, or who are elected in spite of him, represent the common will, which is the only will that governs. And grievances which afflict the community must be redressed by those to whom the law has intrusted the duty of interference.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 N.W. 333, 240 Mich. 515, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-gibson-mich-1927.