L'HOMMEDIEU v. Smith

88 N.W.2d 510, 351 Mich. 223, 1958 Mich. LEXIS 509
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1958
DocketDocket 60, Calendar 47,279
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 88 N.W.2d 510 (L'HOMMEDIEU v. Smith) 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
L'HOMMEDIEU v. Smith, 88 N.W.2d 510, 351 Mich. 223, 1958 Mich. LEXIS 509 (Mich. 1958).

Opinion

*225 Black, J.

This case was originally assigned to a Brother Justice. It was reassigned to the writer during the October term.

Plaintiffs’ bill was filed in the Wayne circuit January 26, 1953. The sworn answer of defendants Smith and city of Highland Park was filed February 11,1953. Forty months later (May 28,1956) defendants Smith and Highland Park moved to dismiss the hill as to them, assigning in general the reasons we shall quote from the chancellor’s opinion. The motion was granted. Plaintiffs appeal.

The hill alleges, in general substance, that since 1931 the plaintiffs with other policemen and firemen of the defendant city have been coerced into signing a so-called “Policemen’s and Firemen’s Benefit” agreement as a condition to obtaining or retaining employment as policemen or firemen of the city; that the agreement provides, upon and in event of death of any signer thereof, that each of the remaining signers must pay $20 to the city treasurer (defendant Smith) in trust to be paid over by him to specified heirs or beneficiaries of the deceased signer; that the agreement authorized the defendant city treasurer to deduct such required amounts from the salaries or pension allotments due each signer; that the agreement for stated reasons was and is illegal ; that they, the said plaintiffs, have formally and successively notified the defendant city treasurer and the defendant city to cease and terminate such deductions; that the latter have refused to recognize or conform to such desist notices, and that they, the said plaintiffs, are entitled to specific relief as against all of the defendants for and on account of such charging part of the hill.

The ultimate allegations of the hill appear in paragraphs 21, 22 and 23, quoted as follows:

*226 “21. On or about tbe 30th day of September, 1952, thirty-one active members of the fire department of the city of Highland Park, including plaintiffs herein, formally requested that their names be removed from the rolls of the ‘Policemen’s and Firemen’s Benefit’ by letter sent to each of the defendants herein. A copy of said letter is incorporated and attached as exhibit B. Such communication thereupon received the attention of various officers and agents of the city of Highland Park including defendant Smith, and was thereafter considered by the council of said muncipality and ‘placed on file’ by said body.
“22. On October 20, 1952, some 51 active members of the police and fire departments of the city of Highland Park, including plaintiffs herein, directed a further communication to defendant Smith, requesting that no further deductions be made by the city treasurer from their regular compensation by way of contributions or payments to any fund under the ‘Policemen’s and Firemen’s Benefit.’ A copy of said communication is incorporated and attached as exhibit C.
“23. Members of said forces are paid stipulated compensation by defendant municipality for their services by means of checks drawn upon funds of the city and signed by defendant Smith as city treasurer ; such checks are paid every other week to each employee and represent compensation for services performed by the employee up to and including the 10th day preceding date of payment. Notwithstanding the terms of exhibit C, defendant Smith has at :all'times thereafter continued to make deductions ■from the compensation otherwise due to each of said employees, including the named plaintiffs, for so-called contributions or liabilities to the ‘Policemen’s and Firemen’s Benefit.’ Said defendant has further given notice of his intention to continue to do so by letter of November 18, 1952, a copy of which is incorporated as attached exhibit D. Such acts constitute unauthorized confiscation of plaintiffs’ prop *227 erty and earnings without due process and contrary to law.”

Following are the chancellor’s reasons for grant of the motion:

“The court, in granting the motion to dismiss against the city of Highland Park and Robert M. Smith, its former treasurer, did so for the reason that Robert M. Smith, who had formerly served the city of Highland Park as city treasurer, had retired* some time prior to the filing of the aforesaid motions! and is no longer connected in any way. whatsoever with the affairs of the city, or concerned with or affected by allegations set forth in the alleged bill of complaint.
“The court, in granting the motion for dismissal against the city of Highland Park did so for the reason that the city of Highland Park was not, and is-not, connected in any legal or contractual way with-the aforementioned benefit agreement mentioned in the bill of complaint. Also, the city of Highland-Park, as a municipal corporation, could not by its officers be held liable in any way to answer for any of the matters alleged in the bill of complaint.”

We disagree with such reasoning. The bill to us is a model of fairly informative pleading. Whether the accounting as sought by plaintiffs is due from defendant Smith or defendant city of Highland: Park, or both, or whether that accounting is due from remaining defendants, or whether plaintiffs are entitled to no relief at all, are questions for determination on testimonial hearing rather than motion to-dismiss. The latter is but another instance of attempted short-cut trial of issues of fact — by motion and without taking of testimony — and it proceeds (as did the moving defendant in Love v. Wilson, 346 Mich 327) on erroneous assumption that a bill in equity must state, as at law, a cause of action against *228 each defendant in order to hold the latter in court until the invoked purposes of equity are fulfilled. >

Here, accepting as we must the well-pleaded conclusions of fact set forth in plaintiffs’ .bill, it will not be known until the nigh-to-4-year framed issues are tried whether the actual deductions, from, émployee wages as made by the defendant city treasurer, were or were not lawfully retained by the latter —officially or otherwise — after the desist -notices of September 30,1952, and October 20,1952, were given. Too, and if plaintiffs should prevail according to their allegation of illegal deduction and retention, it will not be known until the time for decree arrives whether defendant Smith has retained such deducted funds personally, or whether such funds remain' in city coffers, or whether the same have been lawfully or otherwise disbursed. Since the theory of- this bill is that the city treasurer illegally continued, after desist notices, to withhold funds he and his principal should now account for in equity, and since if plaintiffs’ allegations are true one or the other or both of the named defendants (Smith and city of Highland Park) now hold or should account for such withheld amounts, the. bill states fair case for an accounting as against such named defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 N.W.2d 510, 351 Mich. 223, 1958 Mich. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lhommedieu-v-smith-mich-1958.