MacOmb County Prosecutor v. MacOmb County Executive

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 28, 2025
Docket374004
StatusUnpublished

This text of MacOmb County Prosecutor v. MacOmb County Executive (MacOmb County Prosecutor v. MacOmb County Executive) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacOmb County Prosecutor v. MacOmb County Executive, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

MACOMB COUNTY PROSECUTOR, UNPUBLISHED July 28, 2025 Plaintiff, 10:13 AM

v No. 374004

MACOMB COUNTY EXECUTIVE and COUNTY OF MACOMB,

Defendants.

Before: MALDONADO, P.J., and PATEL and YOUNG, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this original action under MCL 141.438(7) of the Uniform Budgeting and Accounting Act (the UBAA), MCL 141.421 et seq., plaintiff Macomb County Prosecutor Peter Lucido filed a complaint seeking an order directing defendant Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel to disburse funds appropriated by the Board of Commissioners of defendant Macomb County. While this case was still pending, Lucido moved this Court to immediately enforce a portion of the complaint, and Hackel moved this Court to dismiss a portion of the complaint. We grant relief in part and deny it in part.

I. BACKGROUND

The dispute before this Court involves two components of the FY 2025 Comprehensive General Appropriations Ordinance, Macomb Enrolled Ordinance No. 2024-05, which was enacted November 21, 2024. First, Lucido contends that the Board appropriated funds for a Chief Operations Clerk for the prosecutor’s office and that Hackel improperly impounded these funds. Second, Lucido alleges that Hackel impounded funds appropriated for outside legal services for the prosecutor’s office. In response to Lucido’s claims, Hackel asserted that the appropriations at issue were conditional and that the conditions precedent to disbursement of the funds had not occurred, meaning that Hackel had no obligation to disburse the funds.

To provide context for this dispute, we begin with a summary of the budget procedures under the Macomb County Charter, which this Court has previously explained as follows:

-1- In 2009, Macomb County voters adopted a home rule charter under the Charter Counties Act (CCA), MCL 45.501 et seq., and created the office of the county executive. Under the charter, the executive, who is the head of the executive branch of county government, oversees all county departments, except for departments headed by countywide elected officials. The executive is responsible for submitting a proposed annual budget and quarterly financial reports to the Commission [i.e., the Board]. The 13-member Commission, which holds the county’s legislative power, has the authority to appropriate funds pursuant to section 4.4(c) of the charter. The charter requires that plaintiff [Lucido], as a countywide elected official, manage his office within authorized budget appropriations. The charter also provides that plaintiff is subject to the budgeting recommendations of the executive as approved by the Commission.

The charter mandates that the executive prepare and administer a balanced budget, which the executive transmits to the Commission before the beginning of the next fiscal year. The Commission adopts a balanced line item operating budget and a general appropriations ordinance. Transfers and impoundments of appropriations may be made only in accordance with the appropriations ordinance. The executive may veto a line item of an ordinance appropriating money, but the Commission can override that veto. If the executive does not veto within 10 business days, the action of the Commission takes effect. [Macomb County Prosecutor v Macomb County Executive, ___ Mich App ___, ___; ___ NW3d ___ (2024) (footnotes omitted) (Macomb II); slip op at 1-2, (Mich, 2025).]

Before turning to the facts underlying the 2025 budget dispute, we note that the present case is the third budget dispute before this Court between Lucido and Hackel in recent years. Previously, related to the 2022 Budget, Lucido and Hackel quarreled over funding for positions in the prosecutor’s office. In Macomb County Prosecutor v Macomb County Executive, 341 Mich App 289, 295; 989 NW2d 864 (2022) (Macomb I), among other issues, this Court determined that the Macomb County Charter authorized the Board to appropriate more funds for a line-item than the amounts contained in the executive’s recommended budget. Id. at 308. Further, considering the Macomb County Charter and MCL 141.137, this Court concluded that the executive lacked the “blanket authorization” to “unilaterally” impound “appropriated funds at his or her discretion.” Macomb I, 341 Mich App at 313-314. However, this Court recognized that Hackel, as the executive, possessed limited authority to impound appropriate funds, “limited to situations in which doing so would achieve economic efficiencies.” Id. at 314. As applied in Macomb I, this Court concluded that Hackel exceeded his authority by impounding funds appropriated by the Board for positions in the prosecutor’s office, and this Court granted Lucido declaratory relief and issued a writ of mandamus directing Hackel to disburse the funds or to “seek an amendment of the appropriations ordinance from the Board.” Id. at 314-315, 318.

Related to the 2024 Budget, the parties later litigated the question whether the Board could appropriate funds for Lucido to use to hire independent legal counsel. In Macomb II, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 10-13, looking to statutory provisions and the Macomb County Charter, this Court held that the Board could appropriate funds for the prosecutor to use for outside legal services and that Hackel could not impound these appropriated funds without a showing of economic efficiencies. Elaborating, this Court concluded that, “although § 6.6.5 [of the Macomb

-2- County Charter] indicates that an elected county official cannot expend funds on independent counsel, it has an exception if such an expenditure is permitted by law. The Commission appropriated the funds, then issued a resolution that specifically authorized their use for independent legal counsel, and defendants have not cited anything in the charter proscribing that authority or process.” Id. at ___; slip op at 12. Having determined that the Board could appropriate funds for outside counsel for the prosecutor, this Court turned to the question whether Hackel could impound those funds, and this Court concluded that Hackel again exceeded his authority by impounding the funds without a showing of economic efficiencies. Id. at ___; slip op at 12-13. This Court issued a writ of mandamus, directing Hackel to disburse the $42,500 appropriation and indicating that the parties should “work together to facilitate legal contracts under the applicable county process.” Id. at ___; slip op at 13.

In Macomb II, the Supreme Court ordered oral arguments on the application. Ultimately, the Supreme Court denied the application for leave to appeal. Macomb County Prosecutor v Macomb County Executive, 21 NW3d 458 (Mich, 2025).

A. FACTS RELATED TO THE CHIEF OPERATIONS CLERK

Turning to the current dispute, for the 2025 Budget, Lucido sought funding for a Chief Operations Clerk. Lucido proposed upgrading an existing position—the Office Manager—to the Chief Operations Clerk, which would increase personnel expenses by approximately $17,000. Hackel’s recommended budget did not include funding for a Chief Operations Clerk, but the Board conditionally approved funding for this position, subject to reclassification of the Office Manager position. In this regard, the 2025 Appropriations Ordinance states:

WHEREAS, funds for personnel in the General Fund for the Office of the Prosecuting Attorney are appropriated for FY 2025 as follows in accordance with MCL 49.31 and MCL 49.34.

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Bluebook (online)
MacOmb County Prosecutor v. MacOmb County Executive, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macomb-county-prosecutor-v-macomb-county-executive-michctapp-2025.