Minty v. Board of State Auditors

58 N.W.2d 106, 336 Mich. 370, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 488
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1953
DocketDocket 78, Calendar 45,477
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 58 N.W.2d 106 (Minty v. Board of State Auditors) 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
Minty v. Board of State Auditors, 58 N.W.2d 106, 336 Mich. 370, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 488 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Dethmers, C. J.

(dissenting). This case involves the construction of 3 acts. The first is PA 1939, No 135 (CL 1948, § 691.101 et seq. [Stat Ann 1951 Cum Supp § 27.3548(1)]), hereinafter called the court of claims act. The second, hereinafter called the waiver of immunity act, is PA 1943, No 237, which amended section 24 of the court of claims act to provide that,, with certain exceptions not pertinent here, the defense of sovereign immunity was waived in cases brought in the court of claims against the State for the torts of its officers and employees committed in performance of a governmental function. The third, hereinafter called the repealing act, is PA 1945, No 87 (CL 1948, §691.141 [Stat Ann § 27.3548(41)]), which became effective September 6, 1945, repealing the mentioned waiver of immunity act of 1943. It contained no saving clause.

On February 6, 1945, plaintiff’s cause of action, if any, arose out of injury sustained in a fall in the State office building caused by slipping on ice allegedly present due to negligence of State employees.. On August 3, 1945, plaintiff filed notice of her intention to file a claim against the State. It will be noted that both the injury and the filing of notice antedated the effective date of the repealing act of 1945 and occurred while the waiver of immunity act of 1943 was in effect. On January 20,1948, after the repealing act had become effective, plaintiff filed her pending petition and bill of particulars in the court of claims, demanding judgment for $25,000. On Jan- *375 nary 28, 1948, defendants filed a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s petition and from denial thereof, on leave granted, bring this appeal.

Should the court have granted defendants’ motion to dismiss, planted on the theory that the 1945 repeal of the 1943 waiver of immunity deprived plaintiff of the right to proceed against the State in a suit, begun after the repeal, based on a cause of action which had ■accrued while the waiver was still in effect?

Bejger v. Zawadzki, 252 Mich 14, is cited in support of defendants’ motion. There an act providing for double damages for injuries resulting from dog bite and dispensing with the common-law necessity for proof that the owner had knowledge of the dog’s vicious propensities was repealed, without a saving clause, during pendency of suit on a cause of action which had accrued while the act ivas in effect. It was held that no recovery could be had under the repealed act. Involved was the repeal of statutory provisions for a penalty and a rule of evidence to which this Court held no vested rights attach. Those are not the elements here involved.

Also cited by defendants are cases such as Detroit Trust Co. v. Allinger, 271 Mich 600, for the proposition that “the repeal of a statute divests all inchoate rights which have arisen under the statute which it destroys. 54 CJ, p 402.” But, was plaintiff’s accrued cause of action an inchoate right? In Cusick v. Feldpausch, 259 Mich 349, this Court held that an accrued right of action for damages resulting from the tortious act of another is not an inchoate, but a vested, right which may not be defeated by giving a subsequently-enacted statute retrospective effect.

Decision must depend upon analysis of the essence of the State’s waiver of sovereign immunity in the 1943 act. Did it impose a liability on the State under certain circumstances and thus create a cause of action, a right, or did it amount merely to a consent

*376 to be sued, the affording of a remedy ? If the latter, it clearly gave rise to no vested right, but only a privilege which the State could withdraw at any time even though the withdrawal served to destroy the remedy in relation to causes of action which had already accrued and to terminate suits thereon already pending. In McDowell v. Warden of Michigan Reformatory at Ionia, 169 Mich 332, involving a contractual right against the State, it was held that such withdrawal of consent to be sued terminated a pending suit and that this was not violative of the constitutional inhibition against impairment of the obligation of contract. Similarly, in Beers, Use of Platinius, v. Arkansas, 20 How (61 US) 527 (15 L ed 991), involving a contractual right against a State, the court held that, inasmuch as a State’s consent to be sued is voluntarily given, it may be withdrawn altogether, even though a cause of action on contract has already accrued to plaintiff, and that this does not violate United States Constitution, art 1, § 10, prohibiting impairment of the obligation of contract. In Lynch v. United States, 292 US 571 (54 S Ct 840, 78 L ed 1434), it was held that consent given by the United States government to be sued on insurance contracts issued by it could be withdrawn at any time, even though the contractual obligation had been assumed by the government while the consent was in effect, and that this was not violative of the Fifth Amendment’s prohibition against taking property without making just compensation and did not imply repudiation of contract obligation. To the same effect is Duke Power Co. v. South Carolina Taos Commission (CCA), 81 F2d 513, which also held that such course of action did not violate the limitations of the Fourteenth Amendment.

The trial judge pointed out, however, that the 1943 act not only waived immunity, but also provided that “the State hereby assumes liability for such acts.” *377 From this the court concluded that the act served not only to provide a remedy but also to create a substantive right. To this concept the court applied the holding of Cusick v. Feldpausch, supra, that the repealing act could not operate retrospectively to destroy such vested right. Granted that the repealing* act may not, for constitutional reasons, operate retrospectively to destroy a vested right, may it not, nevertheless, stand as a valid withdrawal of consent to be sued on causes of action already accrued? In considering that question, the court in Lynch v. United States, supra, said:

“There is a suggestion that although, in repealing all laws ‘granting or pertaining to yearly renewable term insurance,’ congress intended to take away the contractual right, it also intended to take away the remedy; that since it had power to take away the remedy, the statute should be given effect to that extent, even if void insofar as it purported to take away the contractual right. The suggestion is at Avar with settled rules of construction. It is true that a statute bad in part is not necessarily void in its entirety. A provision within the legislative poAver may be allowed to stand if it is separable from the bad. But no provision however unobjectionable in itself, can stand unless it appears both that, standing alone, the provision can be given legal effect and that the legislature intended the unobjectionable provision to stand in case other provisions held bad should fall. Dorchy v. Kansas, 264 US 286, 288, 290 (44 S Ct 323, 68 L ed 686). Here, both those essentials are absent.

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Bluebook (online)
58 N.W.2d 106, 336 Mich. 370, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minty-v-board-of-state-auditors-mich-1953.