[304]*304Levin, P. J.
The plaintiff, Kenneth Pressley, commenced this action in the Wayne County Circuit Court claiming that he and other persons similarly situated had been deprived of the right to post bail under the 10% bail deposit act.1 Under that act, persons accused of committing traffic offenses and misdemeanors may post bail by depositing 10% of the amount of the bail set by the court and signing a bail bond.
Judges of the Traffic and Ordinance Division of the Recorder’s Court of the City of Detroit take the position that they may deny particular offenders the benefit of the 10% bail deposit act by requiring that they furnish a surety bond. They have instructed the sheriff of Wayne County, William Lucas, to refuse to accept 10% deposits in those cases where a judge has stipulated that a surety bond be furnished.
After a hearing the circuit judge entered an order directing Sheriff Lucas to release Pressley upon his depositing the 10% and signing the bail bond. However, he refused to extend his order to include others “similarly situated”. Pressley appealed in the interest of the class.
We hold:
1. The 10% bail deposit act confers upon persons charged with the commission of traffic offenses and misdemeanors the right to post bail by depositing 10% of the amount of the bail, and precludes judges and others authorized to set bail from requiring that persons accused of such offenses furnish a surety bond.
2. The 10% bail deposit act does not infringe unconstitutionally upon inherent judicial power and, until the Supreme Court in the exercise of its exclu[305]*305sive power to control practice and procedure rules otherwise, the provisions of the act govern.
3. The circuit judge should have extended the relief granted Pressley to the others in the class similarly situated.
I.
Our statute is modeled on a 1963 Illinois statute.2 A study of bail practices in the municipal court of Chicago had revealed that in the year 1962 professional bondsmen wrote bonds of $18,513,965, on which they were entitled to receive fees of $1,851,396 (10% of the bonds). The total amount of forfeitures collected from bondsmen in that year was $183,-938, i.e., approximately 10% of the fees collected.3
The essence of the Illinois plan is that the accused person is allowed to deposit the 10% he would pay to the bondsman with the court at the time he executes the bond. If he complies with the conditions of the bond, there is to be returned to him 90% of the amount deposited — the average gross profit after forfeitures of the bondsmen; the remaining 10% is retained by the court. Since forfeitures in 1962 were 10% of the gross bond fees, the 10% retainage would, it was thought, produce revenue equal to the revenue received from forfeitures.
The Illinois plan was adopted on an experimental basis for two years. Although the ultimate objective of the plan was the elimination of professional bondsmen, during the two-year experimental period compensated sureties were permitted to continue to operate. The Illinois plan was successful in both reducing the jail population and in providing a fund [306]*306(the 90% to be returned to the accused person) out of which fines and other expenses of litigation could be paid; there was no attendant increase in jumps or forfeitures; and, principally because more accused persons were able to make bail, the 10% retainage produced more revenue than had been received from forfeitures.4
In 1965 the Illinois legislation was made permanent and, by amendment, the provisions of the act were made “exclusive of other provisions of law for the giving, taking, or enforcement of bail” thereby eliminating compensated sureties altogether in criminal cases.5 Since 1965 professional bondsmen have been unable to operate in Illinois.6
[307]*307The Michigan statute, adopted in 1966, follows the Illinois statute verbatim, except (a) the Michigan statute is not exclusive, professional compensated sureties have not been prohibited; (b) the Michigan statute applies only to traffic offenses or misdemeanors while the Illinois statute applies to all offenses, including major felonies;7 (c) in Michigan the minimum amount of the 10% bail deposit is $10, in Illinois it is $25 ;8 (d) under the Michigan act the [308]*308entire 10% deposit is required to be returned if the accused person is not convicted9 while under the Illinois act only 90% is returned even if the accused person is acquitted.10
The remedial purpose of the act is apparent.11
II.
In this case Kenneth Pressley was charged with the offense of operating a motor vehicle without an operating permit in violation of a City of Detroit [309]*309ordinance.12 He pled not guilty when arraigned on July 2, 1970 and hail was set at $50, one surety. His trial date was set for September 22, 1970, 81 days after the arraignment. The maximum penalty upon conviction of the offense is 90 days or a fine of $500, or both.13 Thus, if Pressley could not obtain a surety bond and was not permitted to post a 10% deposit, he would be required, while awaiting trial, to serve a sentence substantially equal to the maximum prison sentence the court could impose upon conviction.
It appears that professional sureties are generally unwilling to write small bonds because they are unprofitable — 10% of $50 is $5. In this context, it is manifest that the effect of imposing a one-surety requirement and of directing the clerk of the court and the sheriff to refuse to accept a 10% deposit is to deny bail altogether to precisely those persons intended to be benefitted by the 1966 legislation— economically disadvantaged, minor offenders. (No doubt, bondsmen make exceptions and go surety on some small bonds, but that must be small comfort to the larger group who are unable to obtain this accommodation.)
In People v. Ingram (1966), 34 Ill 2d 623 (217 NE2d 803), the Supreme Court of Illinois rejected a challenge to the constitutionality of the Illinois act. It held that § 15 of the Illinois act (making that act exclusive of other provisions and thereby, in effect, barring compensated sureties in criminal cases) did not unconstitutionally discriminate against defendants in criminal cases because civil litigants who are required to post bond can continue to post a surety bond. The Court further held that the provision of the Illinois act, corresponding to § 7 of our act, per[310]*310mitting, in lieu of the 10% deposit, the furnishing of a bail bond with or without sureties, secured by a deposit of cash or stocks and bonds equal in value to the amount of the bail or unencumbered real estate equal in value to twice the amount of the bail,14 was constitutional and that the complaining surety company must deposit security for the full amount of the bail.15
The Court declared:
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[304]*304Levin, P. J.
The plaintiff, Kenneth Pressley, commenced this action in the Wayne County Circuit Court claiming that he and other persons similarly situated had been deprived of the right to post bail under the 10% bail deposit act.1 Under that act, persons accused of committing traffic offenses and misdemeanors may post bail by depositing 10% of the amount of the bail set by the court and signing a bail bond.
Judges of the Traffic and Ordinance Division of the Recorder’s Court of the City of Detroit take the position that they may deny particular offenders the benefit of the 10% bail deposit act by requiring that they furnish a surety bond. They have instructed the sheriff of Wayne County, William Lucas, to refuse to accept 10% deposits in those cases where a judge has stipulated that a surety bond be furnished.
After a hearing the circuit judge entered an order directing Sheriff Lucas to release Pressley upon his depositing the 10% and signing the bail bond. However, he refused to extend his order to include others “similarly situated”. Pressley appealed in the interest of the class.
We hold:
1. The 10% bail deposit act confers upon persons charged with the commission of traffic offenses and misdemeanors the right to post bail by depositing 10% of the amount of the bail, and precludes judges and others authorized to set bail from requiring that persons accused of such offenses furnish a surety bond.
2. The 10% bail deposit act does not infringe unconstitutionally upon inherent judicial power and, until the Supreme Court in the exercise of its exclu[305]*305sive power to control practice and procedure rules otherwise, the provisions of the act govern.
3. The circuit judge should have extended the relief granted Pressley to the others in the class similarly situated.
I.
Our statute is modeled on a 1963 Illinois statute.2 A study of bail practices in the municipal court of Chicago had revealed that in the year 1962 professional bondsmen wrote bonds of $18,513,965, on which they were entitled to receive fees of $1,851,396 (10% of the bonds). The total amount of forfeitures collected from bondsmen in that year was $183,-938, i.e., approximately 10% of the fees collected.3
The essence of the Illinois plan is that the accused person is allowed to deposit the 10% he would pay to the bondsman with the court at the time he executes the bond. If he complies with the conditions of the bond, there is to be returned to him 90% of the amount deposited — the average gross profit after forfeitures of the bondsmen; the remaining 10% is retained by the court. Since forfeitures in 1962 were 10% of the gross bond fees, the 10% retainage would, it was thought, produce revenue equal to the revenue received from forfeitures.
The Illinois plan was adopted on an experimental basis for two years. Although the ultimate objective of the plan was the elimination of professional bondsmen, during the two-year experimental period compensated sureties were permitted to continue to operate. The Illinois plan was successful in both reducing the jail population and in providing a fund [306]*306(the 90% to be returned to the accused person) out of which fines and other expenses of litigation could be paid; there was no attendant increase in jumps or forfeitures; and, principally because more accused persons were able to make bail, the 10% retainage produced more revenue than had been received from forfeitures.4
In 1965 the Illinois legislation was made permanent and, by amendment, the provisions of the act were made “exclusive of other provisions of law for the giving, taking, or enforcement of bail” thereby eliminating compensated sureties altogether in criminal cases.5 Since 1965 professional bondsmen have been unable to operate in Illinois.6
[307]*307The Michigan statute, adopted in 1966, follows the Illinois statute verbatim, except (a) the Michigan statute is not exclusive, professional compensated sureties have not been prohibited; (b) the Michigan statute applies only to traffic offenses or misdemeanors while the Illinois statute applies to all offenses, including major felonies;7 (c) in Michigan the minimum amount of the 10% bail deposit is $10, in Illinois it is $25 ;8 (d) under the Michigan act the [308]*308entire 10% deposit is required to be returned if the accused person is not convicted9 while under the Illinois act only 90% is returned even if the accused person is acquitted.10
The remedial purpose of the act is apparent.11
II.
In this case Kenneth Pressley was charged with the offense of operating a motor vehicle without an operating permit in violation of a City of Detroit [309]*309ordinance.12 He pled not guilty when arraigned on July 2, 1970 and hail was set at $50, one surety. His trial date was set for September 22, 1970, 81 days after the arraignment. The maximum penalty upon conviction of the offense is 90 days or a fine of $500, or both.13 Thus, if Pressley could not obtain a surety bond and was not permitted to post a 10% deposit, he would be required, while awaiting trial, to serve a sentence substantially equal to the maximum prison sentence the court could impose upon conviction.
It appears that professional sureties are generally unwilling to write small bonds because they are unprofitable — 10% of $50 is $5. In this context, it is manifest that the effect of imposing a one-surety requirement and of directing the clerk of the court and the sheriff to refuse to accept a 10% deposit is to deny bail altogether to precisely those persons intended to be benefitted by the 1966 legislation— economically disadvantaged, minor offenders. (No doubt, bondsmen make exceptions and go surety on some small bonds, but that must be small comfort to the larger group who are unable to obtain this accommodation.)
In People v. Ingram (1966), 34 Ill 2d 623 (217 NE2d 803), the Supreme Court of Illinois rejected a challenge to the constitutionality of the Illinois act. It held that § 15 of the Illinois act (making that act exclusive of other provisions and thereby, in effect, barring compensated sureties in criminal cases) did not unconstitutionally discriminate against defendants in criminal cases because civil litigants who are required to post bond can continue to post a surety bond. The Court further held that the provision of the Illinois act, corresponding to § 7 of our act, per[310]*310mitting, in lieu of the 10% deposit, the furnishing of a bail bond with or without sureties, secured by a deposit of cash or stocks and bonds equal in value to the amount of the bail or unencumbered real estate equal in value to twice the amount of the bail,14 was constitutional and that the complaining surety company must deposit security for the full amount of the bail.15
The Court declared:
“Requiring a bond with sufficient sureties is premised on the assumption that economic loss to the accused, his family or friends, will assure his appearance for trial. In actual practice, however, it is not the accused or his family who usually suffer the loss for nonappearance, but the professional bondsmen and insurance companies. If the accused employs a professional bondsman or insurance company to make his bond, he is required to pay the bond premium regardless of his appearance or nonappearance at trial. Hence, the economic loss deterrent loses force when an accused is admitted to bail with professional sureties, and the purpose of admitting persons to bail is frustrated.
“Experience has shown that the method of allowing a person to make bond with a professional surety does not accomplish the purpose of bail. (See Bowman, The Illinois Ten Per Cent Bail Deposit Provision, 1965 Ill L. Forum 35.) The legislature in section 110-8 has determined more is needed than [311]*311the mere ability to pay bail bond forfeitures on a business basis. (See Committee Comments, Smith-Hurd Ill Anno Stat pp 145-149.) We are of the opinion that the alternative methods of bail provided in sections 110-716 and 110-817 do not violate the constitutional provision that all persons shall be bailable by ‘sufficient sureties’.” People v. Ingram, supra, p 626. (Emphasis by the Court.)
The Michigan act, like the Illinois act, makes no provision for uncollaterallized surety bonds.18 We are satisfied that the plain meaning of the 10% bail deposit act is that the 10% deposit shall be the preferred means by which traffic offenders and misdemeanants furnish bail. Alternatively, they may, if they wish, “in lieu” of the 10% deposit, furnish a collaterallized bond with or without sureties. It is completely inconsistent with the statutory scheme for a judge or other officer authorized to set bail to require a surety bond instead of a bond filed under the act. The act preserves to the judge the power to set the amount of bail, but deprives him of the power to prescribe the form of the bond or the security for its performance.
[312]*312The Michigan legislature made perfectly clear its intention that those who set bail may not by indirection defeat the 10% deposit plan when in 1969 it amended the 1966 act to provide that the amount of bail shall be “uniform whether the bail bond be executed by the person for whom bail has been set or by a surety”.
We hold that a person accused of committing a traffic offense or a misdemeanor has an absolute statutory right to post bail under the 10% bail deposit act and that he may not be required to furnish a surety bond.
III.
The jurisdiction of the Recorder’s Court extends to violations of both city ordinances and state law. It functions as a municipal court, and is an “inferior court” subject to the constitutionally-vested supervisory and general control power of the circuit court (Const 1963, art 6, § 13), when it enforces a city ordinance. But it is a co-equal court, free of such control, when it functions as a state court enforcing state law.19
Pressley was held to answer a charge of violating a city ordinance. Clearly the traffic and ordinance division was sitting as a municipal court when it set bail in his case.
The relief prayed for in this case does not require the issuance of a writ of superintending control directed to a judge or judges of the Recorder’s Court.20 The plaintiff asks, rather, that a writ of [313]*313mandamus issue to the Wayne County Sheriff who, under the act, is required to accept bail bonds and 10% deposits and release from custody prisoners who so make hail without regard to whether they are charged under a city ordinance or state law.21
IV.
In considering the constitutionality of the elimination of judicial discretion to require a surety bond, we must distinguish between questions arising under § 1 and under § 5 of the judicial article, art 6, of the 1963 Constitution.
The 10% bail deposit act, in depriving judges of the power to require a surety bond, does not, in our opinion, violate § 1, which vests the “judicial power of the state” in the courts of the state established under or pursuant to the Constitution.
To the. extent that the setting of bail may he an aspect of “practice and procedure” the Supreme Court might modify the provisions of the legislative enactment in the exercise of its power “by general rules [to] establish, modify and simplify the practice and procedure in all courts”. Const 1963, art 6, § 5. No other court, only the Supreme Court, enjoys that power.
A considerable body of statutory law regulates and channels the exercise of judicial power. The statutory provisions regarding the jurisdiction of courts, the manner of commencing and prosecuting suits and enforcing judgments, all guide, organize [314]*314and control, in varying degrees, the judicial function. Statutes which create a right or impose a duty and look to the courts to adjudicate controversies, as well as those which speak directly to points of substantive and procedural law, in a sense impinge upon judicial power.
Recently in City of Muskegon v. Slater (1967), 379 Mich 466, 473, a majority of our Supreme Court declared: “A complete revision and overhaul of the amount and power to assess costs and attorney fees in all Michigan courts is overdue” and that the remedy was for the legislature to place responsibility for costs and attorney fees with the Supreme Court by amending the Revised Judicature Act to provide that the Supreme Court shall adopt rules for the taxation or imposition of costs and the allowance of attorney fees. The Court concluded that “the deletion of legislative authority” from the Revised Judicature Act would permit a uniform approach under the court rules. Implicit in this statement is the Court’s acknowledgment that even as to a matter which affects fundamentally the daily operation of the courts, as does the power to assess costs and attorney fees, the legislature may exercise a measure of control.22
Some legislative enactments have, indeed, been viewed as an unwarranted interference with the judicial power.23 The line between one and the other [315]*315does not lend itself to precise demarcation. In reaching a judgment, case by case, we seek to distinguish between details and fundamentals.
The setting of hail has for a long time been regulated largely by statute.24 Whether this is a judicial function need not detain us.25 Even if it is a judicial function, depriving judges of the power to require that the offender furnish a surety willing to stand behind his undertaking does not interfere with their performance in a judicial manner of the bail-setting function.
Nor does the 10% hail deposit act significantly erode the court’s power to control judicial business. All persons charged with a traffic offense or a misdemeanor are entitled to be released on reasonable hail. It is not permissible to deny hail, directly or indirectly. What empirical data there are indicate that offenders released on 10% bail deposit bonds are not less likely to appear than those released on surety bonds.26
[316]*316This legislation, designed to ameliorate conditions which deprive poor persons of their constitutional right to be released on reasonable bail, does not constitute an impermissible intrusion upon inherent judicial power.
The Supreme Court may, in the exercise of its ultimate responsibility of deciding questions of practice and procedure, restore to trial judges the power to require a surety bond. But until the Supreme Court so decrees, the judges of all courts, trial judges and judges of this Court alike, and all others authorized to set bail, are bound to accord the legislative judgment the respect that we give a constitutional law.
In this connection we note that the Michigan Supreme Court has indicated its approval of the challenged legislation by its adoption of DCR 2004 which expressly requires that bail be set in the district courts in accordance with the provisions of the 10% bail deposit act.27 It would, therefore, appear that the Supreme Court does not regard the act to be an intrusion upon inherent judicial power.28
[317]*317The power to release on bail came into being as a check on the power to hold a citizen before trial.29 In light of that history, the judiciary should be slow to superimpose requirements which would impede the full implementation of legislation providing a more equitable means of obtaining release on bail. It would, however, be entirely consistent with the statutory and constitutional protection afforded the right to be released upon furnishing reasonable bail and within the prerogative of the Supreme Court under Const 1963, art 6, § 5 for the Court to extend the 10% bail deposit concept to include, as in Illinois, persons accused of the commission of felonies.30
y.
Pressley commenced this action “for himself and all those similarly situated”. The circuit judge issued the writ, but refused to extend it to include other persons denied the right to post a 10% deposit. In this we think he erred.
Our court rule concerning class actions, GrCR 1963, 208 is modeled on the Federal rule as it read before its recent amendment.31 Whether the class action is “true”, “hybrid” or “spurious”, it may be maintained only if the persons claimed to be a class “are so numerous as to make it impracticable to bring them all before the court” and the persons who claim to represent the class “will fairly insure [its] adequate representation”.
In the spurious class action — and this is the category into which Pressley’s claim falls — the rights of [318]*318the members of the class sought to be enforced are “several”, as contrasted with “joint” (the “true” class action),32 and there is a “common question of law or fact affecting the several rights and a common relief is sought”. GCR 1963, 208.1(3).
It has been said that:
“The class action was an invention of equity [citation omitted], mothered by the practical necessity of providing a procedural device so that mere numbers would not disable large groups of individuals, united in interest, from enforcing their equitable rights nor grant them immunity from their equitable wrongs.” Montgomery Ward & Co., Inc. v. Langer (CA 8, 1948), 168 F2d 182, 187.
The United States Supreme Court, in an early case, Smith v. Swormstedt (1853), 57 US (16 How) 288, 303 (14 L Ed 942, 948), in language frequently quoted, including by our Supreme Court,33 observed:
“Where the parties interested in the suit are numerous, their rights and liabilities are so subject to change and fluctuation by death or otherwise, that it would not be possible, without very great inconvenience, to make all of them parties, and would oftentimes prevent the prosecution of the suit to a hearing. For convenience, therefore, and to prevent a failure of justice, a court of equity permits a portion of the parties in interest to represent the entire body, and the decree binds all of them the same as if all were before the court.”
In a number of cases the Michigan Supreme Court has recognized that class actions are an appropriate [319]*319procedural device where there are numerous members of the class and common questions of law or fact affect their rights and common relief is sought.34
Recently in Bond v. Ann Arbor School District (1970), 383 Mich 693, 702, the Court observed:
“It is in the very nature of a class action that the claim of each individual member of the class action may be such as to alone scarcely warrant pursuit of repayment. * * * This situation was one peculiarly adapted to a class suit. The claim of each member of the class alone did not warrant an action, all members were affected in like manner by the action of defendant, and the issue was one that demanded legal clarification.”
The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit similarly observed:
“Class actions serve an important function in our judicial system. By establishing a technique whereby the claims of many individuals can be resolved at the same time, the class suit both eliminates the possibility of repetitious litigation and provides small claimants with a method of obtaining redress for claims which would otherwise be too small to warrant individual litigation.” Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin (CA 2, 1968), 391 F2d 555, 560.
In the present case the numerousness criterion, as it has evolved, is met. It is now recognized that “in addition to mere numbers other factors, such as the instability of the group and the whereabouts of its members, should be weighed in determining whether it is ‘impracticable to bring them all before the court’.” James, Civil Procedure, pp 498, 499.
Pressley alleges that there are 50 to 60 inmates of the Wayne County Jail in circumstances similar to [320]*320his own. The class fluctuates constantly both in size and identity of members. The class, in a larger sense, includes all persons who might be subjected to the practices against which this litigation is aimed.
As in Ann Arbor School District, the claim of each member of the class might not warrant an action; surely the attorneys representing Pressley would have found it simpler to obtain a $50 surety bond than to commence and prosecute this litigation. All members of the class Pressley represents are affected in like manner by the actions he complains of and the issue is one that demands legal clarification.
The adaptation of the class action to the protection of the rights of indigent accused persons is a sensible extension of this procedural device which was fashioned in equity to assure that important rights would not go unvindicated. In Adderly v. Wainwright (MD Fla, 1968), 46 FRD 97, the court ruled that habeas corpus applicants attacking the Florida death penalty in capital cases could maintain a class action. There were in excess of 50 prisoners in the class sought to be represented but, as here, the size of the class was subject to constant fluctuations. The court declared that both the size of the class sought to be represented and its lack of stability made joinder of all members impracticable. There were common questions of law and fact involving the death penalty and Florida’s practice in capital cases. The coincidence of the interests of the representatives and the other members of the class was thought to insure that the interest of the class would be adequately and fairly protected by the representative parties. The court declared:
“[T]he class action device is ‘superior’ to other methods for the ‘fair and efficient adjudication’ of the claims. It eliminates burdensome duplication in [321]*321what would be essentially identical individual petitions. It eliminates the problem of appointment of attorneys to serve without fee for more than fifty prisoners. It would avoid the risk of prejudice to ‘functionally illiterate’ prisoners which might result from requiring each to correspond and deal with an individual attorney, as many prisoners, as well as individual counsel, might find such correspondence difficult and confusing.”
In Jackson v. Bishop (CA 8, 1968), 404 F2d 571, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit affirmed a decision of a panel of district judges35 and ruled that three inmates of an Arkansas penitentiary could maintain a class action seeking to bar the use of the strap and other devices as disciplinary measures in Arkansas penal institutions.
In Anderson v. Ellington (MD Tenn, 1969), 300 F Supp 789, an inmate of a county workhouse challenged the Tennessee practice of imposing an additional period of confinement to “work off costs” for those unable to pay. A three-judge court ruled that the complaint adequately defined a class of indigent persons who were imprisoned because of their failure to pay costs, that the plaintiff was a proper representative of the class and that he could maintain a class action.
We are satisfied that Pressley can and has fairly insured adequate representation of the class. See Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin, supra, pp 562, 563. The fact that he has obtained relief for himself does not bar his continuing to prosecute the action for the benefit of the other plaintiffs (the other members of the class) that were denied relief.36 Five lawyers [322]*322joined in bringing the present action. They are from three different legal service programs, the University of Detroit Urban Law Clinic, the Wayne County Neighborhood Legal Services and the Michigan Legal Services Assistance Program. The only factor differentiating Pressley from the others claimed to be similarly situated is the amount of bail set. The legal issue, whether Sheriff Lucas had a clear duty to release Pressley and other members of the class upon deposit of 10% of the bail set and signing of the bail bond, is the same.
The order entered by the trial court is hereby modified, effective upon issuance of this opinion (OCR 1963, 820.1 [7]; 821.2), to require that the defendant, Sheriff Lucas, release from custody all persons now or hereafter entrusted to his custody charged with committing a traffic offense or a misdemeanor upon their depositing 10% of the bail set (but at least $10) and the signing by the accused person of a bail bond in the manner provided in the 10% bail deposit act; the accused person shall not be required to furnish a surety bond.
No costs, a public question.
Bronson, J., concurred.