Township of Clearwater v. Board of Supervisors

153 N.W. 824, 187 Mich. 516, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 616
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1915
DocketCalendar No. 26,481
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 153 N.W. 824 (Township of Clearwater v. Board of Supervisors) 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
Township of Clearwater v. Board of Supervisors, 153 N.W. 824, 187 Mich. 516, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 616 (Mich. 1915).

Opinion

Steere, J.

This case turns upon the construction of section 26,, chap. 4, of Act No. 355, Pub. Acts 1913, which is as follows:

“Sec. 26. The adoption of the county road system in any county shall not prohibit any organized township from building State reward roads with moneys raised by tax or by bonding, and in townships where money has been raised by bonding to build State reward roads, the township clerk shall certify to the board of supervisors at the annual meeting thereof the amount of such bonds remaining unpaid, and the county road tax paid by such township shall be returned to the township each year to be applied in payment of such bonds until they are fully paid: Provided, however, that no township shall be entitled to the return of its county road tax until it shall have paid as much money in county road taxes as may have been expended on county roads within said township by the county road commissioners.”

The circuit court of Kalkaska county denied an ap[519]*519plication for a writ of mandamus to compel respondent to return to relator certain county road taxes it had paid, and which it claimed should, be refunded under the provisions of said section 26. Relator now seeks, by certiorari to mandamus a reversal of said order of denial.

Clearwater is a township of Kalkaska county, where the county road system has been' in force and operation for about 14 years. In 1912 Clearwater township by popular vote issued its bonds to the amount of $6,000 for the purpose of building State reward roads through its own territory. The money thus obtained was expended for such purpose within its boundaries, the work of construction continuing from the autumn of 1912 through the ensuing season until'the fall of 1913 or the first days of the season of 1914. Clear-water township had each year since the county road system was in force in Kalkaska county regularly paid its proportion of county road taxes assessed against it. The amount of taxes so paid by it during the years in which the county road law had been in force exceeded the amount expended in the township by the county road commissioners during the same time, but the amount of county road funds expended in the township by the county road commissioners subsequent to the passage of said Act No. 355 exceeded thé county road taxes paid by said township during the same period.

At the annual October, 1913, meeting of the board of supervisors of said county a certificate in behalf of Clearwater township was presented to and filed with the board by the Clearwater township clerk, certifying in due form to the raising of $6,000, as before stated, by township bonds to build State reward roads, that said bonds were outstanding and unpaid, and requested the board by proper action to refund to the township all moneys paid by it for the current year [520]*520as county road taxes, that the same might be applied in payment of said bonds. The board of supervisors declined to act favorably upon said application, denying that the township was legally entitled to repayment of its portion of the county road tax as claimed. The township thereupon instituted proceedings in the circuit court of said county to obtain a writ of mandamus directing the board of supervisors to refund said taxes. An order to show cause was issued upon said application, and an answer thereto duly filed by respondent. When the matter was brought on for hearing in the circuit court, issues were framed upon the petition of the relator and respondent’s answer as follows:

“First. Did the township of Clearwater issue its bonds and raise money for the building of State reward roads in the sum of $6,000, as alleged in the petition?
“Second. Was the certificate of the clerk of Clear-water township made stating the amount of such bonds remaining unpaid, and said certificate presented to the board of supervisors of Kalkaska county at its annual October meeting, October, 1918?
“Third. Had the township of Clearwater paid as much money in county road taxes as has been expended on county roads within said township by the county road commissioners of Kalkaska county?
“Fourth. Has the township of Clearwater expended in the building of State reward roads the sum of $6,000 and upwards of the moneys raised upon the above-mentioned issue of bonds of said township as alleged in the petition herein ?”

The issues were tried before the court without a jury, and all answered in the affirmative except the third, the answer to which was as follows:

“Yes, if the issue is intended to include all county road taxes paid by the township since the adoption of the county road system by Kalkaska county; and the answer of this coúrt is no, if the issue is confined to the county road taxes paid by said township since [521]*521the passage of the statute under which this action is brought.”

The court thereupon denied said application for a writ of mandamus, for the reason indicated by the concluding portion of its answer to issue No. 3. The question at issue is the meaning of the proviso in section 26, which declares:

“That no township shall be entitled to the return of its county road tax until it shall have paid as much money in county road taxes as may have been expended on county roads within said township by the county road commissioners.”

Relator contends this means the total balances as they appear each year, and should be determined by a computation covering the period during which the county road system has been in force in Kalkaska county and the township compelled to pay county road taxes; while respondent urges that the law in its intent is prospective, and the proviso does not permit consideration of bonds issued and county road taxes paid by the township, nor county road money spent within its territory, prior to its enactment, but only expenditures by the county on roads within the township and county road taxes paid by the latter after the law went into effect can be considered.

It cannot be said that relator’s construction and method of computation are prohibited, because involving a retrospective construction of the law. The rights and duties of these municipalities are not based on any contractual relations. They are organizations purely for public purposes, and their powers, rights, and duties may at any time be modified or abolished by legislation. A law is not retrospective, in a sense'forbidding it, because a part of the requisites for its action and application is drawn from a time antedating its passage. It was within the power of the legislature to provide, in consideration of previous expenditures [522]*522for State reward roads and county road taxes paid out of proportion to benefits, that the township should under certain contingencies have, through a process of rebate, relief in part from the burden of such taxation for a time thereafter. So far as that question is concerned, the proviso is open to either construction contended for; and the more serious question is: What was the legislative intent?

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.W. 824, 187 Mich. 516, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/township-of-clearwater-v-board-of-supervisors-mich-1915.