Levin, J.
The judges of the third judicial circuit, Wayne county, brought this action to compel the defendants, county of Wayne, its boards of supervisors and auditors and its treasurer to provide funds for 11 additional probation officers at a salary of $8,736 per year, 8 law clerks at a salary of $9,000 per year and a judicial assistant at a salary of $25,000 per year.
The trial judge granted the plaintiffs the requested relief and a writ of mandamus issued directing the defendants to provide the necessary funds.
The trial judge’s bench-dictated opinion, which was expressly incorporated by reference into the judgment, declared that as a matter of constitutional principle based upon section 1 of the judicial article of Michigan’s constitution,
circuit judges have the inherent power to determine their requirements for
supporting personnel, to fix the salaries of such personnel and to compel a local legislative body, such as the board of supervisors of Wayne county, to provide the necessary funds. This, said the trial judge, follows as a matter of necessity so as to preserve tbe independence of the judiciary and to protect the judicial function.
Section 1471 of the revised judicature act authorizes a circuit court to “employ law clerks for the court or for each judge of the court.” Section 1481 of that act authorizes a circuit court having 10 or more judges, as does the Wayne circuit court, to employ a judicial assistant. Sections 1471 and 1481 authorize the appointing judges to “fix” the compensation of those so employed “within the sum appropriated therefor” by the legislative body of
the governmental unit, other than the State of Michigan, which pays the compensation of the judges (MCLA §§ 600.1471, 600.1481 [Stat Ann 1962 Rev §§ 27A.1471, 27A.1481]). The local governmental unit which pays the compensation of Wayne circuit judges is Wayne county and its board of supervisors is the legislative body of Wayne county.
The statutory authority for the appointment of probation officers is contained in sections 7 and 12, ch 11, of the code of criminal procedure.
The portion of the judgment directing the defendants to provide funds for hiring law clerks and a judicial assistant was rested on both the power conferred by the legislature in RJA § 1471 (law clerks) and § 1481 (judicial assistant) and the power Qonferred by the people in § 1 of the judicial article of the constitution. The portion of the judgment directing the defendants to provide funds for hiring additional probation officers was based solely on the asserted constitutionally-conferred power to hire necessary supporting personnel.
On this appeal, Wayne county asserts that its county board of supervisors exercises legislative power and that the right to determine how the county’s money shall be spent is vested solely in the
board of supervisors and that the doctrine of separation of powers
bars the plaintiff circuit judges from obtaining the relief granted by the trial judge.
Nevertheless, the county acknowledges, despite the separation of powers doctrine, that the judicial branch may direct the appropriation of funds required for judicial purposes where the deprivation of funds is of such serious proportions that the failure to appropriate may properly be characterized as unreasonable and arbitrary, but the judges bear the burden of establishing such capriciousness.
The judges, on the other hand, assert that they satisfy their burden when they certify that the proposed expenditure is necessary in their judgment for the proper functioning of the judicial system, and the appropriating authority has the duty to provide the required funds unless it can show that the requisition is unreasonable or arbitrary.
Thus, both the judges and the county would bound the limits of their own discretion by a standard of arbitrariness, and each claims for itself the middle or “reasonable” ground.
The county does not deny the need for additional probation officers,
law clerks and a judicial assist
ant.
It does not require a testimonial record to establish that as organized today the Wayne circuit court could not operate efficiently without probation officers and other supporting personnel in addition to bailiffs, court clerks and stenographers.
At the hearing the county showed that it is without plenary taxing power, that the legislature has imposed on it innumerable obligations requiring the expenditure of funds without providing corresponding revenue, that the county has been operating at a deficit for years and finds itself in debt to both the city of Detroit and the State of Michigan for large sums and that it is financially unable to provide urgently needed social services.
The county argues that its board of supervisors is empowered to decide whether the pressing unmet social service needs of Wayne county shall have priority over or be subordinated to the concededly valid need for additional probation officers, law clerks and a judicial assistant.
This confrontation between the Wayne circuit judges and the Wayne hoard of supervisors follows unsuccessful efforts to reach a compromise whereby the Wayne board of supervisors would appropriate some additional funds for supporting personnel.
The plaintiff judges have called onr attention to decisions of other State courts asserting the inherent power of the judiciary to require the appropriation of funds when necessary to preserve the functioning of the judicial system.
There are Michigan cases
which, appear to recognize that the judiciary possesses such power.
However, some of the cases
concern incidental expenditures, relatively small in amount, or expenditures for items which, customarily, had been paid as a matter of course.
In almost all the cases where the inherent power of the judiciary to direct the appropriation of funds was recognized the court also relied on legislation authorizing the expenditure directed by the court.
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Levin, J.
The judges of the third judicial circuit, Wayne county, brought this action to compel the defendants, county of Wayne, its boards of supervisors and auditors and its treasurer to provide funds for 11 additional probation officers at a salary of $8,736 per year, 8 law clerks at a salary of $9,000 per year and a judicial assistant at a salary of $25,000 per year.
The trial judge granted the plaintiffs the requested relief and a writ of mandamus issued directing the defendants to provide the necessary funds.
The trial judge’s bench-dictated opinion, which was expressly incorporated by reference into the judgment, declared that as a matter of constitutional principle based upon section 1 of the judicial article of Michigan’s constitution,
circuit judges have the inherent power to determine their requirements for
supporting personnel, to fix the salaries of such personnel and to compel a local legislative body, such as the board of supervisors of Wayne county, to provide the necessary funds. This, said the trial judge, follows as a matter of necessity so as to preserve tbe independence of the judiciary and to protect the judicial function.
Section 1471 of the revised judicature act authorizes a circuit court to “employ law clerks for the court or for each judge of the court.” Section 1481 of that act authorizes a circuit court having 10 or more judges, as does the Wayne circuit court, to employ a judicial assistant. Sections 1471 and 1481 authorize the appointing judges to “fix” the compensation of those so employed “within the sum appropriated therefor” by the legislative body of
the governmental unit, other than the State of Michigan, which pays the compensation of the judges (MCLA §§ 600.1471, 600.1481 [Stat Ann 1962 Rev §§ 27A.1471, 27A.1481]). The local governmental unit which pays the compensation of Wayne circuit judges is Wayne county and its board of supervisors is the legislative body of Wayne county.
The statutory authority for the appointment of probation officers is contained in sections 7 and 12, ch 11, of the code of criminal procedure.
The portion of the judgment directing the defendants to provide funds for hiring law clerks and a judicial assistant was rested on both the power conferred by the legislature in RJA § 1471 (law clerks) and § 1481 (judicial assistant) and the power Qonferred by the people in § 1 of the judicial article of the constitution. The portion of the judgment directing the defendants to provide funds for hiring additional probation officers was based solely on the asserted constitutionally-conferred power to hire necessary supporting personnel.
On this appeal, Wayne county asserts that its county board of supervisors exercises legislative power and that the right to determine how the county’s money shall be spent is vested solely in the
board of supervisors and that the doctrine of separation of powers
bars the plaintiff circuit judges from obtaining the relief granted by the trial judge.
Nevertheless, the county acknowledges, despite the separation of powers doctrine, that the judicial branch may direct the appropriation of funds required for judicial purposes where the deprivation of funds is of such serious proportions that the failure to appropriate may properly be characterized as unreasonable and arbitrary, but the judges bear the burden of establishing such capriciousness.
The judges, on the other hand, assert that they satisfy their burden when they certify that the proposed expenditure is necessary in their judgment for the proper functioning of the judicial system, and the appropriating authority has the duty to provide the required funds unless it can show that the requisition is unreasonable or arbitrary.
Thus, both the judges and the county would bound the limits of their own discretion by a standard of arbitrariness, and each claims for itself the middle or “reasonable” ground.
The county does not deny the need for additional probation officers,
law clerks and a judicial assist
ant.
It does not require a testimonial record to establish that as organized today the Wayne circuit court could not operate efficiently without probation officers and other supporting personnel in addition to bailiffs, court clerks and stenographers.
At the hearing the county showed that it is without plenary taxing power, that the legislature has imposed on it innumerable obligations requiring the expenditure of funds without providing corresponding revenue, that the county has been operating at a deficit for years and finds itself in debt to both the city of Detroit and the State of Michigan for large sums and that it is financially unable to provide urgently needed social services.
The county argues that its board of supervisors is empowered to decide whether the pressing unmet social service needs of Wayne county shall have priority over or be subordinated to the concededly valid need for additional probation officers, law clerks and a judicial assistant.
This confrontation between the Wayne circuit judges and the Wayne hoard of supervisors follows unsuccessful efforts to reach a compromise whereby the Wayne board of supervisors would appropriate some additional funds for supporting personnel.
The plaintiff judges have called onr attention to decisions of other State courts asserting the inherent power of the judiciary to require the appropriation of funds when necessary to preserve the functioning of the judicial system.
There are Michigan cases
which, appear to recognize that the judiciary possesses such power.
However, some of the cases
concern incidental expenditures, relatively small in amount, or expenditures for items which, customarily, had been paid as a matter of course.
In almost all the cases where the inherent power of the judiciary to direct the appropriation of funds was recognized the court also relied on legislation authorizing the expenditure directed by the court.
Similarly, here, while the plaintiff judges rest their case largely on the claimed constitutionally-conferred power, the Michigan State legislature has authorized the very expenditures which the plaintiff circuit judges seek.
It is a sound tradition that courts avoid unnecessary decision of constitutional questions and, thus, if .the court perceives a nonconstitutional ground upon' which decision can be rested it may decide the case on that ground whether or not urged before it.
' “[A] court does not grapple with a constitu
tional issue except as a last resort.”
Taylor
v.
Auditor General
(1960), 360 Mich 146, 154. That principle is invoked in this case.
We hold that the trial judge correctly construed RJA §§ 1471, 1481, as authorizing the Wayne circuit judges to hire law clerks and a judicial assistant, to fix their compensation and, if need be, to require the county to appropriate the funds required to pay their compensation.
In our opinion sections 7 and 12, eh 11, of the code of criminal procedure also evidence a legislative purpose to vest in circuit judges,' not the board of supervisors, the power to determiné the county’s needs for probation officers, to cause such supporting personnel to be hired, to fix their compensation and, if need be, to direct the legislative body to appropriate the required' funds.
The legislature has conferred on the courts the power to place convicted persons on probation under the supervision of probation officers. MCLA § 771.1 (Stat Ann 1968 Cum Supp § 28.1131). The legislature requires a pre-sentence report prepared by a probation officer to be delivered to the sentencing judge before he sentences a person “charged” with a felony and authorizes a court to
direct the preparation of such a report for a person charged with a misdemeanor. Copies of the report are required to be filed with the State department of corrections. Probation officers are required to supervise those placed on probation. MCLA § 771-.14 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.1144).
We take it that the legislature intended that the pre-sentence reports be prepared expeditiously, yet comprehensively, to the end that a convicted person be sentenced promptly after conviction and the sentencing judge be fully informed regarding the background of the case and of the convicted person. We are also convinced that it was intended that judicial exercise of the probation power not be limited by the number of probation officers available to supervise probationers, and, yet, that there would be adequate supervision of all those placed on probation. The legislature did not intend that its directives or that judicial exercise of the probation power be frustrated by a board of supervisors’ failure to provide necessary funds.
Having in mind the financial circumstances of most counties of this State, we do not think the legislature meant to vest in the county boards of supervisors the discretion to determine whether the legislation regarding probation officers, law clerks and a judicial assistant would be implemented.
In a somewhat analogous case,
Sturgis
v.
County of Allegan
(1955), 343 Mich 209, a county superintendent of schools sought to compel payment of his salary. The county’s defense was that the superintendent’s salary as fixed by the board of education was subject to the approval of the board of supervisors. The relevant statute authorized the board of education to employ a county superintendent of schools and to fix his salary. It was further provided that the portion of his compensation to be
paid from county funds (p 213) “shall be paid by the county treasurer after the same have been authorized by the county board of education from such amounts as may be appropriated therefor by the county board of supervisors.” The Michigan Supreme Court held that the statutory right of the board of education to hire and fix the salary of a school superintendent could not be frustrated by the failure of the county board of supervisors to appropriate the necessary funds. The Court directed the county to pay the school superintendent’s salary.
The attorney general in OAG-1958, No 3192, p 41, construed an act which provided that the county board of social welfare may employ a director who “shall receive such compensation as shall be fixed by the board and approved by the county board or boards of supervisors.” The opinion of the attorney general focused on the fact that the statute there under consideration conferred authority on the board of supervisors to “approve” the compensation awarded by the county board of social welfare. He ruled, nevertheless, on the authority of
Sturgis:
“We think the conclusion must be that the county board of supervisors has no power, by arbitrarily withholding approval of compensation, to nullify the statutory right of the county board of social welfare to select and appoint a director. * * *
“the legislature has placed the responsibility for selection of a director and for fixing his compensation upon the welfare board, and the county supervisors are not empowered to assume, by indirection, such authority as will nullify the will of the legislature with respect to appointment and fixing of compensation.”
So, too, in this case. The county board of supervisors has not been empowered by indirection, by failing to make necessary appropriations, to thwart
the will of the legislature with respect to the appointment of probation officers, law clerks and a judicial assistant for the Wayne circuit judges.
The Nebraska Supreme Court, faced with a similar issue of statutory construction, ruled that a county cannot nullify a judge’s statutory right to appoint a court clerk by failing to approve necessary appropriations to pay the clerk’s salary:
“We conclude from the foregoing authorities that the statute authorizes the county judge to fix the salary of the clerk of the county court. In so doing he must not act arbitrarily, capriciously, or unreasonably. The limitation placed upon the authority of the judge in fixing the salary of the clerk of the county court to the effect that it should be done ‘with the approval of the county board’ authorizes the county board to approve or disapprove the act of the county judge, but in so acting the county board may not act arbitrarily, capriciously, or unreasonably.
In the absence of evidence that the salary fixed by the county judge is unreasonable, capricious, or arbitrary, the county board is without authority to disapprove it.” Bass
v.
County of Saline
(1960), 171 Neb 538, 543 (106 NW2d 860, 864) (emphasis supplied); similarly see
State
v.
Rush
(1966), 46 NJ 399, 414 (217 A2d 441, 449);
People, ex rel. Conn,
v.
Randolph, Director of Public Safety
(1966), 35 Ill 2d 24, 30 (219 NE2d 337, 341) ;
Powers
v.
Isley
(1947), 66 Ariz 94, 104 (183 P2d 880, 888).
We think that before the county should be heard to interpose financial inability to provide the required funds it must demonstrate not only that there is a shortage of funds but also that such shortage is attributable to obligations having the same rank and priority in terms of legislative mandate upon the board of supervisors as do appropriations for probation officers; law clerks and a judicial
assistant. For all that appears on this record the county’s financial embarrassment may be attributable to the incnrment of liabilities and the making of expenditures of a discretionary nature and not because of expenditures required by the legislature. Until it is made to appear that the county’s financial embarrassment cannot be alleviated by the elimination of discretionary expenditures, there is no need to consider the contentions of the parties as to whether the eounty is in fact short of funds
and how, if the kind of shortage referred to in opinions of the attorney general
were shown to exist, the financial resources of the county would be apportioned.
The problem of providing adequate funds for the support of necessary judicial services is primarily the function of the State legislature.
Cf. People, ex rel. Conn,
v.
Randolph, Director of Public Safety,
supra, p 32. The judges and the county have made a plea for State funds to alleviate the burden on Wayne county of meeting- these additional expenditures for judicial purposes. Further legislative attention to the matter may result in consideration of Wayne county’s claim that the statute which provides for supplemental service grants to meet the probation officer needs of only the less populous counties
unfairly discriminates against Wayne and the other more populous counties.
We have not addressed ourselves to the question of the reasonableness of the requests of the plaintiff circuit judges,
i.e.,
whether the}*- need 11 additional probation officers, 8 law clerks and a judicial assistant and whether the amounts fixed as salaries for those positions are appropriate. The spectrum of reasonableness is broad and opinions regarding reasonableness will vary throughout the spectrum. It would not be appropriate for a panel of this Court to second-guess what is essentially an administrative judgment of the judges of the Wayne circuit court. It is our understanding that our Court has not been vested with superintending control over the general practices of the trial courts — that the power to exercise that kind of superintending control has been reserved by the Supreme Court exclusively to itself.
Cf. Morcom
v.
Recorders Court Judges
(1968), 15 Mich App 358. See Const 1963, art 6, §4; MCLA § 600.219 (Stat Ann 1962 Eev § 27A.219). Accordingly, we do not comment and express no opinion on
the reasonableness of the action of the Wayne circuit judges.
The county asserts that it was deprived of due process of law guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment and Const 1963, art 1, § 17, when, over its objection, this case was tried to a circuit judge, albeit one other than of the Wayne circuit court, who was designated by the Michigan Supreme Court administrator to hear this case as a visiting judge.
It is the county’s contention that no circuit judge could be impartial since the presented issue concerned the power of all Michigan circuit judges and, thus, all circuit judges at one time or another have been or may well be faced with a need for additional funds for judicial purposes which their county boards of supervisors are unwilling to provide.
We note that our decision is not predicated upon any factual determination made by the trial judge. We do not think that the resolution of the legal issues presented by this case has been prejudiced by the fact that they were first considered by a circuit judge just because that judge may wish to join with his colleagues some day in exercising the power claimed by the Wayne circuit judges. The county’s argument would make ineligible all Michigan judges because the judges of our Court and the justices of the Michigan Supreme Court may some day be obliged to assert and exercise the inherent power of an independent branch of government. Adjudication
of a case regarding the breadth of judicial power cannot be avoided because all judges are in a sense affected by the manner in which the issue is resolved.
yin summary, we hold that (1) EJA §§ 1471 and 1481 and sections 7 and 12, ch 11, of the code of criminal procedure evidence a legislative purpose to vest in circuit judges the power to determine the extent to which probation officers, law clerks and a judicial-assistant shall be hired, to fix the compensation of .those hired and, if need be, to direct local units.of government to pay the amounts so determined and (2) the issue of the propriety of the action taken by the Wayne circuit judges in this case was not reviewable by the trial judge or by us but is subject to review by the Michigan Supreme Court in the exercise of its power of general superintending control over the actions of all judges and courts inferior to the Supreme Court.
Affirmed. No costs, a public question.
J; H. Gillis, P. J., and Fitzgerald, J., concurred.