Stewart v. Royal Oak Township Clerk
Stewart v. Royal Oak Township Clerk
Opinion of the Court
Boyal Oak Township is an unchartered township situated in Oakland County, Michigan, organized under and pursuant to the Constitution and statutes of the State of Michigan.
Prior to October 20, 1966, the township board consisted of a supervisor, a treasurer, a clerk and four trustees. Having been convicted of infamous crimes, the treasurer and a trustee were removed from office. One of the vacancies, that of treasurer, was filled by the remaining township board’s appointment of an acting treasurer.
The conflict causing this appeal developed at the October 20,1966, regularly scheduled board meeting.' A quorum was established by the presence of the supervisor, the acting treasurer and two trustees. The township clerk was absent from the meeting but had arranged to have her deputy clerk present,
During this meeting, 23 motions were made and unanimously carried, but when the 24th motion, a motion to fill existing vacancies on the board, was made and supported, the supervisor left the meeting. The subsequent vote taken, without the supervisor, was recorded as having passed with “3 yeas”. The deputy clerk took no part in the proceedings other than to record the minutes.
The plaintiffs instituted action in the circuit court when the township clerk refused to administer the oath of office to them, or to certify that they had been duly appointed trustees to fill the vacancies. Defendant clerk gave as the reason for such refusal her belief that plaintiffs had not been duly appointed to fill the vacancies because of a lack of a quorum at the time of voting on the motion to appoint them.
The trial court ordered the issuance of a writ of mandamus, ordering the clerk to administer the required oath of office to plaintiffs and to certify their names as trustees to fill out the unexpired terms of the offices. Following this decision was much legal traffic including an emergency appeal to this Court and further proceedings below which eventually brought the case before us.
The sole issue presented here is whether or not a deputy township clerk, in an unchartered township, is vested with legislative powers.
In Kennedy v. Van Buren County Drain Commissioner (1916), 189 Mich 676, 678, the Court set forth the powers of the deputy clerk as follows:
*436 “The office of deputy clerk is one authorized by the statute (CL 1897, § 2342), and unless his powers are limited by the statute, he may perform any act which his principal may perform. Dorr v. Clark (1859), 7 Mich 310; Andres v. Ottawa Circuit Judge
Defendant, however, contends that the Constitution of 1963 makes inapplicable both § 41.69 and the Kennedy Case. For the purpose of comparing the two constitutional provisions, the one in existence at the time of Kennedy and the one presently before this Court, we set forth both provisions as follows:
*437 “The legislature may by general law confer upon organized townships such powers of a local, legislative and administrative character, not inconsistent with the provisions of this constitution, as it may deem proper.” Const 1908, art 8, § 17. (Emphasis supplied.)
“There shall be elected annually on the first Monday of April in each organized township one supervisor, one township clerk, one commissioner of highways, one township treasurer, not to exceed four constables and one overseer of highways for each highway district, whose potvers and duties shall be
• Despite the change in constitutional language, we can see no substantive difference between the 1908 and 1963 Constitutions such as would prevent the legislature from creating the office of deputy clerk' and granting* its holder power to act on the township board in a legislative capacity. As such, the Kennedy Case is controlling in the instant case.
Affirmed. No costs, a public question being involved.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.