Pokorny v. Wayne County , 322 Mich. 10 ( 1948 )


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  • This is an appeal by defendants attorney general and the State board of escheats from a decree pertaining to the disposition of certain funds now held by plaintiff Edward Pokorny, friend of the court of Wayne county. Pokorny filed a bill of complaint in which he stated that there was in his hands as of March 30, 1943, the sum of $11,969.92, representing unclaimed alimony deposited with him under the terms of orders theretofore entered, by the Wayne circuit court, which sum has been unclaimed by the intended recipients thereto for 10 years and upwards. This money is on deposit in a savings account in a Detroit bank. Plaintiff further informed the circuit court that he had in his hands the sum of $4,992.60 in separate account, representing interest earned upon the above mentioned funds to February 26, 1943. *Page 13

    On July 15, 1943, the board of supervisors of the county of Wayne adopted a resolution expressing its desire that these funds be placed by Pokorny in the county treasury to the credit of the general fund of the county. This resolution requested plaintiff to apply to the Wayne circuit court for an order directing him to deposit in the general fund of Wayne county all interest earned upon said bank deposits of alimony, except for certain items not important here, and all moneys coming into his possession which have not been claimed for a period of 6 years or more.

    This resolution also provided for the situation where the moneys in question, or part of them, shall be claimed by those originally entitled thereto, and provided a method for their payment.

    Pokorny's bill alleged that the board of escheats of the State of Michigan may claim that these funds should be paid to it by virtue of the statutes of the State of Michigan, and he asked that it be joined as a party defendant. The circuit court, after considering appellants' answer and the testimony of Pokorny, granted plaintiff the relief here requested and ordered him to deposit the mentioned funds to the credit of the county's general fund.

    It is the first contention of the plaintiff that the funds are public moneys, and therefore are not subjected to the escheat statutes of this State. Both sides agree that, if these funds are public moneys, then they cannot escheat to the State. However, we are unable to find in the present instance that these funds are public moneys. Public moneys are defined by our statute as follows, being Act No. 40, § 1, Pub. Acts 1932 (1st Ex. Sess.) (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 2746-9, Stat. Ann. § 3.751):

    "All moneys which shall come into the hands of any officer of any county, or of any township, school district, city or village, or of any other municipal *Page 14 or public corporation within this State, pursuant to any provision of law authorizing such officer to collect or receive the same, shall be denominated public moneys within the meaning of this act."

    Plaintiff contends that he, and these funds which he has received, fall within the definition given in the statute because, by virtue of Wayne Circuit Court Rule No. 9, subd. (a) of part 1, he is an officer of the court. That he is such an officer of the court is sustained by the cited court rule, which reads:

    "All payments of alimony, temporary and permanent, shall be made payable to and shall be paid to the friend of the court, who shall be deputized as a deputy court clerk for that purpose."

    But it still does not follow that these funds are public moneys. The distinction between public and nonpublic moneys is well stated in 50 C.J. p. 854, § 40, where it is said:

    "The term `public funds' means funds belonging to the State or to any county or political subdivision of the State; more specifically taxes, customs, moneys, et cetera, raised by the operation of some general law, and appropriated by the government to the discharge of its obligations, or for some public or governmental purpose; and in this sense it applies to the funds of every political division of the State wherein taxes are levied for public purposes. The term does not apply to special funds, which are collected or voluntarily contributed, for the sole benefit of the contributors, and of which the State is merely the custodian."

    This definition of public moneys is sustained by the following authorities: Branch v. United States, 12 Court of Claims, 281; Federal Deposit Ins. Corporation v. Tremaine,37 F. Supp. 177, 41 F. Supp. 849; Hood v. Hardesty,94 F.2d 26, certiorari *Page 15 denied, 303 U.S. 661 (58 Sup. Ct. 765, 82 L.Ed. 1120); andState, ex rel. Stearns, v. Olson, State Treasurer, 43 N.D. 619 (175 N.W. 714).

    The instant case is a prime example of a situation where the distinction must be drawn between funds held by governmental officers. If we are not to say that all funds held by such officers are public moneys, which we cannot say, then this is clearly a case where such funds must be held not to be public moneys. Here, the plaintiff is merely a depository, he has no interest in these funds other than to collect them and to see that they eventually, if possible, go to those parties entitled to them. These funds were never intended for the use of any public agency or any governmental unit, and to so appropriate them would be a misuse of them. To call these moneys public moneys merely because they have been deposited with the plaintiff would be the same as saying that these funds belong to the bank in which they are deposited, only because they are there so deposited. Such a result would, of course, be ridiculous.

    Notwithstanding the statute, which we construe to be consistent with this holding, public moneys mean those funds which are raised by a governmental unit or agency for the conduct of government and for governmental purposes, and not those funds such as the present, which incidentally fall into the hands of some governmental agent, while such agent is performing his lawful functions. These funds never were intended to belong to the county and were held by plaintiff merely in a fiduciary capacity, not for the benefit of the county, even incidentally, but for the benefit of those parties entitled to them by virtue of appropriate court orders.

    Nevertheless, it is contended by plaintiff that these funds cannot be escheated to the State board *Page 16 of escheats. There is no support for this contention. At its last regular session the legislature, apparently to clear up any doubts which the parties to this controversy, and others, had concerning the disposition of such funds as are here in controversy, passed Act No. 329, § 11, Pub. Acts 1947 (Stat. Ann. 1947 Cum. Supp. § 26.1053 [11]), which provides:

    "Whenever any officer of a court in this State, including Federal courts, or any county officer is in possession of any money or other property collected or received pursuant to an order of court, and such officer is unable to distribute or pay out such money or property to the person or persons entitled thereto as prescribed by such order or decree of court, due to the failure of the distributee or distributees to claim the same, or for the reason that the whereabouts of such distributee or distributees cannot be ascertained and such inability shall continue for a period of 7 years from and after the receipt of such money or property by such officer, then it shall be the duty of such officer to report the same to the State board of escheats as abandoned property in conformity with the provisions of section 6 or 8 hereof.

    "Upon the receipt of the report required by this section, the board of escheats shall immediately deliver a copy thereof to the attorney general whose duty it shall be to institute or cause to be instituted a proper suit or proceeding for an adjudication of abandonment and the descent of such property to the State as an escheat as provided in this act: Provided, That nothing contained in this section shall be construed as divesting the court, under whose order or decree the money was received by said officer, of jurisdiction over said money or property and the power to control the distribution thereof to the rightful owner or owners, except as such court shall waive jurisdiction, or the owner or owners of such property shall fail to appear and cause their appearance to be entered in the suit or proceeding *Page 17 instituted by the attorney general, or at his instance, as provided in this act."

    This act provides specifically for the situation at hand, and dictates the result that the fund in question should escheat to the State, and therefore cannot be deposited by the plaintiff in the Wayne county general fund as ordered by the circuit court. No objection has been made to the validity of this act, and it appears to us that it is a valid exercise of legislative power.

    Therefore, of necessity, the decree of the lower court is vacated, and one may be entered here in conformity with this opinion, but without costs, a question of public interest being involved.

    SHARPE, BOYLES, REID, NORTH, BUTZEL, and CARR, JJ., concurred. DETHMERS, J., did not sit.