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gaged in like service shall receive at the rate of two dollars per day, and said expense shall also be paid, two-thirds by the How paid. municipality where such service is rendered, and one-third by the State, as hereinafter provided, but no payment shall be made to any claimant under this act until he shall have presented an itemized account and made oath or affirmation that said account is just and correct, which account shall be approved by the township board, city or village council, as the case may be. The clerk of the board or council, as the case Adjusting of may be, shall thereupon issue to each claimant his warrant upon the treasurer of the municipality for the entire sum to which such claimant is entitled, and such treasurer shall pay the same. Such clerk shall transmit the original oath and copy of the warrant to the Auditor General, who shall audit such claim, and one-third thereof shall be paid out of the State treasury from the general revenue fund by warrant issued by the Auditor General upon the State Treasurer in favor of the county in which the same was paid, and forward the same to the treasurer of said county, who shall pay it over to the treasurer of the proper municipality: Provided, That no fire Proviso as to warden shall be paid in any one year for more than ten days' time may be service in extinguishment and preventing forest fires, nor for paid for. more than five days' service in each year in posting notices and making the reports required by this act, nor, in the aggregate, for more than fifteen days' services of whatever character, in any one year; nor shall any one person employed by fire wardens to assist in extinguishing or preventing forest fires be paid for more than five days of such service in any one year. Not more than fifty dollars shall be expended under this act in any one year in any city, village or surveyed township in this State.

amount of

fires.

SEC. 9. Any person who wilfully, negligently or carelessly Penalty for sets on fire, or causes to be set on fire, any woods, grass lands setting of or other combustible material, whether or not on his own lands, by means whereof the property of another is injured or endangered, or any person who wilfully, negligently or carelessly suffers any fire set by himself to damage the property of another, is guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be punished by a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars, or by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding three months. Any person who maliciously sets on fire, or causes to be set on fire, any woods, grass lands or other combustible material whereby the property of another is destroyed or life is endangered, shall be punished with a fine of not over five hundred dollars, or be imprisoned in the State prison for a term of not over ten years, or both such fine and imprisonment.

SEC. 10. Any person who shall kindle a fire on or danger- Idem. ously near to forest or grass lands, and leave it unquenched, or shall be a party thereto, and every person who shall use other than incombustible wads for firearms, or who shall carry a naked torch, fire brand, or other exposed light in or dangerously near to forest land, causing risk of accidental fire, shall

Penalty for destroying placard.

Duty of railroads relative to spark

be punished by a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars or imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding three months.

SEC. 11. Every person who shall wilfully deface, destroy or remove any warning placard posted under the requirements of this act shall be liable to a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars for each offense, or imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding three months.

SEC. 12. It shall be the duty of all railroad companies operating any railroad within this State to use efficient spark arresters, etc. arresters on all their engines and to keep their right of way to the width of fifty feet on each side of the center of the main track cleared of all combustible materials and safely dispose of the same within said limits of their right of way between the fifteenth day of April and the first day of December. No railroad company shall permit its employes to leave a deposit of fire or live coals, or hot ashes, in the immediate vicinity of woodland, or lands liable to be overrun by fires, and where engineers, conductors or trainmen discover that fences or other materials along the right of way or woodland adjacent to the railroad are burning or in danger from fire, they shall report the same promptly at the next telegraph station that they pass. In seasons of drouth railroad companies shall give particular instructions to their employes for the prevention and prompt extinguishment of fires and they shall cause warning placards furnished by the forest commissioner to be posted at their stations in the vicinity of forest and grass lands, and where a fire occurs along the line of their road they shall concentrate such help and adopt such measures as shall be available to effectively extinguish it. Any railroad company wilfully violating the requirements of this act shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and be punished by a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars for each such offense, and railroad employes wilfuly violating the requirements of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and be punished by a fine of not less than five dollars nor more than fifty dollars. But this section shall not be construed to prohibit or prevent any railroad company from piling or keeping upon the right of way cross ties or other material necessary in the operation or maintenance of such railroad.

Penalty for violation.

Relative to

SEC. 13. It shall be the duty of each and every owner of threshing, etc. threshing or other portable steam engines to have efficient spark arresters on their engines at all times when in use, and no person in charge of any threshing engine shall deposit live coals or hot ashes from his engine in any place without putting them out or covering them with at least three inches of earth before leaving them. All persons violating the provisions of this section shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by a fine not less than five dollars nor more than fifty dollars.

Penalty for violation.

Relative to damages.

SEC. 14. Nothing in this act shall be construed as affecting any right of action for damages.

SEC. 15. Woodland territory within the terms of this act Woodland, shall be construed to mean forest and brush land.

what deemed.

expended.

SEC. 16. All moneys received as penalties for violating the Penalties, how provisions of this act shall be paid into the county treasury of the county wherein the offense occurred, and the treasurer of the county shall pay the same forthwith to the treasurer of the municipality where the offense occurred, to be used in defraying the expenses of enforcing the provisions of this act within such municipality.

to report to governor.

SEC. 17. The forest commissioner shall annually on or be- Commissioner fore the first day of December make a written report to the Governor of his doings in respect to the duties herein assigned him, together with an itemized account of the expenses incurred in carrying out the provisions of this act, which report shall include such statistics and facts as he has obtained from the chief fire warden and from the several fire wardens of the State, and from other sources, together with his suggestions relative to the preservation of the forests of the State and the prevention and extinguishment of forest fires.

of act.

SEC. 18. This act shall apply and be in force only within Application the territory within this State lying north of the north line of township twenty north.

SEC. 19. All acts and parts of acts inconsistent with this Repealing

act are hereby repealed.

Approved June 18, 1903.

clause.

[No. 250.]

AN ACT to amend sections one, three and thirteen of act number one hundred forty-six of the Public Acts of eighteen hundred fifty-seven, approved February sixteen, eighteen hundred fifty-seven, as amended by act number six of the Public Acts of eighteen hundred eighty-seven, approved February five. eighteen hundred eighty-seven, being sections one hundred seventy-seven, one hundred seventy-nine and one hundred eighty-five of the Compiled Laws of eighteen hundred ninety-seven, entitled "An act to provide for the organization of the supreme court."

The People of the State of Michigan enact:

amended.

SECTION 1. Sections one, three and thirteen of act number sections one hundred forty-six of the Public Acts of eighteen hundred fifty-seven, approved February sixteenth, eighteen hundred fifty-seven, as amended by act number six of the Public Acts of eighteen hundred eighty-seven, approved February fifth, eighteen hundred eighty-seven, being sections one hundred seventy-seven, one hundred seventy-nine and one hundred eighty-five of the Compiled Laws of eighteen hundred ninety

How constituted.

Additional justices, when

seven, entitled "An act to provide for the organization of the supreme court," are hereby amended so as to read as follows: SEC. 1. From and after the first day of January, nineteen hundred five, the supreme court shall consist of a chief justice and seven associate justices, to be chosen by the electors of this State, and in the mean time the supreme court shall continue as at present organized.

SEC. 3. At the election to be held in the several townships elected, term and cities of this State, on the first Tuesday after the first of office. etc. Monday of November, nineteen hundred four, there shall be elected three additional associate justices of the supreme court, who shall enter upon office on the first day of January, nineteen hundred five, one of whom shall hold his office until the thirty-first day of December, nineteen hundred seven, one shall hold his office until the thirty-first day of December, nineteen hundred nine, and one shall [hold] his office until the thirty-first day of December, nineteen hundred eleven. The ballots cast at such election for such justices shall designate the term of service of each justice voted for. At the election to be held in the several townships and cities of this State, on the first Monday in April, nineteen hundred five, there shall be elected one justice of the supreme court, who shall hold his office for the term of eight years from and after the first day of January next succeeding such election. At the election to be held in the several townships and cities of this State, on the first Monday in April, nineteen hundred seven, and every two years thereafter, there shall be elected two justices of the supreme court to hold their offices respectively for the term of eight years from and after the first day of January next succeeding such elections. The several justices of the supreme court now in office shall hold their offices respectively during the term for which they have been elected, and the term of all other justices of the supreme court shall be eight years, as above provided.

Transacting

of business.

SEC. 13. Five judges shall be sufficient to form a quorum for the hearing of cases and the transaction of business by the supreme court organized under the provisions of this act, and the court shall have the same jurisdiction and powers which have been conferred by the constitution and laws now in force, upon the present supreme court. Parties to proceedings pending in the supreme court shall be entitled to an oral hearing in all calendar cases and upon all motions involving constitutional questions and personal liberty. Whenever there shall be filed a dissenting opinion in a case heard by a quorum of five judges only, the parties therein shall have a right to a rehearing before the entire bench upon making a proper application therefor. From and after the thirty-first chief justice. day of December, nineteen hundred five, the powers and duties appertaining to the office of chief justice of the supreme court shall devolve, from time to time, upon the two justices of that court whose term of office shall soonest expire by its own limitations; the justice having served the longest time

Who to be

court.

in said court shall discharge such duties during the year next preceding the last year of his term, and the justice having served the shortest time in said court shall discharge such duties during the last year of his said term: Provided, how- Proviso. ever, In case the said two justices have served the same length of time in said court, then the justice senior in years shall discharge such duties during the year next preceding the last year of his term, and the justice junior in years shall discharge such duties during the last year of his term. Four Terms of terms of the supreme court shall be held annually, commencing Tuesday after the first Monday of January, April, June and October, which shall be called, respectively, the January, April, June and October terms of said court. All the terms of said court shall be held at the supreme court room in the city of Lansing, in the county of Ingham. The court may hold special or adjourned terms, and shall continue its sessions a sufficient number of days at each term to hear all the causes ready for hearing, and all causes and questions not decided at the term when the same are submitted shall be determined early in the next succeeding term. Approved June 18, 1903.

[No. 251.]

AN ACT to amend sections nine, ten, eleven, sixteen, twenty and twenty-five of an act, entitled "An act to increase the efficiency of the military establishment of the State of Michigan, and to repeal all former acts or parts of acts inconsistent with the provisions of this act," approved June six, nineteen hundred and one.

The People of the State of Michigan enact:

amended.

SECTION 1. Sections nine, ten, eleven, sixteen, twenty and Sections twenty-five of an act, entitled "An act to increase the efficiency of the military establishment of the State of Michigan, and to repeal all former acts or parts of acts inconsistent with the provisions of this act," approved June thirty, nineteen hundred and one, are hereby amended so as to read as follows:

SEC. 9. The Michigan National Guard shall be composed of M. N. G., how not less than forty companies of infantry, and if more than composed. forty companies are organized, at least one shall be composed of colored men. The Commander-in-Chief, with the advice of the State Military Board, may organize one battery of light artil lery, one signal company, one company of engineers and one troop of cavalry: Provided, That it shall be lawful to pro- Proviso as to cure not to exceed four automatic guns or other repeating or guns. revolving guns, and to provide for their use by said companies of infantry, or detachments therefrom, and all of which force

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