This is an appeal from a circuit court order requiring defendants to restore plaintiff to a position as policeman and to compensate him for loss of wages suffered by reason of their failure to do so immediately upon his application for reemployment. The order was entered under PA 1951, No 263 (CLS 1952, § 35.351 et seq.; Stat Ann 1952 Rev §4.1486[1] et seq.), which provides for rights of public employees who enter the armed forces to reinstatement after relief from military duty.
Section 2 of the act provides, in part:
“(a) Any public employee who leaves a position * * * to perform military duty, * * * and who is relieved or discharged from such duty under lionorable conditions, and makes application for reemployment within 90 days after he is relieved from military duty * * * shall — - •
“(1) If still qualified to perform the duties of :such position, be restored to such position; * * . *
“(2) If not qualified to perform the duties of such position by reason of disability sustained during *57such service, such public employee shall be placed in such other position, the duties of which he is qualified to perform, * * *
“(b) * * * if it is determined that # * *
“(2) For any reason it is not feasible for such person to be restored to such department or agency, it shall be determined whether or not there is a position in any other department or agency of the same public employer for which such person is qualified and which is either vacant or held by a person having* a temporary appointment thereto or less seniority than the employee returning from military service.. In any case in which it is determined that there is such a position, such person shall be restored in service and appointed to such position by the department or agency in which such position exists.”
Section 5(b) provides, in part:
“In case any public employer fails or refuses to comply with the provisions of this act, the circuit court for the district in which such public employer is located shall have power, upon filing of a motion, petition, or other appropriate pleading by the person entitled to the benefits of such provisions, specifically to require such employer to comply with such provisions and to compensate such person for any loss of wages or benefits suffered by reason of such employers’ unlawful action.”
Defendants contend that section 5(b) undertakes to impose an administrative function on the courts, in violation of Constitution 1908, art 4, §§ 1, 2, dividing the powers of government into 3 departments;citing Koeper v. Detroit Street Railway Commission, 222 Mich 464. Involved in that case was the veterans’ preference act, PA 1897, No 205, as amended by PA 1919, No 224, section 2 of which provided that no veteran should be removed from his public employment, except after hearing before the circuit court and only upon its written order. This Court held that that *58provision attempted to delegate an executive or administrative function to the judicial department of government and was, therefore, unconstitutional and void. The act provided for no determination of grounds for removal by any administrative agency, but placed sole responsibility for deciding whether such employee should be removed or not upon the court. This Court quoted with approval from the opinion of the trial judge, as follows:
“Said section 2 is unconstitutional, null and void in that no provision is made in said section or in the act itself specifically setting forth the causes based upon which the order of such removal, suspension and transfer may be made. There being no common standard for determination mentioned in the statute, no judicial question arising under the statute is presented to the court.”
Distinguishable is the instant situation, in which section 2 of the act here involved specifically sets forth the conditions and circumstances under which re-employment is required, thus establishing a standard for determination, and in which section 5(c) thereof places on the employing administrative agency the responsibility for compliance with the requirements of section 2 and, hence, for determining, as provided in that section, the existence or absence of such conditions and circumstances. We do not agree with defendants that under section 5(b) the question thereafter before the circuit court is the same as the one previously before the public employer. Section 5(b) imposes upon the court the judicial function and duty, upon petition, to require compliance with the act. That is the sort of function constantly performed by courts. There is nothing in the act which specifically requires the court, in performing that duty, to reject the public employer’s determinations and substitute and follow its own as *59to whether the employee is still qualified to perform the duties of the position or whether it is feasible to restore him to employment. As already stated, those determinations are. expressly required, by section 5(c), to be made by the administrative employing unit. Neither is there anything in the act requiring the court to abandon the general rule and practice, with which the legislature must be deemed to have been familiar, followed in the review of administrative decisions, namely, to decline to usurp administrative functions or to substitute judicial judgment for administrative judgment in the determination of facts, but to confine the judicial role to that of inquiry into whether the administrative agency made such determination as required by law and, if so, to accept it if, and only if, it is supported by evidence and has a sufficient foundation. That this properly comes within the province of the courts appears from Purdie v. Detroit Police Department Trial Board, 318 Mich 430, and cases therein cited. Section 5(b) is, therefore, not, as contended, unconstitutional.
The trial court did not err in denying a motion to dismiss as to defendant board on the ground that it is not a corporate legal entity under the city charter with capacity to sue and be sued. Defendants concede that CL 1948, § 613.35 (Stat Ann § 27.765), provides for service of process on unincorporated public boards where the right to bring suit against them is conferred by law, but contend that no right to sue defendant board is conferred by law. PA 1951, No 263, itself confers such right in providing that only the employer shall be deemed a necessary party respondent to any action such as. this and in defining a “public employer” as any department, agency or instrumentality of any municipality employing a public employee in a position. Defendant; board is such employer.
*60Defendants say that plaintiff waived his right to reinstatement because, at the time of his entry into military service, he resigned rather than to take a leave of absence as permitted under a resolution of defendant board and a provision of city charter. The statute does not make the right to its benefits dependent upon how a public employee separated himself from his employment to perform military duty. It simply applies its beneficent provisions to “any public employee who leaves a position * * * to perform military duty.” That statutory language covers plaintiff’s situation, regardless of whether he resigned or took leave of absence. No board resolution or city charter provision can supersede it.
Next, defendants urge that plaintiff did not make sufficient or proper application for re-employment in that he did not apply to defendant board formally, but only talked about it to the chief of police, and because such conversation occurred after plaintiff was permitted to leave military duty and remain at home, but before he received his honorable discharge. We think this without merit, especially in view of the fact that defendant board did consider his informal application and, on the basis thereof, determined not to reinstate him for an entirely different reason. Formal and seasonable application would have made no difference to the action of the board.
We come now to defendants’ claim that they were not required under the act to re-employ plaintiff because he was not “still qualified to perform the duties of such position” and because it was “not feasible for such person to be restored.” As previously stated, in considering that claim it is not our function to determine the facts, but, rather, to ascertain whether defendant board made such determination and, if so, whether there was a sufficient foundation for it and whether the finding was supported by evidence. Purdie v. Detroit Police Department Trial *61 Board, supra. The difficulty with defendants’ position in this connection is that it is evident from the record that defendant board never determined that plaintiff was not “still qualified” or that it was “not feasible” to restore him, but refused to re-employ him for an altogether different reason. And with good reason did it refrain from determining that plaintiff was not “still qualified,” as the record makes clear. Plaintiff testified that he was in good physical condition, had not been wounded or disabled in any way while in the armed service, and had never been disciplined or had any trouble or complaints about his work while serving as policeman. That testimony stands unrefuted, except as it may be considered assailed by that of the present chief of police, who testified that he had been a police inspector during the period of plaintiff’s previous service and, as such, had never heard anything derogatory about plaintiff on the force, but that after plaintiff applied for reinstatement he (the new chief) “talked to some of the superior officers and they said he’s a very good boy but a very poor policeman. # * * They said he was obstinate, he didn’t like to accept orders # * * a captain told me * * # he was downright lazy.” These criticisms related to plaintiff’s 5-year service as policeman prior to his service in the armed forces for a year and a half. There is no testimony making those criticisms applicable to plaintiff or his qualifications to be a policeman after his return from military duty, nor is there any adverse testimony in that regard. There was, then, no foundation for or any evidence to support a determination, had it been made, that plaintiff was not “still qualified” to perform the duties of policeman upon his return from military service.
It is significant that in making qualification a prerequisite to reinstatement, section 2(a)(1) uses the term “If still qualified” and section 2(a)(2) reads *62“If not qualified * * * by reason of disability sustained during such (military) service.” This language presupposes from tbe fact that a public employee was holding his position, that he was qualified to perform its duties before entering military service, and is expressive of a legislative intent that a lack of qualification for the position, to be relied upon as the basis for refusal to re-employ, must be one occurring after leaving such position to enter the armed service and resulting from a disability sustained during such service. To hold otherwise would be to permit an employee’s position to be prejudiced by the very fact of military service, and it was precisely this which the statute was designed to prevent. Evidence of a disqualification of that character is utterly lacking in this record. At all events, defendant board did not determine and did not predicate its refusal to re-employ on the grounds that plaintiff was not “still qualified.” A board member testified that the refusal was not based on anything “personal about Mr. Borseth * * * or his service while a member of the force.” Testimony of other board members was of the same tenor and established that their refusal was for a different reason altogether. Defendants may not assert on appeal here a reason not relied upon and administratively determined as a fact by defendant board previous to or at the time of its refusal to re-employ plaintiff.
What defendants now point to as constituting a determination by defendant board that it was not feasible to restore plaintiff consists, as disclosed by testimony of board members, of this: That defendant board had “taken the position * * * that it wasn’t fair to the men on the force to reinstate a man that had severed connections, withdrew all his pension fund.” In amplification, they admitted, in effect, that, if plaintiff had merely taken a leave of absence *63and left his pension contributions in the fund when he entered the armed forces, they would have deemed it feasible to and he would have been re-employed upon his return; but they insisted that it would not be feasible and would be destructive of police department morale to reinstate a man who, instead, had resigned and withdrawn his pension contributions. The only material difference shown on the record between the 2 situations is the leaving of contributions in the pension fund in the former instance and their withdrawal in the latter. There is no evidence in the record, and there appears to have been none before defendant board, to support a determination that reinstatement after service in the armed forces would be more feasible and less destructive of morale in the former instance than in the latter. Furthermore, when plaintiff applied for reinstatement heoffered, as subsequently required by the trial court, to return to the pension fund the sum he had withdrawn upon resignation. Defendants complain here that the statute does not authorize the court to require such reimbursement and thus remove the main prop from the position assumed by defendants. That question we need not determine inasmuch as it is not raised in defendants’ statement of reasons and grounds for appeal or statement of questions involved in their brief. That plaintiff offered such reimbursement and that defendants did not accept it but now object to the court’s requiring it, is eloquent, however, of the fact that in reality defendant board’s refusal never was based on a determination that it would be unfeasible or destructive of morale to reinstate plaintiff solely because he had resigned and withdrawn his pension contributions (nor is there any foundation for or evidence to support such determination in this record). On the contrary, it is clear that defendant board has “taken the position” that policemen about to enter the armed serv*64ices ought to comply with the board’s resolution adopted in that connection by taking a leave of absence from their jobs and from their pension contributions and refrain from resigning and withdrawing the contributions, and that failure to so comply merits refusal, despite the absence of any other justification recognized by the statute, of the re-employment guaranteed and required by State law.
It is to be noted, in addition, that when a determination is made by a public employer that it is not feasible to restore an employee to his former employment or that he is not still qualified for such position, the statute requires such employer to determine thereafter whether it has some other available position for which such employee is qualified and, if so, to assign him to it. Lack of evidence in the record to disclose that defendants followed such course of procedure also bespeaks a failure to have determined the statutory questions of nonqualification or nonfeasibility at all.
Defendants have failed to comply with the provisions of the statute and it is within the power of the circuit court to require it.
Affirmed, without costs, a public question being involved.
Adams, Btjtzel, Carr, Btjshnell, Sharpe, Boyles, and Reid, JJ., concurred.