Boden v. Town of Lake

12 N.W.2d 140, 244 Wis. 215, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 61
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 N.W.2d 140 (Boden v. Town of Lake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boden v. Town of Lake, 12 N.W.2d 140, 244 Wis. 215, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 61 (Wis. 1943).

Opinion

Fowler, J.

The action was brought to set aside a special assessment for construction of a sanitary sewer constructed by the town of Lake through a fifty-three-acre tract of farm land in the town on the ground that the town did not acquire jurisdiction to impose the tax and tO' recover the amount of the taxes imposed which were paid under protest. The tax imposed was to be.paid in three annual instalments of $367 each, to be put upon the tax rolls of 1938, 1939, and 1940. The action was commenced March 6, 1940. The 1938 and 1939 in-stalments had been paid prior to that time. The 1940 instalment was paid February 27, 1941. The case was tried to the court in June, 1942.

Sec. 75.62 (1), Stats., provides that whenever any action is “commenced to set aside . . . any tax, for any error or defect going to the validity of the assessment and affecting the groundwork of such tax,” the plaintiff shall pay the amount *218 of the tax to the taxing unit “within twenty days after the commencement of such action.” The court held that sec. 75.62 (1) applied to the case. It also' found and concluded that the proceedings taken were authorized under statutes applicable and that the tax was valid. It directed judgment dismissing the complaint but did not specify the ground on which it should be entered. The judgment entered declared and adjudged the tax valid.

We will first consider the effect, if any, that sec. 75.62 (1), Stats., has upon the case. Lombard v. McMillan, 95 Wis. 627, 70 N. W. 673, was ejectment by-the original owner of land to recover possession of the land from the vendee under a tax deed. Ch. 278, Laws of 1883, provided that no action should be commenced, maintained, or prosecuted by such original owner to recover possession of, or in any way affecting the title of the land until all taxes levied on the land since the tax sale were paid into the county treasury. This court held that nonpayment of such taxes was matter in abatement and not in bar; that objection to prosecution of the action must be taken by demurrer or plea in abatement or it is waived; and that nonpayment did not destroy the right of action. A plea in abatement had been entered. The court dismissed the action under the plea in abatement.

The rule of the McMillan Case, supra, applies to the instant action. There was here a plea in abatement, although it was not denominated as such. The answer pleaded nonpayment of the third instalment and that was sufficient to constitute the allegation a plea in abatement. 3 Bryant, Wis. Pl. & Pr. (2d ed.) sec. 305. The statute did not make the payment a condition precedent, for it expressly provided that payment might be made within twenty days from commencement of the action. The nonpayment did not destroy the plaintiffs’ right of action but left him free to commence another case upon the same cause of action as in the McMillan Case, supra.

*219 In the instant case the answer interposed the plea in abatement and a plea on the merits. This is a proper practice. 3 Bryant, Wis. Pl. & Pr., supra. The trial judge decided the case upon both issues. By his written decision and his findings of fact and conclusions of law he decided both that the action should be dismissed because of nonpayment of the assessments within the twenty days, and also decided that it should be dismissed on the merits. If the court had decided the issue under the plea in abatement the other way it would have been proper to proceed to decide the case upon the merits. But having decided that issue as he did, judgment could not be granted on both grounds. The judgment must either have been entered upon the plea in abatement and been merely of dismissal with right to commence another action or been entered on the merits. The trial judge’s conclusion of law merely was “That the defendants are entitled to judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ complaint with costs.” The judgment entered is plainly on the merits. The defendants by entering such judgment did not rely on their plea in abatement and waived the defense under that plea just as effectively as they would have waived it by not entering the plea. As to trials together of pleas in abatement and in bar see Pomeroy, Code Remedies (4th ed.), sec. 597.

As above stated, the principal ground of the claim that the special tax involved is invalid is that the town did not acquire jurisdiction to impose it. The sewer .extended for nearly a mile wholly within the town of Lake adjacent to the east beside a railroad track and in a road called South Sixth street which is an extension of Sixth street in the city of Milwaukee. The tax was imposed on the adjacent lands east of the street only, but plaintiffs’ whole tract of fifty-three acres was in-chided while ten and a half acres lay west of the railroad track and received no possible benefit from the sewer. The purported basis of the tax is a resolution passed by the town board *220 January 4, 1937, reciting in a preamble, in substance, that the matter of installing a sanitary sewer in and along South Sixth street from the south limits of the city oí Milwaukee tO' East Layton avenue had been considered, and that it had been decided that such installation was “for the best interests of the residents of the town of Lake and for the public interest, health and convenience of said residents.” The enacting part of the resolution “Resolved that pursuant to . . . Stats. 1935, chapters 60, 61 and 62 . . . that the said sanitary sewer be laid . . . and that the engineer make and submit to' the town board plans and specifications for said sewer.”

The next step in the proceedings was a resolution reciting ■ the submission to the town board by the engineer of plans and specifications for the said sewer, which “Resolved” that 'a notice be published that the plans and specifications were open for inspection at the office of the to.wn clerk and “all persons owning or interested in real estate in said district are entitled to examine the same and file objections thereto,” and that at a time and place specified the board would be in session to consider objections filed and hear all persons desiring to be heard. Such notice was duly published and at 7 :40 p. m. at the close of the meeting noticed the board “approved” the plans and specifications.

The act of the board purporting to impose the special tax involved, and the only enactment besides those above noted that has any possible bearing on the validity of the tax is a resolution adopted December 14, 1938, after completion of the sewer, reciting that whereas the board had been requested to construct the sewer by a “petition of the property owners” who had “agreed to pay the cost of all materials, equipment rental and engineering and inspection charges therewith connected, under the WPA program;” and whereas “the costs oí the construction of said sanitary sewers and laterals opposite the tract of land abutting” the same was as shown on attached exhibits ; “Resolved that a tax be and is hereby levied to pay the cost of *221 construction of said sanitary sewers and laterals” on the abutting lands as shown by the exhibits and that the tax be extended in three instalments on the “1938, 1939 and 1940 tax rolls.” The “exhibits” referred to merely referred to the plaintiffs’ land as fifty-three acres and stated the assessment to be $1,103.41.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.W.2d 140, 244 Wis. 215, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boden-v-town-of-lake-wis-1943.