Cathcart v. Comstock

14 N.W. 833, 56 Wis. 590, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 426
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 14 N.W. 833 (Cathcart v. Comstock) 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
Cathcart v. Comstock, 14 N.W. 833, 56 Wis. 590, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 426 (Wis. 1883).

Opinion

Cassoday, J.

Ch. 128, Laws of 1874, entitled “An act for the division of the county of Marathon and the erection of the county of Lincoln,” provided, in effect, that the territory therein designated should, as soon as a separate county organization was perfected, as provided in said act, be detached from the county of Marathon and he known and called, when so detached and organized, the county of Lincoln, and should thereafter constitute a separate county, except that the same should be and remain attached to the county of Marathon for all judicial purposes (sec. 1); that for the purpose of organization the town clerk of the town of Jenny should, not sooner than October 1, 1874, call an election for a county clerk, treasurer, superintendent, surveyor, and register of deeds for said county of Lincoln, to be held at the place of holding elections in the town of Jenny, giving at least twenty days’ notice thereof, in the usual manner, which election was to be governed by the laws applicable to the election of county officers, and all the qualified electors within such detached territory were thereby entitled to vote at such election, and the officers so elected were thereby authorized to enter upon the duties of their respective offices immediately after having qualified, and to hold the same for two years from the first day of January thereafter, and upon the election and qualification of -such county officers Lincoln county was thereby declared to be organized and established, and entitled to all the powers and privileges of other counties, under the laws of the state, not organized for judicial purposes, and liable to the same duties and responsibilities, but Marathon county was thereby to remain intact and unchanged in territory, and in all other respects, until Lincoln county should be organized as therein provided (sec. 2); that at the next annual meeting of the board of supervisors of Marathon county they and the board of supervisors of Lincoln county were thereby required to hold a joint session at the county seat of Marathon, and determine [596]*596upon and fix the proportion of all county property, moneys, taxes, appropriations, debts, and liabilities, a record of which was to be kept by the respective clerks of each county, and the same was thereby made binding upon each of said counties, and such determination was thereby required to be based upon the amount of assessed valuation of property in each of said counties by the last assessment in said territory (sec. 3). The next section (4) provided for an itemized bill of all expenses whatsoever for judicial purposes within the two counties, and an apportionment of the same upon and according to the assessed valuation of the property in the respective counties.

At the time of that enactment, as well as since, the general statutes provided that “ the county board of supervisors shall consist of the chairmen of the boards of supervisors of the several towns, etc., . . . but whenever a county shall consist of only one town, the supervisors of such town shall constitute the board of supervisors of such county, and they shall exercise and perform all the power and duties of a board of county supervisors.” 1 Tay. Stats,, 296, ch. 13, sec. 21; Ri S., sec. 663. “ "Whenever any organized county shall not be divided into towns, such county shall, for the purposes of town government, until so divided, be considered as one town, and may elect town officers, whose powers and duties shall be the same as town officers in other towns, and each county may elect as many justices of the peace as under the county system of government they were authorized to elect.” 1 Tay. Stats., 364, ch. 15, sec. 83; R. S., sec. m

Such were the statutory provisions under which the levies and sales were made, and the tax deeds issued, which constitute the first and second causes of action herein. Assuming that the legislature had in mind those general provisions of the statutes at the time of the enactment of ch. 128, Laws 'of 1874, and in view of the provisions of that [597]*597enactment, it would seem that they thereby intended that upon the election and qualification of the several county officers therein provided for, Lincoln county should be deemed fully organized and established, and entitled to all the powers and privileges of other counties, under the laws of the state, not organized for judicial purposes. This could only be upon the theory that the board of supervisors, elected by the town of Jenny while it was a part of Marathon county, should, upon such organization and establishment of Lincoln county in October, 1874, become by force of the statute the board of supervisors of the county of Lincoln. As stated, the act of 1874 purported to detach the whole of the territory of the town of Jenny, as it existed in Marathon, from that county, and to incorporate the same into Lincoln county. The act also recognized the town organization of the town of Jenny by requiring the town clerk thereof to give the requisite and usual notice for holding an election, for the county officers named, at the place of holding elections in the town of Jenny. This seems to have been essential, since the other territory, detached from Marathon and incorporated into Lincoln, consisted of fractions of towns Avithout any toAvn organization, and hence the town officers in the town of Jenny, at the time of the organization and establishment of Lincoln county, constituted the only existing organization in the territory so detached.

In passing the enactment in question, the theory of the legislature evidently Avas that the property in the town of Jenny Avould be assessed in the spring of 1874 by the town officers in that town prior to the establishment of Lincoln county, but that the apportionment and levy of the taxes therein would be by the supervisors elected in the town of Jenny, while acting as the board of supervisors of Lincoln county after its establishment, and that the collection of such taxes, the sale of lands for taxes, and the issuing of tax [598]*598deeds thereon, should be by the county officers so to be elected in October, 1874. That such was the legislative intent is further enforced by the enactment of ch. 14, Laws of 1875, for while that provided for the collection of the taxes assessed in 1874 in such fractions of towns so detached, it made no provision for the collection of the taxes assessed in 1874 in the town of Jenny. By such omission it is obvious that the legislature regarded the machinery complete for collecting the taxes assessed in the town of Jenny that year. Such being the legislative intent, evinced by the act of 1874, and the land in question being situated wholly in what was the town of Jenny as it existed in Marathon county, it remains to be determined whether that act gave effect to such intent or was invalid. The decision of this question will determine whether the demurrers to the first and second causes of action alleged were properly sustained.

It is contended by the learned counsel for the plaintiff that there was no legal organization of the county of Lincoln, because there was no town organization in the county. He thinks, however, that the entire town of Jenny, as organized and constituted in Marathon county, became a town in Lincoln county, and needed no further organization, “except, perhaps, a new election of officers.” We see no necessity, however, for such special election, and the word “ perhaps ” indicates that counsel does not regard such “ new election ” as really essential.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.W. 833, 56 Wis. 590, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cathcart-v-comstock-wis-1883.