Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co. v. Langlade County

14 N.W. 844, 56 Wis. 614, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 428
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 14 N.W. 844 (Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co. v. Langlade County) 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
Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co. v. Langlade County, 14 N.W. 844, 56 Wis. 614, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 428 (Wis. 1883).

Opinion

Cassoday, J.

Since Langlade county contained more than 900 square miles of territory, the legislature had power to [620]*620change its boundaries without first submitting the question to a vote of the people, as required by sec. 7, art. XIII, of the constitution. The territory of the county was divided into six towns, and a name and certain prescribed limits given to each, and each declared to have all the powers and privileges conferred by general laws upon other towns of this state, except as therein provided. The act also fixed the several places for holding the first annual town meeting in each of the towns, and also the time and place for holding the first meeting of the county board of supervisors in the county. And it further appears that the several town officers in each of said towns were elected at the time of holding annual town meetings in the spring of 1881. We do not think these provisions were “ incorporating cmy town,” within the meaning of subd. 9 of sec. 31 of the amendments to article IY of the constitution, for the reasons given at length in Cathcart v. Comstock, ante, p. 590, and which need not be here repeated. Not being within the prohibition of that subdivision, it clearly was not within the prohibition of sec. 32 of that amendment, for that provides for the enactment of general laws only for the transaction of such business as is prohibited by said sec. 31.

In construing the ninth subdivision of sec. 31, Mr. Justice TayloR says, in Smith v. Sherry, 50 Wis., 213: “ If the ninth subdivision, of the amending section 31 had been omitted altogether, it is probable that the amendments would have been construed as not applicable to municipal corporations at all; but, however that might have been, it is now very clear that the legislature in adopting the seventh s.ubdivision and the people in ratifying the same, in connection with the ninth subdivision of the section, did not intend that the seventh subdivision should extend to towns and villages. If the general terms used in the seventh subdivision had been intended to .prohibit the legislature from granting corporate powers and privileges to towns and villages by special or private laws, as well as to corporations of a private nature, [621]*621there would haye been no necessity for adding the ninth subdivision, which in express terms prohibits the incorporation of any town or village, or to amend the charter thereof, by any special law. . . . The object of the amendment [subd. 9] was to prevent special legislation and to promote uniformity, so far as possible, in the laws governing the incorporated towns and villages in the state.”

"We find nothing in that opinion, however, which authorizes the inference that the amendment in question was intended as a prohibition against legislation dividing the territory of a single county into towns and for the organization of the same. Such 'towns are at most but mere quasi-corporations, and not incorporated towns within the meaning of that amendment. Cathcart v. Comstock, supra. Of course, the act in question is special, in that it is confined to a particular fraction of the state, and not to territory generally throughout the state; but it is not the kind of special legislation there prohibited.

Nor do we think it was a private or local law within the meaning of sec. 18, art. IY, of the constitution, for reasons given at length in Cathcart v. Comstock, supra. See, also, State of Nebraska v. Page, 12 Neb., 386.

It is true that the constitution nowhere expressly authorizes the legislature to divide the territory of a county up into towns and then provide for the organization of the same; neither does it expressly authorize them to confer that power upon the respective boards of supervisors of the several counties. But in construing the constitution of the state we are to remember that the legislature is not acting under a delegation of powers, but only under a limitation of powers. It is a maxim too well established to require the citation of authority, that the state legislature may exercise all legislative power not delegated to the general government, nor restricted nor reserved to the people by the state or national constitution. The fixing of the boundaries of counties and [622]*622dividing the same into towns, and providing for the organization thereof, are certainly legislative functions.

It is true, the constitution expressly provides that “the legislature may confer upon the boards of supervisors of the several counties of the state such powers of a local, legislative, and administrative character as they shall from time to time prescribe.” Sec. 22, art. IV. This authority for conferring such powers upon county boards, contains within' itself an express reservation of the same powers to be exercised from time to time in, prescribing other and different laws. ‘Whether such express reservation was essential to the resumption of such powers by the legislature, seems to be unnecessary here to consider. Under the authority thus expressly given to the legislature, they had, prior to the act in question, conferred upon the several county boards the special power to set off, organize, vacate, and change the boundaries of the towns in their respective counties, designate and give names thereto, fix the time and place of holding the first town meeting therein, etc. Subd. 1, sec. 670, R. S. The section seems to apply more particularly to counties already organized. At all events, the powers therein conferred upon the boards were subject to the conditions mentioned in the statute. Of course, the legislature enacting that statute could not thereby take away nor abridge the powers of subsequent legislatures to legislate upon the same subject.

It is true, the legislature had power to establish but one system of town and county government, and that was to be as, nearly uniform as practicable. Sec. 23, art. IV, Const. But even that does not require absolute uniformity. Cathcart v. Comstock, supra, and cases there cited. Except in so far as the act in question substantially interferes with the unity or uniformity of the system, it cannot be regarded as repugnant to this constitutional provision. Is this interdiction so rigid as to preclude the legislature by direct action from [623]*623changing the boundaries of counties, or creating new counties or dividing the territory thereof into new towns, and then providing for their organization, so that, when organized, they shall belong to the one established and uniform system?

It is the one system, which is to be as nearly uniform as practicable. It is that which is to be protected against legislative encroachment. This system, which is to be thus guarded, is nothing more nor less than the plan or scheme by which the town and county are to be governed. Within the limits of the constitution, this plan or scheme of governing either town or county may be changed by the legislature without any interference with the other. The mere fact that the legislature, in a given case, prescribes a particular method of organizing new towns and bringing them into the one established system, does not necessarily imply that the plan or scheme of governing such new towns, after they are thus brought into the system, is to be any different from that in other towns. The incipient steps leading towards organization should not be mistaken for the more advanced stages. A town implies inception and progression, as well as completed organization. The same is true of a county.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.W. 844, 56 Wis. 614, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-northwestern-railway-co-v-langlade-county-wis-1883.