City of Milwaukee v. Sewerage Commission

67 N.W.2d 624, 268 Wis. 342, 1954 Wisc. LEXIS 461
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 67 N.W.2d 624 (City of Milwaukee v. Sewerage Commission) 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
City of Milwaukee v. Sewerage Commission, 67 N.W.2d 624, 268 Wis. 342, 1954 Wisc. LEXIS 461 (Wis. 1954).

Opinion

Steinle, J.

Consolidation of a town with a city is authorized by sec. 66.02, Stats. Procedure for such consolidation is specified in the statute.

Sec. 66.02, Stats., provides:

“Consolidation. Any town, village, or city may be consolidated with a contiguous town, village, or city, by ordinance, passed by a two-thirds vote of all the members of each board or council, fixing the terms of the consolidation and ratified by the electors at a referendum held in each municipality. The ballots shall bear the words, ‘for consolidation,’ and ‘against consolidation,’ and if a majority of *346 the votes cast thereon in each municipality shall be for consolidation, the ordinances shall then be in effect and shall have the force of a contract. The ordinance and the result of the referendum shall be certified to the clerk of the consolidated corporation and by him recorded and certified as provided in section 61.11 if a village; or subsection (6) of section 62.06 if a city; to the county clerk, if a town and the certification shall be preserved as provided-in subsection (6) of section 60.05, section 61.11 and subsection (6) of section 62.06, respectively. Consolidation shall not affect the pre-existing rights or liabilities of any municipality and actions thereon may be commenced or completed as though no consolidation had been effected.”

The city of Milwaukee in its amended complaint in substance alleges that pursuant to statutory authority the common council of the city on March 10, 1954, adopted ordinance No. 732, and that the town board of the town of Lake on March 16, 1954, adopted ordinance No. 408, which are complementary and substantially identical ordinances providing for and fixing the terms of the consolidation; that on April 6, 1954, at the regular spring election, referenda were held in both communities for ratification of the ordinances; that the referendum in the city was conducted principally pursuant to provisions of secs. 66.02, 6.80, 10.40, 6.21, and 6.23, Stats., and that the referendum in the town was held pursuant to secs. 66.02, 6.80, and 6.21; that previous to the election of April 6, 1954, there was official publication of the ordinances in newspapers of the respective communities and that a copy of the town ordinance was distributed to each occupied premises in the town.

In the amended complaint there is also set forth the forms of the specific- referendum questions submitted to the voters of the town of Lake and the city of Milwaukee for the ratification of the ordinances in question.

It is further alleged that a majority of the votes cast in both the city and the town were “for consolidation;” that *347 on April 9, 1954, the ordinances and the results of the referenda were certified to the secretary of state; that the town ceased to exist as a separate entity and has been administered as part of the city from April 6, 1954.

There was further allegation in the amended complaint to the effect that four separate proceedings for annexation within the former town of Lake had been commenced prior to April 6, 1954 (date of election), and were pending at the time; portions of the town were posted for annexation to the city of Milwaukee in October, 1951, in October, 1952, and in May, 1953, and that the entire north side of the town adjoining the city of Milwaukee was posted for annexation to the city of St. Francis in October, 1953.

Averment was also made in the amended complaint that on June 3, 1954, the city of Milwaukee requested the defendant Sewerage Commission to extend its main sanitary sewer to an area that was formerly in the town of Lake, but which became included in the city of Milwaukee by virtue of the consolidation proceeding, in order that the city could proceed with the construction of service sewers in the area to be served thereby; that the Sewerage Commission declined to act upon the request of the city of Milwaukee, having adopted a resolution on June 10, 1954, wherein it determined to defer action until a proper legal determination had been made of the propriety of the use of funds of the commission for construction of sewers in the former town'of Lake.

In its decision on demurrer, the trial court determined that there are no constitutional objections to sec. 66.02, Stats., nor to the proceedings taken thereunder by the town of Lake and the city of Milwaukee; that the posting of the city of St. Francis was void on its face and could be entirely disregarded; and that pending proceedings for annexation to the city of Milwaukee were not a bar to consolidation of the same territory with the city of Milwaukee.

*348 Five questions have been raised upon this appeal. They are:

1. Is sec. 66.02, Stats., an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power to towns contrary to sec. 1, art. IV of the Wisconsin constitution?

2. Is sec. 66.02, Stats., void for uncertainty in that it sets forth no procedure for the conduct of the referendum therein required ?

3. Were the referendum questions presented to the electors properly and legally framed without the inclusion of the full text of the ordinances thereby submitted for ratification ?

4. Did the several proceedings for annexation of parts of the former town, which had been commenced prior to, and were pending at the time of the commencement of the consolidation proceeding, preclude a consolidation of the same area?

5. Did the pending annexation proceedings destroy the contiguity of the town and the city for purposes of consolidation?

Consolidation merges two or more political units. It involves surrender of all power of one unit to the other, or to a new consolidated government, on the basis of terms agreeable to both. As a result of consolidation the government of one unit is disbanded, its assets and liabilities are taken over by the other, and citizens of the disbanded unit are thereafter eligible for all of the rights and duties of the remaining consolidated government. Consolidation, like annexation, is a method provided by the legislature for the integration of adjacent areas. Annexation is limited to the addition of unincorporated territory to a city.

With reference to the first question presented upon this appeal, it is the position of the appellant, Sewerage Commission, that sec. 66.02, Stats., is an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power to towns, — being contrary to sec. 1, *349 art. IV of the Wisconsin constitution which provides that the legislative power shall be vested in a senate and assembly. In support of its contention, appellant argues principally, that except as authorized by the constitution, the legislature cannot delegate legislative power; that the constitution contains no provision authorizing delegation of legislative power to towns, or conferring home-rule power upon towns; that the adoption of a consolidation ordinance by a town board under sec. 66.02 is an exercise of legislative power; that the statute is not a mere delegation of authority concerning administrative detail; that while the statute is not an option law, there is an authorization of ordinances which have the characteristic of an option law.

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.W.2d 624, 268 Wis. 342, 1954 Wisc. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-milwaukee-v-sewerage-commission-wis-1954.