Dean v. City of Madison

9 Wis. 402
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 9 Wis. 402 (Dean v. City of Madison) 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
Dean v. City of Madison, 9 Wis. 402 (Wis. 1859).

Opinion

By the Court,

Cole, J.

The only ground of demurrer to this complaint is, that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. It therefore becomes necessary to look at the statements of the complaint to see if this ground of demurrer really exists.

The suit was instituted for the purpose of cancelling and setting aside certain tax certificates issued upon the sale of the lots mentioned in the complaint, for side walk taxes or assessments, levied by the trustees of the village of Madison, which certificates it is alleged are regular upon their face, and constitute a cloud upon the title. The complaint states, in substance, that the appellant is now and was in 1S55, the owner in fee of the lots; that the trustees of the village, on the 15th of May of that year, levied or pretended to levy a tax upon them for building a side walk, which tax was over and above the amount of taxes levied by said trustees for corporation purposes; that the tax list for the collection thereof was afterwards placed in the hands of the treasurer of the village, who proceeded to sell the lots to the defendant Remington, for the amount of said sidewalk tax, and to issue certificates of sale therefor; that the appellant notified the treasurer that he was the owner of the lots, and had paid all taxes legally chargeable upon them, and that he forbid the sale of [404]*404the lots by the treasurer for' this tax, for the reason that it had been levied without any authority of law,* and the complaint distinctly alleges that the said tax was illegal and void, on account of the neglect of the trustees of the village to observe and comply with various provisions of the village charter authorizing them to levy such special assessments or taxes. The complaint further alleges that the side walk taxes were illegal and void, because they were not assessed at the time of making out the tax list, but were added to the said list long after the assessment and tax roll were placed in the hands of the treasurer of the village; that there was not before the assessment of the said taxes, any application of the owners of two-thirds of the lots on one side of any street or block upon or in which said lots were situated, asking the board of trustees of said village to levy and collect a special tax on the said lots, on such street or part of a street, according to their respective parts, for the purpose of making a cross walk or side walk along the same. The complaint contains other statements, as to the disregard of the trustees in their proceedings, of the requirements of the charter, and which go to show that these special taxes were, void; and also averments that the appellant had within the limits of the village during the time the tax list was in the hands of the treasurer a sufficient amount of personal property upon which the treasurer might have levied and sold, to have paid all taxes legally assessed upon the lots. It is not material to notice further the allegations of this complaint. For, assuming these to be true, which we have referred to in reference to levying these special assessments for a side walk tax, and it is apparent that under the charter, those assessments were unauthorized and void.

By subdivision 15 of § 14, of the village charter, (Sess. Laws 1846, p. 144,) the trustees were authorized, on the application of owners of two-thirds of the lots on- any street, or on one side of any street or block, to levy and collect a special [405]*405tax on the owners on such street, or part of street, according to their respective parts, for the purpose of making a cross walk or' side walk along the same. Now this application of the owners of two-thirds of the lots along which the side walk was to be constructed, was the very thing to give the trustees jurisdiction, and was essential to the validity of any special tax levied for side walk purposes. The trustees had no power under the charter to levy such taxes unless the application was made; this must be obvious upon the slightest examination of the charter.

Assuming then that the village authorities had no legal right or authority to sell the lots for the assessments or special taxes mentioned in the complaint, and the question arises whether, under such circumstances, a court will interfere and set aside the certificates of sale and direct them to be cancelled, and perpetually enjoin the proper officers from executing conveyances pursuant to the sale; or deny the appellant the relief he seeks, and compel him to wait until his rights are disturbed by some legal proceedings, and then defend himself upon principles of the common law.

Whether this complaint was filed under § 34, chap. 84, R. S., 1850, which enables any person having the possession and legal title to land to institute a suit against any other person setting up a claim thereto; or whether it is to be considered as addressed to the well settled equity powers of courts which exert their jurisdiction to remove such a cloud upon the title as tends to cast a doubt upon it, and diminishes the value of the property, it is not very material to inquire. In either view we think the complaint can be sustained. If the action should be considered as instituted under the provision of the statutes above cit.ed,it was insisted by the counsel for the respondents, that the complaint Was defective in not distinctly alleging, that the respondents or either of them, set up a claim” o the lands therein mentioned. But we think the statements [406]*406in the complaint are sufficient to bring the case within the meaning of that provision' of law. The fact that the respondents, or one of them, holds these certificates of sale, and will soon probably be insisting upon an execution of the tax deed to which they may be entitled, shows that they are setting up a claim to the land.” Must the appellant wait until the tax deed is given and a suit brought upon it to recover possession of the lots, before he can avail himself of the benefit of this statute ? Holding these certificates over the appellant’s land, insisting upon their validity by resisting an application to the court to set them aside, is “ setting up a claim” in the most serious manner, to some rights in these lots. Burnett vs. Corporation of Cincinnati, 3 Ohio, 73; M’Coy vs. The Corporation of Chilicothe, id., 370 ; Douglas vs. Scott, 5 id., 194; Culbertson vs. The City of Cincinnati, 16 id., 574; Scott vs. Onderdonk et al., 4 Kernan, 9.

Practically we well know that a person having a tax certificate upon a piece of land, does really have a claim to such land, which most materially affects its value. No one will give as much for property resting under such a paper, as he would if the title were clear. These certificates are always capable of being used to throw a cloud over the title, and thus produce a serious injury. And we cannot but think that the person who holds them does set up a claim to the lands embraced in them within the meaning and intent of the statute.

But it was further contended, in support of the demurrer, that if the statements in the complaint were true they clearly showed that the taxes in question were entirely illegal and void, the certificates therefore, it was insisted, constituted no cloud upon the title, and the appellant’s remedy at law was adequate and complete. As this practice would not be sound under the old practice, it cannot certainly have more weight since the adoption of the code, which professes to abolish all [407]*407distinctions between actions at law and suits in equity.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Wis. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-city-of-madison-wis-1859.