Fass v. Seehawer

19 N.W. 533, 60 Wis. 525, 1884 Wisc. LEXIS 150
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 19 N.W. 533 (Fass v. Seehawer) 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
Fass v. Seehawer, 19 N.W. 533, 60 Wis. 525, 1884 Wisc. LEXIS 150 (Wis. 1884).

Opinion

Lyon, J.

The circuit court gave judgment for the defendants, on the sole ground that no sufficient and reasonable time to perform the work ordered by the common [532]*532council was given to owners of lots fronting on the improvement, as required by the statute on that subject. P. & L. Laws of 1869, ch. 401, sec. 25. The statute (sec. 24) provides that an assessment of benefits shall be made by the board of public works. Sec. 25 provides that “thereupon said board shall give notice for six days, in the official city papers, to the owner or agent of any lot or parcel of land fronting upon any such improvement to be made, requiring him to do the work mentioned in such notice within a reasonable time therein to be specified, and if such work shall not be done within such time, the said board shall contract for the doing of the same as hereinbefore provided.”

The court found that such notice was published by the board for six days in the proper official city papers, commencing May 26, 1871, requiring the owner of any lot or parcel of land fronting on the improvement to do the work mentioned in the notice by July 1st of the same year; and that the time limited for doing the work was unreasonably short. The court held that this failure to allow the owner sufficient time to do the work himself was fatal to the validity of the assessment, and rendered the tax certificate null and void. The question first to be determined is, Was this ruling correct ?

The giving of the notice required by ch. 401, Laws of 1869, is doubtless a condition precedent to the authority of the board to let the contract for doing the work. No notice being given, the board would be absolutely powerless to' make a valid contract to do the work, and thus the very groundwork of a tax to pay for the same would be wanting. It was so held in Johnston v. Oshkosh, 21 Wis., 184.

In this case, however, a notice was given pursuant to the requirements of the statute, except the time limited therein for the owner to do the work ordered was unreasonably short. Do the same consequences follow such a notice as would result from a failure to give any notice? The statute [533]*533does not prescribe the length of time the board shall give .the owner in which to do the work. It requires generally that a reasonable time must be given, but leaves it for the board to determine, in the first instance, what is a reasonable time. The board necessarily determined, in the present case, that the time limited in the notice for the owner to do the work was a reasonable time. In this the board manifestly erred, but it was mere error, in our opinion, not going to the jurisdiction of the board to give the notice and act under it until reversed or modified. In a direct proceeding to review such determination, the circuit court, by virtue of its supervisory control over all inferior tribunals (Const., art. YII, sec. 8), would have corrected the error by directing the board to extend the time. But where, as in the present case, the determination of the board is attacked collaterally, and where no fraud is found or alleged, we are inclined to think such determination conclusive, and that the owner cannot be heard to allege that a' reasonable time within which to do the work was not given him. But, however this may be, the board having jurisdiction to issue the notice, it is clear that, in a court of equity, the owner can take no advantage, collaterally, of any mere error or irregularity therein, unless he shows that he has suffered some-injury thereby. No such injury is here alleged. It is not suggested that it would have been more advantageous to the owner of the lot in question to have done the work himself, or that he ever desired to do it, or would have done,it had a reasonable time been allowed him for that purpose.

The views here expressed do not conflict with the decision of this court in Foote v. Milwaukee, 18 Wis., 210, upon which the learned counsel for the defendant relies to uphold the judgment of the circuit court in the present case, in that case the tax certificate was impeached for fraud in the notice to the owner to do the work and in letting the contract, as well as in the subsequent proceedings of the street com [534]*534missioners. It was held, in the language of the opinion by Dixon, C. J., that “ the complaint shows a most glaring and egregious case of fraud, which, if proved, would avoid the certificate and assessment, and render the whole proceeding a nullity.” The judgment of the circuit court was reversed, because that court sustained a. demurrer ore tenus to the-complaint. The time fixed by the street commissioners for the owners to do the work ordered in front of their respective lots was unreasonably short, and it was alleged that the same was so fixed pursuant to a fraudulent conspiracy between the commissioners and the prospective contractors to do the work. In this case no fraud is alleged. The distinction between the two cases is obvious and vital, and the rule of law which determined the judgment in the former case has no application here.

Counsel also questions the validity of the statute which provides for giving notice to owners of lots abutting the improvement to do the work ordered, by publication in official papers, because it does not require personal notice to be given to such owners, of at least to such of them as reside in the city. The case of State ex rel. Flint v. Fond du Lac., 42 Wis., 287, is relied upon to sustain that proposition. To that case may be added several others to the same effect. Among these are Hood v. Finch, 8 Wis., 381; Lumsden v. Milwaukee, id., 485; Seifert v. Brooks, 34 Wis., 443. In all these cases the question of- notice arose in proceedings to condemn lands to the public use. The grounds upon which these cases were determined are that such a proceeding is strictly adversary — the public, represented by some municipality, being one of the parties thereto, and the owner of the land proposed to be condemned to the public use being the other party,— and that the land-owner has a constitutional right to be heard (and therefore to due notice of the proposed proceedings), before there can be any valid condemnation of his property to the public use.

[535]*535But we have here no such case. The improvement was’ regularly authorized, and the benefits regularly assessed against the defendant’s lot, and the notice was only to give him the privilege of doing the work himself, should he so elect, instead of paying the assessed benefits in cash. We have here no element of an adversary proceeding,— no condemnation of property to the public use, — -no imposition of a burden upon the owner,— following the notice in question. Besides, the owner has no inherent or constitutional right to do the work, and the option given him is a mere favor which the legislature may withdraw at any time. Hence the statute would probably be valid if it made no provision for' notice to the owner. Yet, where the statute requires such a notice to be given, the failure to give it is jurisdictional, and no valid tax can be levied for the benefits assessed. Johnston v. Oshkosh, 21 Wis., 186. We conclude that the statute providing for giving such notice by publication is a' valid law.

It follows that the ground upon which the circuit court rested its judgment cannot be sustained, and the judgment must be reversed unless the tax certificate is invalid for some' other cause disclosed in the record. Several other grounds of invalidity are alleged on behalf of defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.W. 533, 60 Wis. 525, 1884 Wisc. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fass-v-seehawer-wis-1884.