Fond du Lac Water Co. v. City of Fond du Lac

16 L.R.A. 581, 52 N.W. 439, 82 Wis. 322, 1892 Wisc. LEXIS 165
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 16 L.R.A. 581 (Fond du Lac Water Co. v. City of Fond du Lac) 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
Fond du Lac Water Co. v. City of Fond du Lac, 16 L.R.A. 581, 52 N.W. 439, 82 Wis. 322, 1892 Wisc. LEXIS 165 (Wis. 1892).

Opinion

PiNNey, J.

The corporation plaintiff was organized and exists as such under ch. 86, R. S., and by sec. 1780 had the power to make and enter into any contract with the city defendant to supply it with water for fire and other purposes, upon such terms and conditions as might be agreed upon, and might, by the consent of and in the manner agreed upon with its proper authorities, use any street, alley, lane, park, or public grounds for laying water pipes therein, provided no permanent injury should be done thereto; and the city might by contract acquire the right to use the water supplied by such corporation, or such portion of it as it might desire, upon such terms and conditions as might be agreed upon by such corporation and the authorities of such city. The corporation plaintiff and the city entered into arrangements as contemplated by the statute, evidenced by an ordinance of fourteen sections, regulating their respective rights and duties. The more important provisions of this ordinance consist of a grant to the plaintiff of the franchise for and during the term of its corporate existence, subject to the right of purchase and the conditions and .the forfeiture therein provided, “ to erect, construct, complete, maintain, and operate water works in said city for supplying it and the inhabitants thereof and its vicinity with water for public trad private purposes, and to use, in the present and future limits of the city, subject to the limitations, etc., therein fixed, the [328]*328streets, alleys, public ways, and the bridges and beds of Fond du Lac river, and of its forks, and of De Neveu creek and other water ways, for the purpose of laying, taking up, and repairing mains, pipes, hydrants, and other apparatus,” vesting in the plaintiff all the powers possessed by the city, and which it could lawfully grant for that purpose, under its charter and acts amendatory thereof; and as the inducement for the plaintiff to enter upon the construction of such works, the franchise thereby vested in it was to remain in it during its term of corporate existence, and the city agreed to rent of it 140 hydrants for and during the term of thirty years from the completion of such works.

The company thus acquired not only the corporate rights and franchises resulting from its organization under the general law, but the valuable and important franchises and rights granted to it by the city, which will doubtless increase in value from year to year as the city becomes more populous and prosperous. These franchises were grants in gross of incorporeal hereditaments, and not grants appurtenant to any particular land, lots, or estate, in the strict technical sense of the term. They were granted to the plaintiff without reference to its ownership of these or any particular lots, and it was not necessary that it should purchase or own any lots or lands in fee to carry out its enterprise and make the franchises with which it had been clothed for important public purposes available, as it might well secure all it needed as to lots or lands by a lease for a long period of years, with the right of renewal from time to time. The plaintiff corporation, though created primarily for private gain, was a quasi public corporation, clothed with an important public trust, and, having secured these valuable rights, proceeded to lay its water mains and pipes to the extent mentioned in the preceding statement; but it built its pumping works and station on [329]*329the several lots of land purchased by it, herein mentioned as the subject of the assessment in question.

The questions presented by the record are: (1) Whether an assessment of the several lots described in the complaint, on which the pumping works and station of the plaintiff are situated, merely by their numbers and the number of the block in which they are situated, is an assessment of the mains, pipes, hydrants, and the rights and franchises of the plaintiff, or merely of the lots themselves; and, if so, whether it is a valid assessment. (2) Whether the action of the board of review in arbitrarily and without evidence raising the valuation of these lots, alleged to be excessive, from $40,000 to $55,000, was void, so that the tax levied thereon should be enjoined:

1. Taxes are to be levied upon all property in- this state, except such as is exempted therefrom (B. S. sec. 1034), and it will be seen that none of the property of the plaintiff hereinbefore mentioned is within the category of property exempt from taxation (B. S. sec. 1038). Inasmuch as the property of the corporation is not exempt, but is taxable, stock therein is exempt from taxation. B. S. sec. 1038, subd. 9. The franchises, rights, and privileges acquired as hereinbefore stated are property, the title to which is vested in the plaintiff, and the mains, pipes, hydrants, and machinery are really of little or no value without the franchises annexed, which render the use of them valuable and productive, and without which they could not be used or operated. In short, the entire plant and works are to this extent, no doubt, an entirety within the rule laid down in Yellow River Imp. Co. v. Wood Co. 81 Wis. 554; and in this sense the lots in question, used with these franchises, mains, pipes, and hydrants, etc., are a part of such entirety, and are all taxable together as such, but not in separate parcels or items. In virtue of the intimate and necessary relation of the lots and the mains, pipes, and hydrants, [330]*330which extend to most parts of the city, with the franchises and privileges of the plaintiff, it would seem that, as a subject of taxation as well as of sale under judicial process, they are to be regarded as an entirety; and as the plaintiff is a quasi public corporation, a dismemberment or separation of the entire plant under such proceedings cannot be allowed, for the reasons fully set forth in the opinion of Mr. Justice Cassoday in the case above referred to, wherein it is stated that “ the cases go upon the theory that the rights, franchises, and plant essential to the continued business and purposes of such corporations are not to be severed, broken up, or destroyed without express legislative authority, but, on the contrary, are to be preserved in their entirety.” This rule applies, however, only to property and lots the use of which is essential to the exercise and. enjoyment of the franchises of the corporation. All such property of the corporation must be regarded and entered upon the assessment roll, and treated throughout, for all purposes of taxation, as an entirety, and valued as such. Property not so annexed and necessary or essential to the exercise and enjoyment of the franchises of the corporation may properly be treated and dealt with separately, as in the case of property belonging to a natural person. Within this rule, the assessment and taxation of these particular lots whereon the pumping station and works of the company are situated, separate and apart from the rest of the property, and merely as so many lots, cannot be justified. It is not necessary to do more than refer to the rule so well stated in that case, and abundantly fortified by the best-considered cases on the subject.

The only subject of taxation entered upon the assessment roll in this case is simply certain specified lots in block 26, without the least reference to the works of the plaintiff, its mains, pipes, and hydrants, or its corporate rights or franchises, either in detail or as a plant or en[331]*331tirety.

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Bluebook (online)
16 L.R.A. 581, 52 N.W. 439, 82 Wis. 322, 1892 Wisc. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fond-du-lac-water-co-v-city-of-fond-du-lac-wis-1892.