WILLIAM G. CALLOW, J.
On this review we are asked to decide whether orders denying a town’s motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction and enjoining a town from incorporating as a city are appealable. We find the injunction order final and thus appealable. But because we also find that the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction over the Town, the order enjoining the incorporation referendum is void.
On March 24, 1980, a petition was filed with the clerk of the Town of Fitchburg (Town) seeking an incorpora[637]*637tion referendum pursuant to sec. 60.81, Stats.1 Acting upon that petition, the Town passed a resolution on March 31, 1980, setting forth the wards and boundaries of the proposed City of Fitchburg, establishing notice [638]*638procedures, and fixing the date of the referendum as June 3, 1980. Also on March 24, 1980, a second petition was filed in the Dane County Circuit Court seeking the [639]*639incorporation of the Town of Fitchburg pursuant to sec. 66.014, Stats.2 Pursuant to sec. 66.014(8) (a), the cir[640]*640cuit court established September 15, 1980, as the hearing date on the petition. On April 16, 1980, the City of Madison (City) filed a motion with the circuit court “[f]or leave to intervene as a defendant in opposition to the Petition for the Incorporation of the City of Fitch-[641]*641burg on file herein, under Sec. 803.09(1), Wis. Stats." That motion also sought an order “enjoining the Town of Fitchburg from holding or conducting any referendum by the electors of the Town of Fitchburg on the question of the incorporation of the Town of Fitchburg as a fourth [642]*642class city, pursuant to Sec. 60.81, Wis. Stats., or any other law, until such time that this court orders an incorporation referendum under Secs. 66.014(9) (f) and 66.018, Wis. Stats.” A hearing on this motion was set for May 19,1980, before Judge Eich.
The Chapter 66 petitioners did not oppose the City’s intervention but did oppose the injunction motion on the ground that the Town was not a party to the Chapter 66 proceeding, it had not been served with a summons and complaint, and therefore the court lacked personal jurisdiction over it. In support of this position, the peti[643]*643tioners submitted the affidavits of Douglas W. Morris-sette, Town Chairman of the Town of Fitchburg, stating that he had received by mail copies of the City’s motion and notice of motion addressed to him in his personal, as opposed to his official, capacity. The petitioners also submitted the affidavit of Ed Lynaugh, Town Clerk of the Town of Fitchburg, stating that he had received by mail copies of the City’s motion and notice of motion addressed to him in his official capacity. The petitioners argued that service of these documents was insufficient to confer personal jurisdiction over the Town as personal jurisdiction requires service of a summons and complaint.
On May 14, 1980, the City filed a motion for an order making the Town a party to the proceeding. On May 19, 1980, the Town filed a notice of special appearance to object to the court's jurisdiction. At the May 19 hearing, Judge Eich granted the City’s motion to intervene but took under advisement the other motions pending further briefing.
Notwithstanding the absence of service of a summons and complaint, in a memorandum decision dated May 20, 1980, Judge Eich granted the City’s motion to make the Town a party. The basis for the decision was that the Chapter 66 proceeding was a special proceeding commenced not by summons and complaint but by petition; that the Town had received copies of the petition and the City’s motion papers so it had notice of the matter; and that sec. 803.03(1) (b), Stats., in conjunction with sec. 66.014(5), empowered the court to make the Town a party. Accordingly, the court issued an order, dated May 20, 1980, “that the motion of the City of Madison for an order making the Town of Fitchburg a party to these proceedings be, and the same hereby is, granted, without any further notice to the said Town, copies of the petition and the motions filed with respect thereto by the City of Madison being attached hereto and made [644]*644a part of this order.” The order also established May 22, 1980, for a hearing on the City’s motion for a temporary injunction.
On May 20, 1980, the Town filed a notice of special appearance and a motion to dismiss the Town as a party to the proceeding on the grounds of lack of personal jurisdiction, insufficiency of process and insufficiency of service of process. A motion hearing- was scheduled for May 28, 1980, to coincide with the hearing on the City’s injunction motion. Following the hearing, by order dated May 30, 1980, Judge Eich denied the Town’s motion to dismiss and granted the City’s motion for an injunction, ordering “that the Town of Fitchburg, its officers and agents are enjoined from conducting any sec. 60.81, Stats., incorporation referendum on June 3, 1980, or any other incorporation referendum, other than as may be ordered by the Court at the conclusion of this proceeding pursuant to sec. 66.018, Stats.” In a memorandum accompanying the May 30 order, the court addressed only the injunction question, concluding that the City had standing to challenge the sec. 60.81 incorporation proceeding; that the sec. 60.81 proceeding was not available to the Town because the City is not a city of the first class as required by sec. 60.81; and that the sec. 60.81 proceeding was no longer an independent incorporation proceeding but was assimilated into the Chapter 66 incorporation procedures.3
On May 30, .1980, the Town and the petitioners filed a joint notice of appeal in which they appealed to the court of appeals that portion of the May 20, 1980, order which made the Town a party, and the whole of the May 30, [645]*6451980, order denying the Town’s motion to dismiss and enjoining the Town from conducting the sec. 60.81 referendum. Concurrently with the joint notice of appeal, the Town and petitioners filed a motion for relief pending appeal and a petition for a writ of prohibition, both of which were directed toward relieving the Town of the effects of the orders from which it appeals.
The court of appeals, on May 30, 1980, denied the petition for a writ of prohibition. On May 31, 1980, the court of appeals dismissed the notice of appeal, holding that the orders appealed from were nonfinal and non-appealable. The motion for relief pending appeal was also dismissed.
By letter to the court of appeals dated June 2, 1980, the day before the sec. 60.81 referendum had been scheduled to take place, counsel for the Town and the petitioners sought reconsideration of the May 31, 1980, decision on the ground that it was clearly erroneous in failing to take notice of sec. 801.08, Stats., which provides that a trial court’s “decision upon a question of jurisdiction shall be by order which is appealable.” On June 2, 1980, the court of appeals issued an order declining to modify its May 31, 1980, order, holding that sec. 801.08 must be read in conjunction with sec. 808.03, Stats., and that an order denying a motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds is only appealable as a matter of discretion.
We granted review on June 2, 1980, and on July 10, 1980, granted the petitioners’ motion to advance the case on our calendar.
I.
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WILLIAM G. CALLOW, J.
On this review we are asked to decide whether orders denying a town’s motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction and enjoining a town from incorporating as a city are appealable. We find the injunction order final and thus appealable. But because we also find that the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction over the Town, the order enjoining the incorporation referendum is void.
On March 24, 1980, a petition was filed with the clerk of the Town of Fitchburg (Town) seeking an incorpora[637]*637tion referendum pursuant to sec. 60.81, Stats.1 Acting upon that petition, the Town passed a resolution on March 31, 1980, setting forth the wards and boundaries of the proposed City of Fitchburg, establishing notice [638]*638procedures, and fixing the date of the referendum as June 3, 1980. Also on March 24, 1980, a second petition was filed in the Dane County Circuit Court seeking the [639]*639incorporation of the Town of Fitchburg pursuant to sec. 66.014, Stats.2 Pursuant to sec. 66.014(8) (a), the cir[640]*640cuit court established September 15, 1980, as the hearing date on the petition. On April 16, 1980, the City of Madison (City) filed a motion with the circuit court “[f]or leave to intervene as a defendant in opposition to the Petition for the Incorporation of the City of Fitch-[641]*641burg on file herein, under Sec. 803.09(1), Wis. Stats." That motion also sought an order “enjoining the Town of Fitchburg from holding or conducting any referendum by the electors of the Town of Fitchburg on the question of the incorporation of the Town of Fitchburg as a fourth [642]*642class city, pursuant to Sec. 60.81, Wis. Stats., or any other law, until such time that this court orders an incorporation referendum under Secs. 66.014(9) (f) and 66.018, Wis. Stats.” A hearing on this motion was set for May 19,1980, before Judge Eich.
The Chapter 66 petitioners did not oppose the City’s intervention but did oppose the injunction motion on the ground that the Town was not a party to the Chapter 66 proceeding, it had not been served with a summons and complaint, and therefore the court lacked personal jurisdiction over it. In support of this position, the peti[643]*643tioners submitted the affidavits of Douglas W. Morris-sette, Town Chairman of the Town of Fitchburg, stating that he had received by mail copies of the City’s motion and notice of motion addressed to him in his personal, as opposed to his official, capacity. The petitioners also submitted the affidavit of Ed Lynaugh, Town Clerk of the Town of Fitchburg, stating that he had received by mail copies of the City’s motion and notice of motion addressed to him in his official capacity. The petitioners argued that service of these documents was insufficient to confer personal jurisdiction over the Town as personal jurisdiction requires service of a summons and complaint.
On May 14, 1980, the City filed a motion for an order making the Town a party to the proceeding. On May 19, 1980, the Town filed a notice of special appearance to object to the court's jurisdiction. At the May 19 hearing, Judge Eich granted the City’s motion to intervene but took under advisement the other motions pending further briefing.
Notwithstanding the absence of service of a summons and complaint, in a memorandum decision dated May 20, 1980, Judge Eich granted the City’s motion to make the Town a party. The basis for the decision was that the Chapter 66 proceeding was a special proceeding commenced not by summons and complaint but by petition; that the Town had received copies of the petition and the City’s motion papers so it had notice of the matter; and that sec. 803.03(1) (b), Stats., in conjunction with sec. 66.014(5), empowered the court to make the Town a party. Accordingly, the court issued an order, dated May 20, 1980, “that the motion of the City of Madison for an order making the Town of Fitchburg a party to these proceedings be, and the same hereby is, granted, without any further notice to the said Town, copies of the petition and the motions filed with respect thereto by the City of Madison being attached hereto and made [644]*644a part of this order.” The order also established May 22, 1980, for a hearing on the City’s motion for a temporary injunction.
On May 20, 1980, the Town filed a notice of special appearance and a motion to dismiss the Town as a party to the proceeding on the grounds of lack of personal jurisdiction, insufficiency of process and insufficiency of service of process. A motion hearing- was scheduled for May 28, 1980, to coincide with the hearing on the City’s injunction motion. Following the hearing, by order dated May 30, 1980, Judge Eich denied the Town’s motion to dismiss and granted the City’s motion for an injunction, ordering “that the Town of Fitchburg, its officers and agents are enjoined from conducting any sec. 60.81, Stats., incorporation referendum on June 3, 1980, or any other incorporation referendum, other than as may be ordered by the Court at the conclusion of this proceeding pursuant to sec. 66.018, Stats.” In a memorandum accompanying the May 30 order, the court addressed only the injunction question, concluding that the City had standing to challenge the sec. 60.81 incorporation proceeding; that the sec. 60.81 proceeding was not available to the Town because the City is not a city of the first class as required by sec. 60.81; and that the sec. 60.81 proceeding was no longer an independent incorporation proceeding but was assimilated into the Chapter 66 incorporation procedures.3
On May 30, .1980, the Town and the petitioners filed a joint notice of appeal in which they appealed to the court of appeals that portion of the May 20, 1980, order which made the Town a party, and the whole of the May 30, [645]*6451980, order denying the Town’s motion to dismiss and enjoining the Town from conducting the sec. 60.81 referendum. Concurrently with the joint notice of appeal, the Town and petitioners filed a motion for relief pending appeal and a petition for a writ of prohibition, both of which were directed toward relieving the Town of the effects of the orders from which it appeals.
The court of appeals, on May 30, 1980, denied the petition for a writ of prohibition. On May 31, 1980, the court of appeals dismissed the notice of appeal, holding that the orders appealed from were nonfinal and non-appealable. The motion for relief pending appeal was also dismissed.
By letter to the court of appeals dated June 2, 1980, the day before the sec. 60.81 referendum had been scheduled to take place, counsel for the Town and the petitioners sought reconsideration of the May 31, 1980, decision on the ground that it was clearly erroneous in failing to take notice of sec. 801.08, Stats., which provides that a trial court’s “decision upon a question of jurisdiction shall be by order which is appealable.” On June 2, 1980, the court of appeals issued an order declining to modify its May 31, 1980, order, holding that sec. 801.08 must be read in conjunction with sec. 808.03, Stats., and that an order denying a motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds is only appealable as a matter of discretion.
We granted review on June 2, 1980, and on July 10, 1980, granted the petitioners’ motion to advance the case on our calendar.
I.
Our initial concern is whether the court of appeals erred in dismissing the appeal below. Although the issues before the court of appeals included the appealability [646]*646of both the May 20 and May 30 orders of the trial court, the Town now appears to challenge the appellate court’s decision only as it relates to the appealability of the May 30 orders which denied the Town’s motion to dismiss and granted the City’s motion to enjoin the sec. 60.81 referendum. The Town’s position is that both May 30 orders are final orders appealable as of right since both meet the standards set by this court for testing whether an order is final. The City argues in response that both orders are nonfinal because neither order completely terminates the litigation with respect to any party.
(A)
The question of what constitutes a final order for purposes of an appeal of right has been before this court several times in the recent past. Aparacor v. ILHR Department, 97 Wis.2d 399, 293 N.W.2d 545 (1980) ; Heaton v. Independent Mortuary Corp., 97 Wis.2d 379, 294 N.W.2d 15 (1980); State v. Rabe, 96 Wis.2d 48, 291 N.W.2d 809 (1980) ; State v. Jenich, 94 Wis.2d 74, 288 N.W.2d 114 (1980) ; State ex rel. A.E. v. Green Lake County Cir. Ct., 94 Wis.2d 98, 288 N.W.2d 125 (1980). These decisions reiterate the substance of sec. 808.03, Stats., recognizing that “[o]rders which ‘[dispose] of the entire matter in litigation’ are appealable by right; all other orders are appealable only by permission.” State v. Rabe, supra at 56.
In Heaton we specifically addressed the question of the appealability of an order denying a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, concluding that such an order is appealable by permission only. “The order does not dispose of the entire matter in litigation; it does not resolve the dispute; it does not preclude further hear[647]*647ing; it does not completely settle the rights of the parties. Indeed the effect of the order is to continue the litigation, not end it.” Heaton v. Independent Mortuary Corp., supra at 396-97. The order denying the Town’s motion to dismiss is squarely controlled by Heaton. The Town would have us reconsider Heaton, but we decline to do so. For reasons which shall be discussed later, we reach the j urisdictional question by a different route.
(B)
The court of appeals also found the order enjoining the Town from conducting a sec. 60.81 referendum to be a nonfinal order “because it is clear from the record in this case that the parties and the court considered the injunction to be temporary pending disposition of this lawsuit.” Order of Court of Appeals, No. 980, dated May 31, 1980. Judge Bablitch, dissenting from this portion of the appellate court order, believed the injunction order to be final in that it “permanently deprives the Town of the right to proceed with the referendum prior to the extensive review proceedings set forth in sec. 66.-014, Stats.” Id. (Bablitch, J., dissenting.)
We believe the trial court’s order enjoining the Town was intended to be, and is in its effect, a permanent prohibition on the Town’s performance of its duties under sec. 60.81 (l)-(4), Stats. This permanently frustrates the efforts of the sec. 60.81 petitioners and extinguishes the right to incorporate under that section as to any future 60.81 petitioners as well. Although the City’s motion papers seek a temporary injunction, and the trial court’s memorandum decision is denominated “Memorandum Decision on Motion for Temporary Injunction,” we are not bound by these labels. Rather, “[w]e will look beyond the form and the label of the document to [648]*648the substance and nature of the determination.” Thomas/Van Dyken Joint Venture v. Van Dyken, 90 Wis.2d 236, 241, 279 N.W.2d 459 (1979). In so doing we must ascertain whether the trial court intended the order to be final. Fredrick v. City of Janesville, 92 Wis.2d 685, 686-87, 285 N.W.2d 655 (1979) (Per Curiam).
The trial court’s order enjoins the Town from conducting any referendum other than one “ordered by the Court.” Under the incorporation procedures involved in this review, a court-ordered incorporation referendum only occurs in a Chapter 66 proceeding. The sec. 60.81 procedure does not provide for judicial oversight, and the referendum authorized pursuant to that section is not conducted by court order. Therefore, in shaping the injunction order such that any future incorporation referendum is predicated upon a court order, the trial court clearly contemplated that only a Chapter 66 referendum, not a sec. 60.81 referendum, might be held. Further support for this position is to be found in the court’s memorandum decision. In attempting to reconcile the existence of two separate statutory incorporation procedures, the court concluded:
“the clear intention of the legislature in adopting secs. 66.013-66.019, Stats., was to make the procedures specified therein applicable to all proceedings for incorporation, whether instituted by the petition of electors/freeholders under sec. 66.014, or by the petition of electors/ taxpayers under sec. 60.81. The referendum referred to in 60.81, would be the referendum coming after the Department’s review under 66.014, and the procedures of ch. 66 would control in all cases where any conflict might exist between that chapter and sec. 60.81.”
Obviously the trial court believed that sec. 60.81 incorporation procedures are now controlled by Chapter 66. It is clear that the right of the citizens of the Town to incorporate as provided in sec. 60.81 is extinguished by [649]*649the trial court’s order because the Town is enjoined from carrying out its mandated functions under sec. 60.81.
We believe this order meets the test of appealability set forth in sec. 808.03(1), Stats. The only “issue in litigation” with respect to the Town is the ability to proceed under sec. 60.81. The trial court’s order settles that issue with finality. The City argues that the order is nonfinal because it does not terminate the Chapter 66 proceeding to which, it notes, the Town is still a party. Therefore, the City claims the Town still has the right, under sec. 66.017, to appeal the final Chapter 66 order, which would then permit the review of the injunction order. We are not comforted by the clarity of the review procedures described in sec. 66.017, nor are we certain that a review of the final order terminating the Chapter 66 proceeding would necessarily bring forth for review the injunction order we presently consider. See, e.g., Hoppenrath v. State, 97 Wis.2d 449, 462, 293 N.W.2d 910 (1980). However, we need not address these contentions. In this case it is evident that the only reason the City wanted to make the Town a party to the Chapter 66 proceeding was to seek to terminate the sec. 60.81 effort. Beyond that purpose, the Town’s presence as a party to the continuing Chapter 66 proceeding is nominal only. Under Chapter 66 the Town whose territory is being considered for incorporation is not required to be a party. The Town may become a party, as may any other interested person or governmental unit, as provided by sec. 66.014(5), Stats., but there are no issues which require for their determination that the Town be a party. As a result, we find that the trial court’s order enjoining the Town from conducting a sec. 60.81 referendum terminated the only matter in litigation with respect to the Town. The court of appeals erred in finding it non-appealable.
[650]*650II.
Having found an appealable order, our course now returns to a consideration of the jurisdictional order we initially found to be nonappealable. Sec. 809.10(4), Stats., provides that “[a]n appeal from a final judgment or final order brings before the court all prior nonfinal judgments, orders and rulings adverse to the appellant and favorable to the respondent made in the action or proceeding not previously appealed and ruled upon.” By operation of this language, we are now confronted with the merits of the Town’s claim that the trial court erred in denying the Town’s motion to dismiss it as a party for lack of personal jurisdiction. The basis of the Town’s claim is that it was made a party and then subjected to an adverse order without ever having been served with a summons and complaint. The trial court denied the Town’s motion to dismiss summarily at the same time it decided to issue the injunction. However, in its memorandum decision accompanying the order of May 20, 1980, making the Town a party, the court discussed the jurisdictional problem. We assume the reasons stated in that decision are applicable to the order under review.
In brief, the trial court concluded the Town was subject to the court’s jurisdiction without service of summons and complaint for three reasons: (1) The Chapter 66 procedure is a special proceeding commenced by petition, and “[t]o require (as the Town urges) the City of Madison to draft a summons and complaint and serve them on the Town would be to ignore both the form and the substance of the pending proceeding”; (2) secs. 66.014(5) and 803.03(1), Stats., authorize the court to make the Town a party to the proceeding; and (3) the Town had received copies of the petition and the City’s motions and was, in fact, on notice as to the proceeding.
[651]*651Considering the second of these reasons, we do not read sec. 66.014(5), Stats., as conferring upon the trial court the power to effect involuntary joinder. The language of that section, as it applies to the Town, provides that “[a]ny governmental unit entitled to notice pursuant to sub. (4), . . . may become a party to the proceeding prior to the time set for the hearing.” We have stated that “ [a] mbiguity in a statute exists when ‘. . . a statute is capable of being understood by reasonably well-informed persons in two or more different senses.’ ” Wirth v. Ehly, 93 Wis.2d 433, 441, 287 N.W.2d 140 (1980). Interpreting the language of sec. 66.014(5) as authorizing the court to compel joinder is within the bounds set forth in Wirth. Therefore, we may resort to extrinsic aids to determine legislative intent. Id. at 442.
Sec. 66.014(5), Stats., was created by sec. 5 of Chapter 261, Laws of 1959. A drafter’s note to that section provides:
“Sub. (5) broadens existing law by permitting any party having a legitimate interest in the proposed incorporation to enter the proceedings prior to the hearing. It is the intent of this provision to give the review authorities an opportunity to hear all relevant testimony, particularly from neighboring municipalities or towns which might be affected by the incorporation.”
The existing law to which the note refers is sec. 61.07 (2), Stats., 1957, which was a part of the statutory framework governing the incorporation of villages. That section provides:
“ (2) If such a petition is not filed, the court shall hear all parties interested for or against such application who shall seasonably appear; may in its discretion adjourn such hearing from time to time, direct a resurvey to be made or another census taken by whomsoever it shall appoint, and refer any question for examination and [652]*652report thereon. Any town containing territory of the proposed new village shall upon application be a party and entitled to be heard on any matter pertaining to the right of such proposed territory to incorporate as a village.”
Under that law the court was required to hear all interested parties who appeared “seasonably,” but the only entities which were allowed to become parties to the proceeding were the Towns whose territories were to be incorporated. That they “shall upon application be a party” does not authorize the court to compel their presence. It means only that, should they desire to apply, they could become parties. Consistent with the dráfter’s note above, the language of sec. 66.014(5) now permits any interested person or governmental unit to become a party, not just the governmental units whose territories may be incorporated. Accordingly, we conclude that sec. 66.014(5) declares only that interested parties who are desirous of becoming parties to the proceeding may do so. It does not empower the court to compel joinder.
Neither does the trial court’s reliance upon sec. 803.08 (1), Stats., in conjunction with sec. 66.014(5), authorize joinder without service of process. Sec. 803.08 (1) is the necessary parties provision of the Rules of Civil Procedure, which provides as follows:
“(1) Persons to be joined if feasible. A person who is subject to service of process shall be joined as a party in the action if (a) in the person’s absence complete relief cannot be accorded among those already parties, or (b) the person claims an interest relating to the subject of the action and is so situated that the disposition of the action in the person’s absence may 1. as a practical matter impair or impede the person’s ability to protect that interest or 2. leave any of the persons already parties subject to a substantial risk [653]*653of incurring double, multiple or otherwise inconsistent obligations by reason of his or her claimed interest.”
This subsection establishes the criteria by which it can be determined who must be joined in an action. See: Clausen and Lowe, The New Wisconsin Rules of Civil Procedure, Chapters 801-803, 59 Marq. L. Rev. 1, 79-90 (1976). We need not decide whether the Town is a necessary party according to sec. 803.08(1), since even if it were, when a trial court, pursuant to subsection (3), orders “that the person be made a party,” a summons and complaint must be served in order to commence the action as to that person. See: Secs. 801.02 (1), 801.05, and 801.06, Stats. This leads to the third reason underlying the trial court’s exercise of jurisdiction over the Town which is that the City’s motion papers gave the Town actual notice of the proceeding. We have held that motion papers are insufficient to confer jurisdiction over a party where a summons and complaint are required. Estate of Von Wald, 24 Wis.2d 256, 257-58, 128 N.W.2d 398 (1964); Madison v. Pierce, 266 Wis. 303, 306, 62 N.W.2d 910 (1954). Accordingly, even if the Town were a necessary party under sec. 803.03(1), its joinder could not be effectuated, pursuant to the Rules of Civil Procedure, by service of the City’s motions.
We come to the principal question, then, of whether the fact that Chapter 66 is a special proceeding eliminates the need for service of summons and complaint in order to effectuate the joinder of a party. Sec. 801.01(2), Stats., states that
“[t]he sections in chs. 801 to 847 govern procedure and practice in circuit courts of this state in all civil actions and special proceedings whether cognizable as cases at law, in equity or of statutory origin except where different procedure is prescribed by statute or rule.”
The answer thus hinges upon whether Chapter 66 provides a different procedure for the compulsory joinder [654]*654of and extension of the court’s jurisdiction over the Town which does not require the service of a summons and complaint. We cannot find such a procedure in Chapter 66.
We have already determined that sec. 66.014 (5), Stats., does not empower the trial court to compel joinder. Nor do we find such authority expressed in any other provision of the Chapter 66 incorporation procedures, secs. 66.013-66.019. Rather, Chapter 66 incorporations contemplate that the parties to the proceeding will be those who petition under sec. 66.014(2), and those who intervene under sec. 66.014(5). This fact is significant for two reasons. First, it invokes the procedural rules governing civil actions and special proceedings found in Chapters 801 et seq. which, as we have pointed out, require a summons and complaint in order to commence a civil action as to a party. Second, it refutes the trial court’s assertion that to require the City to serve a summons and complaint “would be to ignore both the form and the substance of the pending proceeding.” By first searching the provisions of the Chapter 66 incorporation statutes for procedural equivalents of compulsory joinder and service of process and finding none, we have satisfied the test of sec. 801.01(2). Our reference to the Rules of Civil Procedure is made in clear recognition of the “form and substance” of the pending proceeding.
Once we have determined that the Rules of Civil Procedure govern the Town’s joinder and entitlement to service, the insufficiency of the procedures employed by the City become apparent. This conclusion is compelled by three provisions of the Rules of Civil Procedure. Sec. 801.02 (1), Stats., states:
“(1) A civil action in which a personal judgment is sought, other than certiorari, habeas corpus, mandamus [655]*655or prohibition, is commenced as to any defendant when a summons and a complaint naming the person as defendant are filed with the court, provided service of an authenticated copy of the summons and of the complaint is made upon the defendant under this chapter within 60 days after filing.”
Sec. 801.04(2), Stats., provides:
“(2) Personal jurisdiction. A court of this state having jurisdiction of the subject matter may render a judgment against a party personally only if there exists one or more of the jurisdictional grounds set forth in s. 801.05 or 801.06 and in addition either:
“(a) A summons is served upon the person pursuant to s. 801.11; or
“(b) Service of a summons is dispensed with under the conditions in s. 801.06.”
Sec. 801.06, Stats., provides:
“A court of this state having jurisdiction of the subject matter may, without a summons having been served upon a person, exercise jurisdiction in an action over a person with respect to any counterclaim asserted against that person in an action which the person has commenced in this state and also over any person who appears in the action and waives the defense of lack of jurisdiction over his or her person as provided in s. 802.06(8).”
These sections make clear that for a court to exercise personal jurisdiction over a party which neither submits nor waives a jurisdictional objection, a summons and complaint must issue. Our cases have been consistent in so holding. See: Howard v. Preston, 30 Wis.2d 663, 669, 142 N.W.2d 178 (1966) ; Home Bank v. Becker, 48 Wis.2d 1, 6, 179 N.W.2d 855 (1970) ; Gehr v. Sheboygan, 81 Wis.2d 117, 122, 260 N.W.2d 30 (1977). Exceptions to this rule have been recognized in cases where a court exercises jurisdiction over a criminal defendant or juvenile because of the accused’s physical presence in the court, Pillsbury v. State, 31 Wis.2d 87, 92, 142 [656]*656N.W.2d 187 (1966) ; State ex rel. La Follette v. Circuit Court, 37 Wis.2d 329, 343, 155 N.W.2d 141 (1967), and where a statute specifically provides for the exercise of jurisdiction without service. Berkoff v. Dept. of Building Inspection, 47 Wis.2d 215, 218, 177 N.W.2d 142 (1970). In Berkoff the court stated:
“The language of sec. 66.05(3), which on its face provides that a party affected need only ‘apply’ to the circuit court within the thirty days, is indicative of the legislature’s belief that the unusual circumstances of razing a building by administrative fiat triggers the right to a restraining order upon application made to the court without the necessity of prior service to obtain jurisdiction.” Id. at 218.
In the instant case there is no specific statutory grant of jurisdiction without service, nor did the Town submit to the court’s jurisdiction.
It is important also to note that the nature of the relief sought by the City is similarly not expressly provided for in Chapter 66. Secs. 66.014(8) and 66.014 (9) (f) and (g), Stats., which delineate the role of the court in a Chapter 66 incorporation, do not provide for the sort of relief the City sought to obtain. Accordingly, with the “form and substance” of the Chapter 66 procedure in mind, we hold that the City, in order to obtain relief which is not provided in Chapter 66, against a party whose joinder is not provided in Chapter 66, should have served the Town with summons and complaint as provided by the Rules of Civil Procedure. We conclude, therefore, that the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction over the Town, and the Town’s motion to dismiss should have been granted.
By the Court. — The order of the court of appeals is reversed, and the order of the trial court enjoining the sec. 60.81 referendum is vacated. The case is remanded [657]*657to the trial court with instructions to grant the Town’s motion to dismiss.