In Re Town of Spread Eagle

116 N.W.2d 165, 17 Wis. 2d 200
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 116 N.W.2d 165 (In Re Town of Spread Eagle) 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
In Re Town of Spread Eagle, 116 N.W.2d 165, 17 Wis. 2d 200 (Wis. 1962).

Opinion

Dieterich, J.

The parties stipulated on the first day of trial, March 7, 1961, to certain facts which constituted a fulfilment of the statutory requirements to organize a new town, except for the following three issues:

(1) Whether the proposed new town contained ISO resident freeholders;

(2) Whether the petition contained the signatures of a majority of the electors of the proposed new town; and

(3) Whether the petition contained the signatures of a majority of the resident freeholders of the proposed new town.

The petitioners offered the following exhibits in evidence:

(1) The original verified petition, containing a list of 180 electors and 105 signatures.

(2) The proof of service.

(3) The proof of publication.

(4) Thirteen additional signers.

(5) Certified copy of register of deeds setting forth the names of 161 freeholders and the instrument under which each of the petitioning freeholders obtains title to his property.

*203 (6) The stipulation of March 7, 1961, between the petitioners and objectors as to the issues involved.

The objectors objected to the introduction of Exhibit 4 which contained 13 new additional signatures to those that were contained in the original petition of February 1, 1961, and claimed that it was not admissible because it was an addition and therefore could not comply with sec. 60.06 (2), Stats., as to notice and that therefore it constitutes a new petition and was not admissible.

The trial court admitted Exhibits 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 in evidence. Exhibit 4 was admitted subject to the objection.

Objectors offered in evidence Exhibits A and B in the form of a counterpetition, containing a total of 17 signatures requesting withdrawal of their names from the original petition. Both exhibits were received in evidence.

The referee subtracted the 17 signatures on objectors’ exhibits from both the list of resident freeholders and from the list of electors contained in the original petition. This resulted in a deficit of signatures on these lists to constitute a majority of the resident freeholders and electors of the proposed town. On that basis the referee on March 17, 1961, recommended to the circuit court that the original petition be dismissed.

The trial court on March 22, 1961, made an interlocutory decision and order holding that the referee was in error and that the objectors should have been required to complete their case and that the petitioners should have been afforded an opportunity to offer rebuttal testimony or proof. The trial court in that decision defined an “elector” as “a person who has lived in the state of Wisconsin for a period of one year and the town of Florence for ten days prior to any election in which he voted or had a right to vote.” The court also defined a “resident freeholder” as “a person who has an estate *204 of inheritance in real estate where he has resided during certain periods of the year prior to the filing of the original petition.”

By order of the circuit court, the hearing was reconvened on March 30, 1961, for the purpose of taking further testimony of the petitioners and objectors.

The referee, after hearing testimony on March 30, 31, and April 3, 1961, made findings, which were incorporated in his report dated June 12, 1961. In his report, the referee stated:

“I would prefer to believe that ‘residence’ is the place which a person makes his principal seat of affairs and interests. Residence should be more than a temporary sojourn coupled with land ownership.”

Petitioners’ Exhibit 5 offered with the original petition to establish a prima facie case, listed 161 persons as freeholders in the proposed town of Spread Eagle.

The referee found that by applying the trial court’s formula of resident freeholder to the facts that there would be considerably more than 161 resident freeholders in the proposed town of Spread Eagle, as many as 211. He also found that as in the first hearing, the petitioners had but 77 signers on the petition who qualified as resident freeholders, thus the petition must fail for lack of a majority of resident freeholders as petitioners.

The referee also found that if he applied his definition of resident freeholder to the 161 persons listed as freeholders in Exhibit 5, the petition would fail for lack of the requisite number of resident freeholders (ISO or more).

The original petition contained a list of 180 electors. The referee found that the testimony established that 10 more names should be added to the list of electors, or a new total of 190 electors. He found that there were only 88 valid electors’ signatures on the original petition, which is less than a majority of 190.

*205 The record reveals several withdrawal petitions and reinstatement petitions, upon which the referee made rulings. The referee in his rulings permitted no additions to the original petition, but did permit some withdrawals and some rein-statements and recommended that the petition be denied on the ground that it did not contain the signatures of a majority of the electors or a majority of the resident freeholders of the proposed town of Spread Eagle.

The trial court in its written decision accompanying its order confirming the referee’s report incorporated a decision of December 10, 1960, rendered on a previous petition to form the town of Spread Eagle, which decision contained a definition of resident freeholders requiring only a temporary sojourn coupled with a freehold interest in land.

Under the facts of the instant proceeding, the issues on this appeal are:

(1) Who qualifies as a resident freeholder under sec. 60.06, Stats.?
(2) When is a signer of a petition under sec. 60.06 (2), Stats., precluded from withdrawing his name from the petition, and when are additional signers precluded from adding their names to the petition?
Sec. 60.06, Stats., provides:
“Organization of towns in special cases. (1) Requisite conditions. Any government township, or any contiguous territory, being part of any town or towns, equal in area to more than one government township and to not more than two government townships, lying within the same county, having at least 150 resident freeholders or homesteaders, at least 80 of whom are electors who have resided within such territory for at least one year prior to the verification of the petition referred to in this section, and an assessed valuation of at least $200,000, according to the last preceding assessment, may be organized into a town, where the remaining area of any town of which such proposed town forms a part is not less than 36 square miles, and has not less than 75 resi *206 dent electors and an assessed value of not less than $200,000, according to the last preceding assessment.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Nielsen v. Waukesha County Board of Supervisors
504 N.W.2d 621 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 1993)
Nielsen v. WAUKESHA COUNTY BD. OF SUP'RS.
504 N.W.2d 621 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 N.W.2d 165, 17 Wis. 2d 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-town-of-spread-eagle-wis-1962.