In Re Village of Oconomowoc Lake

72 N.W.2d 544, 270 Wis. 530, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 315
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 72 N.W.2d 544 (In Re Village of Oconomowoc Lake) 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 Village of Oconomowoc Lake, 72 N.W.2d 544, 270 Wis. 530, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 315 (Wis. 1955).

Opinions

Fairchild, C. J.

We have only the question of the sufficiency of the petition to deal with. The court should not refuse to hold that the facts on which the purpose of the petition is based be fully presented so as to advise the objecting party of the essential elements claimed to exist and of the issues which must be met with relation to the existence or nonexistence of those essential elements. The preliminary proceedings, such as preparation of maps, survey, notice, and filing of petition were properly alleged and are not seriously challenged here. The sufficiency of the petition seeking the incorporation as a village of the area involved is challenged because respondents have failed to bring to the court by allegation a claim that such area exists presently as a village or to allege such characteristics as would show that it is a village. Having alleged compliance with the two elements of a village prescribed by statute, i. e., area and population, respondents contend that they do not have to allege, in addition, that the area they seek to incorporate is a village in fact, or to allege characteristics of a village.

The incorporation of a village can occur only when the affected territory and population constitute a village in fact, as distinguished from an area which has not developed its conveniences and social and domestic life to village purposes. State ex rel. Holland v. Lammers, 113 Wis. 398, 86 N. W. 677, 89 N. W. 501. The legislature can grant recognition to and confer village status and authority upon a community which is a village in fact.

[533]*533Sec. 3, art. XI, and sec. 23, art. IV of the constitution originally directed, respectively, that:

“It shall be the duty of the legislature, and they are hereby empowered, to provide for the organization of cities and incorporated villages,” and that—
“The legislature shall establish but one system of town and county government, which shall be as nearly uniform as practicable.”

The first statute enacted in accordance with those constitutional mandates was ch. 52, sec. 1, R. S. 1849. Since 1849 that statute has been amended and renumbered at various times until it now appears as sec. 61.01, Stats. It presently reads:

“61.01 Incorporation: area and population. Any part of any town or towns not included in any village, lying in the same county or in two or more adjoining counties, not more than one half square mile in area, with a resident population of not less than 150; or of a greater area than one half square mile and a population of not less than 200; or not less than one square mile in area, with a population of at least 400 persons to every square mile thereof, may, upon application therefor by not less than five taxpayers and residents of such territory and upon compliance with the conditions of this chapter, become incorporated as a village by such name as may be designated in the order of the court for its incorporation with the ordinary powers of a municipal corporation, and such as are conferred by the statutes, except that no territory used principally for tourist or summer resort purposes, shall be so incorporated where one half or more thereof, in area, is owned by persons who are not qualified, because of nonresidence, to vote in the state or in the township in which is located the land so owned; unless the majority of the nonresident owners, by petition, consent to the incorporation thereof.”

In 1901, the constitutionality of sec. 854, Stats. 1898 (corresponding to the present sec. 61.01, Stats.), was at[534]*534tacked for the first time in State ex rel. Holland v. Lammers, supra. In that case, there was an attempt to incorporate a portion of a town of about two square miles, situated entirely within one county and having a resident population of 317. The statute (sec. 854, Stats. 1898) then provided that any part of any town or towns, not less than one-half square mile in area and not included in any village and all lying in the same county, which contained a resident population of not less than 300 might, on compliance with ch. 40, Stats. 1898, become incorporated as a village. The problem arising in that case was whether certain distinctly rural, sparsely settled, agricultural lands were entitled to be included, under the statute and the constitution, in the territory sought to be incorporated as a village. The constitutionality of the general law was attacked on the grounds that it did not limit the size of the territory to be incorporated by prescribing a restriction as to density of population in proportion to area. The court there determined that such a restriction was to be implied from the use in the constitution of the words “cities and incorporated villages,” and held as its final conclusion that (p. 415) :

“With the implied limitations we have mentioned surrounding each attempt to incorporate villages under the general law, it may be upheld as a valid enactment, and impervious to the attack upon it that it violates the constitutional rule of uniformity of town government.”

In reaching this conclusion, the court reasoned that many of the framers of our constitution came from New England and New York, and that when they framed our constitution they used the word “village” in the sense of a village as it existed in the older parts of the country at that time, that is, in the sense of an urban, developed community. Upon this basis, the court determined that a territory proposing to incorporate as a village must be a village in fact. It was stated in the opinion that (p. 414) :

[535]*535“When the law says that any district containing a population of 1,500 or over may become incorporated as a city, it means that any district having the ordinary and usual characteristics of a city may thus become incorporated. . . . The same limitations must be held to apply to the incorporation of villages. . . . Under the law in question the territory seeking incorporation as a village must be harmonious with the idea of what a village actually is.”

Respondents argue, in effect, that the 1939 amendment of the statute, which gives us our present law, destroyed the “village characteristics” test applied in the Lammers Case. They urge that there it was necessary for the court to use that test of village-characteristics requirements in order to supply by implication the lack in the general law resulting from the failure of the legislature to indicate a ratio of density of population to area. The assumption is that the population-to-area ratio having since been expressed by legislative will, there are no further constitutional limitations to be implied. However, area and population are not the only attributes of a village. The opinion in the Lammers Case, among other things, states that a village must have a “reasonably compact center or nucleus of population,” and its territory must be “distinctly urban in character, with such adjacent lands as are. naturally connected with, and are reasonably appurtenant and necessary for future growth, in view of the surroundings and circumstances of location and prospects of future prosperity.” Confining ourselves to these descriptions alone, does the statute, as now amended, determine whether a territory is distinctly urban in character, and.

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In Re Village of Oconomowoc Lake
72 N.W.2d 544 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 N.W.2d 544, 270 Wis. 530, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-village-of-oconomowoc-lake-wis-1955.