Johnson v. Waukesha County

25 N.W. 7, 64 Wis. 281, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 34
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 N.W. 7 (Johnson v. Waukesha County) 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
Johnson v. Waukesha County, 25 N.W. 7, 64 Wis. 281, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 34 (Wis. 1885).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

The respondent presented a claim to the board of supervisors of the appellant county for services as marshal of the village of Waukesha, in said county, for serving process and other services in twenty-eight criminal actions, all of which were tried by a justice of the peace of said village or of the town of Waukesha. The charge against the defendant in each case was vagrancy, and they were all actions under sec. 1543, E. S. 1878. The claim of the respondent was disallowed by the board of supervisors, and he appealed from the order of the board disallowing the claim to the circuit court of the county of Waukesha.

Before the trial in that court the county filed an answer to the claim of the respondent. The answer sets out at considerable length that all the actions in which the services were performed, and for which services the respondent presented his claim to the board of supervisors, were actions brought under the provisions of said sec. 1543, E. S.

The answer further alleges that the complaint in each of the said casos was made by the respondent, and that at the time of making said complaints he knew that the persons proceeded against as vagrants under said sec. 1543 were not actual inhabitants of either the town or the village of Wau-kesha, and that they were a class of vagrants which the statute defines as tramps;” that, being tramps,” a justice of the peace had no jurisdiction to issue a warrant [284]*284either for their arrest or trial; and that snoh complaints so made by the respondent were false, and were made for the purpose of founding thereon claims for services against the county under color of law when no right to perform such services existed.

The answer further charges that when the respondent made the several complaints in said actions, he knew that the persons proceeded against were not actual inhabitants of the town or village of Waulcesha; and that he fraudulently, and with intent to cheat said county out of the amount of his said several bills for services, entered said complaints under said sec. 1543, R. S., instead of under ch. 342, Laws of 1883, which chapter governed the proceedings against that class of persons to which the parties complained of belonged.

The answer futher charges an unlawful conspiracy between the respondent and the several justices of the peace whose names appear in said complaints, in substance that they would ignore entirely the provisions of ch. 342, Laws of 1883, and proceed against all vagrants found in said town or village of Waukesha as though said ch. 342, Laws of 1883, had not been enacted; that this conspiracy was entered into for the purpose of unlawfully increasing the emoluments of their respective offices; and that, in pursuance of this conspiracy, the respondent arrested all “tramps” found within said town or village under the provisions of said see. 1543, R. S., without stating in the complaint any facts which would take the case out of the provisions of said section, and bring them within the provisions of ch. 342, Laws of 1883, and so oust the said justices of any jurisdiction to arrest or try the persons so complained of.

It is not claimed by either party upon this appeal that sec. 1543, R. S., is repealed, but on the part of the appellant it is claimed that by virtue of ch. 188, Laws of 1879, ch. 342, Laws of 1883, and ch. 333, Laws of 1885, certain per[285]*285sons who are vagrants within the provisions of said see. 1543 may also be “ tramps,” within the law above referred to, and that when they are not only vagrants, but also “ tramps,” within the meaning of the statutes above cited, then the officers of the law have no authority to proceed against them as mere vagrants on complaint before a justice of the peace, but they must proceed by complaint before the officers mentioned in said chapters, and in no other way; that to proceed against them in a justice’s court for the mere offense of vagrancy is an unlawful evasion of the law, and an officer who makes a complaint against such person for vagrancy before a justice of the peace, with knowledge that such vagrant is also a “ tramp,” as defined by the law, does an unlawful act, and ought not to be permitted to recover for his services for serving process or performing any other service in such action.

Ch. 188, Laws of 1879, was probably repealed by implication by the enactment of ch. 342, Laws of 1883; and ch. 333, Laws of 1885, simply amends sec. 4, ch. 342, Laws of 1883, by giving police justices of incorporated villages power to issue process for the arrest of “ tramps,” and take their examination and hold to bail or commit for trial. Sec. 1, ch. 342, Laws of 1883, makes every male person over sixteen years old, who is a vagrant within the meaning of sec. 1543, E. S., a “tramp,” if he be without visible means of support and be found and arrested in any town, city, or village of this state, in which he is not at the time an actual inhabitant; or if any male vagrant, within the meaning of said sec. 1543, over sixteen years old, be found drunk and disorderly, whether he be an inhabitant or not of the town, city, or village in which he is arrested, he is also made a “ tramp ” by this act. On conviction of being a “ tramp ” the act provides that he shall be punished by imprisonment in the county jail not less than fifteen days, during which imprisonment his food and daily drink shall be bread and [286]*286water only, or by imprisonment in the state’s prison not exceeding one year; except that in counties having workhouses, commitment may be made to such work-house in the discretion of the court. All jurisdiction to issue warrants for the arrest of “ tramps,” or to take their examination, or hold them to bail for trial, or to try them, is taken away from the justices of the peace. The power to try such offense is conferred upon the several county courts, municipal courts, and circuit courts of the state, and by the amendment of 1885 the power to apprehend and take the examinations of such offenders is conferred upon the police justices of the incorporated villages of the state.

It will be seen by an examination of these statutes that sec. 1513, R. S., is not repealed by the act of 1883 as amended by the act of 1885, and there is no doubt, therefore, of the power of a justice of the peace to issue his warrant for the arrest of a person upon a complaint showing that he is a vagrant within the meaning of sec. 1513, R. S.; nor of his power to try the person arrested upon such complaint, and, if found guilty, to sentence him to confinement in 'the county jail not exceeding ninety days. See secs. 1546, 4739, 4759, R. S.

If upon such trial the evidence should show that the accused was probably guilty of being a “ tramp ” as well as a vagrant, the justice might, if he thought the defendant ought to be put upon his trial for the higher offense of being a “ tramp,” stop his proceedings and bind him over, or commit him to jail to answer to the court having jurisdiction to try him for such offense. Sec. 4678, R. S. The statute seems to leave it to the discretion of the justice whether he will proceed with the trial or stop proceedings and bind him over to answer to the court having jurisdiction of the higher offense. The question whether he will proceed with the trial or bind him over to stand trial for the higher offense is wholly addressed to the discretion of the [287]*287justice, and I know of no way in which any other court could interfere to compel the justice to suspend the trial and hold the accused to bail for the higher offense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 N.W. 7, 64 Wis. 281, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-waukesha-county-wis-1885.