Konrad v. State

91 N.W.2d 203, 4 Wis. 2d 532, 1958 Wisc. LEXIS 425
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 91 N.W.2d 203 (Konrad v. State) 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
Konrad v. State, 91 N.W.2d 203, 4 Wis. 2d 532, 1958 Wisc. LEXIS 425 (Wis. 1958).

Opinion

Brown, J.

An inverse condemnation proceeding under ch. 32, Stats., is conducted at the expense of the taker. Sec. 32.15 (1), Stats. Plaintiffs contend that they are entitled to their expenses as well as their taxable costs. The expenses are substantial, particularly in view of their contract to pay a contingent fee to their attorneys. While the judgment does not expressly state that ch. 32, Stats., does not afford a remedy to plaintiffs for a taking of their property by a state agency, plaintiffs so interpret it because of the failure of the judgment to allow them their expenses, and because of the trial court’s memorandum decision to that effect and its conclusions of law reciting:

“3. That there is no statutory provision for service of process on the attorney general in an action for inverse condemnation against the state under chapter 32, Stats., and that no such service has ever been accomplished.
“4. That the Wisconsin Conservation Department is not an entity that can sue and be sued.”

Plaintiffs’ motion for review seeks relief under ch. 32, Stats. Appellant’s appeal seeks reversal of the judgment awarding damages and costs on the ground that there is no [536]*536competent evidence in support of the finding of fact that the dam caused the flooding of plaintiffs’ land.

Motion to Review.

Ch. 32, Stats., is devoted to the subject of eminent domain and outlines procedures for condemning private property required for public purposes. Sec. 32.02, Stats., names the bodies to which the legislature gives condemnation powers. They include “any public board or commission.” Sec. 23.09 (7) (d)- — the Conservation Commission chapter, — also gives condemnatory powers to the commission. Sec. 32.04 prescribes the manner in which proceedings under ch. 32, Stats., are instituted. It is concerned principally with condemnations commenced by the bodies empowered to condemn but both sec. 32.04 and sec. 32.15 contemplate a situation where some “person” having condemnatory rights has taken property without condemning it. In that event “the party interested in such property may institute and conduct at the expense of such person the proceedings to a conclusion if such person delays or omits to prosecute the same.” “The proceedings” refers to condemnation under this chapter and “person” is defined by sec. 32.01 (1) and includes the state, a board, or commission.

Sec. 32.04, Stats., contains this language:

“. . . If any owner of property desires to institute condemnation proceedings, he shall present his verified petition therefor to the county or circuit judge of the county where the land is situated. Such petition shall describe the land, state the hoard, commission, or corporation against which the condemnation proceedings are instituted, and use to which it has been put or is designed to have been put by the board, commission, or corporation against which the proceedings are instituted. . . .” (Italics ours.)

These statutory provisions convince us that if the Conservation Commission has taken private property for public [537]*537use the owner may, in the absence of a condemnation begun by the commission, institute and conduct such proceedings against the commission.

The circuit court’s fourth conclusion of law is: “That the Wisconsin Conservation Department is not an entity that can sue and be sued.” Strictly speaking, we consider this to be true for we cannot find in the statutes, nor in the Wisconsin Blue Book, any entity having the title of Wisconsin Conservation Department. Apparently there is no such thing as a Conservation Department and proceedings against what does not exist are nullities.

If, however, plaintiffs’ use of the word “department” is a mere misnomer and may be treated as “commission” we reach a different conclusion. For the purposes of this appeal we treat plaintiffs’ use of the word “department” as a misnomer — the equivalent of “commission,”- — although it is not clear to us that the learned trial court so considered it.

Even so, if plaintiffs’ proceeding was against the commission, and not against a nonexistent department, it was defective for lack of notice to or service upon the commission. Sec. 32.05, Stats., demands notice of the hearing of plaintiffs’ petition to “be served upon all interested at least twenty days before said hearing. ...” We think that such notice includes service of a copy of the petition which is to be heard. The Conservation Commission is certainly “interested,” being a party proceeded against. It is composed of six members; it has an office in the capítol and a staff headed by a director. Sec. 23.09 (2), (5), and (6). It would not seem difficult to give directly to the commission any notice which a party wished to call to its attention. To deliver to the attorney general such notices, which is all the plaintiffs did, does not seem to us to be a compliance with the requirements of service of notice on the commission. In this respect plaintiffs’ proceedings were defective in their inception, and [538]*538resulted in a lack of jurisdiction over the commission. Objection on this ground was timely made. The circuit court correctly held that plaintiffs’ proceeding under ch. 32, Stats., as against the commission, — the court said “department,”— is void.

We must still consider plaintiffs’ proceeding under ch. 32, Stats., directly against the state.

Sec. 32.01 (1), Stats., declares that “person” includes the state. Sec. 32.02 names the various entities which may condemn property. The state is nowhere named, although many of its agencies are. The only mention of a “person” which (or who) may condemn is in sec. 32.02 (12), and applies only to a person who operates a plant which causes stream pollution. This is not such a case.

Undoubtedly the state could, if it chose, condemn private property for public use. That is an attribute of sovereignty. The exercise of the right is limited by sec. 13, art. I, Const., declaring:

“The property of no person shall be taken for public use without just compensation therefor.”

But the state cannot be sued without its consent and only in the manner and under the procedure by which it has consented to be sued.

“It is not disputed that it is an established principle of law that no action will lie against a sovereign state in the absence of express legislative permission. It is further established that when a sovereign permits itself to be sued upon certain conditions, compliance therewith is a jurisdictional matter, and a suit against the sovereign may not be maintained unless such conditions are complied with.” State ex rel. Martin v. Reis (1939), 230 Wis. 683, 685, 284 N. W. 580.

Further:

“This raises for consideration the question whether a statute of general application containing no specific provision to [539]*539the effect that the state is within it, applies to the state itself. It is universally held, both in this country and in England, that such statutes do not apply to the state unless the state is explicitly included by appropriate language.” State ex rel. Martin v. Reis, supra, page 687.

Ch.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 N.W.2d 203, 4 Wis. 2d 532, 1958 Wisc. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/konrad-v-state-wis-1958.