Lewis v. Town of Eagle

115 N.W. 361, 135 Wis. 141, 1908 Wisc. LEXIS 109
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 115 N.W. 361 (Lewis v. Town of 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
Lewis v. Town of Eagle, 115 N.W. 361, 135 Wis. 141, 1908 Wisc. LEXIS 109 (Wis. 1908).

Opinion

TVT/SRBTTATn, J.

There is a fundamental defect in appellants’ case as to the general tax of $1,000. As to that a question is involved which ruled Judd v. Fox Lahe, 28 Wis. 583; Sage v. Fifield, 68 Wis. 546, 32 N. W. 629; and Harley v. Lindemann, 129 Wis. 514, 109 N. W. 570.

It will be seen from the statement that the cause of com[145]*145plaint as to the tax for general purposes was that the same was illegal but would nevertheless he extended; upon the tax roll and town orders be issued in anticipation of the collection thereof, unless the court interfered and prevented it. That was precisely the situation in Judd v. Fox Lake, supra, and Sage v. Fifield, supra.

In the first case referred to the purport of the complaint was that the electors of the town without authority of law had determined to raise $500 for the improvement of a street in the village of Eox Lahe and the town officers pursuant to such illegal determination would draw and sign orders on the town treasury for the payment of said sum and insert the same in the tax roll of the town for the purpose of paying such orders unless such officers were restrained by the court. The prayer for relief was to the effect that the improvement of the street, the assessment of the tax, and all things in respect thereto be declared void and perpetually enjoined. A temporary injunction was issued at the start, as in this case, which was subsequently dissolved. Upon the question of the right of plaintiff, to relief coming before this court for review, the decision was in the negative upon grounds best stated by quoting from the opinion by Dixon, C. J., as follows:

“It is, supposing the resolution of the voters in town- meeting to have been unauthorized, and the proposed tax illet-gal, at most a mere anticipated or threatened invasion of the legal rights of the plaintiffs, which as’ yet has ripened into nothing injurious or detrimental to them at all, and perchance may never do so, but which,' if it ever should, would not in its nature be irreparable, but might be redressed by the ordinary processes known to courts- of law and equity. Should the officers of the town attempt to carry the resolution into effect, and assess a tax wholly unauthorized and illegal, as the complaint charges, the plaintiffs will have their action at law to recover back the money i’f paid under protest or on levy or distress of personal property; [146]*146and if the same be extended against tbeir real estate they will also have tbeir sn.it in equity to remove tbe supposed lien and cloud from tbeir title. Tbe complaint presents, therefore, tbe naked question, whether under tbe circumstances tbe aid of equity can be successfully invoked to declare in advance that certain acts of public officers, proposed or threatened in tbe future to be done, will, if performed, be illegal and void. We are clearly of tbe opinion that it cannot.”

Tbe case was differentiated from those found in tbe books, tbe purpose of which was to judicially annul a void contract and to prevent tbe payment out of tbe public treasury of money, or the levy of taxes on account of such contract, or tbe issuance of negotiable paper which would be good in tbe bands of an innocent bolder, and those for the removal of apparent liens or clouds resting on title, such as Peck v. School Dist. 21 Wis. 516; Lawson v. Schnellen, 33 Wis. 288; Willard v. Comstock, 58 Wis. 565, 17 N. W. 401; Fowler v. Superior, 85 Wis. 411, 54 N. W. 800; Kyes v. St. Croix Co. 108 Wis. 136, 83 N. W. 631.

The authorities, as to tbe tax for general purposes, show that, even bad the court found in favor of appellants upon all points relied upon by them, a judgment in tbeir favor would be improper.

The other branch of tbe case must be separately treated, as before indicated, because of the alleged illegal contract.

Tbe evidence was to tbe effect that a special meeting was called to vote on tbe question of building a town ball and levying a tax of $700 for that purpose, resulting favorably, but various questions decided on tbe trial adversely to appellants are now presented in respect to whether such meeting was properly called and tbe proceedings bad pursuant to such call were jurisdictionally defective.

Tbe first point is that tbe matter of building a town ball cannot properly be considered at a special town meeting. Sec. 788, Stats. (1898), makes unmistakable provision therefor by reference to sec. 776, Stats. (1898), at subd. 10.

[147]*147Tbe nest point is that the evidence of posting notices of. the meeting was insufficient. The court found that the notices were properly posted and that the town cleric who did the work caused a true copy of the notice to be filed in his office. That was based on the filed copy having a memorandum thereon, signed by the town clerk, stating that it was a copy of a notice of a special town meeting of which three were posted in three of the most public places in the town on the 28th day of June, 1907. Me testified that he posted the notices and that the places of posting wex*e public places. The law does not prescribe the method by which the posting of such notices shall be evidenced. The jurisdictional circumstance is the fact of posting. That wasi abundantly established by the evidence referred to and the holding of the meeting pursuant to the notice. In Lemington v. Blodgett, 37 Vt. 210, we find it held that the mere record of the notice with the fact of a meeting having been held and the business mentioned in such notice having been done, is prima facie evidence of the posting. We do not need to go that far in this case, and only hold that it was competent to show the fact of posting and in the proper places by the filed copy, the indorsement thereon, and the oral evidence of the clerk.

Complaint is made because the polls were closed one hour at noon. That at best was a mere.irregularity not affecting the result, so far as appears, and so not in any event material in this equitable action.

It is suggested that opportunity was -not given to move to reconsider the resolution as to locating the town hall and procuring a site. The evidence seems to* cover that point. Moreover, there is nothing in the statutes which requires a town meeting to be- kept open one hour, or any particular length of time, to permit of a motion for reconsideration to be made. In case of such a motion being made within one hour after a vote shall have been passed it is in time, otherwise not. That is the effect of sec. 795, Stats. (1898)'. Further, [148]*148there is nothing in the case to indicate that any elector desired to make such a motion. In a court of equity, that cannot be assumed as probable and that a change of the result may probably have been prevented, for the purpose of defeating a vote duly passed.

Attention is called to the fact that the finding as to the signers of the call for the special meeting mentions them as “freeholder's” instead of “qualified voters,” as required by sec. 788, Stats. (1898). The use of the word “freeholders” instead of “qualified voters” was evidently an. inadvertence. The request for the special meeting was signed by persons specified in the writing as “qualified voters,” though there was another paper, called a petition, signed by a large number of persons described as freeholders.

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Bluebook (online)
115 N.W. 361, 135 Wis. 141, 1908 Wisc. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-town-of-eagle-wis-1908.