Marinette County v. Schmitt

22 N.W.2d 151, 248 Wis. 308, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 370
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 N.W.2d 151 (Marinette County v. Schmitt) 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
Marinette County v. Schmitt, 22 N.W.2d 151, 248 Wis. 308, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 370 (Wis. 1945).

Opinions

Fritz, J.

In this action for money had and received, plaintiff seeks to recover from defendant $2,695 received by him from plaintiff for services which he claims and testified he actually rendered for plaintiff as the court reporter of the *311 Marinette county court. Such an action for money had and received is deemed to be equitable in its nature; and, as is stated in 19 Am. Jur., Equity, p. 168, sec. 195,—

“It is said that the rights of the parties in such an action are to be determined as they would be upon a bill in equity and that the defendant may rely upon any defense which shows that in equity and good conscience the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in whole or in part.”

That is the well-established rule in actions for money had and received. As Mr. Chief Justice Cassoday said in Frederick v. Douglas County, 96 Wis. 411, 421, 71 N. W. 798, “In all such actions, in the absence of mistake, deceit, fraud, duress, oppression, or undue influence, the party seeking to recover, or in whose behalf recovery is sought, must be equitably entitled to a repayment of the money, or no recovery can be had or repayment compelled.” And in an opinion concurring in the application of that rule in deciding the case but disagreeing “with the chief justice as to the legal grounds upon which such decision should be based,” Mr. Justice Winslow said,—

“This court decides in the present case that ‘the county board had no authority to employ Mr. Grace to take charge of and conduct the tax litigation mentioned.’ ” (p. 424.)
“But while we believe it to be salutary and a correct principle of law to hold that moneys paid out by municipal officials in violation of law may be recovered from the recipient in an action seasonably brought, especially where the transaction is marked by haste, fraud, collusion, or concealment, we believe there are cases in which the circumstances are such that a court of equity ought not to decree the return of money merely because the appropriation thereof was unauthorized, and such a case we believe to be before us now. . . . But he who comes into a court of equity must do equity. Could it, under any view of the circumstances, be said to be equitable to com *312 pel Mr. Grace to pay back the money which he received for long and valuable labors, rendered honestly and in good faith, the benefit'of which the corporation has received, and concerning which the taxpayers of Superior were, or ought to have been, fully informed during their entire progress ? Were a court of equity to make this judgment under the circumstances, we should regard it as having become an engine of oppression, rather than an instrument of justice. We do not rest this decision entirely upon the ground that the remedy has been lost by laches, or that the county has become estopped, but upon the ground that under all the circumstances, the plaintiff having invoked the relief of a court of equity, that court, in granting the relief, will not take away the fruit of honest labor.” (pp. 425, 426.)

In Murphy v. Paull, 192 Wis. 93, 98, 101, 212 N. W. 402, the court said, in affirming a judgment dismissing an action to recover moneys of a village illegally paid out by its officers,—

“Courts of equity sit to redress wrongs causing damage. When no damage is shown they will not order reparation of moneys equitable though irregularly disbursed. The penalty provided for a violation of a statute cannot be imposed in a taxpayer’s action. So if the taxpayers have sustained no loss by an irregular act, a court of equity has no function to perform. It may enjoin an irregular act. It may restore a loss. But it cannot punish for a past violation of the statute. To require a repayment of that which was equitably paid would be to render a-court of equity an engine of injustice, as was said in Frederick v. Douglas County, 96 Wis. 411, 71 N. W. 798. . . . It seems to be quite well established from our own decisions as well as from decisions in other states and in accordance with principles announced by textbook writers that in a matter in which the municipality has power to act, where there has been a completed transaction, though irregular and unlawful, a court of equity will not require restoration of the money paid unless some loss can be shown to the taxpayers. Because to do so would be grossly inequitable. . . . Courts *313 will not order a refund of moneys illegally paid out where the municipality has the power to do the thing that is done, and where no loss results to the taxpayers, even though there are statutory irregularities in the manner of doing, as in the case of Ellefson v. Smith, 182 Wis. 398, 196 N. W. 834.” See also Shulse v. Mayville, 223 Wis. 624, 630, 271 N. W. 643.

In the case at bar, sec. 25, ch. 110, Laws of 1929, in connection with authorizing the county judge to fix, as he did, the reporter’s compensation at $10 for each day’s, and $5 for each half day’s attendance, provided that, “The per diem compensation of said reporter shall be paid out of the treasury of Marinette county upon the certificate of the judge.” In view of that provision, the reporter’s compensation should have been paid only “upon the certificate of the judge,” which means, of course, a certificate signed by the judge himself. Thereby it was evidently intended to protect the interests of the county by an audit of the reporter’s charges by the judge who, by reason of his own knowledge as to the reporter’s attendance would presumably be best informed and qualified to perform that duty. The judge was not authorized to either delegate or leave the performance of that duty, including his execution of the required certificate, to anyone else; and certainly not to the reporter who was adversely interested.

However, on the trial of this action there were proceedings to the following effect. In answer to the court’s question, “There is no charge of fraud here, is there; no attempt to forge the signature of the judge,” the plaintiff’s counsel replied, “No, we have laid the action for money had and received. . . .” The defendant testified that the certificates prepared and signed by him—

“were for services in reporting proceedings in probate, juvenile, civil, and criminal matters coming before the county judge. I kept a record of my time spent in such work and the *314 certificates comprising Exhibit ‘A’ represent services that were actually performed and they were compiled from my records. . . . The certificates in both Exhibits ‘A’ and ‘B’ represent services actually performed by me as county court reporter, and the information on which the certificates were drawn was gleaned from my stenographic notebooks, from which I would prepare the certificates.”

That testimony was neither controverted nor impeached in any respect on the trial. Instead it was corroborated by the county judge’s testimony that,—

“The services represented by the exhibits in Exhibit ‘A’

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22 N.W.2d 151, 248 Wis. 308, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marinette-county-v-schmitt-wis-1945.