Miller v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.

113 N.W. 384, 133 Wis. 183, 1907 Wisc. LEXIS 7
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 113 N.W. 384 (Miller v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.) 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
Miller v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co., 113 N.W. 384, 133 Wis. 183, 1907 Wisc. LEXIS 7 (Wis. 1907).

Opinion

Mabshall, J.

The preliminary question is presented of whether sec. 1813, Stats. (1898), under which the action was brought, was not so substantially changed by ch. 623, Laws of 1907, as to supersede the former law, and consequently appellant’s right to recover. The new law amended such section by substituting the words “each day after the expiration of said three months” for “each and every locomotive that may thereafter pass through such land,” thereby reducing the penalty for wrongfully failing to construct a farm crossing on inclosed land when duly requested to do so from $10 for each and every locomotive passing through such land during the period of default to $10 per day during such period.

We shall not spend much time on the subject of whether the law in question is a penal statute. It was clearly designed to afford the right to recover in ease of a violation of a landowner’s statutory privilege more than actual damages; to recover such sum as to not only satisfy such damages, if any, but to serve as a punishment for the violation. Any law giving a right to recover of a person by civil action either for the benefit of the public, or in its name for the benefit of a private person, or in the name of the latter for his own use a sum by way of punishment, or punitory damages, is a penal statute, and rights under it do not survive a repeal thereof without a saving clause therein both as regards the right and the pending cause of action to enforce it, if there be one, or other efficient saving law.

The rule on the subject mentioned is commonly stated in the books substantially thus:

“The repeal of a statute prescribing a penalty or forfeiture recoverable in a civil action, without a saving clause in the repealing act, takes away the right of recovery, even though [188]*188■an action lias been begun, for there is no- vested right in an unenforced penalty until its actual recovery by final judgment.” 26 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d ed.) 753.

That raje is applicable- to all offenses and rights created by statute, but the saving clause need not, necessarily, as will be seen hereafter, be embodied in the amendatory or repealing act.

Eo where is the general principle under discussion more definitely laid down than in the decisions of this court, as for instance in Dillon v. Linder, 36 Wis. 344, 349, the court said:

“Whatever a statute gives, which has not ripened into a vested right, a repeal of the statute may take away. ‘The effect of a repealing statute I take to be, to obliterate the statute repealed as completely from the records of parliament, as if it had never been passed; and that it must be considered as a law that had never existed, except for the purpose of those actions or suits which were commenced, prosecuted and concluded while it was an existing law.’ ”

That case, Rood v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 43 Wis. 146, and Smith v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 43 Wis. 686, are probably the most notable instances where such principle has been here applied.

Though there is no saving clause in the law of 1907, the question arises as to whether sec. 4974, Stats. (1898), does not apply. That provides as follows:

“The repeal of a statute hereafter shall not remit, defeat or impair any civil or criminal liability for offenses committed, penalties or forfeitures incurred or rights of action accrued under such statute before the repeal thereof, whether or not in course of prosecution or action at the time of such repeal; but all such offenses, penalties, forfeitures and rights of action created by or founded on such statute, liability wherefor shall have been incurred before the time of such repeal thereof, shall be preserved and remain in force notwithstanding such repeal, unless specially and expressly remitted, abrogated or done away with by the repealing statute. [189]*189And criminal prosecutions and actions at law or in equity founded upon such repealed statute, whether instituted before or after the repeal thereof, shall not be defeated or impaired by such repeal, but shall, .notwithstanding such repeal, proceed to judgment in the same manner and to the like purpose- and effect as if the repealed statute continued in full force-to the time of final judgment thereon, unless the offenses,, penalties, forfeitures or rights of action on which such prosecutions or actions shall be founded shall be specially and expressly remitted, abrogated or done away with by such repealing statute.”

It has been held elseAvhere that the legislature cannot legitimately declare, in advance, the effect of future legislation on existing rights. Mongeon v. People, 55 N. Y. 613; Mix v. Ill. Cent. R. Co. 116 Ill. 502, 6 N. E. 42. Other courts have taken a contrary position in harmony Avith the decision of this co-urt in Dillon v. Linder, supra, where it was held that a saving clause in a repealing act or in a general law as regards future legislation expressly saving existing rights and pending actions to enforce them, if any there be, will have that effect. In that case a right which existed', under a repealed law at the time of such repeal was involved. It was sought to enforce it nevertheless, under sec. 33, eh. 119, R. S. 1858, which in terms saved pending actions but' did not expressly save existing causes of action. By applying the rule of strict construction, perhaps to the limit of reasonableness, it was held that the right did not survive the repeal, and, therefore, that the general law saving pending-actions was ineffective. That led, as the revisers’ notes show, to a change in the law to the form we now have for the very purpose of preventing, in the future, the mere repeal of a. statute from defeating existing rights. The court has heretofore held accordingly, notably in H. W. Wright L. Co. v. Eixon, 105 Wis. 153, 80 N. W. 1110, 1135. It seems, therefore, very plain that the case before us is governed by sec. 1813 as it formerly stood.

[190]*190We now come to the vital question upon which the case turned in the court below, viz.: Is the call of the statute for '“the owner or occupant” of “inclosed land” satisfied with anything other than the owner or occupant of a tract of land so surrounded by a substantial fence or barrier of some kind, reasonably calculated to turn or restrain domestic animals commonly so restrained, or otherwise suitable to the purposes for which the land is devoted, and separating such land at the boundaries thereof from the premises of others ? If not, the ruling of the trial court is right, since it is conceded there was no fence or barrier on the east boundary of the land, and it is clear from the evidence there was none •on a very substantial part of the north boundary.

It is claimed by the learned counsel for appellant that the land in question was suitably inclosed in common with other lands by permission of the owners thereof, and that such ■common inclosure satisfied the statute. In other words, by applying rules for judicial construction to the statute, it is •contended it is not limited to inclosed lands in the sense of the land of each owner or occupant being so surrounded by a •substantial barrier as to isolate it from other lands, enabling it to be put to use separate from the land of any other person.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 N.W. 384, 133 Wis. 183, 1907 Wisc. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-chicago-northwestern-railway-co-wis-1907.