Miltimore v. Supervisors of Rock County
This text of 15 Wis. 9 (Miltimore v. Supervisors of Rock 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.
Opinion
By the Court,
Action to restrain the defendant James, as clerk of the board of supervisors of the county of Bock, from executing and delivering deeds of the plaintiff’s lands, situate in the city of Janesville, for the unpaid taxes assessed thereon in the year 1856, and to have the sale [10]*10an<^ cer^ca^es declared illegal and void. The relief is on tbe ground that the rule of taxation which was followed in the levy and assessment of the taxes, was not equal and uniform, it being that prescribed by chapters 179 and 286, Local Laws of 1854, which was decided by this court in Knowlton vs. Supervisors of Rock County, 9 Wis., 410, to be unconstitutional. But the two cases differ in this, that the plaintiff’s lands were situated without the recorded plat of the village of Janesville and its additions, and used for agricultural purposes, and consequently the amount of taxes levied thereon to defray the current expenses of the city, and for the building and repairing of roads and bridges and the support of the poor, were less than they would have been had the constitutional rule been pursued. In the case of Knowlton, the lands were within the recorded plat, and were charged with the payment of a greater sum for these purposes than could by law be assessed upon them. He was required to pay a portion of the taxes which should have been charged to the lands of the plaintiff. It appears from the complaint that the taxes for defraying the current expenses of the city were apportioned to the real and personal property within the recorded plat and its additions at the rate of two per cent, and upwards upon each dollar of the valuation, while upon the real and personal property without the plat, including that of the plaintiff, the apportionment was but one half of one per cent, on the dollar; and that the taxes for the building and repairing of roads and bridges and the support of the poor, were as two to one in favor of the plaintiff when compared with owners of property within the plat and its additions. It is of this inequality that the plaintiff complains. She asks that the defendant James may be restrained from executing the deeds, and that the sales may be annulled, because the taxing officers demanded of her less than her due proportion of the public revenue. This constitutes no ground equitable interference. Warden vs. Supervisors of La Fayette Co., and Kellogg vs. Oshkosh, 14 Wis., 618, 623. The demurrer to the complaint should have been sustained.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
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