Milwaukee Iron Co. v. Schubel

29 Wis. 444
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 29 Wis. 444 (Milwaukee Iron Co. v. Schubel) 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
Milwaukee Iron Co. v. Schubel, 29 Wis. 444 (Wis. 1872).

Opinion

Cole, J.

This is a common law certiorari, issued out of this court for the purpose of bringing up for review the proceedings of the board of review of the town of Hubbard, in Dodge county, in assessing and fixing the valuation of the property of the Wisconsin Iron Company, situated in that town. The writ was issued in October last, and was directed to the town clerk of the town, commanding him to send up a “ full and complete record of the testimony taken before said board of review, together with the record of all the proceedings and judgment or finding of said board of review upon the application ” of the Wisconsin Iron Company for a reduction of the value assessed upon its real estate. A motion is made to quash the writ:

First. Because it is not issued or directed to the tribunal that made the determination complained of and sought to be re-' viewed, and because the power and functions of the board of review of the town of Hubbard have ceased.

[446]*446Secondly. Because it does not appear that the defendant in error or said board have exceeded their powers or jurisdiction;. nor do the matters stated in the petition for the writ have any tendency to establish such a fact.

Thirdly. Because the petition and writ wholly fail to show on their face any case in which such writ ought to issue.

Fourthly. Because the writ is, in other respects, informal, defective and insufficient

In answer to the first objection, the counsel on the other side says, that the settled rule in all cases from necessity is, to direct the writ to the tribunal, person or persons having the possession and legal custody of the record of the proceedings sought to be reviewed; and that, as in this case the town cleric alone had the legal control and possession of the proceedings of the board of review, he was the person to whom the writ should be directed. This answer appears to us entirely satisfactory and conclusive. There can be no doubt that the record of the proceedings of the board is in the possession and under the control of the clerk. Section 28, chap. 180, Laws of 1868, makes it the duty of the assessors to deliver their assessment rolls as corrected by the board, with all sworn statements and valuations of personal property, to the clerk of their town, city or village on or before the first Monday of August of each year, which latter records are to be “filed and preserved by said clerk.” The clerk, then, had the legal custody and possession of the record of the action of the board, and of all statements, and of examinations of persons under oath made before the board; and he alone could make return to the writ. Of course the object of the writ is to reach this record where-ever it is, and bring it before this court for review. It, therefore, appears that the objection that the writ was improperly directed to the town clerk is untenable. (See, upon this point, The People v. Highway Com'rs, 30 N. Y., 72; and The People v. Reddy, 43 Barb., 540.)

But the important question raised by this motion is really [447]*447the one involved in the second and third grounds assigned for quashing the writ. And that is, whether, upon a common law writ of certiorari, this court can inquire into the determination of the board of review, and correct errors committed by it in assessing and fixing the valuation of the real estate of the company. The counsel for the defendant denies the efficacy of the writ, upon the ground that this court would have no right to review the evidence taken before the board, and determine whether it sustains its decision in the premises, but can only review questions óf jurisdiction or power. The doctrine is frequently stated in the books, that the office of a certiorari, at common law, is only to bring up for review questions of jurisdiction, power and authority on the part of the inferior tribunal ; and that the appellate court is confined to a simple consideration whether, the inferior tribunal had jurisdiction, and whetaer the proceeding and order was within that jurisdiction? And, if the appellate court finds that the inferior tribunal has not exceeded its jurisdiction, it will not go further and inquire whether the order or judgment complained of was right upon the merits.

This statement of the law is, doubtless, sufficiently accurate when considered in connection with the cases in which it is generally made. But this rule is not always strictly adhered to, as an examination of the adjudged cases will abundantly prove. Courts do frequently consider, upon a common law certiorari, defects and errors in the proceedings of the inferior tribunal which are not strictly of a jurisdictional nature. “ Questions relating to the regularity of the proceedings, or questions of law which arise on the face of the record, or of the proceedings and orders, which are'in the nature of records, will be noticed.” Senator Paige, in Stone v. Mayor and Aldermen, etc., 25 Wend., 168. Indeed, in many instances the final adjudications of persons invested with power to decide on the property or rights of the citizen, and who act in a summary manner, or in a new course, different from' the common law, are reviewed upon cer-[448]*448tiorari. Especially is. this true in regard to the proceedings of assessors in the valuation of property for the assessment of taxes, and in the proceedings of commissioners laying out highways, and awarding damages for property taken for public use.

In the case of the People v. Reddy, supra, which was common law certiorari to remove the proceedings in relation to an assessment upon the real and personal property of the relator, the supreme court examined the principal upon which the assessment was made, as well as the evidence before the assessors, and held that the assessment was clearly unwarranted by the evidence. It is true that in that case the writ was dismissed because it was directed to the assessors, and it appeared that the roll or record was no longer in their possession or under their control. But the case is directly in point upon the question as to what matters can be considered on the writ in the present case. In Baldwin v. City of Buffalo, 35 N. Y., 375, there is a very clear intimation in the opinion of Justice MORGAN, that on a common law certiorari to review the proceedings of comissioners appointed to award damages upon opening a highway, such writ would bring up so much of the evidence as was necessary to present the question of law upon which the relator relies to avoid the decision of the commissioners. But it is proper to. add that that precise question was not before the court for decision. Again, in Swift v. City of Poughkeepsie, 37 N. Y., 511, which was an action to recover back an illegal tax assessed and paid, the court, while denying that, upon the facts, the action could be maintained, yet suggest that the plaintiff had an ample remedy, by certiorari, to correct the assessment, had he availed himself of it in season, and say that such a writ would not only bring up the naked question of jurisdiction, but the evidence on which the body acted to which the writ is directed, as well as the ground or principle of their action.

In The People v. Board of Assessors, 39 N. Y., 81, the court fully examine the action of the assessors, and correct the errors committed by them in making the asssessment. In [449]*449speaking of tke office of the writ of certiorari,

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Bluebook (online)
29 Wis. 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milwaukee-iron-co-v-schubel-wis-1872.