Milwaukee Light, Heat & Traction Co. v. Ela Co.

125 N.W. 903, 142 Wis. 424, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 206
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 125 N.W. 903 (Milwaukee Light, Heat & Traction Co. v. Ela 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
Milwaukee Light, Heat & Traction Co. v. Ela Co., 125 N.W. 903, 142 Wis. 424, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 206 (Wis. 1910).

Opinion

Maeshaxl, J.

The most important proposition submitted for discussion and decision is, In condemnation proceedings under secs. 1845 to 1851, Stats. (1898), does the court have jurisdiction to vacate the award of the commissioners on account of their prejudicially improper conduct and discharge them as incompetent to further proceed ? The proposition must be examined from the viewpoint of the nature of the proceedings, the express authority of the court therein, and its inherent power as well.

[428]*428Sec. 1846, Stats. (1898), provides for the initiation of a •condemnation proceeding by filing a petition in the office of the clerk of the circuit court having jurisdiction of the matter, praying for the appointment of commissioners by such court, or the judge thereof. The nature of the proceeding is indicated by the declaration in such section that “the filing of such petition shall be the commencement of a suit in said court.” Being a “suit” in court from its initiation, the proceeding must, necessarily, continue to be a judicial proceeding in the nature of a suit in court until its termination by the filing of the award, or turned into an action in court by appeal from the award as provided in sec. 1849. Such section, in effect, provides that the appeal, as regards the subject involved, shall be considered a distinct proceeding in court with the characteristics of an action at law. So the proceeding must be in the nature of a judicial controversy in court of some sort from the beginning to the end. It is a judicial remedy, within the meaning of sec. 2594, Stats. (1898). In the broad sense, it is an action from the beginning, in that it is a judicial remedy for the enforcement or protection of a right, though it is not such, in the strict statutory sense, because it is not an “ordinary action” for that purpose commenced by service of a summons under sec. 2629, Stats. (1898). Only such are actions under sec. 2595, Stats. (1898). Not being, strictly speaking, an action under the Code and yet a judicial remedy denominated a suit, which in the broad sense applies to any proceeding in a court of justice by which a party pursues the remedy which the law affords for litigating a subject of controversy between adverse parties (Kohl v. U. S. 91 U. S. 367, 375; Kuhl v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 101 Wis. 42, 77 N. W. 155; State ex rel. Durner v. Huegin, 110 Wis. 189, 85 N. W. 1046), its statutory name must be a special proceeding, under sec. 2596, as every civil judicial remedy in a court of justice under the Code must have either the statutory name of a “civil action” or [429]*429a “special proceeding.” See. 2594. Notwithstanding the common-law distinctions between actions and snits, as applied to legal and equitable remedies, are not known under the Code (sec. 260.0), there may be many remedies in the nature of a civil action falling within the broad signification of suit as used in see.. 1846. Every civil remedy which is not known by the statutory characterization of an “ordinary action,” where parties are arranged adversely in judicial proceedings, one to prosecute or enforce a right or redress or prevent a wrong, the other having opportunity to defend, is a proceeding in the nature of a civil action, and, generally, classible as a special proceeding. The final determination is in the nature of a final judgment in a suit or proceeding in the nature of a civil action. So it has been said that the abolition of common-law names has not and cannot change the essential character of judicial remedies. State ex rel. Durner v. Huegin, 110 Wis. 189, 223, 85 N. W. 1046. That applies to a purely statutory remedy when the legislature so manifests its pleasure by declaring that it shall be a suit

The foregoing general treatment would sufficiently suggest the nature of the remedy provided for taking private property for railroad purposes by the right of eminent domain, even if the legislature had not seen fit to give it a name. In giving it the name of “a suit,” which is unknown to the Code in the classification -of remedies, the broad common-law meaning suggested must have been intended, contemplating existence in respect thereto of all the inherent power of courts of general jurisdiction in such matters, and such is the trend of previous decisions of this court.

In Cornish v. M. & L. W. R. Co. 60 Wis. 476, 19 N. W. 443, it was observed that the meaning of the term “suit” in sec. 1846 is that the proceeding shall be regarded from its commencement to the end as a special proceeding under the control of the court; that it is a suit by the party seeking to [430]*430take the land against the owner of the land and in rem. Watson v. M. & M. R. Co. 57 Wis. 332, 15 N. W. 468. Consistent therewith the statute provides, first, for a judicial hearing of the application for the appointment of commissioners on due notice to the adverse parties; second, for the appearance of incompetents, as in an ordinary civil action; third, for a judicial determination of the right to take and the extent of the taking; fourth, for the appointment of commissioners, regulating the time of hearing before them and limiting the time for them to perform their duty; fifth> for a hearing by the parties before the commissioners; sixth, for filing their determination in court; seventh, for a record thereof in the judgment book of the court; eighth, for enforcement of the judgment on one hand by the ordinary process for obtaining possession of land pursuant to a judgment of the court, and, on the other, for enforcement of the judgment by execution; ninth, for bringing in new parties and curing defects and informalities by amendment, as in case of judicial proceedings generally; tenth, for requiring notice to be given to any party at any time which in the sound discretion of the court may be thought proper; and eleventh, for appointing other commissioners in place of any who may die or refuse or neglect to serve, or be incapable of serving.

It would seem to follow, necessarily, that the court possesses the same inherent power over the award of the commissioners as it does over the determination of triers of fact in any judicial proceeding. That the circuit courts of this state under the constitution have very broad discretionary power to do things which may be deemed necessary or proper by the judicial head to guard the purity of the channels of justice, and that it includes, ordinarily, vacating the determination of triers of fact for prejudicial misconduct, does not need discussion. That it extends to dealing with an award of commissioners, as in this case, was held in Matter of N. Y. C. & H. R. R. Co. 64 N. Y. 60, overruling some previous deT [431]*431cisions in New York, upon which counsel for appellant rely. The holding in that case and others in jurisdictions where, unlike the statutory practice here, the award is required to he confirmed hy the court, was not based on and did not have any reference whatever to that feature, as appellant’s counsel seem to think. That is plainly indicated by this language from the opinion:

“The fallacy is in assuming that the Special Term, in vacating the prior orders, was traveling in the path of the statute. It was exercising its inherent power over the proceedings of the court to annul, vacate and set them aside, which power stands by the side of the statute and goes with it.

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Bluebook (online)
125 N.W. 903, 142 Wis. 424, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milwaukee-light-heat-traction-co-v-ela-co-wis-1910.