Oconto County v. City of Gillett

22 N.W.2d 528, 248 Wis. 486, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 243
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1946
StatusPublished

This text of 22 N.W.2d 528 (Oconto County v. City of Gillett) 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
Oconto County v. City of Gillett, 22 N.W.2d 528, 248 Wis. 486, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 243 (Wis. 1946).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

The facts material on this appeal are stated in the complaint of Oconto county and the answer of the city of Gillett and an affidavit with annexed exhibits upon which it based its motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint. On May 22, 1935, Oconto county acquired title by a tax deed to certain real property described in the complaint and located in the city of Gillett (which was formerly the village of Gillett). Pursuant to a resolution adopted on June 18, 1935, by the board of supervisors of the county, it sold that property under a land contract to George" Baldwin and Walter L. John for $12,500, of which the vendees paid $1,000 in cash and agreed to pay $200 on August 1, 1935, and a similar sum each month thereafter; and further agreed to pay “when due and payable all taxes and assessments that shall become due on this property after this date.” The vendees took immediate possession of the property and have continued to operate it as a manufacturing plant; and pursuant to the contract the county, on February 28, 1941, executed and delivered to the vendees a deed of the property. For the year 1935, while the property was owned by the county, it was not assessed; but for the years 1936, 1937, 1938, and 1939, the assessor for the village of Gillett assessed the property to- the vendees and they paid the taxes levied against the property for .1936. But they did not pay the taxes levied for 1937, 1938, and 1939, amounting in the aggregate to $2,871.94; and these unpaid taxes were duly reported and returned annually as delinquent by the village treasurer and full credit was given for same by the county treasurer to the village at tax-settlement time for each of those years. By a resolution which it adopted on January 16, 1941, the county board de- *488 dared that the 1937,1938, and 1939 taxes against the property were illegal and void on the ground that it was owned by Oconto county at the times of the assessments thereof; and by that resolution the board also canceled the tax-certificates which had been issued to the county for the delinquent taxes assessed on the property for those three years. ' On November 25, 1941, the county clerk notified the village of Gillett of the cancellation of the tax certificates and that the sums aggregating $2,871.94 levied on the illegal assessments were charged back to the village; and upon its failure and refusal to add such charge back to its tax roll, the county on June 1, 1944, through its county clerk, made and filed a claim against the city of Gillett. The city council adopted a resolution that the claim be denied. The city alleges in its answer to that complaint that the property was lawfully assessed and liable for the taxes in question; and that the action of the county by the resolution of June 16, 1941, declaring the 1937, 1938, and 1939 taxes illegal and void, and canceling the tax certificates issued therefor to the county, was without right and capricious. The city also alleges that this action to recover on account of the 1937 and 1938 taxes was not commenced within the six-year period of limitation provided by sec. 330.19 (2) and (3), Stats.

The county contends that on June 1, 1935, neither it nor its board of supervisors had the power or right to sell, by a land contract, the property in question, which it had acquired under a tax deed; that therefore that contract was void and the county continued to own the property in the years 1935 to 1939, inclusive; and that because of its ownership thereof it was not subject to assessment and taxation for those years. These contentions must be sustained. In 1935 the only power and authority of the county board in relation to the sale of property acquired by the county under a tax deed was by the method prescribed in sec. 75.35, Stats. 1935, which provided:

*489 “The county board may, by an order to be entered in its records prescribing the terms of sale, authorize the county clerk or the county treasurer to sell and assign the tax certificates held or owned by the county, and also the county clerk to sell and convey by quitclaim deed, duly executed and delivered by such clerk under his hand and the county seal of such county, any such lands for which a deed has been executed to such county as provided in the next section.”

In Smith v. Board of Supervisors, 44 Wis. 686, 692, 693, this court considered a proviso in sec. 1, ch. 138, Laws of 1861, authorizing the sale by the county board of tax certificates and of lands acquired by the county under tax deeds, which provided, “that the board of supervisors may, by an order to be entered in their minutes, prescribe the terms of sale and the rate of interest chargeable by such treasurer on such certificates.” In construing that statute, the court concluded,—

“We must hold that the statute confers no power upon a county treasurer to make, and no authority upon the board of supervisors to order him to make, any other than an absolute and fully executed sale of tax certificates, and for cash in hand. The very language of the power itself, ‘to sell and transfer by assignment/ must mean such a sale with present payment, and by assignment and delivery, and no other. If, .then the board of supervisors authorized the making of the contract set out in the complaint (as we must assume they did for the purposes of this demurrer), they acted without authority, and, as we think, in violation of law, and their action in this respect was ultra vires and void, and conferred no authority whatever upon the county treasurer to enter into this contract.”

These conclusions are likewise applicable to the construction and meaning of the terms “prescribing the terms of sale,” “to sell and assign the tax certificates,” and “to sell and convey by quitclaim deed,” which are used in the above-quoted provision in sec. 75.35, Stats. 1935. As this statute specifically provides that the county board may authorize the.county cl,erk “to sell and convey by quitclaim deed,” the board cannot be deemed *490 to be authorized to sell by land contract, and that contract was void and the county continued to be the owner of the property in the years 1935 to 1939, inclusive. Therefore, in view of sec. 70.11 (2), Stats., the property was then exempt from taxation.

It is further contended by the county that when the county clerk, at the direction of the county board, notified the village of Gillett of the cancellation of tax certificates issued for the taxes assessed for 1937, 1938, and 1939, and that the amounts of the taxes which were then levied were charged back to the village, there was compliance by the county with the provision in sec. 74.72, Stats., which prescribes that,—

“Whenever any town shall have failed to levy, collect or pay over to the county treasurer any state or county tax apportioned to and charged against such town in any year, or any part thereof, the county board of such county shall, in the next or any succeeding year, charge all such delinquent taxes and a penalty of twenty-five per cent to such delinquent town; and the county clerk shall add the same to the amount of the annual state and county tax apportioned to such town for such succeeding year.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 N.W.2d 528, 248 Wis. 486, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconto-county-v-city-of-gillett-wis-1946.