Reetz v. Kitch

283 N.W. 348, 230 Wis. 1, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 38
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 283 N.W. 348 (Reetz v. Kitch) 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
Reetz v. Kitch, 283 N.W. 348, 230 Wis. 1, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 38 (Wis. 1939).

Opinion

Wickhem, J.

The facts are in the main undisputed. Bloomer is a city of the fourth class located in Chippewa county. . Plaintiff is mayor of the city and is a taxpayer. Defendants Kitch, Schlenk, and Schmidmayr were members of the city council and with Harry Reetz, a brother of plaintiff, constituted the common council of the city. Defendant F. C. Dutton was city clerk, and A. J. Prueher was the city attorney. The action questions the propriety of the purchase by the city of a bank building for use as a city hall and general utility office. The city of Bloomer owns and operates a municipal electric and water plant. The plant was operated by the city council and not by a board of commissioners. The Bank of Bloomer and the Peoples State Bank each owned separate banking houses in the city of Bloomer. They were consolidated and the building occupied by the Peoples State Bank was vacant and for sale at the time here involved. In the meantime, the Peoples State Bank had become delinquent and gone through a reorganization, whereby its doubt[5]*5•ful assets were put into a segregated trust against which trust certificates were issued. The bank building was not a part of the segregated trust. The common council had been holding its meetings in the high-school building which had been somewhat overbuilt to take care of future needs and which had rooms available for the common council. On March 24, 1937, the common council voted to submit to the voters of the city the question as to the purchase by the city of the old bank building for use as a city hall. Upon the referendum the vote was against the purchase. On October 12, 1937, the board of education passed a resolution requesting the city council to vacate the high-school building for the reason that its rooms were needed for school purposes. The resolution of the school board was presented to the council on October 13, 1937. On that date defendant Kitch introduced Resolution No. 187. This recites the fact that the city and school district have been in joint occupancy of the high-school building under arrangement that the building be so occupied until the school district should require the use of the whole of the building, and that the school district does require a portion of the building presently used by the city for its purposes. It is further recited that the Peoples State Bank of Bloomer has offered to sell to the city its former bank site for the sum of $7,500 in cash, the bank to pay the 1937 and all prior taxes. It is further recited that the building and premises are ideally located and adapted for the use of the city and will be largely used for the benefit of the electric and water utilities and-the storage of records of the city utilities. The resolution is to the effect “that the city purchase the said bank premises for the sum of $7,500 payable in cash,” etc. The details of the purchase are thereafter recited. There follows the provision, “that the said premises be purchased as an asset of the electric and water utilities of the city and be paid out of the funds and assets [6]*6of the said two utilities. And that all future rents, profits, and income from said premises be paid into and become a part of the assets and funds of the said two utilities.” The mayor, city clerk, and city attorney are directed to take all steps necessary to complete the transaction. Plaintiff refused to put the matter to a vote, whereupon the city attorney advised him that he must do so. Defendants Schlenk, Kitch, and Schmidmayr voted for its passage, and Plarry Reetz voted against passage. The mayor refúsed to sign or countersign the check upon the city treasury. The funds of the utilities were kept in a separate fund known as the Bloomer Electric & Water Company, from which disbursements were customarily made upon the signature of the city clerk alone. The city clerk was a stockholder of the bank. After consulting with the public service commission, the mayor then commenced this action for an injunction to restrain the payment or for a refund if the payment had been made. A temporary injunction was obtained on November 17, 1937, but vacated on November 30, 1937, because the disbursement had already been made on November 12th. On November 24, 1937, after the commencement of this action, Resolution No. 188 was adopted by the common council. It was resolved that the water and electric utilities and F. C. Dutton, clerk of them, credit to apply upon the debt of the utilities to the city the sum of $7,500, and that the city then hold the bank premises purchased under Resolution No. 187 free and clear of any claim, interest, or equity therein of the utilities. The clerk was directed to amend all book accounts and vouchers necessary to conform the transaction to the amendment; that thereafter “the city of Bloomer be the owner of the said building and premises, the same being a general asset of the city, and not of the utilities.” The resolution further provides that the city clerk prepare an allocation of use of the building between the city and the utilities, together [7]*7with the value of these uses, and that thereafter the utilities pay to the general fund of the city annually the reasonable value of the use to the utilities of the building and premises.

Plaintiff’s first contention is that the mayor has a right without authorization by the city council to commence an action in the name of the city against councilmen who have illegally abstracted funds from the city treasury. It is not deemed necessary to deal with this contention for the reason that plaintiff sufficiently establishes his position as a taxpayer and discloses that the council is so constituted that demand upon it for action would be futile.

We shall, therefore, proceed to an examination of the merits of plaintiff’s contention that the contract in question was void, and that the disbursement involved in the purchase constituted an illegal disbursement of public moneys made under such circumstances as to fix upon defendants a personal liability to reimburse the public treasury. On the supposition that the council was acting as a utilities board, plaintiff contends that the transaction was void viewed from the standpoint of the utility law. Attention of the court is first directed by plaintiff to the fact that the Bloomer utilities were managed by the common council in violation of sec. 66.06 (10) (a), Stats., which provides that in cities of the fourth class owning a public utility, the council shall provide for a nonpartisan management thereof and create for each utility a board of commissioners. It was held in Rice Lake v. United States F. & G. Co. 216 Wis. 1, 255 N. W. 130, that under sec. 66.06 (10) (g) a city of the fourth class might provide for operation of its utilities by the board of public works, and that under sec. 62.14 (1) the council might abolish the board of public works and assume the duties themselves. The city of Bloomer made no attempt, so far as the record discloses, to follow the statutory procedure, and apparently assumed the management without any ceremony. [8]*8However, the conclusion of the trial court that the council was a de facto board in charge of the utility works appears to be sound. The city by strictly following the procedure adopted in the Rice Lake Case might properly have assumed the management of the utilities. We think that the procedural irregularities in exercising its well-established powers could not deprive the council of standing as a de facto board. No' particular consequences material to the case are argued to follow this unconventional assumption of power by the council, and we think that the objection need not further be examined.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 N.W. 348, 230 Wis. 1, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reetz-v-kitch-wis-1939.