Reichert v. Milwaukee County

150 N.W. 401, 159 Wis. 25, 1914 Wisc. LEXIS 369
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 150 N.W. 401 (Reichert v. Milwaukee 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.

Bluebook
Reichert v. Milwaukee County, 150 N.W. 401, 159 Wis. 25, 1914 Wisc. LEXIS 369 (Wis. 1914).

Opinion

Tijmliet, J.

These cases are argued by counsel for respondents and seem to have been decided by the court below upon the hypothesis that a county which is party to a land contract is under the same liability to pay interest as damages for delay as is a natural person under similar circumstances. This is erroneous. Indeed, there is a respectable array of authority to the effect that a county, being merely an arm or agency of the state, has, at least when carrying out a function of the state, the same exemption from liability for interest as has the state. Seton v. Hoyt, 34 Oreg. 266, 55 Pac. 967, 43 L. R. A. 634, 75 Am. St. Rep. 641; Garland Co. v. Hot Spring Co. 68 Ark. 83, 56 S. W. 636; Clay Co. v. Chickasaw Co. 64 Miss. 534, 1 South. 753; National Bank v. Duval Co. 45 Fla. 496, 34 South. 894; Madison Co. v. Bartlett, 2 Ill. 67, and subsequent Illinois citations.

[33]*33Our court, however, has never gone so far, but has recognized the liability of a county to pay interest as damages in certain cases. In Alexander v. Oneida Co. 76 Wis. 56, 45 N. W. 21, it was held that proof of neglect to pay a county order after a proper demand and refusal did not authorize a court to award interest as damages against a county. In Land, L. & L. Co. v. Oneida Co. 83 Wis. 649, 53 N. W. 491, it was held that the county board might allow the towns in that county interest' on the amounts due to such towns from the county. In Mueller v. Cavour, 107 Wis. 599, 83 N. W. 944, interest against a county was denied on a county order. In Rice v. Ashland Co. 114 Wis. 130, 89 N. W. 908, interest was allowed against the county in an action for money had and received. In Spooner v. Washburn Co. 124 Wis. 24, 102 N. W. 325, interest was allowed after demand and refusal in an action upon an account by a town against the county. In Rider v. Ashland Co. 87 Wis. 160, 58 N. W. 236, interest against a county was allowed sub sileniio. In Quigg v. Monroe Co. 134 Wis. 122, 113 N. W. 723, the question is left in doubt. In Voigt v. Milwaukee Co. 158 Wis. 666, 149 N. W. 392, where a statute authorized a recovery of damages against a county, it was held that this carried interest on such damages from the time when inflicted.

The legal character of a county is set forth and prior decisions in this state bearing upon the subject collected in Frederick v. Douglas Co. 96 Wis. 411, 71 N. W. 798. 1 Dillon, Mun. Corp. §§23 and 25, is quoted in support of the following: “They are purely auxiliaries of the state; and to the general statutes of the state they owe their creation, and the statutes confer upon them all the powers they possess, prescribe all the duties they owe, and impose all liabilities to which they are subject.” The last member of this compound sentence is not strictly accurate. If it were it would dispose of this case at .once, for there is no statute imposing any liability upon the county for interest in such case. Sec. 686, [34]*34Stats., requires claims against the county to be allowed by the county board, which shall direct a county order to be drawn on the treasurer in favor of the claimant. No such order, except for the per diem and mileage of the members of the board, is to be drawn within five days after the allowance, of the claim, and no interest shall ever be paid by any county on its orders. Sec. 685 provides that upon trial in the circuit court of an appeal'from a resolution of the county board rejecting a claim, no interest' shall be recovered by the plaintiff upon any sum allowed by the county board and for which orders were drawn. Sec. 616 provides that no action shall be brought or maintained against a county upon any account, demand, or cause of action when the only relief demandable is a judgment for money, unless the county board shall consent and agree to the institution of such action, or unless such claim shall have been duly presented to the board and the board shall have failed to act upon the same within the time fixed by law. But it is therein provided that no action shall be brought upon any county order until the expiration of thirty days after a demand for the payment thereof has been made. Because another statute requires that all judgments bear interest, and apparently in order to prevent transforming a county order into a judgment so as to make it bear interest, it is further provided that if an action be brought on a county order and the county fails to appear and there is no proof of such thirty-day demand, the court, or the clerk thereof, shall not permit' judgment to be entered, and if judgment be entered thereon the judgment shall be absolutely void. . It was said in Mueller v. Cavour, 107 Wis. 599, 83 N. W. 944, that interest is not recoverable upon town or county orders, the former by common law, the latter by common law and statute. Town orders have been considered in Packard v. Bovina, 24 Wis. 382; Brown v. Jacobs, 77 Wis. 29, 45 N. W. 679 ; and Marvin v. Jacobs, 77 Wis. 31, 45 N. W. 679.

These statutes and decisions furnish very significant indi[35]*35cations that a county, with reference to liability for interest, is not on a par with a natural person or with a private corporation. In the case of a natural' person failing in a suit for rescission, as this county did in Neacy v. Milwaukee Co. 144 Wis. 210, 128 N. W. 1063, equity would have closed the controversy then and there by, decreeing a recovery of the purchase money with or without interest, as the case might be,, and the question of the liability of the purchaser for interest would in that suit have been finally adjudicated. There are essential differences between a county and a private corporation or a natural person relative to liability for interest or damages which cannot be disregarded. The county acts through its officers as agents, but agents not of its own choice or creation. These officers are agents who represent the county in the transaction, but have their authority conferred and limited by act of the state through its legislature. Each has his appointed field of action, not created, limited, or expanded by act of the county or by usage or by contract obligations. Within the scope of the authority conferred by the legislature the county, through its board of supervisors, may by its acts arouse official action and official duties upon the part of other county officers, but the powers of the latter derived from the state legislature may not be taken away or narrowed by action of the county board nor enlarged except in cases in which the legislature has authorized such limitation or enlargement. Eor illustration: Although the county board is given power to contract and to authorize and require the making and delivery of county orders, and the duty of the county clerk in signing and delivering such orders is ministerial (State ex rel. Treat v. Richter, 37 Wis. 275), the clerk may refuse to sign and deliver an order not legally authorized (State ex rel. Mulholland v. County Clerk, 48 Wis. 112, 4 N. W. 121), and if he fail to take objection in such case the treasurer may refuse to pay such order after it is issued and delivered (Doyle v. Gill, 59 Wis. 518, 18 N. W. 517).

[36]*36Every ministerial officer in the performance of purely ministerial acts is required, at his peril, to interpret the statute, or the order made in pursuance thereof, imposing' a duty upon him and calling for action on his part.

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Bluebook (online)
150 N.W. 401, 159 Wis. 25, 1914 Wisc. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reichert-v-milwaukee-county-wis-1914.