Relyea v. Tomahawk Paper & Pulp Co.

78 N.W. 412, 102 Wis. 301, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 26
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 78 N.W. 412 (Relyea v. Tomahawk Paper & Pulp 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
Relyea v. Tomahawk Paper & Pulp Co., 78 N.W. 412, 102 Wis. 301, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 26 (Wis. 1899).

Opinion

Marshall, J.

The sole question presented here is, Was plaintiff’s cause of action extinguished by the failure to serve a notice under ch. 304, Laws of 1897 ? The learned trial court decided that in the affirmative, basing his conclusion, probably, on Plum v. Fond du Lac, 51 Wis. 393; Reed v. Madison, 83 Wis. 171. They were cases involving the applicability of acts of the legislature adding new conditions precedent to the statutory right to compensation for personal injuries received on public highways on account of the insufficiency thereof. In the Plum Case the time left after the passage of the act, for the performance of the new condition, was eighty days, and in the Reed Case forty days. The acts were rightly held applicable because the rights affected were purely statutory. While the rule is inflexible that rights not dependent on statute are guaranteed by the national constitution against impairment, either by laws [304]*304affecting existing contracts or taking property without due process of law, mere statutory rights may be conferred upon such conditions as in the wisdom of the legislature may seem best, and the conditions may be changed from time to time, even as to existing rights, or such rights may be taken away entirely, at the legislative will. Such rights do not come within the constitutional provision. If the conditions requisite to their existence be once satisfied, a new one may be added as in the two cases cited, and whether the time given in which to comply with it be long or short is a matter exclusively of legislative discretion. True, there is language in opinions, treating of a new condition respecting existing statutory rights, indicating an idea in the judicial mind that a law imposing such conditions takes effect as to such rights if a reasonable length of time be left for the claimant to comply with it; but the real ground upon which the decisions rest is that, the rights being statutory, they are entirely the subject of legislative discretion.

The difference between a statute requiring notice to be served, as for example sec. 1339, R. S. 1818, as a condition •of a right to damages for an injury through failure of duty on the part of a municipality to keep its highways in a proper state of repair, and a statute requiring such a notice to be served as a condition of recovery for injuries to an employee through actionable negligence of his employer, is that the former is a condition of the right to damages and the remedy to recover the same as well, while the latter is a condition acting on the remedy alone, the right not being dependent on the statute at all. Such difference is well defined in the books and universally recognized. In Smith v. Cleveland, 17 Wis. 556, it is said, in effect, that the difference between laws that the legislature may change at will and those which the constitution protects from interference to the prejudice of vested rights, is that under the former the right is dependent on the law, and under the latter the right itself is [305]*305independent of the law. The subject was recently discussed in Schaefer v. Fond duc Lac, 99 Wis. 333; Daniels v. Racine, 98 Wis. 649, where it is said that a right given by statute may be changed by adding new conditions, or wholly taken away by statute. There, as in most cases of the kind, the right of action was spoken of as synonymous with the right itself, and properly so. If the distinction be not kept in mind between statutory and common-law rights, where the court speaks regarding a condition of the former as precedent to a right of action therefor, it will be taken as meaning that the condition is in the nature of a limitation acting on the remedy alone.

From what has been said, it is clear that the rule in Plum v. Fond du Lac, and similar cases where the right acted upon by a legislative change of condition upon which the right depended was a creature of statute, does not apply to this case. Plaintiff had a right to compensation for his injuries independent of the statute. He was entitled to six years from the happening of the injury before making any move to enforce such right. In that situation ch. 304, Laws of 189J, was passed, which, it is claimed, extinguished the right in sixty-one days after its passage and more than five years before it would have been extinguished by the statute of limitations as it before existed. While time for the commencement of the action was not in terms changed, the condition precedent to such commencement had that effect, rendering the law essentially a statute of limitations, and it must be so treated. *

It is well settled that it is within legislative power to change a statute of-limitations regarding the remedy for the ■enforcement of existing rights, if a reasonable time be allowed to resort to existing remedies, or a reasonable remedy be provided, to enforce such rights. A statute which undertakes to extinguish rights of action without giving such opportunity, is not deemed a statute of limitations, but an [306]*306arbitrary, unlawful impairment of a constitutional right. It is further well settled that what is a reasonable, time is a matter largely of legislative discretion. If such discretion be once exercised by a saving clause in the act providing for existing causes of action, that is controlling unless, manifestly, the time be unreasonable. That must appear beyond a reasonable doubt, however, in order to justify the court in condemning the law as unconstitutional. Where there is no saving clause in the act and it thereby appears that the legislature did not consider the subject at all, the court must apply it, or not, to causes of action existing when it took effect according as it shall judicially appear that a reasonable time was left thereafter for the plaintiff to commence his action or perform the new condition. Subject to this rule, the statute of limitations in force when an action is commenced governs in the absence of some indication therein, or in some other provision of law, to the contrary. Woodbury v. Shackleford, 19 Wis. 55; Converse v. Burrows, 2 Minn. 239; Toland v. Wells, 59 Ind. 529.

The legal principles thus far mentioned in this opinion are deemed to be too elementary to warrant any extended discussion or citation of authorities in support of them. They may be stated concisely thus: A purely statutory right may be, by the power conferring it, made to depend upon a new condition, or taken away entirely. A statute of limitations, strictly so called, operates on the remedy directly. A statute changing the condition of a right of action for damages given by statute, is a condition precedent to the right to such damages, hence acts directly on the right, and is not a statute of limitations in the ordinary legal sense of the term. Such rights are not protected against impairment, by constitutional guaranties, while rights which exist independent of the statute are so protected. A law changing the time for, or conditions of, the enforcement of a common-law right, is in the nature of a statute of limitations which, if of such a [307]*307character as to materially affect the right itself, is 'within the inhibition of the constitution in regard-to the passage of laws impairing the obligation of contracts or taking property without due process of law.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.W. 412, 102 Wis. 301, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/relyea-v-tomahawk-paper-pulp-co-wis-1899.