Ross v. City of Crandon

290 N.W. 587, 234 Wis. 114, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 75
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 12, 1940
StatusPublished

This text of 290 N.W. 587 (Ross v. City of Crandon) 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
Ross v. City of Crandon, 290 N.W. 587, 234 Wis. 114, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 75 (Wis. 1940).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

The judgment under review was based upon the court’s conclusions of law that the common schools of the city of Crandon constituted a city school district, under ch. 40, Stats., and subject to secs. 40.50 to 40.60, Stats.; that defendants, Kline, Hansen, and Sparks, constituted the board of education of the city school district as de facto officers thereof with the powers of such a board, although to constitute them members they should have been elected by the electors, instead of being selected by appointment by the mayor and confirmation by the common council; that all their acts pertaining to the razing of the school building in question were ratified by the city by action of its common council; and that the city acted within its power through its agency, the board of education, in ordering and proceeding with the razing of the building. Plaintiffs’ principal contention in seeking a reversal of the judgment is that the public schools in Crandon were still under the control and management of the common school district for the territory in question which existed at the time of the incorporation of Cran-don as a city on January 28, 1909, and that therefore the board of education and the common council were without authority to order and proceed with the razing of the building. That contention is-based upon plaintiffs’ claims that *116 the incorporation of the unincorporated village of Crandon as a city of the fourth class did not change the status of the existing common school district for the territory which constituted the area of the city upon its incorporation; that an election was required under the statutes in order to change that status; that, although subsequently sec. 40.50, Stats. 1927, placed the common school district under the city school plan, which is provided by secs. 40.50 to 40.60, Stats., that enactment required the members of a board of education under that plan to be elected by the electors; that, because the status of the common school district has not been changed, the city school plan and the selection of the members thereof by appointment, instead of by being elected by the electors, has not been in effect; and that therefore the officers of the old common school district continued as de jtire officers until their successors were duly elected and qualified, and the members of the city’s board of education, who were selected by appointment by the mayor and confirmation by the common council under the city school plan, are neither officers de jure nor de facto.

The contentions and claims of the plaintiffs cannot be sustained. On the contrary, due consideration of the facts and statutes involved compels the conclusions that the school system of Crandon is and has been under the city school plan ever since its incorporation as a city in January, 1909; and that when the razing of the building was ordered by the board of education its members were officers de jure, by virtue of their appointment and confirmation by the mayor and common council, respectively, of the city.

Crandon was an unincorporated village until it was organized under ch. 40a, Stats., as a city of the fourth class on January 28, 1909. At that time sec. 925 — 113 of ch. 40a, Stats, (as amended by ch. 287, Laws of 1899), provided (so far as here material) that,—

“In every city or village which shall adopt this chapter for its government, or shall have become newly organized under *117 it by reason of the provisions of section 925g, Wisconsin statutes of 1898, if there shall be or shall have been at the time of such adoption, a board of education or school board elected by the people under the provisions of its charter, or the school district system is in force, and in all cases of such cities or villages which have heretofore adopted the provisions of this act, or become newly organized as aforesaid, and which shall have continued to act under the old school district or school board system, the election and organization, powers and duties of such board shall not be affected by this chapter; and such system shall continue until changed by a vote of the electors of such school district. . . .
“In all other cities governed by this chapter, the board of education shall consist of one commissioner from each ward and three from the city at large, to be appointed by the mayor and confirmed by the common council, or elected by the council if determined by ordinance. ...”

Prior to the amendment thereof by ch. 287, Laws of 1899, the first clause in that sec. 925 — 113, Stats., read: “In every city which shall adopt. ...” In State ex rel. McCann v. Enos, 97 Wis. 164, 165, 72 N. W. 222, the word “city,” as used in that clause, had been held to mean “an existing city;” and in that connection, the court held that “in all other cases (this includes a village which organizes as a city) the board of education shall consist of one commissioner from each ward, and three from the city at large, to be appointed by the mayor and confirmed by the council.” Consequently, under the statute construed in that case, the schools in an incorporated city, which prior to its incorporation had not been an existing city, were required to be under the control of a board of education, the members of which were to be selected by appointment by the mayor and confirmation by the council. The same consequences as to the type of school system and the method of selecting the members of the school board were made applicable to every existing “village” which became an incorporated city after the amendment by ch. 287, Laws of 1899, which inserted the words “or village” after the words “in every city” in the above quoted opening clause *118 of sec. 925 — 113, Stats. However, that amendment did not render inapplicable to the term “in every city” and the added words “or village” the ruling in the McCann Case, supra, that there was meant thereby an existing “city or village.” But that term as amended still did not include an wwincor-porated village, — such as Crandon was prior to January 28, 1909, — because then, as well as at all times since, there was in effect and applicable to the word “village,” wherever used in the statutes including, of course, sec. 925 — 113, Stats. 1899, the definition which is now sec. 370.01 (33), Stats., that,—

“The word ‘village’ imports only a municipal corporation organized by some special act or under some general law, except when a different definition shall be expressly given to the same.”

In view of that definition the unincorporated village of Crandon was not to be included under the term “in every city or village” as used in sec. 925- — 113, Stats., and likewise was not to be included under the word “village” as used in the provision that “whenever the population of any village shall exceed fifteen hundred as shown by the last national or state census such village shall become a city of the fourth class.” Sec. 925^, Stats. 1898. Consequently, when Crandon was incorporated as a city in January, 1909, it was in the class of cities to which there was applicable the provision in sec. 925 — 113, Stats., that,

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Related

State ex rel. McCann v. Enos
72 N.W. 222 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1897)
City of Manitowoc v. Board of Education
229 N.W. 652 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1930)
State ex rel. Thompson v. Beloit City School District
253 N.W. 598 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
290 N.W. 587, 234 Wis. 114, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-city-of-crandon-wis-1940.