Slauson v. City of Racine

13 Wis. 398
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 13 Wis. 398 (Slauson v. City of Racine) 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
Slauson v. City of Racine, 13 Wis. 398 (Wis. 1861).

Opinions

By the Court,

PAINE, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiffs to restrain the sale of their lands for taxes. The [400]*400lauds in question are situated in several tracts wbicb were adjacent to the city of Eacine previous to March 6th, 1856, an(j which the appellant claims to have been annexed to the city by an act approved on that day. The plaintiffs object to the legality of the taxes assessed by the city upon these lands, first, because the act was unconstitutional and wholly inoperative; and second, for several other reasons not inconsistent with the validity of the act. The conclusion to which we have come upon the first objection, will preclude the necessity of considering the others.

The plaintiffs claim the act to have been unconstitutional for two reasons. First, because it would leave the two assembly districts, which by the previous apportionment law were composed, one of the city of Eacine, and the other of the towns of Eacine, Caledonia and Mt. Pleasant, not bounded by county, town, precinct or ward lines, as required by section 4, art. IY of the constitution. This objection assumes that it was incompetent for the legislature to alter the assembly districts until the time for the next apportionment, as prescribed by the constitution, and this assumption is necessary to the validity of the objection. For if the assembly districts might be altered, and if by the annexation of the tracts in question to the city, they thereby became a part of the city to all intents and purposes, then they would be a part of the assembly district composed of the city, and cease to be a part of that composed of the towns. So that both districts would still be bounded by town lines, those lines being different, however, from what they were when the districts were organized. The validity of this objection depends, therefore, on the question whether it is within the power of the legislature, by any means, intermediate two apportionment laws, to transfer any part of the territory in one assembly district to another.

It has been held in Massachusetts and New York, under their constitutions, that this could not be done. 6 Cush., 575, 578; 2 Gray, 84; 80 Barb., 849. But the constitution of New York, after providing for an enumeration of the people and an apportionment of representatives at stated periods, expressly provides that “ the apportionment and dis[401]*401tricts, so to be made, shall remain, unaltered until another enumeration shall be taken,” &c. The decision there based upon this provision. The constitution of Massachusetts provides for an enumeration once in ten years, and determines the number of representatives to which any town or district is entitled by the number of “rateable polls,” and having provided for the ascertainment of this number once in ten years, declares that it shall remain fixed and unalterable for the period of ten years.” Their decisions were based upon the limitation derived from these provisions.

But in our constitution there is no express prohibition against an alteration of assembly districts. And whatever limitation exists upon the power of the legislature in that respect, is to be derived from the general scope and objects of the provisions of the constitution concerning the apportionment of senators and representatives. But it may well be said that these furnish such a limitation, and that when the instrument provides for an apportionment and organization of districts once in five years, this implies that it shall not be done at any other time. This would seem clear, with respect to a general apportionment; and perhaps the same implication would extend to any partial re-organization of assembly or senate districts, by any law passed directly for that purpose. Whether it would or not we shall not now decide, but shall assume for the purposes of this case that it would.

But assuming that, we still think the implied prohibition does not extend to such changes in these districts as may result incidentally from the exercise of the acknowledged power of the legislature to organize counties, towns and cities, and change the boundaries of such as are already organized. Of the existence of this power there is no-question. The constitution imposes no express limitation upon it material to this inquiry. The occasions for its exercise are constant and frequent, having no relation to or connection with the stated periods prescribed for apportionment. And we think the provisions upon the latter subject should be deemed to have been adopted in contemplation of the existence of this power, and that therefore the implied prohibi-[402]*402^°n "^idi may ^ddy be derived from tbem, is so qualified as not to include changes in these districts arising incidentally from an increase or decrease by the legislature of the towns, cities or counties of which they may be composed. The restriction is upon the power to apportion and organize these districts by laws having that object alone. But it is subject to the power to organize and change the boundaries of the political divisions of the state.

This conclusion may seem liable to the objection of permitting that to be done indirectly which could not be done directly. But it really is not so, if we are right as to the extent of the implied prohibition to be derived from the provisions concerning apportionment. Eor then the prohibition included only a direct re-organization of these districts, and left them subject to such incidental changes as might occur by changes in the cities, towns or counties so constituting them. This qualified prohibition may well exist in connection with the intent to leave the other power unimpaired. And when the framers of the instrument carefully avoided inserting any express prohibition, like that in other constitutions, we do not feel warranted in extending an implied one, so as to restrict an acknowledged power of the legislature, entirely independent of the subject matter out of which the implied prohibition arises. This conclusion is supported by the opinion of STRONG, J., in Rumsey vs. The People, 19 N. Y., 41, and by the dissenting opinion of Allen, J., in Kinney vs. Syracuse, 30 Barb., 368, which we think would have been adopted by the whole court in that case, if their constitution had been similar to ours.

Nor do we think any valid argument against it can be derived from the schedule to the constitution, by which the first senate and assembly districts were established. In section 12 it is declared, that the town of Centre with others in Eock county should form an assembly district, “provided that if the legislature should divide the town of Centre, they might attach such part of it to the district lying next north, as they should deem expedient.” At the close of the section is the following provision: “ The foregoing districts are subject, however, so far to be altered, that where any new [403]*403town shall be organized, it may be added to either of the adjoining assembly districts.”

It might be said that the power of making certain specific changes being expressed, that of making all others was ex-eluded, and that these clauses assume the necessity of a specific authority to make such changes in the districts as might result from organizing towns or dividing them. This argument would undoubtedly be good, with respect to districts thus established by the constitution itself.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Wis. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slauson-v-city-of-racine-wis-1861.