State ex rel. City of New Richmond v. Davidson

88 N.W. 596, 114 Wis. 563, 1902 Wisc. LEXIS 99
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 88 N.W. 596 (State ex rel. City of New Richmond v. Davidson) 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
State ex rel. City of New Richmond v. Davidson, 88 N.W. 596, 114 Wis. 563, 1902 Wisc. LEXIS 99 (Wis. 1902).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed January 7, 1902:

Dodge, J.

The merits of the controversy have not been-at all considered upon the application for this alternative writ,, merely the propriety of this court assuming original jurisdiction to issue it. The policy and practice of this court on the subject of the exercise of its original jurisdiction have been so recently re-enunciated in In re Court of Honor, 109 Wis. 625, 85 N. W. 497, that reference to that case will suffice to define that policy in the main, and to indicate that several prior aberrations from the rule must not be considered' as changing it. That jurisdiction will generally be made to depend upon the question, “Does the wrong to be redressed' affect the sovereignty of the state, its franchises or prerogatives, or the liberties of its people?” In that case it was held that an application by a corporation to compel a state-[565]*565officer to issue to it a franchise, although it involved the granting of a right by the state and construction of general laws, did not fall within the rule, for the reason that “the wrong to be redressed” was that of an individual, and the effect upon the public generally was secondary only. In another late case, where the subject was carefully considered, to wit, In re Town of Holland, 107 Wis. 178, 83 N. W. 319, it was decided that the wrong sought to be redressed did not become public and general so as to justify this court in exercising its original jurisdiction, simply because the party seeking vindication was one of its minor municipal or political subdivisions, in that ease a town.

Those cases, taken together, would seem to rule the proposition that the present application, if measured only by the injury threatened to the relator, was not public or general in the sense of the rule prescribed to itself by this court, but was a wrong suffered merely by the city in its corporate, as. dis<-tinct from its political, capacity, and, if the effect upon the state at large from the granting of the relief sought would be only the same as that presented in the Gourt of Honor Case, there could be little doubt that we should deny the writ. A distinction, however, presents itself. In that case there was sought to secure from the state of Wisconsin, acting by one of its constituted officers, merely a license to do business, — a right which the state had granted upon certain facts existing or being found, and which it was 'the duty of the officer in question to recognize and satisfy if the facts existed. Here the practical result of granting the relief prayed, namely, commanding the state treasurer to act, is to enable the relator to recover money from the state. Of course, in so doling, to a certain extent the whole state is affected, although such effect is perhaps not radically different in its nature from the acquisition from the state of any other right which it may give. But the recovery of money from the state has been, both by tire constitution and the legislature, placed in a class [566]*566by itself. Sec. 27, art. IV, of the constitution, evidently subjects the state to a suit for money recovery, but only in such manner as the legislature by ' statute shall provide. Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co. v. State, 53 Wis. 509, 10 N. W. 560. The legislature, by sec. 3200, Stats- 1898, has authorized such suit to be brought only in the supreme court. Now, while such legislation perhaps in terms does not, and perhaps could not, either increase or restrain this court in the exercise of its original jurisdiction by writ of mandamus to compel actions of individual state officers, yet it declares a legislative policy in a field delegated by the constitution, and, whether controlling or not, is entitled to deference and to our utmost co-operation to give it effect. Such policy obviously is that the liability of the state to a money claim shall be tried only by the supreme court; that the commonwealth should not be subjected to the necessity of defending in local courts, nor to the burden of appeal from decision adverse to it. In deference to that policy, we deem it seemly and proper for this court to hold that a question of general and public interest is always involved in suits, the ultimate practical purpose of which is the.recovery of public moneys from the state treasury, although that result may be sought by the machinery of coercing the individual action of state officers by one of our original writs. On that ground we have decided to allow the alternative writ of mandamus upon the present petition.

By the Court. — Let such writ issue as prayed.

The subsequent proceedings, as well as the substance of the petition for the writ, are thus stated by Oassoday, O. J.:

The relator filed in this court a petition for an alternative writ of mandamus to compel the defendant, as state treasurer, to transfer from the moneys in the state treasury, not otherwise appropriated, the sum of $21,500 to the trust funds out of which the moneys were borrowed by the city, in order [567]*567that the commissioners of such funds may cancel the indebtedness of the relator to the state. The petition alleges, in effect, the incorporation of the relator as a city in 1885; the authority given by the common council of the city for the commencement of these proceedings, and the filing of the petition; that prior to June 12, 1899, the city had a population of 1,900 persons; that its business portion consisted of a large number of stores, shops, factories, hotels, and other places of business, besides a city hall, waterworks tower and tank, pumping station, numerous churches, and more than 200 homes; that its people were well to do, prosperous, and enjoying good health and other blessings usually attendant upon a prosperous city located and surrounded by an unusually fine farming community; that on the evening of June 12, 1899, a terrific cyclone struck the city, destroying the entire business portion thereof, killing outright, or injuring so that death ensued from such injuries, 115 of its citizens, and injuring about 500 more of its citizens, many seriously, destroying upwards of 100 dwelling houses and rendering about 600 of its citizens homeless, destroying its city hall, waterworks tower and tank and pumping station, its electric light plant, and the expensive bridge crossing the Willow river within the city, and four of its churches, killing 175 large animals and a large number of smaller ones, filling the public streets and alleys, and almost the entire area of the city, with debris, destroying-property of more than three quarters of a million of dollars in value, leaving the city almost a complete wreck, and its inhabitants in sore and great distress; that it became and was absolutely necessary for the city to take immediate steps for the burial of its dead, the caring for its injured, clearing up of the debris to prevent disease and pestilence, at a large expense to the city, as well as placing upon all or nearly all of its citizens the great burden and almost insurmountable difficulties of caring for the dead and injured and homeless; that many of the citizens thereof lost all of their property, — their [568]

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Bluebook (online)
88 N.W. 596, 114 Wis. 563, 1902 Wisc. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-city-of-new-richmond-v-davidson-wis-1902.