State ex rel. Mc Curdy v. Tappan

29 Wis. 664
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 29 Wis. 664 (State ex rel. Mc Curdy v. Tappan) 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. Mc Curdy v. Tappan, 29 Wis. 664 (Wis. 1872).

Opinion

Lyon, J.

Whether the act of 1869 is, or is not a valid exercise of legislative power, tinder the constitution, is obvipusly the controlling question in this action. In view of its great importance we have given it the most deliberate and careful consideration. We are called upon to lay down the principles upon which the legislative power may constitutionally be employed to impose local municipal burdens in exceptional cases and for extraordinary purposes, and to define the limits of that power. While we may not shrink from this delicate and important duty, we shall endeavor to perform it with caution and with due regard to those rules of law which have been wisely. ordained to. prevent improper judicial interference with the legitimate powers of the legislature.

That the legislature may confer upon cities, towns and villages power to raise money by taxation to pay bounties to those who, in time of war, shall enlist in the military service of the United States, has been settled by repeated decisions of this court and of the courts of other states. It was so held upon the grounds that claims for public services, or expenditures founded in equity and justice, in gratitude or charity, will support a tax, which is voluntarily imposed upon a municipality by a majority of the citizens thereof, or by the consent of the municipality, evidenced in some other manner. Brodhead v. The City of Milwaukee, 19 Wis., 624. No person has the hardihood to deny that the men who enlisted during our. late war to serve in the ranks, (and these alone were entitled to bounties,) became thereby entitled to the gratitude of the nation; and because of this, and because, also, it was a matter of great public concern that the ranks of our armies should be constantly replenished by recruits from the walks of civil life, it was held that the legislature might authorize the various cities, towns and villages of the state to tax themselves respectively, [673]*673to a limited extent, to promote tbe public welfare, and at tbe same time to recognize these obligations of gratitude.. Tbis tbey were authorized to do by raising money by taxation, with which to pay those persons who had been, or who might be mustered into the military service of the United States and credited upon the quota of the municipality imposing such tax. The general law of the state limited such bounties to two hundred dollars for each volunteer so mustered and credited, and did not make the payment of any bounty obligatory upon the municipality. The legislature left it entirely to the discretion of a majority of the legal voters of the city, village or town, to raise money by taxation for that purpose, or not, as such majority thought proper.

The furnishing of soldiers for the armies of the United States is not, in any correct sense, one of the municipal functions of a city or town, and taxation to pay bounties to volunteers who enter such service is not, therefore, taxation for a municipal purpose. While it is true that every citizen, and particularly every tax payer, had, during the late war, a direct interest in having the Union armies seasonably replenished and increased, with the least practicable disturbance to the social relations and business interests of the people, and while the system of raising troops by offering inducements to men to volunteer rather than by resorting to drafts, was best calculated to secure those results, yet, during such, war, military service was an individual, and not a municipal, obligation to the general government. It was enforced by the direct action of the government upon individuals. Although, for convenience, the local municipal subdivisions of the state were used to limit and designate the districts in which the government officers should operate in enforcing that obligation, no duty or obligation of the town, city, or ward, as such was ever asserted. For instance, the government did not say to a town that it must furnish a given number of men for the military service, but it said to all of the citizens of a town who were, by the laws of the United [674]*674States, liable thereto, that of their number a certain proportion must, either in person or by substitution of some kind, render such service. It does not change the nature of the obligation nor extend its operation, that the state zealously and efficiently co-operated with the general government to procure volunteers and recruits for the army. The obligation was still upon the individual and not upon the municipality as such.

Having thus ascertained the nature and extent of the obligation to render military service to. the government of the United States, and the principles upon which cities and towns were allowed, if they chose to do so, to raise money by taxation to pay bounties to volunteers in such service, we are the better prepared to consider the authorities upon which the learned counsel for the plaintiff rely to sustain the validity of the act of 1869, upon which this action is predicated.

It is an important fact that, in most of the cases thus relied upon, where the power of arbitrarily imposing a local tax has been exercised by the legislature and upheld by the courts, the purposes for which the taxes were imposed were strictly municipal in their character, such as opening and working highways, grading and paving streets, building bridges, keeping these in repair and the like, and many of the eases sustain the power on the express ground that the tax was imposed for legitimate municipal purposes. An extended statement of these cases will accomplish no useful purpose. Reference will be made to such of them as are believed to verify the foregoing suggestions. Those which do not, if any such be found, may be the subject of comment before closing the consideration ■of this case.

Thomas v. Leland, 24 Wen., 65; People v. Mitchell, 45 Barb. S. C., 208 ; Norwich v. Comrs. of Hampshire, 18 Pick., 60 ; Shaw v. Dennis, 5 Gilman, 405 ; Blanding v. Bun, 13 Cal., 343; Layton v. The City of New Orleans, 12 La., An., 515; The People ex rel. McLean v. Flagg, 11 Am. Law Reg., 80, (Feb. M. 1872); Creighton v. Supervisors of San Francisco, 4 Ch. Legal News, 58. [675]*675That these were all the cases of taxation for legitimate municipal purposes we do not by any means concede, but such were the grounds of tbe decisions.

It is true that, in some of these cases, the language of the courts may be sufficiently broad to sustain the validity of the act of 1869, but it is believed that none of those decisions go to that extent In some of the cases cited on behalf of the plaintiff, it was left optional with the municipality to levy the tax. In Booth v. Woodbury, 32 Conn., 118, the option was given to the voters of the town to ratify a previous illegal tax to raise money to pay bounties. Weister v. Hade, 52 Penn. St. R., 474, is a similar case, except that the authority was conferred upon the administrative officers of the township in which the tax was levied. Shaw v. Dennis, 5 Gilman, 405, before cited, is a case where a tax was directed by law to be levied to pay for a bridge previously erected, but the county authorities had an option to apply the money when raised, to that purpose, or not, as they might think proper, and stress was laid on that fact in the opinion by Mr. Justice CatoN.

The case of The Town of Guilford v. The Board of Supervisors of Chenango Co., 13 N. Y., 143 ; 18 Barb. S. C., 615; is probably the strongest one cited in support of the validity of the act of 1869, and requires a more particular notice.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Wis. 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mc-curdy-v-tappan-wis-1872.