State ex rel. Smith v. Zimmerman

63 N.W.2d 52, 266 Wis. 307, 1954 Wisc. LEXIS 339
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 63 N.W.2d 52 (State ex rel. Smith v. Zimmerman) 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. Smith v. Zimmerman, 63 N.W.2d 52, 266 Wis. 307, 1954 Wisc. LEXIS 339 (Wis. 1954).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The substance of the complaint is that sec. 3, art. IV, Wis. Const., permits only one districting and apportionment by the legislature in the period between federal enumerations, and such a one was accomplished by ch. 728, Laws of 1951, wherefore ch. 550, Laws of 1953, being a second redistricting and apportionment within the same census period, is unconstitutional legislation. The only facts pleaded as to variations between the 1951 and 1953 acts are those which concern Brown county and it is to the part of the chapter affecting that county alone that we direct this decision and opinion.

The part of the constitution involved here reads:

“Apportionment. Section 3. [As amended Nov. 1910] At their first session after each enumeration made by the authority of the United States, the legislature shall apportion and district anew the members of the senate and assembly, according to the number of inhabitants, excluding Indians not taxed, soldiers, and officers of the United States army and navy.” (Art. IV.)

It is now settled that, without a constitutional change permitting it, no more than one legislative apportionment may be made in the interval between two federal enumera[313]*313tions. State ex rel. Thomson v. Zimmerman (1953), 264 Wis. 644, 661, 60 N. W. (2d) 416, 61 N. W. (2d) 300. We do not understand that defendant disputes this but he does submit that up to and including the time when ch. 550, Laws of 1953, was enacted there had been no completed, final apportionment, notwithstanding the passage of the Rosenberry Act in 1951; wherefore the 1953 legislature was free to proceed with modifications of the Rosenberry districts if it chose to do so, at least up to January 1, 1954, when the Rosenberry Act became operative as a result of the referendum.

The present defendant has been before us in two previous cases involving the validity of the Rosenberry Act and in both he conceded that it met constitutional requirements. State ex rel. Broughton v. Zimmerman (1952), 261 Wis. 398, 404, 52 N. W. (2d) 903, and State ex rel. Thomson v. Zimmerman, supra (p. 649). In discussing the legislature’s attempt to change senate districts by ch. 242, Laws of 1953, we stated expressly that under the present state constitution the passage, of the Rosenberry Act exercised and exhausted the power of the legislature to redistrict during the present interval between censuses except in the cases of districts whose boundaries did not observe the constitutional mandate. State ex rel. Thomson v. Zimmerman, supra (pp. 661, 663). There is no claim here that the Brown county apportionment in 1951 did not comply with all constitutional demands. Both houses of the legislature passed the bill, the governor signed it, the secretary of state published it, the legislature adjourned sine die, and the citizens of the state by their action in the referendum brought to pass the condition upon which the finality of the Rosenberry apportionment depended. Nothing in the facts now called to our attention disposes us to reverse our statement in the Thomson Case, supra, and to hold that the Rosenberry Act was not completed legislation. In the absence of a successful [314]*314attack upon its constitutionality (not attempted here), it was a reapportionment, directed by the constitution to be done once and only once following each federal census, which passed beyond the legislature’s power of revision at the date of the referendum at the very latest. It is not necessary to decide now whether it so passed at an earlier date. The defendant’s contention that the 1953 legislature retained and still possessed, any power to redistrict areas already districted in conformity to the constitution by ch. 728, Laws of 1951, cannot be sustained.

Defendant submits another proposal in justification of the 1953 legislation, to wit, that even if the time had passed when the legislature could engage in further districting and apportionment as such, nevertheless the constitution tolerates changes in district boundaries if they are incidental to the exercise of other unquestioned legislative powers. This argument rests on Slauson v. Racine (1861), 13 Wis. *398, but defendant seeks to extend it far beyond the facts in that case to establish a principle which was neither presented nor declared there. In the Slauson Case, supra, by action of the legislature, certain farm area was taken from a township and annexed to the city. Before the annexation, the city lay in one assembly district and the farm in another. The owner of the land considered that when his property became a part of the city it would be transferred into the city assembly district and he sought to defeat the annexation by saying that the statute which accomplished it was a second apportionment in one census period and was therefore void. The supreme court agreed that when the legislature annexed the farm to the city the property became part of the city for all purposes and therefore became a part of the city assembly district. But the court held that such change of area from one legislative district to another, was not a reapportionment prohibited by sec. 3, art. IV, Const., but was only an incident [315]*315to the accomplishment of a valid act passed to effect a different, constitutionally authorized purpose. We said (p. *401) :

“. . . we still think the implied [constitutional] 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.”

The attorney general relies on a sentence in the opinion (p. *402) stating:

“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.”

And he points out that ch. 550, Laws of 1953, was not enacted solely to apportion and organize legislative districts but had for its object the recognition of the changes made in its wards by the city of Green Bay.

The Slauson language must be read in. connection with the facts which the court was considering and with the rest of what is said in the opinion. It is noteworthy that the statute did not mention assembly districts nor attempt to set their boundaries. It was the court, not the legislature, which said that the boundary had changed as an incident to a valid act which annexed territory to the city. Obviously, no area was considered except that composing the addition to the city. We concluded this part of the Slauson opinion as follows (p.*403):

“We are therefore of the opinion that it is competent for the legislature to change incidentally the boundaries of assembly districts, in exercising its power to change the limits of cities, towns, etc.; and that if a part of a town in one district is annexed to a city which constitutes another, unless there be some exception or reservation in the law [316]*316itself, it becomes a part of such city for all purposes for which the legislature could annex it. So that the previous law constituting that city an assembly district would apply to everything that became absolutely a part of it, just as an incumbrance upon land attaches to subsequent improvements upon it, which become a part of the realty.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.W.2d 52, 266 Wis. 307, 1954 Wisc. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-smith-v-zimmerman-wis-1954.