State ex rel. Spaulding v. Elwood

11 Wis. 17
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 11 Wis. 17 (State ex rel. Spaulding v. Elwood) 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. Spaulding v. Elwood, 11 Wis. 17 (Wis. 1860).

Opinion

By the Court,

Coee, J.

This is a motion to quash an alternative writ of mandamus, issued herein, requiring the respondent to record a certain deed mentioned in the relation, and to vacate and discharge the same,upon the grounds:

1st. That the act of the legislature mentioned in the said writ is unconstitutional.

2d. That said act is inoperative.

3d. That it appears upon the face of. said writ that the relator is not entitled to the relief sought.

,4th. That sufficient facts are not set forth in the writ to • entitle the relator to the relief sought.

5th. That the writ is informal and insufficient..

The act referred to in the motion is chapter 69 of the General Laws, 1859, page 75, entitled “An Act to annex a part of the county of Fond du Lac to the county of Green Lake.” The first two sections of the act are as follows :

“§ 1. Township number sixteen north, of range number fourteen east, embracing the territory of the town and city of Ripon, is hereby detached and set off from the county of [21]*21Fond du Lac, and attached and annexed to the county of Green Lake.

§ 2. This act is hereby submitted to a vote of the people of Fond du Lac county, in' the manner following, that is to say: on Tuesday next succeeding the first Monday in November next, an election shall be held in the several towns and wards in said county, at which election any qualified elector of said county may vote ‘ fob. detaching Ripon,’ or £ against detaching Ripon,’ on a separate ballot, written or printed, to be deposited in a box used only for such ballots. Such election shall be held in the several towns and wards during the same hours of the day as the election which is held for other purposes on that day, and the votes of the towns and wards severally, and of the whole county, shall be canvassed in the same manner as the votes for state senator are canvassed in Fond du Lac county; and said canvass, when so made, shall be recorded by the clerk of the board of supervisors of said county, in his office, and a certified copy of the same shall be forthwith forwarded by said clerk to the Secretary of State, to be filed in his office.”

The third section directs the manner in which notices of the election mentioned in the preceding section shall be given.

“ § 4. If a majority of all the votes cast at such election in said county on this subject shall be “for detaching Ripon,” then this act shall be in full force and effect from and after the first day of December, 1859.

Section five declared the law to be a public act, and that it shall take effect on and after its passage.

Several objections have been taken to the validity of the act, by the counsel, who argued in support of this motion. In the first place, he insists that the law was not enacted in conformity to the provisions of the constitution, but was submitted by the legislature to the electors of the county of Fond du Lac, to determine whether the same should become a law [22]*22or not; and he relies mainly upon the language used in the second section of the act, to sustain this view of the case. It is quite true that by the second section it is said that“ this act is hereby submitted to a vote of the people,” &c. Yet, when the whole language of the act is considered, it will be seen that the legislature did not intend to make the operation and taking effect of the law depend upon a vote of the people. For by the fifth section it is expressly provided that the law shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage, which is clearly inconsistent with the idea that it was not to take effect, except upon the happening of any future event, such as a vote of a majority of the people. The object and intent of the legislature, in passing the law, are clear and manifest.

By the constitution, Article XIII, section 7, no county with an area of nine hundred square miles or less, can be divided, or have any part stricken therefrom, without submitting the question to a vote of the people of the county, nor unless a majority of all the legal voters of the county voting upon the question, shall vote for the same. It is admitted that the county of Fond du Lac comes within the constitutional restriction, and cannot be divided, or have any part stricken therefrom, without the question of division is first submitted to the people, and a majority of the legal voters of the county voting upon the question, shall be in favor of such division.

Now, in the first section of the law under consideration, the legislature provided, in substance, for detaching or striking off a portion of the county of Fond du Lac, and attaching the same to the county of Green Lake, in the event that a majority of the legal voters of the former county should be in favor of such a division, at the election to be held under and pursuant to the other sections of the act. Hence, it was not whether the law should take effect, or be in force for any purpose, which was submitted to a vote of the people, but the [23]*23question of the division of the county. Had the legislature used constitutional language, and said, that the question as to whether the town and city of Ripon should be detached and set off from the county of Fond du Lac, and attached, &c., there would have been no ground for contending that the legislature made the force and validity of the law depend upon the event that it should be approved by the people. It would then be understood, that the law was to take elfect in presentí, for the purpose of taking the expression of the people at the polls upon the question therein submitted; and the question of division being definitely settled and passed upon by the voters of the county, in conformity to the constitution. And notwithstanding a little verbal inaccuracy in the use of language, we think that is precisely'what the legislature has done in the present instance.

Again, it is objected that the law makes no provision as to who shall act as the inspectors of the election $ nor as to who shall canvass the votes; nor where they shall be canvassed ; and imposes no penalty for illegal voting upon the question of the division of the county, or for fraudulently conducting the election and determining the result. We need only refer to the second section of the law to show that this objection is not well founded. That section provides that on the Tuesday next succeeding the first Monday in November, after the passage of the law, an election should be held in the several wards and towns of the county of Fond du Lac, at which election any qualified elector of said county might vote "for detaching Ripon,” or "against detaching Ripon,” upon a separate ballot, &e.; that said election should be held in the several towns and wards, during the same hours of the day as the election which is held for other purposes on that day; and that the votes of the towns and wards severally, and of the whole county, shall be canvassed in [24]*24the same manner as the votes for state senator of Fond du Lac county are canvassed.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Wis. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-spaulding-v-elwood-wis-1860.