State ex rel. Stengl v. Cary

112 N.W. 428, 132 Wis. 501, 1907 Wisc. LEXIS 125
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 112 N.W. 428 (State ex rel. Stengl v. Cary) 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. Stengl v. Cary, 112 N.W. 428, 132 Wis. 501, 1907 Wisc. LEXIS 125 (Wis. 1907).

Opinion

TimxiN, J.

This is not a case for the original jurisdiction of this court. The rules governing the exercise of that jurisdiction will be found in In re Court of Honor, 109 Wis. 625, 85 N. W. 497. But the writ having been issued and return made and no objection taken to the jurisdiction of this court by either party, and the case having been argued and submitted upon the questions arising on said writ and return, this court exercises a discretion to entertain the [505]*505cause. State ex rel. Foster v. Graham, 60 Wis. 395, 19 N. W. 359. Future cases of tbis kind will be for tbe circuit court.

Sec. 418, Stats. (1898), provides:

“Whenever the town board shall contemplate an alteration of a district they shall give at least five days’ notice in writing to the clerk of the district or districts to be affected thereby, stating in such notice when and where they will be present to decide upon such proposed alteration; and such clerk or clerks shall immediately notify the other members of the board. No territory shall be detached from one district unless by the same order it be attached to another, and' a district may be dissolved by attaching all its territory to other districts.”

In this case there is no proof that the clerk or clerks of districts Nos. 1, 2, and 5 ever gave any notice to the other members of the school board of either of said districts. We do not determine this case upon that omission, but call attention to the mandatory form of the statute in this particular and the difficulties it might present in practical construction, enabling the clerk of the adverse party, by omission of a statutory duty, apparently to nullify the proceeding. Whether omission of such duty on the part of the clerk would have that effect is not here intimated or decided, but attention is merely directed'to the peculiar form of the statute and the person upon whom the duty is cast of serving notice upon the other members of' the school board. The record here shows no attempt to perform this duty and no request to have it performed.

In many legal proceedings in courts it is well settled that it is the fact of service which gives the court jurisdiction of the person and not the proof of service. If service was in fact made, proof thereof may in many cases- be supplied later when necessary. Schmidt v. Stolowski, 126 Wis. 55, 105 N. W. 44; sec. 2642, Stats. (1898), and cases in notes. But [506]*506with reference to special statutory tribunals the rule is in many cases different. Where the statute expressly makes proof of service a condition precedent to the jurisdiction which it specially confers, there can be no question that proof of service must appear affirmatively before the board or -other special tribunal can act. But there is also a class of cases where the policy of the law or the implications from the statutes require record proof of the preliminary jurisdictional steps in a proceeding. The creation of a school district is a matter of considerable importance in governmental affairs. When created the school district is a gimi-corporation and may sue and be sued. Sec. 417, Stats. (1898). It may have important property rights. Secs. 420, 424, Id. It is a taxing district for certain purposes. Sec. 421, Id. And it has quite extensive powers with reference to school matters and building, voting’ taxes, electing officers, and borrowing money. Sec. 430, Id. It is consequently extremely undesirable that it should remain a matter of doubt or uncertainty whether or not a particular district has or has not corporate existence. If the giving of notice to the district clerk is' essential to the jurisdiction of the town board to create a school district by detaching part of the territory of another district, and the record remains silent as to whether such notice was given or not, and the fact whether notice was given or not liable to dispute or controversy in the courts, great confusion must result. In State ex rel. Bidgood v. Clifton, 113 Wis. 107, 88 N. W. 1019, it was decided that a town board acquired no jurisdiction to alter a school district without giving to the clerk of the district affected the notice required by sec. 418, supra. In the same case it is said, in refusing to sustain the claim that the relator was not entitled to the writ because he had an adequate r.emedy by statutory appeal to the state superintendent, that if the action of the town board was a nullity for want of jurisdiction the state superintendent could not review the same on appeal.

[507]*507‘‘Snob appeal would, have given to tbe state superintendent, no more authority to act in relation to sucb alteration of the-districts than be would have bad if tbe town board bad not acted at all; and hence an appeal would not have given to the-relator an adequate remedy.”

In State ex rel. Graff v. Steele, 106 Wis. 475, 82 N. W. 295, it was beld that not only was this notice to tbe district, clerks necessary to tbe jurisdiction of tbe board, but that the-notice must be authorized by tbe town board at a meeting-duly beld. State ex rel. Foster v. Graham, 60 Wis. 395, 19 N. W. 359, was a writ of certiorari issued out of this court to tbe state superintendent of public instruction and bis determination reversed thereon. That case, however, went further and beld that tbe officers of tbe school district could' not waive or dispense with tbe giving of this notice, and that, tbe determination of tbe state superintendent of public instruction based upon an appeal from tbe determination of tbe town board of supervisors was void for want of jurisdiction if tbe determination appealed from was for that reason., void.

Now, tbe records of tbe town board of supervisors are silent as to tbe service of any notice upon tbe district clerks and also silent as to tbe service of any notice by tbe district clerks-upon tbe other district officers. Is it necessary that proof of" service upon tbe district clerks appear in tbe records of tbe town board of supervisors creating, or refusing to create, the-scbool district? In State ex rel. Witte v. Curtis, 86 Wis. 140, 56 N. W. 475, it was said with reference to tbe action, of tbe supervisors in laying out and establishing a ditch that-it must appear on tbe face of their proceedings that they bad' jurisdiction or tbe proceedings will be void. In McVichie v. Knight, 82 Wis. 137, 51 N. W. 1094, with reference to the-action of tbe town board of supervisors in taking steps to issue and negotiate the bonds of tbe town for tbe purpose of" building a town ball, it is said that tbe jurisdiction of tbe-[508]*508town board to issue tbe bonds must appear on the records of the town. In Iverslie v. Spaulding, 32 Wis. 394, it was said with reference to the affidavit of publication of the notice of tax sale which was wanting from the records, but. where the fact of publication was sought to be established by parol evidence:

“The record alone can be resorted to for the purpose of determining whether the requirements of the statute have been complied with, and that the introduction of parol evidence in aid of the record thus required to be made would defeat the policy of the law.”

The same rule was asserted in Hiles v. Cate, 75 Wis. 91, 42 N. W. 802. In Saunderson v. Herman, 95 Wis. 48, 69 N. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 N.W. 428, 132 Wis. 501, 1907 Wisc. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-stengl-v-cary-wis-1907.