State ex rel. Thompson v. Eggen

238 N.W. 404, 206 Wis. 651, 1932 Wisc. LEXIS 3
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 238 N.W. 404 (State ex rel. Thompson v. Eggen) 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. Thompson v. Eggen, 238 N.W. 404, 206 Wis. 651, 1932 Wisc. LEXIS 3 (Wis. 1932).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed October 13, 1931:

Owen, J.

Sam Thompson, the relator, owns a farm in the town of Albion, Jackson county, Wisconsin. On the 29th day of June, 1929, he filed with the town clerk of the town of Albion a petition for the laying out of a highway therein described. This petition was signed by himself and more than six other resident freeholders, and was sufficient to confer the power and impose the duty on the town board to take the statutory proceedings and make their determination upon such petition. The town board did fix a time and place for the hearing of said petition and gave notice thereof. There is some question whether the notice was properly posted. But whether it was or not seems immaterial. The board met pursuant to such notice on the 27th day of July, 1929, and adjourned until August 23, 1929, at which time Sam Thompson was present, and it was mutually agreed that a committee be selected to appraise damages. This committee was appointed but it does not appear that it ever met, or appraised damages, or made any report to the town board.

[653]*653On August 31, 1929, more than sixty days from the date of the filing of the petition, the town board declined to act on the petition, as “more than thirty days passed since the notice of meeting to act thereon, it having been adjourned from time to time.” .

On October 17, 1929, Thompson filed a second petition signed by more than six freeholders pf the town, praying for the laying out of a highway covering the same general route as described in the first petition. It appears that notices of a hearing on this petition were duly given, pursuant to which the town board met on October 31, 1929, and denied the petition for the reason that the town board was not satisfied that the notices required by sec. 80.05, Stats., had been duly given and posted, and that the board had found upon investigation that two landowners through whose land the road proposed might pass had not received a copy of the notice of said hearing. No effort was made to serve new notices and nothing further was done with this petition.

On January 24, 1930, a third petition was filed with the town board praying for the laying out of a highway over the same general route. This petition seems to have been acted upon in full conformity with the statutes, and it was denied by the town board on the 25th day of March, 1930. On the 26th day of March, 1930, an appeal was taken from such determination to the county judge of Jackson county, under the provisions of sec. 80.17, Stats. The county judge appointed commissioners under the provisions of sec. 80.19. The commissioners so appointed determined that the highway should be laid out, and duly filed such determination and order in the office of the town clerk of the town of Albion. The town board failed to open up the highway in conformity to such determination and order, and failed to take any action to set aside said order.

On the 23d day of October, 1930, and more than three months after the filing of the said order of the commission[654]*654ers, these proceedings were instituted, as a result of which the town board was ordered to open up the highway, and the question presented upon this appeal is whether, under the circumstances, it was the duty of the town board to do so.

A consideration of the question requires us to bear in mind certain statutory provisions. Sec. 80.22 provides that the “determination refusing to lay out, alter, widen or discontinue any highway shall be final, unless appealed from, for the term of one year after the making of such determination ; and no other application for laying out, widening, altering or discontinuing any such highway shall be acted upon within said term of one year.” Sec. 80.17, Stats., provides in effect that the failure of the supervisors to file their decision upon any application or petition to lay out or discontinue any highway within sixty days after the application is made shall be deemed a refusal of the application, and any person may then appeal therefrom to the county judge. Every order laying out a highway either by the town board or by commissioners appointed on appeal, and the record or certified copy thereof, is made presumptive evidence of the facts therein stated and of the regularity of all the proceedings prior to the making of such order, by the provisions of sub. (1), sec. 80.34; and by sub. (2), sec. 80.34, it is provided that “The validity of any such order if fair on its face shall not be open to collateral attack, but may be tested by certiorari or other proper proper action or proceeding brought directly for that purpose at any time within three months after such order is made but not thereafter.”

Under our statutes the town board is the public body clothed with general authority to lay out, alter, widen, or discontinue public highways. The law confers this power on them in general terms. The filing of a petition signed [655]*655by six or more resident freeholders invests them with jurisdiction to act in a particular case. When the first petition for the laying out of this highway was filed, the town board acquired jurisdiction to act, and to either lay out or refuse to lay out this highway. True, if from that time on they did not take the steps and give the notice as required by the statutes, their ultimate determination might have been vulnerable upon direct attack, but their determination would not have been without jurisdiction of the subject matter. Their power to act in the premises resulted from the filing of the petition. If they had declined to take any action at all in the premises for a period of sixty days, their failure to act would have amounted to a denial of the application, from which an appeal could be taken under the provisions of sec. 80.17, Stats. The fact that they did act, even though they failed to give proper notices, or to take other steps or proceedings required by the statute, could not defeat the provisions or the purpose of sec. 80.17. Their failure to take final action within sixty days after the filing of the petition, no matter what their interim proceedings were, amounted to a denial of the application by force of the statute, from which an appeal might be taken just as though they had filed their determination denying the petition after the most punctilious performance of all the requirements of the statute. State ex rel. Hewitt v. Graves, 120 Wis. 607, 98 N. W. 516; State ex rel. Loehr v. Hanson, 168 Wis. 497, 170 N. W. 725.

The purpose of the statute seems to be to coerce speedy and definite action upon such petitions; and to secure the laying out of highways required by the public interest. Where the town board is adverse to the proposed highway, the appointment of unprejudiced commissioners may be secured after the lapse of sixty days, which right is beyond any possible embarrassment by the town board. If it were [656]*656necessary for the operation of this statute that the town board act in strict compliance therewith, an adverse town board could forever prevent the operation of the statute by failing to comply with some condition precedent to their ultimate determination. This view is made more apparent by the amendment of this section by sec. 20 of ch. 108 of the Laws of 1923, after the decision in State ex rel. Loehr v. Hanson, 172 Wis. 181, 177 N. W. 585, where this court expressed the view that the law as it then stood required the town board to take only some action on the petition within sixty days.

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Bluebook (online)
238 N.W. 404, 206 Wis. 651, 1932 Wisc. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-thompson-v-eggen-wis-1932.