State ex rel. Wood v. Baker

38 Wis. 71
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 38 Wis. 71 (State ex rel. Wood v. Baker) 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. Wood v. Baker, 38 Wis. 71 (Wis. 1875).

Opinion

Ryan, C. J.

I. Our views of the original jurisdiction of this court, and of the cases for the proper exercise of it, in Att'y Gen’l v. Eau Claire, 37 Wis., 400, were carefully considered and deliberately expressed ; and we adhere to them to their full extent. It was there said :

“ To warrant the assertion of original jurisdiction here, the interest of the state should be primary and proximate, not indirect or remote ; peculiar, perhaps, to some subdivision of the state, but affecting the state at large in some of its prerogatives; raising ‘ a contingency requiring the interposition of this court to preserve the prerogatives and franchises of the state, in its sovereign character; ’ this court judging of the contingency in each case for itself. For all else, though raising questions publici juris, ordinary remedies and ordinary jurisdictions are adequate. And only when, for some peculiar cause, these are inadequate, will the original jurisdiction of this court be exercised for the protection of merely private or merely local rights.” “ Proceedings to restrain municipal undertakings or municipal [78]*78taxation, in ordinary cases, belong appropriately to the original jurisdiction of the circuit, and not of this court. .These are questions publici juris, as are title to local public office, performance of local official dutj’, use of local highways, maintenance of local public buildings, abuse of local power or franchise, and kindred local matters. But these are not generally questions directly involving the sovereign prerogative or the interest of the state at large, so as to call for the prerogative jurisdiction of this court. As a rule, no extraordinary jurisdiction is necessary or proper for them ; the ordinary j urisdiction of the circuit court being ample. Practically it would be impossible to take jurisdiction of them all here; and we intend to assume jurisdiction of none of them, which are not taken out of the rule by some exceptional cause. When they .are governed by some peculiarity which brings them within the spirit and object of the original jurisdiction of this court, we will entertain them ; otherwise, they will be left to the circuit courts.”

These cases, involving title to county offices, would undoubtedly be within the rule forbidding the exercise of original jurisdiction of them here, in ordinary circumstances. And the question arises, whether there is any peculiarity affecting them which brings them within the exception. For it is obvious that the rule stated in Att'y Gen'l v. Eau Claire reserves a discretion to the court to exercise original jurisdiction of such cases, when peculiar conditions bring them within the spirit and object of the jurisdiction, or render the jurisdiction of the circuit court inadequate.

Whether the conduct of the county canvassers, presently considered, raises a “ contingency requiring the interposition of 1 this court,” need not be determined. It was upon another ground that we gave leave to bring the cases here, and that we now sustain the exercise of original jurisdiction of them.

When the leave was given, it appeared that the election and canvass involved in these cases were the same that were in [79]*79question at the last term in State ex rel. McDill v. Board of State Canvassers, 36 Wis., 498, and that tbe distinguished gentleman who was the judge of the circuit court in which these cases must be brought, if not brought here, was directly interested in the questions involved in them ; his title to a high office depending more or less upon them.- The relators not unreasonably objected to -bring their cases before him ; and our high respect for him forced us to believe that he would object no less. He was, perhaps, disqualified in law, .he was surely disqualified in propriety, from sitting judicially in these cases; and we felt warranted in believing that he would refuse to act in them. The terms of office involved were brief and fast passing away. We thought then, and hold now, that we could not with judicial propriety subject the relators, or the county whose officers de jure they claimed to be, to the partial denial of justice which would arise from the proper refusal of the learned judge of the circuit court to sit in these cases. For this peculiar cause, the jurisdiction of the circuit court was plainly inadequate. And indeed, such an obstruction, so caused, of the justice which is a sovereign attribute; such a defeat, so caused, of timely effect of a constitutional election; such an interruption of an ordained and radical process by which the sovereignty acts, appears to us to concern the sovereign prerogative, to raise, in Mr. Justice Smith’s words, a contingency requiring the interposition of this court to preserve the prerogative and franchises of the state. For these reasons, we have no doubt of our duty, within the rule of Att'y Gen’l v. Eau Claire, to exercise original jurisdiction of these cases.

II. But it is obvious from what has been said, and still more from the discussions of the original jurisdiction of this court in Att’y Gen’l v. Blossom, 1 Wis., 317, Att’y Gen’l v. R. R. Companies, 35 id., 425, and Att’y Gen’l v. Eau Claire, supra, that it is in the public right only, in the interest of the state at large in its sovereign character, that we ought to exercise jurisdiction [80]*80in such cases ; and that the proper proceeding is therefore by information of the attorney general, as the law officer of the state.

Such was the proceeding in Att'y Gen'l v. Messmore, 14 Wis., 115. A question arose in that case on the form of the summons and the frame of the information, which the court held should in such cases conform to the code. As matter of practice, that might perhaps be convenient and proper enough. But the opinion in that case incautiously, and we think unnecessarily, proceeds to hold that the provision of the code that remedies by information in the nature of quo warranto might be obtained by civil action, and should be as thereby prescribed, had the effect to make all proceedings in the nature of quo war-ranto civil actions, and to abolish the proceeding by information, as it existed at the time of the adoption of the state constitution. We cannot think that so radical a position was properly involved in the decision of that case; and, with profound deference to the opinion of the very learned and able judge who delivered it, we are compelled to dissent from his position. Indeed, we think it overruled by his later and more advised opinion in State v. W. W. Railway Co., infra.

The jurisdiction conferred on this court by the constitution is of informations in the nature of quo warranto, as substituted in modern times for the use of the ancient writ itself, and as used when the constitution was framed. State v. W. W R'y Co., 34 Wis., 197. This was a prerogative proceeding, quasi criminal and quasi civil in its character, according to its use, but always classed with criminal informations. Bacon’s Abr., “Information;” Cole’s Crim. Inf., 110-113. The imposition of a fine, though nominal, appears to stamp upon it the essential character of a criminal proceeding.

The mode of proceeding under this jurisdiction might be regulated by statute, but the jurisdiction itself could not be defeated or abridged. This is expressly recognized in Att'y Gen'l v. Messmore, as it has always been held by this court. [81]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Donald J. Trump v. Joseph R. Biden
2020 WI 91 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2020)
Milwaukee Branch of the NAACP v. Scott Walker
2014 WI 98 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2014)
League of Women Voters of Wisconsin Education Network, Inc. v. Walker
2013 WI App 77 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2013)
Roth v. LaFarge School District Board of Canvassers
2004 WI 6 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2004)
McNally v. Tollander
302 N.W.2d 440 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1981)
McNally v. Tollander
294 N.W.2d 660 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 1980)
Ollmann v. Kowalewski
300 N.W. 183 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1941)
McCarthy v. Hoan
266 N.W. 916 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1936)
State Ex Rel. Besse v. D.C., 4th J.D.
239 P. 452 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1925)
State ex rel. Besse v. District Court of Fourth Judicial Dist.
239 P. 452 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1925)
State ex rel. Symmonds v. Barnett
195 N.W. 707 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1923)
State ex rel. Barber v. Circuit Court for Marathon County
190 N.W. 563 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1922)
State v. Ross
1919 OK 257 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1919)
Reader v. Farriss
1915 OK 1027 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1915)
State ex rel. Bolens v. Frear
134 N.W. 673 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1912)
State ex rel. McGrael v. Phelps
128 N.W. 1041 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1910)
Martin v. McGarr
1910 OK 278 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1910)
Fitzmaurice v. Willis
127 N.W. 95 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1910)
The Homesteaders v. McCombs, Ins. Com'r.
1909 OK 202 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Wis. 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wood-v-baker-wis-1875.