Tarbox v. Supervisors of Adams County

34 Wis. 558
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 34 Wis. 558 (Tarbox v. Supervisors of Adams County) 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
Tarbox v. Supervisors of Adams County, 34 Wis. 558 (Wis. 1874).

Opinion

Lyon, J.

Unless the claim of the plaintiff against the county is barred by the statute of limitations, there can be no doubt of the liability of the county to pay it. Without determining whether the statute commenced to run on the claim as soon as the tax certificates were issued, or not nntil the claim was presented to the board of supervisors (a question by no means free from difficulty), we proceed at once to consider whether the statute is available to the county as a defense to this claim.

In Barden v. The Board of Supervisors of Columbia County, 33 Wis., 445, which was an action or proceeding like this, we held that the defense of the statute of limitations was not available, because the objection that the action was not commenced within the time limited by the statute was not taken by answer, as required by the statute. Tay. Stats., 1622, § 1, (R. S., ch. 138. sec. 1). If that decision was correct, it is decisive of this action; and a majority of the members of the court are of the opinion that it is correct.

It may be said that in appeals of this character there are no pleadings, and hence that no answer, stating such defense, can be interposed. Were this true, it would seem to follow that claims against counties which can only be asserted in this way, are not within the limitation of the statute. The language of the statute is: “ The objection that the action was not commenced within the time limited, can only be taken by answer.” We find no exception in favor of actions of this class, and we have no right to interpolate such exception into the statute. But it is not conceded that there are no pleadings in cases of this kind. Whenever there is submitted to a court for adjudication a proposition of fact or of law which is affirmed by one party and denied by the other, no matter how the issue is made, [561]*561whether orally or in writing, whether formally or informally, the affirmation by one party and the denial by the other constitute pleadings, such affirmation being in substance and effect a declaration or complaint, and such denial a plea or answer.

In this case the verified claim or account presented to the board of supervisors contains all of the essential requisites of a complaint in a civil action, and fulfills all of the functions of a complaint; and the order or vote of the board disallowing such claim is nothing less than a general denial of the liability of the county to pay the same. Employing those terms, then, not in a technical but in a liberal sense, there is here a complaint and an answer; and this court has held that the latter term is used in the statute of limitations in its more enlarged and liberal sense. Howell v. Howell, 15 Wis., 55. The order or vote of the board disallowing the claim being an answer within the meaning of the statute, and the objection not being taken thereby that the action was not brought within the time limited by law therefor, it necessarily follows that the defense of the statute of limitations is not available to the county in this action. See Dudley v. Stiles, 32 Wis., 372.

It is quite probable that the court has the inherent power in such cases, in its discretion, to order or permit formal pleadings to be filed. This might be done advantageously in some cases. But no such practice has been resorted to in this case.

The judgment of the circuit court must be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to render judgment for the plaintiff for the amount of her claim as proved on the trial, and interest thereon.

DixoN, C. J.

I know not what was said in Barden v. The Board of Supervisors of Columbia County, about answering the statute of limitations. My recollection is, that it did hot appear by the record in that case, that any answer or objection of the kind, either orally or in ivriting, was made or taken in the circuit court; and if it was not, then it is obvious it could. not [562]*562have been made or taken for the first time in this coart, and that the statute did not stand in the way of a judgment for the plaintiff here, or of the affirmance of the judgment which he had obtained, with no such defense interposed, at the circuit. But here the objection was taken by answer in the court below, and the judgment appealed from turned on the very point that the demand of the plaintiff was barred by the statute. I say that objection was taken by answer, and sufficiently taken; and in proof of it I refer to the words of the statute cited in the opinion of my brethren, and to the definition there given of pleadings, or what constitutes a complaint and answer. My brethren say: Whenever there is submitted to a court for adjudication, a proposition of fact or of law which is affirmed by one party and denied by the other, no matter how the issue is made, whether orally or in writing, whether formally or informally, the affirmation by one party and the denial by the other constitute pleadings, such affirmation being in substance 'and effect a declaration or complaint, and such denial a plea or answer.”

Now when it is established that an answer may be oral, and it is also seen that the statute does not require the objection to be taken by answer in writing, I would like to know, upon- the reasoning of my brethren, why the objection was not well taken by answer here? My brethren say they “ cannot interpolate an exception into the statute,” to which I agree, and I put the question if they have not interpolated the words in writing ” into the statute, contrary .to the very canon of construction by which they profess to be governed ? The statute does not require the answer to be in voriting, except of course where written pleadings are otherwise required by law, which is the case in most actions instituted in courts of record, but not in this action. “ There are no pleadings in cases of appeal from the board of supervisors.” Warner v. Supervisors of Outagamie County, 19 Wis., 611, 614. By this was intended what my brethren say, that is, no formal written pleadings, but only oral [563]*563ones. And this is the mistake which it seems to me the majority of the court have made; they have interpreted the statute as if the words “ in writing” were found in it, when it contains no such words. They have interpolated when they themselves say the court has no right to interpolate. They have assumed legislative power, and enacted, against the statute, how the answer of limitation shall be made in this particular class of cases. The statute, as it now is, is exactly adapted to all kinds of pleadings, formal and informal, oral as well as written. We must presume it was purposely so drawn and enacted. In justices’ courts, where the pleadings may in all cases be oral (R. S., ch. 120, sec. 46, subd. 2: 2 Tay. Stats., 1362, § 51), an oral answer that the action was not commenced within the time limited, is good. In this case, where there are no written pleadings, but only oral statements and denials, demands and defenses, before the board of supervisors, and on appeal before the circuit court, a like oral answer is good. In actions where written pleadings are required, the answer in writing must of course contain a written statement of the objection, or the objection will not be well taken. These conclusions seem very plain to my mind from the premises assumed and admitted by my associates.

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Related

Paine v. Comstock
14 N.W. 910 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1883)
Morgan v. Bishop
14 N.W. 369 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1882)
Capron v. Supervisors of Adams County
43 Wis. 613 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1878)
Hyde v. Supervisors of Kenosha County
43 Wis. 129 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1877)
Smith v. Peckham
39 Wis. 414 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1876)
Baker v. Supervisors of Columbia County
39 Wis. 444 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1876)

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Bluebook (online)
34 Wis. 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarbox-v-supervisors-of-adams-county-wis-1874.