Town of Greenfield v. Village of West Milwaukee

75 N.W.2d 424, 272 Wis. 215, 1956 Wisc. LEXIS 482
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 75 N.W.2d 424 (Town of Greenfield v. Village of West Milwaukee) 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
Town of Greenfield v. Village of West Milwaukee, 75 N.W.2d 424, 272 Wis. 215, 1956 Wisc. LEXIS 482 (Wis. 1956).

Opinion

Fairchild, C. J.

There is no dispute in the proceeding on appeal here as to the validity of the annexations involved. Appellant town advances as its two chief contentions: First, that sec. 66.03, Stats., is not applicable to the situation existing in the instant case; second, that the respondent village, in any event, has barred itself by laches from the division of assets and liabilities which it seeks.

As to its first contention, the town argues that sec. 66.03, Stats., is a general statute which merely sets up machinery for carrying out the provisions of certain special statutes which specifically invoke sec. 66.03, and calls attention to sec. 60.06 (5), pertaining to division of credits and liabilities when a new town is created; sec. 61.17, pertaining to division of joint property when a new village is created; and sec. 60.31 (2) (b), pertaining to- division of assets when a part of a sanitary district is annexed to a village or city. It is maintained that because those sections specifically invoke the application of sec. 66.03, if the legislature had intended sec. 66.03 to apply to annexation of a portion of a town to an already existing municipality, it would, in the same manner, have specifically invoked sec. 66.03 in the annexation statutes. Thus, the town claims that sec. 66.03 does not apply to a situation in which a portion of a municipality, such as the town of Greenfield, is annexed to an already existing municipality, such as the village of West Milwaukee.

Prior to the commencement of this proceeding, except in school-district cases, sec. 66.03, Stats., has never been re *226 sorted to by any already existing municipality upon annexation to it of a portion of another municipality. The problem confronting us here with reference to the applicability of sec. 66.03 did not have to be dealt with in Cassian v. Nokomis, 254 Wis. 94, 35 N. W. (2d) 408 or in Bayside v. Milwaukee, 267 Wis. 448, 66 N. W. (2d) 129. Those cases concerned situations in which an entirely new municipality was created from a portion of an old one, and there was no question but that sec. 66.03 was applicable, because it was invoked by specific statutes governing those situations.

Appellant, further arguing that sec. 66.03, Stats., could not have been intended to apply to every case where the territory of one municipality is transferred to that of another municipality, points out that in the event of an annexation to a village of a portion of a town there is no division of assets of the school district. In such a situation it is provided by statute that there shall be no change in the boundaries of a school district. A school district is a distinct and separate municipal entity. If there is no change in its boundaries, no territory of the school district has been transferred, but it remains the same, and sec. 66.03, providing for a division of assets and liabilities “when territory is transferred . . . from one municipality to another” has no bearing upon the situation. There has been no division of the territory of the school district. However, as appellant points out, sec. 66.03 does apply when an annexation is made from a town to a city, because in that event the boundaries of the school districts involved are changed. It is noted that in spite of the fact that there is no specific statute invoking sec. 66.03 in such an event, and contrary to its contention that there must be such a specific statute in order that sec. 66.03 may be applied, appellant concedes that sec. 66.03 does apply to school districts where a portion of a town is annexed to. a city.

In State ex rel. Thompson v. Beloit City School Dist. 215 Wis. 409, 417, 253 N. W. 598, Mr. Chief Justice Rosen- *227 berry, referring to Town of Milwaukee v. City of Milwaukee, 12 Wis. *93, pointed out that:

“. . . there is a limitation upon the power of the legislature to abolish municipal corporations and to annex the property of the dissolved corporation to another municipal corporation without' provision for a fair and equitable distribution of its property and liabilities. ... It was there held that while such a corporation is subject to control, ■ change, and even destruction, so far as its public function is concerned, it held its property as does any individual, and that these property rights must be fairly and equitably provided for in whatever changes are made in its franchises; that in default of this the corporation retains such entity, as is essential to vindicate these property rights. In response to this decision a section was added to the statutes intended to provide a scheme to equitably distribute and to adjust property rights and debts in such a situation.”

In the case of Town of Milwaukee v. City. of Milwaukee, supra, it was held that no division of property was required under common law, and the court in that case said (pp. *110, *111) :

“. . . still the inhabitants of the city, by procuring it to be incorporated as such, without any provision as to the land, and by an acquiescence of six years and upwards, must be presumed to have released their interest in it, and to have consented that it remain the sole property of the town as it was after such division. ... By incorporating the city, without dividing the land, it became the sole property of the town; and, if 'such effect was inequitable, it was not in the power of the legislature, without the; consent of the town, afterwards to remedy the evil.”

If, then, as stated in the Thompson Case, the legislature “in response to that decision” enacted sec. 944, Stats. Í898, in an effort to overcome possible inequities such as referred to in the Town of Milwaukee Case, supra, and to provide a fair and equitable distribution in such situations, the legisla *228 ture must have contemplated from the beginning circumstances involving the annexation of a portion of a municipality to an already existing municipality. In that respect, the situation in the instant case is the same as it was in that early case which provoked or led to the act of 1898.

In 1921, sec. 944, Stats. 1898, was repealed, and, by sec. 4 of Bill No. 22, S., ch. 396, Laws of 1921, sec. 66.03 was created in substantially its present form. The purpose of the 1921 enactment is clearly stated in the revisor’s note as follows :

“Uniform system is here substituted for the numerous repetitions of detail now in the statutes. The same principle of adjustment is provided in all cases by the various sections here consolidated, and the present system, provides one . . . procedure for all cases, in language sufficiently general to cover all cases.” See Wis. Anno. (1930), p. 421.

The plain language of the statute directs that “when territory is transferred, in any manner provided by law, from one municipality to another, there shall be assigned to such other municipality, etc.” Furthermore, sec. 66.03 (9), Stats., expressly refers to the detachment from a municipality “by creation of a new municipality or otherwise”

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.W.2d 424, 272 Wis. 215, 1956 Wisc. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-greenfield-v-village-of-west-milwaukee-wis-1956.