Village of Brown Deer v. City of Milwaukee

79 N.W.2d 340, 274 Wis. 50, 1956 Wisc. LEXIS 385
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 79 N.W.2d 340 (Village of Brown Deer v. City of 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
Village of Brown Deer v. City of Milwaukee, 79 N.W.2d 340, 274 Wis. 50, 1956 Wisc. LEXIS 385 (Wis. 1956).

Opinion

Wingert, J.

On the principal questions presented, we conclude that the trial court was right in overruling Milwaukee’s demurrers to the amended complaint of Brown Deer and the cross complaint of Sewell, but erred in sustaining Milwaukee’s demurrer to the cross complaint of the high-school district and Whitten and erred in denying permission to Milwaukee to plead over to certain of the causes of action stated in Brown Deer’s amended complaint.

*58 Since the case is here on demurrers, all facts set forth in the amended complaint and cross complaints are taken as true.

1. The first question is whether Brown Deer’s Corrigan, Tripoli, Johnson, and Brown Deer Park annexations were rendered ineffectual by the ordinances for the consolidation of Granville and Milwaukee, which ordinances were duly approved in the referendum required by statute. We hold that the annexations were not so nullified.

It is the established law of this state that in case of conflict between competing annexations, or between an annexation and a proceeding for the incorporation of a city or village, the proceeding first instituted has precedence, and the later one must yield. In re Incorporation of Village of St. Francis, 208 Wis. 431, 436, 243 N. W. 315; Greenfield v. Milwaukee, 259 Wis. 77, 79, 47 N. W. (2d) 292. Such a proceeding is “instituted” when the first procedural step required by the governing statute is taken. In the case of an annexation under sec. 62.07, Stats., the first procedural step is the posting of the notice, required by sub. (1) (a), that an annexation petition is to be circulated. Greenfield v. Milwaukee, 259 Wis. 77, 83, 47 N. W. (2d) 292.

The statutory notices of circulation of the annexation petitions for the Corrigan, Tripoli, Johnson, and Brown Deer Park annexations were respectively posted October 4, 1955, January 23, 1956, October 5, 1955, and February 9, 1956; hence those proceedings were instituted on and claimed priority from those dates.

The first procedural step required by statute for consolidation under sec. 66.02, Stats., is the adoption of a consolidation ordinance. Milwaukee’s consolidation ordinance was adopted March 12, 1956, and that of Granville on March 14, 1956. Neither a letter from the town board of Granville to Milwaukee dated January 20, 1956, asking when a committee would be appointed to meet with the town board for the pur *59 pose of negotiating a consolidation agreement, nor a resolution adopted by the city’s common council on January 24th directing the committee on judiciary legislation to negotiate with the town for a consolidation agreement and upon completion thereof to introduce an ordinance to effect such consolidation, was a step required by statute and neither amounted to the institution of consolidation proceedings within the priority rule of the cases above cited. Hence the date of institution of the proceedings for the Granville-Milwaukee consolidation, for priority purposes, was March 12, 1956.

It is apparent from the foregoing chronology that under the established rule of priority the four Brown Deer annexations have precedence over the consolidation and are not disturbed thereby, unless consolidations are not governed by the same principles of priority that apply to annexations and incorporations. Milwaukee contends that a consolidation has a preferred status in that respect, and when in conflict with annexations is not subject to the rule of priority applicable to the latter. Legislative intent to accord a superior standing to consolidation is asserted on the basis of various considerations.

The statutory authority for consolidation is found in a single section of the statutes, sec. 66.02, Stats., which is as follows:

“Any town, village, or city may be consolidated with a contiguous town, village, or city, by ordinance, passed by a two-thirds vote of all the members of each board or council, fixing the terms of the consolidation and ratified by the electors at a referendum hold in each municipality. The ballots shall bear the words, ‘for consolidation,’ and ‘against consolidation,’ and if a majority of the votes cast thereon in each municipality shall be for consolidation, the ordinances shall then be in effect and shall have the force of a contract. The ordinance and the result of the referendum shall be certified to the clerk of the consolidated corporation and by him recorded and certified as provided in section 61.11 if a *60 village; or subsection (6) of section 62.06 if a city; to the county clerk, if a town and the certification shall be preserved as provided in subsection (6) of section 60.05, section 61.11, and subsection (6) of section 62.06, respectively. Consolidation shall not affect the pre-existing rights or liabilities of any municipality and actions thereon may be commenced or completed as though no consolidation had been effected.”

The authority for annexations is conferred by sec. 62.07, Stats, (made applicable to villages by sec. 61.185), of which the provisions of greatest present importance are the following:

“(1) Annexation procedure. Territory adjacent to any city may be annexed to such city in the manner following:
“(a) A petition therefor shall be presented to the council 1. signed by a majority of the electors in such adjacent territory and by the owners of one half of the real estate within the limits of the territory proposed to be annexed, or 2. if no electors reside in the said adjacent territory signed by the owners of one half of taxable property therein according to the last tax roll, or 3. by a majority of the electors and the owners of one half of the real estate in assessed value; provided, that no petition for annexation shall be valid unless at least ten days and not more than twenty days before any such petition is caused to be circulated, a notice shall be posted in at least eight public places in the municipality in which the adjacent territory is located, and a copy of such notice published in a newspaper of general circulation within the county in which said adjacent territory is located, at least ten days prior to the time when such petition is caused to be circulated, such notice to set forth that an annexation petition is to be circulated, and including an accurate description of the territory involved.
“(b) An ordinance annexing such territory to the ward or wards named therein shall be introduced at a regular or special meeting of the council after the filing of the petition, be published once each week for four successive weeks in' the official paper and thereafter be adopted at a regular or special meeting by two thirds of all the members of the council.
*61 “(3) Time of taking-effect. The ordinance authorized by sub. (1) (b), and the final ordinance of acceptance authorized by sub. (2) (b), shall not operate to attach or detach the territory until ninety days after the passage thereof, or in case of referendum, ninety days after its approval, . . .

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.W.2d 340, 274 Wis. 50, 1956 Wisc. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-brown-deer-v-city-of-milwaukee-wis-1956.