L.P. VOIGT, Secretary, Department of Natural Resources *Page 432
You have requested my opinion concerning the authority of a town sanitary district formed under chapter 60 of the statutes. Specifically, you inquire whether such district is limited in its authority pursuant to and by the terms of the petition and notice of hearing for its creation or whether it is limited only by the town board order creating such district.
The answer to your question is that the town board order creating the town sanitary district is the only instrument which determines the limits of the district's authority within the purview of ch. 60, Stats. In answering your question, I have considered the fact that, in the case of one such district, a petition and notice of hearing requesting the formation of a town sanitary district for a single purpose resulted in the issuance of a town board order creating a district "for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of secs.
It is necessary to understand that the creation of a town sanitary district pursuant to the provisions of ch. 60, Stats., is a legislative function delegated to the town board. FortHoward Paper Co. v. Fox River Heights S. Dist. (1947),
"Upon the hearing, if it shall appear to the town board after consideration of all objections, that the petition is signed by the requisite owners of real estate * * *, and that the proposed work is necessary, and that the public health, comfort, convenience, necessity or public welfare will be promoted by the establishment of such district, and the property to be included in the district will be benefited by the establishment thereof, the town board, by formal order, shall declare its findings and shall establish the boundaries and shall declare the district organized and give it a corporate name by which in all proceedings it shall thereafter be known, and thereupon the district shall be a body corporate with the powers of a municipal corporation for the purposes of carrying out the provisions ofsections
In Fort Howard Paper Co. v. Town Board (1954),
As pointed out in the Fort Howard Paper Co. v. Town Board case, (
Since the district was organized without any limitation on its authority in the town board order, it may exercise all those powers contained in the pertinent sections of ch. 60, Stats. An administrative agency may neither enlarge nor limit its own power. Clintonville Transfer Line v. Public Service Comm. (1945),
In Fort Howard Paper Co. v. Ashwaubenon (1960),
"Sanitary districts serve a vital public function. Facilities for the supply of water, for drainage and the disposal of sewage, garbage, and refuse, etc, promote and safeguard public health and comfort. Where population is concentrated such facilities and services are essential to the welfare of the public, and the town sanitary-district laws are designed to provide the people in such an area with the means to fulfil [fulfill] those needs. As such population centers expand and the surrounding areas change in character from rural to urban, the need for sanitary-district facilities correspondingly expands."
In carrying out its assigned duties, the district commissioners shall determine what functions are "necessary" (absent an order issued by the Department of Natural Resources to the district pursuant to sec. 144.025, Stats.) for the promotion of the public health, etc. Such a determination is a legislative determination assigned to the commissioners when so authorized by the town board order. In re City of Beloit (1968),
It is my conclusion that the sanitary district you have described would have authority to engage in any activity authorized by ch. 60, Stats., when in its sole discretion any such activity was necessary to promote the public health, comfort, convenience or public welfare of the district. It is the order of the town board, in conjunction with the provisions of ch. 60, Stats., that determine the authority of any town sanitary district.
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