214 Wis. 35 | Wis. | 1934
The plaintiff, city of Wauwatosa, was created a city by letters patent issued May 27, 1897, under the general charter laws of the state. For years the city has maintained a high school under the supervision of its board of education. This high school was established and is maintained under sec. 925 — 113, Stats. 1898, and sections following, which provide for a city school system and a board of education for the city, and authorize the board of education to establish high schools. The defendant Union Free High School District was organized in January, 1924, with the advice and consent of the state superintendent of schools. It comprises the territory included within the town and city of Wauwatosa. The defendant district has never established or maintained a high school, and pupils within the Union District have been compelled to attend other high schools. In general, students residing in the city of Wauwatosa have
The contention of plaintiff is that by virtue of the statutory provisions applicable to this situation, the Union Free High School District must pay tuition to plaintiff for all students attending plaintiff’s high school who reside within the Union District, whether they reside in the city of Wauwatosa or within the town of Wauwatosa. The section of the statutes relied upon by plaintiff is sec. 40.52 (4m), Wis. Stats. 1923 and 1925, which reads as follows:
“Whenever in any year, including the current year, no high school is maintained in any union free high school district, and high school pupils residing in such district attend or have attended a high school in some other district, the electors or board of such union free high school district shall pay the tuition of such pupils in such other high school, and for such purpose, if no funds are immediately available, shall levy a sufficient tax to cover such tuition.”
It is the contention of the defendant that the section in question is intended to apply only where the territory comprising a union free high school district is entirely without any high school. Emphasis is placed upon the word “in” where it occurs in the statute, — “Whenever in any year, including the current year, no high school is maintained in any union free high school district.” It is insisted.that the statute means literally what it says, and that to sustain the position of the plaintiff means to read into the statute the word “by” in place of the word “in.”
Defendant’s position cannot successfully be maintained. Plaintiff and defendant are completely separate municipal corporations, although the territory, of one overlaps that of the other. Under the statutes a high school for the free instruction of students living in a joint school district exists in .that district only if it is maintained b,y the union district itself and is available as a free high school to all residents of
It is the contention of defendant that the right of plaintiff to charge tuition is governed by sec. 40.53 (2) and subsequent sections, which authorize a tuition fee of not to exceed two dollars per week to be charged to pupils prepared to enter a free high school maintained by any free high school district, who may reside in any town or incorporated village “but not within any free high school district.” This section has no application since all students, the tuition of whom is involved in this case, reside in a free high school district.
Sec. 40.47 (7), Stats. 1923 and 1925, provides as follows:
“If an existing free high school district is included in the tract proposed for a union free high school district the establishment of the union free high school district, as provided in this section and of a union free high school as herein provided, shall annul the organization of any such existing free high school district.”
This section was in effect at the time the Union Free High School District was established. It has no application to the present case for the reason that the contingency named by the statute as effective to annul the organization of the plaintiff district has never happened. The defendant has never provided a union free high school. The amendment of the law in 1927 removed this as a condition, and provided that the establishment of the new district would annul any existing school districts within the territory covered, and that the property and liabilities in the old district would become those of the new. While the first of these sections has no operation
Defendant attacks the constitutionality of sec. 40.52 (4m), if construed as plaintiff contends. It is asserted that this section would then be repugnant to the provisions of sec. 3, art. X, of the Wisconsin Constitution, which reads as follows :
“The legislature shall provide by law for the establishment of district schools, which shall be as nearly uniform as practicable ; and such schools shall be free and without charge for tuition to all children between the ages of four and twenty years; and no sectarian instruction shall be allowed therein.”
We regard this claim to be without merit. It has always been held that the provisions of this section are not violated by compelling pupils of one district to pay tuition to entitle them to attend school in another district. Maxcy v. Oshkosh, 144 Wis. 238. 128 N. W. 899. 1138; State ex rel.
Defendant contends that the affirmance of the judgment in this case would constitute double taxation, and that the section under examination, sec. 40.52 (4m), construed as contended for by the plaintiff, accomplishes the following iniquities: (1) double taxation upon property in the district situated in plaintiff city; (2) a tax upon the entire district for tuition, though the portion in said district situated in the town of Wauwatosa may be denied the attendance by its pupils at the free high school of the plaintiff. It is contended
Defendant further contends that the judgment violates sec. 270.57, Stats., which limits the relief granted to the plaintiff, if there be no answer, to that which he shall have demanded in his complaint. This is without merit. There was an answer interposed, and assuming that the judgment gives more relief than the complaint demands, the allegations and proof warrant the judgment and the statute authorizes such relief where an answer is interposed.
The provision in the judgment permitting plaintiff to offset against any tax levied by the defendant district the amount due to it for tuition, is considered not to be erroneous. It simply makes unnecessary the useless formality otherwise involved in the collection of tuition by the city from the union school district, and the subsequent payment by the city in the form of union school district taxes the amount thus
Objection is made to permitting plaintiff to recover interest from the 4th day of July, 1924, it being contended that if interest may be recovered it could only be from the date of the commencement of the action, citing Whereatt v. Ellis, 68 Wis. 61, 30 N. W. 520, 31 N. W. 762. That case, however, related to an unliquidated claim. Here the refusal of the defendant district resulted in the denial of a liquidated claim, and the plaintiff was entitled to interest as awarded. State v. Milwaukee, 158 Wis. 564, 149 N. W. 579.
Defendant further objects that the judgment is erroneous in that it directs a tax levy and that a court has no power to levy a tax without legislative authority. It is contended that in this state sec. 66.09 (2) provides the complete machinery to take care of judgment creditors of municipal units. This section provides:
“In the case of school districts or community centres, transcript and affidavit shall be filed with the clerk of the town, village or city in which the district or any part of it lies, and-levy shall be made against the taxable property of the district or centre.”
The judgment reads in part as follows: “It is further adjudged that a tax be levied by the Union Free High School District of the town and city of Wauwatosa for the collection of such sum.” It will be noticed that the judgment simply follows the statute and judicially declares the duty which the statute imposes. The mere adjudication that it was the duty of the district to levy a tax does not constitute the levy of the tax by the court. The embodying of such a provision in the judgment was not error, although it might have been superfluous. Certainly it was not prejudicial to the rights of the defendant.
It appears that in 1925 plaintiff billed the town of Wauwa-tosa for $9,19.0, for tuition of students residing in that town and attending plaintiff’s high school from January to June,
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.