209 Wis. 452 | Wis. | 1932
This action is doubtless the last litigation that will result from-a certain highway, tax levied by the supervisors of Sheboygan county in 1926. Two different appeals involving questions growing out of said tax levy have been before this court. In the first action, State ex rel. Sheboygan v. Sheboygan County, 194 Wis. 456, 216 N. W. 144, the city sought by certiorari to question the validity of the tax. It was held that the city had no such interest in the tax as would permit it to maintain that action. In the second action, State ex rel. Sheboygan County v. Telgener, 199 Wis. 523, 227 N. W. 35, the county sought to compel the city treasurer by mandarmis to pay over to Sheboygan county the county taxes collected by him. It was held, under the peculiar circumstances shown to exist, that mandamus was a proper remedy and that the county had no other adequate and efficient remedy.
This action is brought to recover the sum of $4,470.15 which the city of Sheboygan received from its designated depositories, as interest on the taxes belonging to the county, during the time that its treasurer, pursuant to a resolution of its common council, wrongfully withheld them from the county. It is undisputed that the amount claimed correctly represents the amount of interest received by the city during two years and two hundred sixty-three days.
The action is for money had and received. While the action is one at law, the right to recover is equitable in its nature, and it can be sustained only if the defendant has received money which in equity and good conscience it ought to pay to the plaintiff. Steuerwald v. Richter, 158 Wis. 597, 149 N. W. 692, and numerous cases cited therein. The rule applicable to such actions is stated in 41 Corp. Jur. p. 33 to be as follows:
“The question, in an action for money had and received,, is to which party does the money, in equity, justice, and law*454 belong? All the plaintiff need show is that defendant holds money which in equity and good conscience belongs to him, but if he fails to show such superior right, that is, that defendant does hold money which so belongs to plaintiff, he cannot recover.”
Although the facts in this action are largely undisputed the trial court held substantially as follows:
(1) That this action is not one for money had and received but is merely an action for interest, brought by the county against- the city (both parties being governmental subdivisions of the state), and that, in the absence of a statute specifically authorizing the recovery of interest, such an action will not lie. Schlesinger v. State, 195 Wis. 366, 218 N. W. 440.
(2) That if the county of Sheboygan had intended to claim the interest in question it could have and should have litigated that question in the mandamus action, and consequently this action is barred because of the former adjudication and judgment.
(3) That this action for money had and received cannot lie because the evidence does not satisfy the court that the interest received by the city from its depositories was actually used for legitimate municipal purposes. State v. Milwaukee, 145 Wis. 131, 129 N. W. 1101.
In the view we take of this action, it was clearly not one for the recovery of interest, as the latter term is ordinarily understood. The allegations of the complaint and the nature of the proofs unquestionably show that the action was one to recover money which the city had received and which in equity and good conscience it ought to pay to the county. Contemporaneously with the collection of the county taxes the city council passed a resolution directing the city treasurer not to pay such funds over to the county. The other city officers refused to sign the orders which were necessary in withdrawing funds from the city depositories. Due to the ill-advised passage of the resolution and the refusal of the city officers to permit the funds to be withdrawn, the
The conclusion of the trial court that this action is barred by the adjudication in the mandamus action, State ex rel. Sheboygan County v. Telgener, supra, is, in our opinion, unjustified. The former action was a mandamtts action brought against the city treasurer to compel him, as the tax-collecting agent of the county, to turn over to it the money collected by him. Appleton v. Outagamie County, 197 Wis. 4, 220 N. W. 393; State ex rel. Sheboygan County v. Telgener, supra. True, the mayor, comptroller, and city clerk were also made party defendants in that action, but obviously only for the reason that a custom existed in the city of Sheboygan which did not permit the withdrawal of money from the city depositories unless its orders were signed or countersigned by the mayor, the comptroller, and the city clerk. In the Telgener Case it was held that the city had no interest in the fund and was not properly its custodian; that the city was wholly without authority to direct the city treasurer to disregard his statutory duties, and that the action of its council in so doing was void and of no legal effect; that it was the clear duty of the city treasurer and all parties having the fund under control to turn it over to the county treasurer. Under the holding in that case, the city treasurer was in reality the only necessary party defendant, and that action was to all actual intents and purposes one against the city treasurer and not against the city of Sheboygan. The city had no right to possess or control the county’s tax funds or to coerce its treasurer, by means of a resolution passed by its council, to withhold payment of the county taxes collected by him or to prevent him from performing his statutory duty to pay over to the county the taxes belonging to
As to the rules governing the efficacy of judgments in subsequent litigation between the same parties or their privies upon the same cause of action or upon different causes of action, see Grunert v. Spalding, 104 Wis. 193, 214, 80 N. W. 589; Bentson v. Brown, 191 Wis. 460, 462, 211 N. W. 132.
The conclusion of the trial court, that this action cannot lie because the evidence did not satisfactorily show that the interest credited to the city by its depositories was used for legitimate municipal purposes, is, in our opinion, unwarranted. ’ It is difficult to perceive what better proof could
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, with directions to enter judgment for the plaintiff for the amount claimed.