12 Wis. 616 | Wis. | 1860
By the Court,
This complaint was filed by the . respondent on Ms own behalf, and on behalf of other land owners, to restrain the city of Kenosha from collecting a special tax of $18,625, levied by the city upon the real estate therein situated, for the purpose of paying a debt originally contracted by the stock subscription of the city to the Kenosha & Beloit R. R. Co. This subscription was made under and by authority of section 8 of an act to amend the charter of the city of Kenosha, and of section 44 of the charter, and also by virtue of an ordinance of the common council, submitting the question to the legal voters, whether a tax “ of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars should be levied and collected, for the promotion of the common interest of the city, in aid of the Kenosha & Beloit Railroad,” &c., and authorizing the mayor to subscribe, in the name of the city, that amount, to the capital stock of the company, provided a majority of the legal voters was in favor of such tax.
The counsel for the respondent contends that section 8 of the act to amend the charter of the city (which is above referred to,) is unconstitutional, and as a necessary consequence, that the action of the .common council under that section, was unauthorized and void. This section, he insists, is in conflict with section 8, art. 21 of the constitution, and such is our opinion. That provision of the constitution reads as follows : “It shall be the duty of the legislature, and they are hereby empowered, to provide for the organization of cities and incorporated villages, and to restrict their power oj taxation, assessment, harrowing money, contracting debts, and loaning their credit, so as to prevent abuses in assessments and taxation, and in contracting debts, by such municipal corporations.” Section 8 of the act amending the charter reads: “ The city council shall have power to levy and collect special taxes for any purpose (aside from what may be specially provided for in the city charter), which may be considered essential to promote or secure the common interest of the city, or may borrow on the corporate credit of the city, for such purposes, any sum of money, for any term of time, at any rate of interest not exceeding ten per centum, and payable at any place that may be deemed expedient.
Here, it will be seen, is an unlimited grant of power to the common council of the city to levy and collect special taxeSj or borrow money on the credit of the city, for any purpose whatever which may be considered essential to promote the common interest of the city. The common council have authority to contract debts to any amount, impose taxes for any and all conceivable objects and purposes; .embark the finances and credit of the city in any enterprise which, in the judgment of the common council, will contribute to the wealth, prosperity or trade of the city, or promote the social and material condition of its citizens. There is no limitation, no restriction imposed by the legislature upon the power of the corporation to run in debt or burthen the people with taxes. If the common council deem it expedient, and a majority of the voters of the city will sanction the policy, the city, in its corporate capacity, may carry on works of internal improvement, at home or abroad, so that those works are calculated to stimulate the trade and increase the business of the city. No matter how ruinous and oppressive these special taxes might be to the owners of real estate, or to the minority of the tax payers, yet we do not see why, under this section of the charter, the common council and a majority of the qualified voters, might not compel the city to become a stockholder in a line of steamboats, to run up and down the lakes fór transportation of freight and passengers ; subscribe for stock' in railroads; improve harbors; open roads and build bridges within or without the city limits; erect and operate flouring mills; keep hotels; or in short,
Nor do we consider it a sufficient answer to this objection, to say that the legislature properly restricted the power of the corporation to levy taxes and contract debts, when they provided that no tax should be levied, or money borrowed,
To prevent all misapprehension, however, we will say that we do not suppose an act of the legislature creating a municipal corporation, but imposing no restriction upon the power of such corporation to levy taxes and borrow money, would necessarily be void for that reason. In such a case, the city authorities would only have power to levy taxes and
We have endeavored to show that the unlimited grant of power of taxation and contracting debts, attempted to be conferred upon the common council by section 8 of the act amending the charter of the city of Kenosha, was in conflict with section 3, article 11, of the constitution, and must fall As a necessary result, the act of the common council, under that section, in creating the debt for the payment of which the tax mentioned in the complaint was levied, cannot be sustained. Whether this would render the scrip of the city, issued in pursuance of that action of the common council, void, or not, we will not attempt to determine in this proceeding. It is sufficient here to state that we consider the tax mentioned in the complaint unauthorized, and that, within the decisions of this court in the cases of Walker vs. Carpenter (unreported), and Dean vs. The City of Madison, 9 Wis., 402, the respondent has the right to restrain the city authorities from collecting the same.
The order of the circuit court, refusing to dissolve the injunction herein granted, is affirmed.