56 Wis. 263 | Wis. | 1882
This action is brought to determine the question of the right of an elector of the village of West Depere to vote at a town meeting in the town of Depere for town officers. The complaint shows that said village was originally a part of said town. For the purposes of this appeal we shall take it for granted that by the proceedings set out in the complaint the original village of West Depere, which was organized under a special act of the legislature passed in 1857, was duly incorporated as a village under the provisions of sec. 852, R. S. 1878. Treating the village of
It is olear, we think, that secs. 909, 910 and 911, as amended by ch. 108, Laws of 1881, prohibited the town within whose limits the territory comprising the village may have been, from levying a tax upon the village property for the purpose of improving the streets therein. The village is liable for damages occasioned by any defect in its streets, the same as the town for the defects of highways within its limits, and the town is expressly exempted from liability for the defects in village streets. The only right retained by the town, or duty imposed on it, is to build the bridges within the village, and for the purpose of building such bridges it may have the right to raise a tax upon all the property of the town and village; but this fact does not seem to be sufficient to uphold the claim of the elector of the village to vote for the officers .of the town. The villages organized under said ch. 40 are in many places in.the statutes recognized as municipalities, separate and independent of the town in which they are situated. When highways are to be laid out on the line of such village and the adjoining town, the same proceedings are to be taken as if the same were laid out on the line of two adjoining towns. Sec. 1274, R. S. High schools may be established therein the same as in towns. Sec. 490, R. S. General elections for state and county officers must be held in such villages. Secs. 13,14,19, R. S. These sections were amended by the revised statutes of 1878, to correspond with the other provisions of law authorizing the incorporation of villages, and at the last election a constitutional amendment was adopted authorizing the legislature to require the registration of electors in villages as well as cities.
It is true that in sec. 26, R. S. 1878, the following language' is used: “The mayor of every city, and the president of every village, except such cities and villages as are joined to
Eor the purposes of the determination of the rights of the residents of villages organized under ch. 40, E. S. 1878, it may be admitted that villages organized under ch. 70, E. S. 1858, before the enactment of the revised statutes of 1878, retained the right to vote at town elections. Under ch. 70, E. S. 1858, no village officers were elected except the president and trustees, and an assessor, and the board were authorized to elect a clerk, treasurer, and marshal. See secs. 17, 19, ch. 70, E. S. 1858. The village remained a part of the town for highway purposes, and the town was expressly authorized to levy highway taxes on the property of the village, and include the village in one or more road districts. See sec. -70 of said chapter. There was no provision in that chapter making the village liable for damages occasioned by the defects or want of repair of its streets. Sec. 17 of said ch. 70, in defining the qualification of an elector at a village election, says: “ Every person residing therein [that is, in the village], qualified to vote for town officers in the town in which such village, or any part thereof, is situated, may vote for all the officers to be chosen.” Sec. 873, ch. 40, E. S. 1S78, provides that “ every qualified elector, then actually residing in such village, may vote at any election.” His qualification to vote does not depend on being qualified to vote for town officers in the town in which such village is situated, as .was required by ch. 70, E. S. 1858. The act of 1858 did not even declare that the village incorporated under it should be a municipal corporation, with the ordinary powers thereof,, but was content with saying it should be
The foregoing statement shows some of the changes made by the revised statutes of 1878 in respect to the powers of villages, showing that under the present statute they are greatly enlarged, and that nearly all the reasons for giving the electors of villages the power to vote at the town meetings have been removed. There are many provisions in the revised statutes of 1878 which strengthen the argument that villages organized under ch. 40, R. S. 1878, are separate and distinct municipal corporations,— as much so as the town from whose territory the village is formed. Sec. 928, R. S. 1878, provides that “any city, village, or town may be annexed to another city, village, or town contiguous, by ordinance passed by a two-thirds vote of all the aldermen, trustees, or supervisors elect of each corporation desiring annexation, ratified by an election, as herein provided.” Ch. 75, Laws of 1881, which amends sec. 886 of ch. 40, provides, among other things, that when the police justice of the village is sick or absent or incapacitated, any justice of the peace of the village or adjoining town in the county in which such village is situated shall have jurisdiction, and may act instead of the village police justice. No distinction is made in favor of the justice of the town out of whose territory the village was formed. That town is as clearly treated as an adjoining town as any other town in the county which may adjoin the village.
Many other provisions might be cited tending to show that
This provision as to the assessment of village property by the town assessor and the collection of the taxes by the town
It is undoubtedly true that ch. 40 is not perfect in all the details which should fix the relations of the village and town to each other, and it would be more satisfactory if the rights and powers of the town and village respectively as to the support of the poor, the power of the town to levy and collect taxes upon the village property for the building of bridges within the village, and other matters relating to taxation, were more definitely fixed and determined by the legislature. But we do not think the act is so imperfect as to render it void for uncertainty or obnoxious to any constitutional inhibition.
Having determined that an elector of a village incorporated under ch. 40, E. S. 1878, is not entitled to vote at the town meeting in the town from which it was taken, it is unnecessary to discuss at length the constitutionality of the law under which the village was organized. We think, however, that by holding as we do that the village is a separate and independent municipality, and that the village elector is not an elector of the town, nearly all the objections made against the constitutionality of the law by the learned counsel for the respondent are obviated. We are unable to see how the law violates the section of the constitution which requires that “ the legislature shall establish but one system of town and county government, which shall be as nearly uniform as practicable.” Art. IY, sec. 23. The law in regard to the formation of villages applies to every town in the state. After a village is formed out of the territory of a town, ■what remains of the town has all the powers of any other'
By the Court.— The order of the circuit court is affirmed.