174 Wis. 412 | Wis. | 1921
Sec. 1130, Stats., among other things, provides as follows:
“The county treasurer shall, on the fourth Monday of April in each year, make out a statement of all lands upon*415 which the taxes have been returned as delinquent and which then remain unpaid, . . . containing a brief description thereof, with an accompanying notice stating that so much of each tract or parcel of land described in said statement as may be necessary therefor will, on the second Tuesday in June next thereafter, and the next succeeding days, be sold by him at public auction at some public place, naming the same, at the seat of justice of the county, for the payment of taxes, interest and charges thereon; . . and cause such statement and notice to be published in a. newspaper printed in his county . . . once in each week for four successive weeks prior to said second Tuesday in June; and such treas'urer shall also, at least four weeks previous to said day, cause to be posted up copies of said statement and notice in at least four, public places in such county, one of which copies shall be posted up in some conspicuous place in his office;
Sec. 1132, Stats., provides:
“Every printer who shall publish such statement and notice shall, immediately after the last publication thereof, transmit to the treasurer of the proper county an affidavit of such publication made by some person to whom the fact of publication shall be known; . . . and the county treasurer shall also make or cause to be made an affidavit or affidavits of the posting of such statement and notice as above required, which affidavits, together with the affidavit of publication, shall be carefully preserved by him and deposited as hereinafter specified.”
The foregoing are general statutes, applicable to all counties in the state.
In the year 1913 the legislature enacted sec. 1131a, which provides as follows:
“Section 1131a. In all counties containing a city of the first class the statement and description, provided for in section 1130 of the statutes, of lands upon which taxes have been returned as delinquent, shall not be published as provided in sections 1130 and 1131 of the statutes, but it shall be sufficient in such counties to publish a notice, once in each week for four successive weeks, in three daily newspapers*416 published in the English, German and Polish language stating that all tracts or parcels of land upon which the taxes remain unpaid will be sold at a time and place specified in such notice, which time and place shall be the same as is provided in section 1130 of the statutes.”
Sec. 1131a relates solely to the publication of the notice as therein provided. Nothing is provided in said section with respect to the posting of the notice, and it also appears that while sec. 1130 expressly provides for a publication of the statement and notice referred to in said section, sec. 1131a attempts to amend said sec. 1130 by requiring a publication once in each week for four successive weeks in three daily papers published in the English, German, and Polish language.
There is no suggestion in sec. 1131a which dispenses with the posting of the notice as is provided for in sec. 1130.
The county treasurer did not post the notice and statement required by sec. 1130, Stats.
The question therefore arises whether sec. 1131a contemplates that the posting of the statement and notice shall be dispensed with. Now, in view of the fact that sec. 1130 provides both for a publication of the notice and statement therein referred to, and also for the posting of. the statement and notice referred to therein, and that sec. 1131a was enacted as an additional section to the Statutes, and simply provides for a change in the publication of the notice, but does not in any way amend sec. 1130 with respect to the posting of the statement and notice therein required, a failure to post such notice and such statement constitutes a fatal omission on the part of the county treasurer. If it was contemplated by sec. 1130 that a publication in a newspaper would comply with all of the requirements of the statute, it would have been superfluous to say anything at all with respect to the posting of the statement and notice. The publication and posting are treated as totally separate and distinct matters by the statute. They are separate and dis
We are therefore of the opinion that in order to comply with sec. 1130, Stats., the notice and statement must be published and the notice and statement required in said section posted.
It is said in the case of Jarvis v. Silliman, 21 Wis. 599, 601:
“If a copy of the notice was not posted up in the treasurer’s office, does the failure to comply with the law in that respect render the deed invalid? The giving notice of a tax sale in the time and manner prescribed by law is generally a prerequisite to the validity of a tax title. The officer derives his power of sale in part from the notice, and in this respect his sale differs from the sale of land by a sheriff on execution. Any neglect of the officer, selling land for the nonpayment of taxes, which deprives the owner and bidders of the full information the law intended to give them, renders the sale invalid. Blackwell, Tax Titles, 253, 254.”
Furthermore, the word “post” as used in sec. 1130 has a meaning distinct from what is implied by the term “publication.” It means to “attach to a post, a wall, or other place of affixing public notices.” Webster, Internat. Diet. Also, “to bring to the notice or attention of the public by affixing to a post, or putting up in some public place.” Standard Dict. See, also, Allen v. Allen, 114 Wis. 615, 623, 91 N. W. 218.
The second point made by plaintiff’s counsel refers to there being no proof of the posting of the notice or statement of the tax sale as required by sec. 1130.
It appearing from the testimony that there was, as a matter of fact, no posting of the notice or of the statement as required by sec. 1130, there was therefore no proof by affidavit of such posting. And not only is it necessary to
It is said in Hilgers v. Quinney, 51 Wis. 62, 71, 8 N. W. 17, where the affidavit merely recited that the notice and statement were posted in the office of the county treasurer:
“This is a clear noncompliance with the statute, too apparent and substantial to require further consideration than mere mention. These defects are fatal to the validity of the tax deed.” '
Sec. 1131a, it is contended by the plaintiff, is unconstitutional as violating the provisions of sec. 23, art. IV, of the constitution of Wisconsin, which reads as follows:
“The legislature shall establish but one system of town and county government, which shall be as nearly uniform as practicable.” ' •
And of sec. 31, art. IV, which provides:
“The legislature is prohibited from enacting any special or private laws in the following cases: . . . 6th. For assessment or collection of taxes or for. extending the time for the collection thereof.”
There is only one county in Wisconsin which comes under the provisions of sec. 1131a, and that is Milwaukee county.
Legislation of the character of sec. 1131a has been frequently attacked on constitutional grounds by the contention that it violates the provisions of the constitution above set forth.
This court, in an early case, in State ex rel. Walsh v.
In State ex rel. Merrimac v. Hazelwood, 158 Wis. 405, 149 N. W. 141, which involved the constitutionality of ch. 586, Laws 1913, providing for the construction of a certain bridge and requiring two counties to levy and collect certain fixed amounts of taxes for that purpose, it was held:
“The attempt to provide for the construction of this bridge in an entirely different way from that provided in the general system must be held to violate the requirement of uniformity, inasmuch as it does not appear that it is impracticable to build the same under the general system.”
It is contended by the defendant that it is impracticable for the county treasurer of Milwaukee county to publish the list of different lands in the notice of tax sale. The reason for the enactment of sec. 1131a is set forth in the testimony of Mr. Smith, the chief clerk in the county treasurer’s office at Milwaukee, as follows:
“It was largely passed to eliminate from the county treasurer’s office that service which did not seem to interest anybody excepting a few tax buyers, and that the time was too short in which to advertise a description of all of the delinquent pieces of real estate. . . .”
It needs but little reflection to realize the object to be accomplished by the publication of the statement referred to in sec. 1130, Stats., and of the posting of the notices as therein required. Such statement and notice, when published in Milwaukee county, and when posted as required by sec. 1130, constitute as great an advantage to people living in Milwaukee county as it does to those living in other counties in the state, and there is no logical reason that can be advanced for making any distinction whatsoever. The distinction might as well have been based upon the subject of religion, race, or politics.
“The classification must be based on substantial and real differences in the classes, which are germane to the purpose*420 of the law and reasonably suggest the propriety of substantially different legislation.” Bingham v. Milwaukee Co. 127 Wis. 344, 347, 106 N. W. 1071. See, also, State ex rel. Risch v. Trustees, 121 Wis. 44, 98 N. W. 954.
It is plain that the provisions of sec. 1130, Stats., are designed to give all persons who are owners of lands oí-an interest therein the fullest opportunity of protecting themselves by information, so as to prevent a forfeiture or loss of their lands. If it is an advantage to owners of lands outside of Milwaukee county to obtain this information, then it is a decided disadvantage to owners of lands in Milwaukee county not to receive such information.
Sec. 1131a also violates the provisions of sec. 31, art. IV, of the constitution.
It has been held in Chicago & N. W. R. Co. v. Forest Co. 95 Wis. 80, 88, 70 N. W. 77, that, referring to the restrictions against special legislation for assessment or collection of taxes, it embraces all the proceedings for raising money by the exercise of the power of taxation, from the inception of the proceedings to its conclusion, and took from the legislature-all jurisdiction, past, present, and future, of special legislation on the subject.
The principal object of the constitutional provisions above referred to is to prohibit special legislation, and the language used in the opinion in Hetland v. Norman Co. 89 Minn. 492, 495, 95 N. W. 305, 306, is apt and applicable to the situation:
, “To approve '[of such legislation] would [be to] open the door to all sorts of special legislation, general in form but special in fact, the only limitation to which would be the ingenuity of legislators in devising new classifications.”
It will not be necessary, for the reasons above stated, to consider plaintiff’s other objections to the validity of the tax deed in question.
The defendant Contends that a deposit should have been
The action that forms the basis of this suit is not one of those actions contemplated by the sections of the statutes last above referred to. It is not an action to- set aside a sale or to cancel the tax certificate or to restrain the issuing of any tax deed, but is an action in ejectment to recover the possession of land, which is controlled by sec. 3087, entitled “Recovery where tax title defective.”
In the case of Van Ostrand v. Cole, 131 Wis. 446, 451, 110 N. W. 891, which was an action of ejectment, the court specifically in its decision decides defendant’s contention adversely to him. In that decision it is held:
“It is further contended that plaintiff could not maintain this action unless before action he tendered defendant the full amount of all taxes, interest, and charges arising out of the sale of the premises for the nonpayment of taxes involved in the proceedings on which her tax titles are based. The argument that the failure to so tender payment of these sums would be a deprivation of defendant’s right to the sum so paid for taxes, interest, and charges, on account of the owner’s delinquency, and would thus deprive her of the interest acquired in the lands by such payments, is'without merit, in view of the provisions of the statute providing that such purchasers shall be reimbursed the sums paid for tax certificates held by them, if the title fails on account of defects or deficiencies in the tax proceedings. Sec. 3087, Stats. 1898, makes provision for the repayment of the amounts paid for taxes, interest, and charges by holders of certificates on the land of such delinquent owner in case he establishes the right to hold the premises against the claims of such purchasers of tax certificates.”
We therefore hold that defendant’s tax deed is invalid for the reasons stated, and that sec. 1131a, Stats., is unconstitutional and in violation of the provisions of secs. 23 and 31 of art. IV of the constitution of the state.
By the Court. — It is so ordered.