157 Wis. 384 | Wis. | 1914
The proceedings for the condemnation of the strip required for the widening of Oak street were had under sec. 925 — 16Y, Stats. 1911. Among the provisions therein contained for making the assessment are the following:
“Opposite each description of the land condemned the board shall set down in separate columns the damages sustained by the owner by reason of the taking of the land, the damages, if any, to the adjoining property of the same owner, the total damages, and in cases wherein benefits may be assessed, the benefits which will in their judgment accrue to his lands in the vicinity of the condemned land by,reason of the condemnation in question, the excess of damages over benefits, and the excess of benefits over damages, each sum being set opposite the proper description.”
Then follow provisions to the effect that no benefits shall be assessed against any lot every part of which is 1,000 feet or more distant from the nearest land condemned, and limitations upon the amount of benefits that can be assessed against lands by reason of any one condemnation proceeding, and upon the amount that can be assessed against lands lying more than 500 feet distant from the nearest land condemned by reason of any one condemnation, and a provision that the board of public works shall proceed as in case of benefits and
In the bill proposed by tbe revisers to tbe legislature of 1897 tbe word “bis” occurs. Tbe section was not amended by tbe legislative committee appointed to examine and suggest amendments to the proposed bill of tbe revisers. Tbe section as it stands was before tbe legislature when it was adopted, and we cannot say that any word therein was there by mistake. Ob. 326, Laws of 1889, was specifically repealed by sec. 4978, Stats. 1898, so sec. 925 — 167 stands as a
It follows that the city was without jurisdiction to assess any benefits against the land in question and that the circuit court properly entered judgment canceling the assessment.
Since there was an entire lack of jurisdiction on the part of the city to make any assessment at all against the lands, its claim that the plaintiffs are estopped to' challenge the validity of the assessment because one of them appeared before the board of public works and stated that he made no objection to certain assessments of benefits against his lands, none of which were taken, cannot be maintained. Jorgenson v. Superior, 111 Wis. 561, 569, 87 N. W. 565. Moreover, when he appeared before the board of public works he appeared in his individual capacity and not as an executor.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.