56 Wis. 660 | Wis. | 1883
The only question arising on the appeal in this case is whether the city clerk of the city of Oshkosh, while acting as a member of the board of review for said city, is entitled to the pay prescribed by sec. 1060, R. S. 1878, which reads as follows: “ The supervisors, clerk, and assessors of each town, the mayor, clerk, and assessors of each city, the president, clerk, and assessors of each village in which tases are assessed and collected independently of the town, shall constitute a board of review for such town, city, or village. The board of review shall meet annually on the last Monday of J une, at their town, city, or village clerk’s office. A majority shall constitute a quorum. Notice of the time and place of meeting shall be posted up by such clerks in at least three public places in each town, village, or city, or ward thereof, at least four days prior to such meeting. The town, city, or village clerk, on said board of review, shall be clerk thereof, and shall keep an accurate record of all its proceedings. The board may adjourn from day to day, until its business is completed, and shall receive the same compensation as is allowed by law to assessors.”
This section very clearly gives the city clerk compensation for his services as one of the members of the board of review, and the amount of such compensation is to be determined by the compensation paid to assessors of the city at the time such services are performed. The fact that this sec
The only provisions of the city charter which have any bearing upon this subject are secs. 8 and 19, suboh. 5, ch. 123, Laws of 1871, which is the present charter of said city. Sec. 3, above referred to, defines the duties of the city clerk, and reads as follows: “ The clerk shall keep the corporate seal and all papers and records of the city, and keep a record of the proceedings of the common council, at whose meetings it shall be his duty to attend; he shall keep an accurate and detailed account of the financial condition of the city and of each ward as the common council prescribe; he shall so keep the books of said city that every subject of taxation shall be entered under its proper head, as state,
Sec. 19 provides for fixing the compensation of the clerk, and is as follows: “ The common council shall have power from time to time to require further and other duties of any officer whose duties are herein prescribed, and to appoint such other officers as may be necessary to carry into effect
Sec. 3, above quoted, does not make it the duty of the city clerk to act as a member of the board of review, nor to act as clerk thereof, and it is very clear that sec. 19 does not give the common council the power to make the city clerk a member of the board of review, or authorize him to perform the duties of such member, though such service be a service for the municipality. It is, however, sufficient for the determination of this case that the common council have not prescribed that the clerk should act as a member of the board of review, as authorized by the statute, nor that the compensation prescribed for him as clerk should include his compensation as a member of such board, as well as for his other services. There is nothing in the city charter which directs the city clerk to perform the duties of a member of the board of review, nor to act as clerk of such board. It is clear, therefore, that, when acting as a' member of the board of review and as clerk thereof, he acts under the general law of the state above quoted, and not under the city charter; and that the compensation fixed for his services, prescribed by the city charter, does not compensate him for his services as a member of such board.
It is said by the learned counsel for the appellant that the statute which declares that the city clerk shall be a member of the board of review requires that he shall take an official oath as a member of such board. This is urged as a strong-argument tending to show that while acting as a member of the board of review he did not act as clerk, and consequently it could not be intended that his compensation as clerk
• It is obvious that the legislature, in the enactment of secs. 1060 and 1061, did not intend that the compensation of. the town clerk, town supervisors, city mayor, city clerk, president of a village, and clerk of a village, when acting as a member of the board of review, should be the compensation to which they were entitled as such mayor, clerk, etc. Had that been the intention, the statute would have been silent on the subject of compensation, and each officer would have been left to receive such compensation for his service as member of the board as he was entitled to receive as mayor, clerk, supervisor, etc. Although these officers, in the discharge of their duties as members , of the board of review, were discharging a duty they were compelled to perform by reason of their holding their respective offices, the legislature has very clearly declared that for discharging such duty they shall receive a compensation different from that which the law gives them for other services which they are required to perform as such officials, and fixes such compensation in an entirely different manner. The statute pro
Sec. 1060 fixes the compensation of each member of the board of review, by the compensation fixed by the' town board for-the assessor, and such compensation may be either more or less than the compensation fixed for other services of the supervisors or town clerk. The intention of the legislature was to give the same compensation to each member of the board of review, while acting as such, although such officers, when discharging other official duties, were entitled to different rates of compensation.
This intent on the part of the legislature is inconsistent with the idea that a city clerk, receiving a fixed salary for the discharge of his official duties as such clerk, must perform this service as a part of his duty for the salary so fixed. We must presume that the legislature knew at the time this act fixing the compensation of the members of the board of review was adopted, that, as a general thing, the mayors of cities received no compensation for their services as mayors, and that clerks of cities, as a general rule, received fixed salaries and not a per diem allowance; and, knowing this, they say that, while acting as members of the board of review, they shall receive a compensation to be fixed by the compensation then allowed to the assessors of the town or city for which they are acting. This act, passed under such circumstances, it seems to us must be construed as a plain declaration that the compensation of the members of the board of review shall not be controlled by the law fixing their compensation as supervisors, clerks, or other officers mentioned in the statute, who may be members of such board. As the law now stands we think it clear
By the Court.— Tbe order of the circuit court sustaining tbe demurrer to tbe complaint is reversed,'and tbe cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.