154 Wis. 23 | Wis. | 1913
The sole question raised by the appeal is whether the decision of the commissioners is void because one of the three failed to take a valid oath, as required by sec. 1280, Stats., before acting and signing. It was held in State ex rel. Vos v. Hoelz, 69 Wis. 84, 33 N. W. 597, that
“If for any reason one or more of said commissioners shall fail to act, the judge or justice making the appointment shall,*26 on receiving notice of such failure, by lot and without notice to either party, select from the number not struck off or drawn from said list one or more commissioners, as the case may require, to fill the vacancy or vacancies in the commission. And in case this list is exhausted before three commissioners are obtained who can and will act, then, without notice to either party, a number of commissioners sufficient to supply the deficiency and having the qualifications above required shall be summoned by order of the appointing officer in the same manner that talesmen are summoned to complete juries in courts held by justices of the peace, to the end that said appeal may have effect. Whenever a new commissioner is drawn or summoned to fill a deficiency, the time for the commissioners to appear, view and examine the highway may be enlarged by the appointing officer to not exceeding ten days, and the time for making return of their decision to not more than twenty days from the date of filling such vacancy. Any commissioner may be excused from acting by the officer appointing him for good cause; and if any commissioner, after due service upon him of the warrant by which he was appointed and not. so excused, shall, without good cause, refuse to act he shall forfeit ten dollars and shall also be liable to the party having the costs of the appeal to pay for the additional costs made in consequence of such refusal.”
These provisions first appeared in the revision of 1878. It is argued that they imply that a full commission must act in order to make a valid decision. We do not so interpret them. If mandatory, they require the appointment of three commissioners, but they do not in terms or by necessary implication require that the three persons appointed shall all act in order to render a valid decision. ' In the present case three commissioners were appointed, and the provisions of the statute in respect to the number to be appointed were complied with.
Assuming that there must be an appointment of three commissioners in order to constitute a valid commission, it does not follow that all must act in order to make a valid decision.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.