146 Wis. 635 | Wis. | 1911
The order is erroneous, if for no other reason, because it provides, absolutely, for judgment in favor of defendants and for ten dollars costs. Tbe court should not have granted costs except as a condition of pleading over, and have allowed reasonable time therefor. See. 2686, ■ Stats.
Tbe precise supposed infirmity in tbe complaint does not ¡appear. Any one mentioned in tbe demurrer falls within tbe general language of tbe decision. Eor augbt appearing, tbe learned circuit court may have thought tbe complaint faulty upon all such grounds. However, it is so clear that a taxpayers’ action is proper to prevent illegal expenditure by school district officers of public money, also to restrain them from illegally issuing school district obligations to pay money, •or otherwise incurring, good in form, school district indebtedness, and that, in such a case, the district and its officers are proper defendants, we must assume the complaint to have been condemned solely .upon the ground of its not showing, unmistakably, danger of such illegal acts occurring to the prejudice of taxpayers, because of failure to allege, with particularity, the facts showing the meeting of July 15, 1910, to have been legal. Obviously the other questions voted upon •at subsequent meetings were subsidiary to the one as to whether a new school house should be built. If the first meeting was legal, sec. 427 of the Statutes precluded reconsideration of the school house matter for one year, and the subsequent contrary course and threatened action pursuant thereto involved danger prejudicial to taxpayers, remediable in an action of this sort according to the well settled practice.
It is claimed that the mere allegation — “on the 15th day of July, A. D. 1910, at 8 o’clock p. m., a special meeting was called pursuant to notice duly given, of all the legal voters of said school district for the purpose of determining the question of building a new school house, and raising money for that purpose and for selecting a site,” and that the majority
Matters of mixed law and fact, tbe ultimate of which is, in a broad sense, a fact, may be pleaded according to their legal •effect. South Milwaukee Co. v. Murphy, 112 Wis. 614, 88 N. W. 583; Prentice v. Nelson, 134 Wis. 456, 114 N. W. 830. Furthermore, for tbe purpose of testing a complaint upon a challenge for insufficiency, every fact necessary to entitle plaintiff to some judicial relief within the competency of the court to grant, which can reasonably be inferred from the language used, giving thereto, as a whole, tbe broadest meaning in favor of tbe pleading it will reasonably bear, must be considered as stated just as effectively as matters expressly and plainly alleged. In short, every reasonable intendment must be indulged in in favor of tbe pleading.
Thus tbe court has heretofore spoken repeatedly and decisively,- — too often to require or perhaps even suggest propriety, on this occasion, of emphasizing tbe matter by referring to previous decisions.
Under tbe rule stated, tbe general language of tbe complaint seems ample to show tbe voters of tbe defendant district to have legally passed upon tbe school bouse matter at the first mentioned meeting, and, contrary, to law, subsequently and within a year thereafter, to have passed upon tbe same matter ,at another, or other such meetings, and imminent danger of action by respondents pursuant thereto, incurring school district indebtedness, good in form, and depleting the district
By the Court. — Tbe order is reversed, and tbe cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.