8 N.W.2d 263 | Wis. | 1943
Lead Opinion
Certiorari brought on the relation of Charles E. Anderton against the respondents, C. M. Sommers, treasurer of the county of Milwaukee, and Bertha Parker and Alle J. Kaufer and wife, for the review and vacation of a determination made by the treasurer under sec.
Parker in applying, as the owner of but a portion of the two and one-half-acre parcel of land, which was sold for taxes as a whole, to have a determination made by Sommers as to the proportion of the delinquent taxes chargeable to the respective portions thereof owned by Parker, Anderton, and the Kaufers, and likewise Sommers, in making that determination, considered such application and determination authorized under sec.
"provided, that when an application is made to the county treasurer to redeem from any tax sale any part or portion of any lot or parcel of land which was sold for taxes as a whole, but which is owned in severalty, said treasurer . . . may ascertain . . . the true proportion of taxes chargeable to the part or portion sought to be redeemed. . . ."
In construing the term "in severalty," which is in that provision, this court said in State ex rel. Dorst v. Sommers,
"The part of sec.
The definition and meaning thus held applicable to the term "in severalty," as used in the clause "which is owned in severalty" in sec.
"Estates, in respect to the number and connection of their owners, are divided into estates in severalty, in joint tenancy and in common. . . ."
Under the provision in sec.
Moreover, even if such an apportionment had been authorized by statute under the circumstances herein, a determination thereof by the treasurer, without giving due notice of the application therefor and affording an opportunity to be heard to all who, as owners of any part or interest in the land would be directly affected by such determination, would be invalid in view of the rule that when a proceeding directly affects the property of a person, he is deemed so specially interested in the proceeding as to be entitled to notice under the constitutional guaranty of due process of law. As Mr. Justice FOWLER said in State ex rel. Dorst v. Sommers, supra (p. 314), —
". . . when a parcel of the tract has been sold the purchaser of that part becomes interested in how much of the total tax on the tract is left by redemption of the remaining or any part of the land a lien on the parcel owned by him. or if the purchaser wishes to redeem the parcel he has purchased, the original owner of the whole tract is likewise interested. The less that is paid by the redemption of a part the more is left to be paid by the owner or owners of the remainder."
Consequently, there is applicable, in relation to all such owners, the rule that, —
"Whether the proceedings relate to liberty or property, in the technical sense, and be of a strictly judicial nature, or to mere privilege, immunity, status, or anything else of value, which commonly are of a quasi-judicial nature, incidental to or as a part of administrative authority, and reviewable by courts as to jurisdictional matters, or, of a purely ministerial nature where the thing is a mere creature of the law granted upon condition of being so dealt with, due process of law pervades and rules them all." Ekern v. McGovern,
Likewise, as the respondents Alle J. Kaufer and wife were owners of a portion of the land in question at the time of the apportionment of the taxes, they were proper, — even if not technically necessary, — parties to the certiorari proceedings, and as such were entitled to be heard on the issues raised by the motions to quash the writ. Sec. 260.11, Stats.; 14 C J.S. p. 206, sec. 60; State ex rel. Welch v. Chatterton,
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment declaring and providing that the proceedings and determination by C. M. Sommers, as treasurer of the county of Milwaukee, were without jurisdiction or authority, and are therefore vacated with costs to the relator.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with the result upon the second ground assigned by the opinion, namely, that a determination by the treasurer, without giving due notice of the application therefor, and affording opportunity to be heard to owners of any part or interest in the land, is invalid as a denial of due process of law. *491