112 Wis. 203 | Wis. | 1901
The appellant makes two contentions: first, that the commissioners had no authority to increase or reduce the valuations of the towns and cities of the county generally, but only to determine ^whether the assessment of
1. This is a question as to the proper construction of sec. 1077a, Stats. 1898. We were not furnished with any direct authorities upon this question by either counsel, nor have we been able to find any in the course of our own investigations. The substance of this section first appears in the legislation of this state as oh. 291, Laws of 1880. Sec. 1 of that act provides, in substance, that any city, village, or town feeling aggrieved by the action or decision of the county board in making a county apportionment under sec. 1073, R. S. 1878, may apply to the circuit judge within a year for the “ appointment of three commissioners ” to review the same, “ and to examine and determine what sum upon the hundred dollars should be added to or deducted from the aggregate valuations thereof as made by the said county board of supervisors, in order to produce a just relation between all the valuations of real estate in said county; but such commissioners shall in no instance increase the aggregate valuations thereof as' made by said county board of supervisors.” By sec. 1, ch. 212, Laws of 1882, the foregoing section was amended so as to provide that any city, town, or village might apply for the appointment of three commissioners “ to review such action or decisions and to examine and determine what sum upon the hundred dollars should be added to* or deducted from the aggregate valuations of real or personal property or both as the case may be, as therein made by such county board of supervisors, in order, to produce a just relation between the valuations of real or personal property or both in said county according as
From an examination of the original act of 18S0 and the amending act of 1882, as quoted above, the purpose of that amendment is very plainly seen. That purpose was to provide that a review of the decision of the county board might be had either as to real or personal property alone, without involving the consideration of both, as the dissatisfied town might elect. In all other respects the law stands to-day substantially as it did when originally passed in 1880, and the question is whether it contemplates that an application for review by one town opens up the whole question as between all the towns, villages, and cities in the county, or only raises the question whether the appealing town has been overvalued. On this question we are without authorities in our own state, and we have found no other state with a similar law. The tribunal is created by statute, and consequently has no power save those which the statute, reasonably construed, gives it.
A few cases have been before this court presenting certain questions with regard to this law, the principal ones being State ex rel. Brown Co. v. Myers, 52 Wis. 628; State ex rel. Manitowoc v. County Clerk, 59 Wis. 15; Outagamie Co. v. Greenville, 77 Wis. 165; and State ex rel. Ellis v. Thorne, ante, p. 81. The first of the above-named cases arose prior to the amendment of 1882, and in it the law was
Thus it is seen that none of the cases passes upon the question here presented, yet it certainly is worthy of note that in two of the cases, to wit, the case in 59 Wis. and the case in 77 Wis., the commission proceeded to raise and lower values throughout the entire county, without reference to any change made in the valuation of the particular town which applied for the commission, and this procedure passed unchallenged through the circuit court and this court, while in the case just decided it appears that increases were made in the valuations of all of the towns of the county save one; such increases, however, being just sufficient to equal the decrease made by the commission in the valuation of the
Turning to the consideration of the terms of the law itself* we are quite well convinced that this latter view is the correct one. The section provides (Stats. 1898, sec. 1077a) that any town, city, or village aggrieved by the “action or decision as to real or personal property or both ” of the county board under Stats. 1898, sec. 1073, may apply for the appointment of commissioners to review such “ action or decision.” By reference to sec. 1073, it will be seen that the action which the board takes under it is to determine the value of all the taxable property in' the county, and make a list thereof, in which the full value of its property, real and personal, is set opposite the name of each town, and this list becomes the county assessment. This list, when complete, forms the decision of the county board, and it would seem that, if the commission is to review the “ decision,” it must have power to examine into the whole of it, and not merely the assessment of one town, which constitutes only a part of the action or decision. Proceeding further, however, with the section, we think this intent becomes more clear. The commissioners are not only to review such action or decision, but they are to “ examine and determine what sum upon the hundred dollars’ should be added to or deducted from the aggregate valuations of real or personal property or both ... in order to produce a gust relation between all ike valuations of real or personal
Some help upon the question of construction may also be had from that part of the section which prescribes the effect which the commissioners’ decision shall have. This part of the section, after providing that the valuation of the commissioners shall be final, provides that in the next following year “each town, village or city in said county shall be credited with an amount equal to the amount that it was charged with on any excess of valuation as determined by said commissioners, and each town, village or city that has been charged with a less amount of taxes on account of an undervaluation, shall be charged in addition to all other taxes with an amount equal to such deficiency, which amount shall be carried out and collected as other taxes.” Certainly this language seems to indicate the expectation that the change and rearrangement of values would be general through the county.
Our conclusion from consideration of the whole section is that it must be construed as distinctly giving to the commissioners power to review all the valuations in the county, either of real or personal property or both, as the application may specify, and to raise or lower the valuation of any town so far as necessary to produce a just relation between-all such valuations in the county, even though the valuation of the town which applies for the commission may not be changed.
2. As to the objection that all members of the board of commissioners were not present all of the time during which testimony was being taken, we think it is fully answered by the provisions of subd. 3, sec. 4971, Stats. 1898, viz.:
“ All words purporting to give a joint authority to three or more public officers or other persons. shall be construed as giving such authority to a majority of such officers or other persons, unless it shall be otherwise expressly declared in the law giving the authority.”
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.