219 Wis. 161 | Wis. | 1935
The sole issue upon this appeal is the constitutionality of ch. 257, Laws of 1933, amending sub. 1 of sec. 15 of ch. 549, Laws of 1909, entitled, “An act to establish the civil court of Milwaukee county and prescribing its jurisdiction and powers.” Ch. 257, Laws of 1933, provides that any summons of said court may be served in any county of the state. It is defendants’ contention that the civil court of Milwaukee county was and is a municipal court and not an inferior court; 'that its writs and processes, by virtue of sec. 2, art. VII, of the Wisconsin constitution, cannot extend beyond the limits of the municipality; that a court originally created as a municipal court cannot, by mere amendment extending its powers with respect to summons or other process, be changed into an inferior court, and that even if this could be so accomplished, the title of the act is fatally defective and repugnant to constitutional requirements respecting the title of private and local acts.
The first question is whether the civil court of Milwaukee county, as originally created, was a municipal or inferior court. Sec. 2, art. VIT, Const., provides in part:
“The legislature may also vest such jurisdiction as shall be deemed necessary in municipal courts, and shall have power to establish inferior courts in the several counties, with limited civil and criminal jurisdiction. Provided, th^it the jurisdiction which may be vested in municipal courts shall not exceed in their respective municipalities that of circuit courts in their respective circuits as prescribed in this constitution.”
It has heretofore been held that the determining characteristics of a municipal court are: (1) That its jurisdiction must not extend beyond its territorial limits, and (2) that it may not exceed in its jurisdiction within these limits that conferred upon the circuit court. Inferior courts must have a jurisdiction less than that of the circuit court, but the process of such a court may run throughout the state. American Loan & Trust Co. v. Bond, 91 Wis. 204, 64 N. W. 854;
For the moment, the question whether the terms “municipal” and “municipalities,” as used in the constitution, refer only to a city or incorporated village, and preclude the legislature from creating a municipal court for a county, will be reserved. The question whether a court created by the legislature is a municipal court or an inferior court is frequently troublesome. No difficulty exists when a court territorially limited to a city or village is given jurisdiction within that territory equal to that of the circuit court. Nor does any difficulty arise where the process of a court inferior in jurisdiction to the circuit court runs throughout the state. The real difficulty arises from the fact that while the jurisdiction of a municipal court may not exceed that of the circuit court, it need not be made equal to it, and that while the process of an inferior court may run throughout the state, it is not required that it do so. Hence, it is possible for the legislature to create a court having a jurisdiction smaller than that of the circuit court, but with no provision that its process shall run throughout the state. In other words, at least if its jurisdiction is confined to a municipality, such a court may be argued to be a municipal court either because it is so limited, or because it is so labeled by the.creating act, or because its process does not run beyond its territorial limits, and the fact that its jurisdiction is not equal to that of the circuit court is disposed of by the absence of any constitutional requirement that its jurisdiction be of this scope. It may be argued to be an inferior court because in fact its jurisdiction is inferior to that of the circuit court, and because it is not required that the process of.an inferior court run throughout the state. To determine the character of such a court is obviously difficult, because of the failure of the legislature to invest it with the
With these principles in mind, it will now be convenient to consider the provisions of ch. 549, Laws of 1909, creating the court. This chapter provides that: “There is hereby created and established in and for the county of Milwaukee a municipal court to be designated as the ‘civil court of Milwaukee county.’ ” In the original act there was no provision permitting the process of the court to run outside of Milwaukee county. Thus not only did the legislature call this a municipal court, but it failed to invest the court with the one characteristic which would positively identify it as an inferior court. The provision labeling this a municipal court is somewhat more significant in this case than in other cases, for there was no occasion to use the label except for the expression of a legislative determination that the court was to be of that character. In some of the cases where the court was to carry the name of “municipal court,” the designation
There remains to be considered another troublesome question heretofore reserved. It is contended by plaintiffs that the term “municipalities” as used in sec. 2, art. VII, Const., means a city or incorporated village; that a municipal court must be created with territorial limits coinciding with that of the village or city for which it was created; that its jurisdiction may not extend to the county, and that a county may not be denominated a municipality for the purposes of such a court. If this is a valid contention, there could be no such thing as a municipal court for Milwaukee county, and the court would ha\re to be sustained as an inferior court or the entire creating act held void. This question was raised in Norton v. Peck, 3 Wis. * 714. There the court held that an organized town is not a municipal corporation in the sense that sec. 2, art. XI, Const, (having to do with eminent domain), uses that term. The court there said, referring to sec. 2, art. VII:
“It will not be claimed by any one, we presume, that this clause of the constitution gives the legislature power to estab*167 lish municipal courts in the several towns in the state, which are organized for the ordinary purposes of township government. The power of the legislature to establish these courts is, as we suppose, confined to cities, and perhaps to incorporated villages.”
In State ex rel. Stark v. McArthur, supra, the question was squarely raised, but the court did not find it necessary to pass upon it. It was there claimed that the word “municipal” includes only cities and incorporated villages. The court declined to pass upon this question because it held that “there is nothing in the language of the constitution prohibiting the legislature from vesting in such court jurisdiction over territory adjacent to the city or village where it may be . . . conceding that the framers of the constitution contemplated the fact that municipal courts were to be located in citiés, the use of these words is explained by the intention merely to describe the kind of court which they wished to authorize; and there is nothing in them which satisfies us that it was the intention to prohibit the legislature from vesting in them any territorial jurisdiction beyond the limits of the cities where they might be.” This was said with reference to the then municipal court of Milwaukee, the jurisdiction of which extended to the entire county. That court was held to be a municipal court. Some doubt is cast upon this case by Atkins v. Fraker, sitpra. In that case Mr. Chief Justice Dixon,. referring to State ex rel. Stark v. McArthur, supra, said :
“Mr. Justice Paine might have saved himself some labor by regarding the municipal court in the city and county of Milwaukee as one of those authorized by the constitution under the denomination of ‘inferior courts in the several counties/ ”
This language, however, was unnecessary to the decision, , and is merely dicta-. In Connors v. Gorey, 32 Wis. 518, it was held that the legislature could not confer upon the municipal courts of the city of Fond du Lac a jurisdiction ex
“It is conceded that if it be a municipal court its jurisdiction may not be extended beyond the boundaries of Langlade county.”
Here the implication is that the county may be a municipality for the purposes of such a court, but there is no discussion of the point involved here, nor was its determination necessary to the decision. In State ex rel. Reynolds v. Sande, supra, it is stated that a court created as a municipal court for Neenah and Menasha could not validly have its jurisdiction extended throughout the county in which those municipalities are located. Here, however, the judge of the court was elected solely by the electors of the two cities, and either the cities constituted the municipality, in which case their boundaries were the limit of the court’s jurisdiction, or, if the court was created for the county, the act was void for failure to permit all of the electors of the county to participate in the election of the judge. In Zitske v. Goldberg, supra, it is implied that “municipal” means city or' village. In Shaffel v. State, 97 Wis. 377, 72 N. W. 888, it is said that the. jurisdictional limits of a municipal court must be coextensive with the boundaries of some municipality, as contrasted with the creation of inferior courts in the several counties. This was said with reference to a municipal court for one of the created municipal districts of Waukesha
“Such municipalities undoubtedly refer to cities which may embrace only a part of the territory of a county, or, it may be, parts of the territory of two counties, as is the case with certain cities in this state.”
It is not to be denied that these authorities are confusing and conflicting, largely because the precise question here presented was not involved, or was at most only indirectly involved. They present no obstacle to a present determination of the question upon what this court considers to be sound and applicable principles. We are of the view that the terms “municipal” and “municipalities” are sufficiently broad to include counties which properly fall within the field of municipal corporations. Even if this were not true, we think that at least where a municipal court is located within a city or village, the territory of its jurisdiction may extend to adjoining territory, provided the electors of all the territory thus included are permitted to participate in the election of judge. The jurisdiction of such a court may not extend beyond the limits of the municipality as thus defined. It follows from this that the civil court of Milwaukee county was at its creation a municipal court.
■The next question is whether ch. 257, Laws of 1933, has effectively changed the character of the court. We pass the contention that a municipal court may not be changed into an inferior court merely by amending the act to enlarge its powers. It is our view that if such was the intended purpose of ch. 257, its title is fatally defective in that it fails to satisfy the requirements of sec. 18, art. IV, Const., which provides:
“No private or local bill which may be passed by the legislature shall embrace more than one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title.”
From what has been said it follows : (1) That the court as originally created constituted a municipal court; (2) that ch. 257, Laws of 1933, is void for repugnance to the requirements of sec. 2, art. VII, Const.
By the Court. — Order reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.