118 Wis. 388 | Wis. | 1903
There immediately present themselves upon this complaint three questions, solution of which will render ultimate conclusion easy, and obviate the necessity of examination of very much statutory detail, now become, in some degree at least, obsolete. Those questions are: (1) Is the proceeding under secs. 1319 — 11 to 1379 — 31, Stats. 1898, a judicial one, so that it falls within sec. 2594, Stats. 1898 ? (2) Had the circuit court jurisdiction thereof? (3) If both the foregoing be answered in the affirmative, can the present plaintiff attack or obstruct the decree collaterally ?
To the first of these questions an affirmative answer is
That jurisdiction generally over the subject-matter is at
This view disposes , of the contention that the statutes did not, at the time of the original decree, in 1900, permit that the assessments be made payable in the remote future, or that money be borrowed, as here, for a considerable term, to be ultimately repaid out of such postponed assessments. We need not consider whether the statutes could properly be so construed as to authorize these things. If the court having-jurisdiction did so construe them, it was a judicial act, none the less binding upon the parties because the construction was wrong.
Appellant, however, urges that the statutes attempting to confer this jurisdiction are void because they accomplish results forbidden by constitutional provisions, either federal or state, namely, that they deprive him of his property with-out due process of law, and that they make upon him imposi
Neither is there need to consider whether the cost of this work can constitutionally be imposed upon the private property “within the drainage district, regardless of actual benefits conferred upon such property, for the statute makes no-such attempt. It requires that, before proceeding to assessment, it must be found and decided that such benefits wili-equal or exceed the amount of the cost, and that behest has-
Having thus reached the conclusion that the order, execution of which is sought to be restrained, is a judicial determination by a court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties, we hardly need to state that it cannot be assailed collaterally, except, perhaps, for fraud, of which nothing appears. Salisbury v. Chadbourne, 45 Wis. 74; Crowns v. Forest L. Co. 102 Wis. 97, 78 N. W. 433; Crist v. Davidson, 116 Wis. 532, 93 N. W. 532. This salutary rule of general law is re-enforced in its application to the present complaint by sec. 7, ch. 43, Laws of 1901, which prohibits any action to restrain collection of drainage assessments, except the appeal from the order authorizing them, accorded by the same statute.
From the foregoing it must result that the plaintiff could not maintain an action to enjoin either the collection of assessments or the issue of bonds in accordance with the final order made January 4, 1900. But it does appear by the complaint, as appellant urges, that the threatened action by the commissioners is not in exact compliance with that order, but with a modification thereof made by another order, dated April 15, 1901. The difference between the two, however, is slight. Under the first the bonds were to run twenty years, and the assessments were to be payable, one tenth on January 4, 1900, and another tenth annually thereafter. They were to draw no interest until they were so payable, but the amount of the interest on the bonds equaling the assessments in amount was to be levied each year. Under the modifying order, bonds were to fall due, one tenth thereof June 1, 1910, and a like amount annually thereafter. The special assessment was still divided into ten instalments, with annual maturity com
Some question is made of the constitutional power of the legislature to enact a law bearing such construction, but we cannot consider it worthy of serious consideration, at least with reference to mere matters of remedy and procedure such as that now before us. Such subjects have always been held not embarrassed by any of the constitutional prohibitions. Oshkosh Waterworks Co. v. Oshkosh, 109 Wis. 208, 85 N. W. 376; Id. 187 U. S. 437, 23 Sup. Ct. 234.
The result of these views is, of course, that the order of April, 1901, like the preceding order, .was within the jurisdiction of the circuit court, and the plaintiff, having had and waived due opportunity to appeal therefrom, cannot attack the same thus collaterally; hence that the complaint before us fails to show any right in the plaintiff to enjoin or restrain the issue of the bonds or the levy and collection of the assessment authorized by the first two orders.
“If in the first assessment the commissioners shall have reported to the court a smaller sum than is needed to complete the work of construction or repair, ... a further assessment on the lands benefited, proportioned on the first, •.shall be made under the order of the court or the presiding .judge thereof without notice.”
We should have little doubt of the cogency of such an objection to a statute which originally authorized an imposition or assessment upon private property without any notice to him whatever, whether the result were to be accomplished by the judgment of a court, or by the decision of some legislative or executive tribunal. This second order, however, -and the law authorizing it, are not such. -It is at most but -one step in a general scheme of procedure, and must be considered in connection with the other parts. It has frequently -been held that, even in tax proceedings out of court, notice of each step is by no means essential to due process of law, but that notice at any stage of the proceedings whereby the -property owner has opportunity to be heard as to the apportionment of a share of the burden to him is sufficient. State v. Whittlesey, 17 Wash. 447, 50 Pac. 119; Meggett v. Eau Claire, 81 Wis. 326, 333, 51 N. W. 566; Hennessy v. Douglas Co. 99 Wis. 129, 148, 74 N. W. 983; Davidson v. New Orleans, 96 U. S. 97. Even more obviously is it competent
A still further and perhaps stronger reason controls the objection now made, namely, that notice of this additional assessment could have availed plaintiff nothing. Every question upon which he had any right to be heard had' already been concluded. The court, by its former order, had established the public purpose, the benefit to plaintiff’s land, and the proportion. All that could be done by the commissioners- or by the court in making this second assessment was mere-arithmetical computation, for which the presence of a property owner was neither necessary nor useful. No error therein could prejudice him. People ex rel. Barber v. Chapman, 127 Ill. 387, 19 N. E. 872; Meggett v. Eau Claire, 81 Wis. 332, 51 N. W. 566.
For these reasons, we conclude that it was competent for-the legislature to authorize this step without further notice,, and that the order of July 18, 1901, was also within the jurisdiction of the court, and, like its former orders, impregnable-to collateral assault.
The conclusiveness of these several adjudications fully appears from the complaint, and renders all the other facts insufficient to support any action to restrain the execution of those orders or decrees. The demurrer was therefore properly sustained.
By the Court. — Order appealed from is affirmed.