17 Wis. 193 | Wis. | 1863
By the Court,
This action grows out of a claim made by Walworth county against the village of Whitewater for moneys which the village has received for licenses granted under its charter for the sale of spirituous liquors. In 1855 the legislature passed an act amendatory of the license law of 1851, by which it was provided that all moneys derived from licenses granted by towns, cities and villages, in the several counties in the state, should be paid by the treasurers of said towns, cities and villages, into the county treasury, and be applied solely for the purpose of defraying the pauper expenses of said counties in which the distinction between county and town poor had been abolished. Chap. 90, Gen. Laws of 1855. Walworth county abolished all distinction between town and county poor in 1852, and since then all paupers in that county are treated as county paupers. In 1858 the legislature incorporated the village of Whitewater, and, among other provisions, declared that the village authorities should have the exclusive power to grant licenses for selling spirituous liquors within the limits of the village; that the sum to be paid for such licenses should not be less than the sum fixed by the laws of the state; and that the village treasurer should annually pay to the county treasurer the sum of ten dollars for each license so granted, which should be in full of all license money required to be paid by the village of Whitewater to the county treasurer. Subd. 19, section 17, chap. 164, Priv. Laws of 1858.
It is indisputable that, before the revision, the village, under its charter, had a clear right to retain all license moneys, after paying to the county ten dollars on each license granted, and that consequently, so far as that village was concerned, the law of 1855 was changed or modified. Was this right taken away by the subsequent passage of the revised statutes ? We think it was not. It is not contended, we believe, that there is anything in the revised statutes directly repealing the provision of the charter which enabled the village to retain the license money, but it is said such repeal was effected by necessary implication. The whole subject of the excise law, it is said, was revised and re-enacted in the revised statutes, and this fact, taken in connection with the language used in different sections of the repealing chapter, must operate as a repeal of the provision oí the charter. It is true, as already observed, that the excise law of 1851, with the amendatory act of 1855, was re-enacted. And the last clause of sec. 1, chap. 191 (the repealing chapter), in effect repeals all acts and parts of acts the subjects whereof are revised and re-enacted in the. revised statutes or which are repugnant to the provisions therein contained ; while, by the 9th section of the same chapter, it is declared that in additiqn to the several acts thereinbefore enumerated, all acts ajad parts of acts passed previous to the then present session of the legislature, the subjects whereof were revised ,or
From these considerations we are of the opinion that the subdivision of the charter which enables the village to retain all the license moneys after paying over to the county ten dollars on each license granted, is still in force.
The judgment of the circuit court is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint.