18 Wis. 463 | Wis. | 1864
By the Court,
This case turns upon the question whether section 123, chap. 15, R. S. 1849, applies to the tax
The deed recites that it was given on a sale of the premises for taxes which were levied “ pursuant to an ordinance of the president and trustees of the town of Milwaukee on the west side of the riverand it is argued that there is no evidence whatever in the case from which the court could possibly be authorized to assume that there was ever in existence any such corporation as “ The Town of Milwaukee on the west side of the river." We have no doubt such a corporation once existed, of which we must take judicial notice, although we have been unable to find the act of the legislature incorporating it. We find however an act of the territorial legislature, approved February 21, 1839 (Sessions 1838 & 9, No. 30, p. 45), which recognizes, in the clearest and most satisfactory terms, the existence of a corporation described as “ the president and trustees of the town of Milwaukee on the west side of the river,” and which authorizes such a corporation to levy and collect a tax for the support of common schools “ in the same manner and at the same time that the corporation tax is now by law levied and collected.” There is a further recognition by the legislature of such a corporation, though not in as express language, in the subsequent act No. 53 (Sessions 1838 & 9, p. 114). And in addition to this we have the decision of the supreme court of the territory of Wisconsin in the case of Dousman v. Ths President and Trustees of the Town of Milwaukee, at the July term, 1839, (Appendix to Laws of 1840-41, p. 178), in which the court say “ that the town of Milwaukee on the west side of the river was incorporated and became a body corporate and politic in 1837.” From all this we feel fully warranted in assuming that a corporation existed on and prior to the 29th day of January, 1889, of the name and title of “ The Town of Milwaukee on the west side of the river.”
There is nothing in the evidence that shows that the grantee in the tax deed was in possession of the land sold in January, 1889, as a vendee. The only proof upon that point is the testimony of the defendant below, that he had been in possession of the premises sometime previous to the commencement of the suit; that he derived possession from Paul Burdick, who had occupied them for about ten years to his knowledge, and, as he had been informed, much longer; and that Burdick claimed to have gone into possession under an agreement with Kilbourn for the purchase of them. This testimony is quite too indefinite and uncertain to authorize us in saying that Bur-dick, the grantee in the tax deed, was in- possession of the land in 1838 under a contract with the owner to purchase it.
The last objection is, that section 123, chap. 15, does not apply to a deed executed by the officer of a city, but only to those conveyances executed by the clerk of the board of supervisors. This is contrary to the construction which has uniformly been placed upon that section, and inconsistent, we think, with the plain intention, purpose and policy of this enactment. We have no doubt that the circuit court was right in holding that the statute of limitations had run upon this deed.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.