128 Wis. 297 | Wis. | 1906
The law under which, in the circumstances stated, it is claimed the liability adjudged in the trial court accrued, is ch. 284, Laws of 1899. The material part thereof is as. follows:
“Every village in' this state . . . shall constitute a separate road district. No part of the streets or highway . . . shall be in any road district established by the town board, nor under the control of the town officers, provided that bridges across navigable streams on town roads shall be built, maintained and repaired by the town and village jointly, the expense to be borne by each in proportion to their equalized valuation as is fixed by the county board. Provided that nothing in this section shall be construed as applying to bridges on public highways outside the platted portion of any incorporated village.”
It is conceded that if appellant is liable to respondent at all on account of the construction of the bridge in question, the measure thereof was properly determined; but it is contended that if the law is valid and such bridge is within the •class mentioned therein no liability accrued to respondent, because the law provides for joint control in the building and maintenance of such a bridge; that the town could not be put 'in default without a reasonable necessity for a new bridge, it having been given opportunity to participate in considering the question of its construction and incurring the expense, and refused to take part in the matter. That is conceded, as we understand it. The trial court so viewed the case, but decided that appellant’s attitude had been such as to preclude it from escaping the liability on that ground.
On the question of waiver by appellant, it seems, the decision of the trial court was right. The town board was formally notified that the old bridge needed immediate repairs, and of a time and place when a meeting would be held to ■decide upon the question in respect thereto. The reply made that the town had decided not to take any part in the matter, ratified, as it was, at the town meeting in the spring of 1904,
“If one of two towns which are jointly bound to keep a. bridge in repair refuses to join in making necessary repairs, the other town may make them and recover the proper proportion of the expense thereof from the town so refusing.”
The. foregoing is but an application to particular facts of the broader rule that where one person owes a clear duty to another in respect to the performance of some service requiring pecuniary outlay, and unreasonably refuses to perform that service, such other may himself perform it or cause the same to be performed and hold such person liable upon im
The law in question is challenged as unconstitutional in that the placing of villages having bridges on town roads within the platted portions of their boundaries and towns in which such villages are located in a class by themselves, for the maintenance of such bridges, is not legitimate classification and so violates the constitutional command as to uniformity of taxation. On this Battles v. Doll, 113 Wis, 357, 89 N. W. 187, is referred to as quite conclusive.
It was held in the case cited that classification for the purpose of exempting property of villages from general taxation,, for a specific object, in counties of which such villages form a part, the exemption having reference to whether such villages have within their corporate limits bridges which they maintain, is not legitimate. Here the question is whether the classification of towns having villages situated therein, for the joint maintenance of bridges across navigable rivers in the platted portions of such villages, is legitimate. We are unable to see that the case, as to its facts or principles, falls necessarily within the discussion in the Battles Case as to classification by reference to physical conditions. It seems to rather fall clearly within the principle laid down in State ex rel. Baraboo v. Sauk Co. 70 Wis. 485, 36 N. W. 398; State ex rel. Star Prairie v. St. Croix Co. 83 Wis. 340, 53 N. W. 698, and the like, to the effect that in case of need of a bridge requiring exceptionally heavy expenditure for its maintenance, it is legitimate for the legislature to impose the
The court, in the first case cited, which has since been followed, quoted approvingly and based its decision on the doctrine, deduced from authority, found in Cooley, Taxation (2d ed..) at page 683, to this effect: There is special need of legislative authority, in special situations springing from the fact that the burden for an object not purely local, like the maintenance of an expensive bridge on an important thoroughfare running through the country, would be too great to be justly imposed upon the particular municipality within which it is located, to lay such burden in part upon outlying districts. The legislature possesses such power, and the manner of its exercise is a matter of legislative discretion. • The law relating to county aid to towns for bridge purposes has been often approved. In that each county is made a taxing district, excepting only such portions as are included within the limits of villages, which maintain théir own bridges. The law here makes every town a taxing district in common with the village situated within its boundaries, as to the maintenance of a bridge across a navigable stream on a town road in the platted portion of the village. We are unable to see any distinction between the two laws in principle.
The particular feature of the law which is supposed to lo1-cate it outside of the rule as to legitimate classification, is that it is based, in part, on physical conditions which cannot be changed. True, that was spoken of in Battles v. Doll as not a proper basis for classification because, as it was said, no room is left for additions to the class.
It seems the doctrine that legitimate classification cannot be bas'ed upon existing circumstances only, precluding any change in the membership of the class, first found declared here in Johnson v. Milwaukee, 88 Wis. 383, 60 N. W. 270, and subsequently many times followed,-was wrongly applied
“If the membership of a class be unchangeable then the law •applies only to the individual members and can never apply to others. Such a law is clearly special.”
Mr. Binney gives this illustration for the better understanding of the matter:
“If Cincinnati be the only city in Ohio that has or ever can have a population of 200,000 by the census of 1870, or Columbus the only city of the second class with a population of over 31,000 by the same census, or Akron the only city of the third class with a population of 12,512 at the census of 1880, then a law passed for all cities to which these circumstances only apply, is passed for Cincinnati, or Columbus, or Akron, just as exclusively as if they were specially mentioned».”
We have just as good an illustration, perhaps, in Burnham v. Milwaukee, 98 Wis. 128, 73 N. W. 1018. The legislation was in form for cities of the first class, empowering them in respect to a particular matter, the power to be exercised only during the year 1897. The law was declared unconstitutional because the city of Milwaukee was the only city of the first class existing at the time of its passage, or which could in any reasonable probability exist during the time of its contemplated operation.
So it will be seen that a law having no prospective opera
Enough has been said to show clearly, it is thought, that the rule as to classification with reference to existing circumstances only has no reference whatever to legislation with reference to physical conditions in whole or in part that cannot be changed, but which at some points require municipal expenditure today and at others not, and those which do may be added to from time to time and diminished from time to time, according as circumstances change. The classification here seems to satisfy every essential laid down in the books. It is based qn substantial distinctions making one class really different from another. It is germane to the purpose of the law. It is not based on existing circumstances only. The law applies equally to the members of the class. The character of the class is so far different from other situations as, within the boundaries of reason at least, to suggest necessity •or propriety, having regard to the public good, of substantially different legislative treatment.. State ex rel. Bisch v. Trustees, 121 Wis. 44, 98 N. W. 954. The idea is that bridges exist in villages and are liable to increase in number ■over streams of such size as to require a greater expenditure •of money in their construction and maintenance than would
The further point is made that the law is fatally defective because the legislature omitted providing details for carrying” it out. Our attention is called to the fact that by sec. Í318, Stats. 1898, the supervisors of a town are empowered only to levy a bridge tax of $300, and to levy it for a bridge in their town. Other provisions of the statutes axe referred to., There is no need of considering them in detail. Suffice it to say, counsel is right to the extent that they do not fit the situation in hand. They do not apply thereto at all. The law itself, by necessary implication, provides for its execution. In mandatory language it provides for the building,, maintenance, and repair of certain bridges by towns and villages jointly, the expense to be borne by them respectively in proportion to the equalized valuation as fixed by the county-board. Build, maintain, and repair jointly and at joint expense, is a term not difficult to understand. It is absolutely free from ambiguity. The imposition of the duty necessarily carries with it the right and duty to incur the necessary expense, and in the only way practicable: by means of action by the executive department of the town and the village. The right and duty to incur the expense, again, carries with it by necessary implication the duty of the people of the town to mate the necessary appropriation and provide by vote for-levying the necessary tax to meet the expenditure. Upon their failure so to do a suit upon implied promise, not the remedy by mandamus, is the proper method to vindicate the right of' the matter, as is ruled in Waupun v. Chester, 61 Wis. 401, 21 N. W. 251.
It is a mistake to suppose that a law imposing upon a municipality the duty to do a particular thing requiring public expenditure is necessarily void because it does not provide in detail procedure to be followed. When the thing to be doner
The further point is made that the law violates sec. 23, art. IV, of the constitution, providing that the legislature shall establish but one system of'town and county government, which shall be as nearly uniform as practicable. The argument at this point is based largely on the idea that the law here deals with the subject of the construction of village bridges in certain cases at the expense, in part, of the towns within which the villages are located. We do not so view the law. It provides expressly that certain bridges within the corporate limits of villages shall be deemed to be town bridges as well as village bridges. So far as they are town bridges they are placed under the control of the towns, and so far as they are' village bridges they are placed under the control of the villages. The idea is that each corporation
Tbe point is made that the law violates the constitutional right of local self-government. That is answered substantially by what we have said as to the bridges referred to being as much local affairs of the towns as of the villages. The argument that the law provides for construction and maintenance of village bridges at the expense in part of towns is clearly, it is thought, beside the case. But if it were otherwise it would be answered by the rule well established that the maintenance of a bridge on a highway is not a purely local matter which must be left, necessarily, to the sole discretion of the town within which it is located.- The state at large is interested in such matters, and may impose the duty on one municipality or a collection of municipalities to aid in maintaining a bridge in another. State ex rel. Baraboo v. Sauk Co. 70 Wis. 485, 36 N. W. 396; Cooley, Taxation (2d ed.) 683; Will Co. v. People, 110 Ill. 511. Such laws, this court has held, do not necessarily contravene any constitutional restriction upon legislative interference with local self-government. All that is said as to the importance of presenting inviolate the constitutional guaranty in that regard meets with appiuval. No one, however, need go outside the decisions of this court, as seems to have been thought was the case, to find emphatic declarations on that line. O’Connor v. Fond du Lac, 109 Wis. 253, 265, 85 N. W. 327.
Points that mamdamus is the proper remedy, that the state did not contemplate power on the part of the village to initiate proceedings to build a bridge at joint expense, and that there is no such thing as a town road or a town bridge in the village corporation, have all been perhaps sufficiently answered by references thereto made, directly or incidentally. This court has held in a similar situation, as we have indicated, that an action upon implied promise is the proper rem
True, generally speaking, a town bridge is one wholly within a town and a village bridge one wholly within a village, but the legislature having seen fit to provide that a town road which is intersected by a village plat and crossed by a navigable stream, requiring to be bridged to make the road usable, shall be deemed to be a town road and the bridge a town bridge to the same extent that it is a village street and a village bridge as regards the maintenance of the latter, there is no reason why effect should not be given thereto. The meaning of the statute on the subject is perfectly plain, and it must be administered accordingly.
Some question is raised as to whether the term “navigable stream” as used in the law has reference to navigable as regards public rights: navigable .in-fact, including what is called a “floatable stream:” one of sufficient capacity to float saw logs during some portion of the year. It is considered that such is the meaning. That is the sense in which the term “navigable” is ordinarily understood, and such ordinary sense is the one always to be adopted in construing legislative enactments in the absence of some ambiguity permitting the adoption of a different meaning. Under the uniform holdings in this state, public waters include streams of sufficient capacity to float saw logs in spring or other freshets, though so small that ordinary rowboats cannot be used there
The further claim is made that the law is invalid, as contravening the constitutional provision inhibiting the state from contracting any debt or being a party in carrying on any work of internal improvement. We cannot perceive sufficient merit in that to warrant more than a passing notice thereof. The making of public improvements by minor subdivisions of the state, like towns, cities, villages, and counties, by means of the ordinary revenues of such municipalities, and under the management of their own officers, has not the remotest relation to the constitutional provision referred to.
After a careful review of the briefs of counsel we do not discover any reason advanced for disturbing the judgment which has not been referred to, except such as do not seem to merit particular attention.
By the Gourt. — The judgment is affirmed.