62 Wis. 154 | Wis. | 1885
This is an action of ejectment, to recover the possession of certain lands described in the complaint. The appellants and defendants claimed title to the lands by virtue of certain tax deeds issued by the county of Lincoln for the nonpayment of taxes assessed thereon in the year 1876. On the trial, the learned circuit judge directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, to which direction the appellants duly excepted, and allege such direction as error.
The evidence showed title in the plaintiff, derived from the government; and he was entitled to a verdict, unless the tax deeds issued to the defendants were valid deeds, or the statute of limitations had run in their favor. The learned circuit judge held the tax deeds void, and that the statute of limitations had not and could not run in their favor. This decision of the learned circuit judge was undoubtedly based upon the construction which should be given to ch. 211, Laws of 1876. The lands in controversy are situate in the town of Fine River, as described and bounded in said ch. 241. This act was not published until the 8th day of April, 1876, and could not, therefore, take effect until that day. On the 4th day of April, 1876, and before the publication of the act, the people of said town held a town meeting (undoubtedly then supposing said act to be in force) and elected a full set of town officers. The officers so elected qualified after the act took effect, and thereafter performed all the duties of town officers for said town until their successors were elected at the next annual town meeting; and said town of Fine River has continued to act as an organized town from April 8, 1876, to the present time. The officers elected April 4,1876, made the assessment and levied the taxes in said town for that year; and because such taxes so assessed and levied were not paid, the lands upon which they were levied were returned delinquent and sold by the county treasurer of the county of Lincoln, and upon such sale the deeds under which the defendants claim title were issued by the proper county officers.
After a careful reading of ch. 241, Laws of 1876, we have come to the conclusion that the learned circuit judge erred in its construction, and that, giving it the construction which its language naturally imports, and which is in evident harmony with the intent of the legislature which passed it, the town of Pine River, as well as the other towns mentioned and described in said act, became a town in fact, immediately after the act took effect, viz., on the 8th day of April, 1876.
The title of the act is, “ An act to attach Lincoln county to the Eighth congressional district, and to organize and define the boundaries of certain towns therein.” Sec. 1 is as follows: “ The county of Lincoln is hereby attached to and shall hereafter form a part of the Eighth congressional district.” Secs. 2, 3, and 4 define the boundaries of the towns of Corning, Pine River, aud Jenny. Sec. 2 is in the following words: “All that territory embraced within the following limits, to wit [here follows a description of the territory], shall constitute aud be known as the town of Corning.” Sec. 3: “ All that territory embraced within the following boundaries, to wit [here follows a description of the territory] shall constitute and be known as the town of Pine River.” Sec. 4: “The balance of the territory of the county of Lincoln, not embraced in the above-mentioned towns of Corning and Pine River, shall hereafter constitute and be known as the town of Jenny. The county board of supervisors shall not have power to change the boundaries
The act was approved by the governor on the 10th of March, 1876, but -was not published until the 8th day of April, 1876, and, as a consequence, did not take effect as a law until that date. As stated above, notwithstanding the act wás not published, town officers were elected on the first Tuesday of April next after its passage, viz., April 4, 1876, and the officers so elected qualified and acted as officers for the several towns in said county for the year 1876.
It is insisted by the learned counsel for the appellants that the officers so elected and serving in said town, although elected without authority of law, were m office by color of an election, and are, therefore, officers de facto if not de jure, and as to the public their acts are as binding as though they had been legally elected. This proposition is well settled . and abundantly supported by the decisions of this court, if it be admitted that the town of Pine River existed as a town after the publication of this act, April 8, 1876, so that the town offices were created by the.act, and might be filled by officers duly appointed or elected.
After, carefully considering the forcible argument of the learned counsel for the respondent made in support of his construction of the act, we are not convinced of its correctness, and are clear that it is in direct conflict with the intent of the legislature, and with the meaning of the language used in the act. The language of secs. 2, 3, and é is clear and positive that certain territory described shall constitute certain towns in the county of Lincoln, and the first section makes the county a part of the Eighth congressional district.
We think it is very clear, from the language of the act itself, that the legislature did not intend to have the first election of the town officers depend upon the provisions of the general law upon the subject. This intention is evident from the fact that in secs. 5, 6, and 7 of the chapter it is prescribed that the first town meeting shall be held, not on the first Tuesday of April next after the act takes effect, but on the first Tuesday of April next; and it is clear to us that by the first Tuesday of April next was meant next after the passage of the act. The date of its passage being March 10, 1876, there was ample time for its publication before that day, and it was not contemplated by the legislature that it would not be published until after that date. An examination of the volume of laws for 1876 shows that very many of the acts passed at that session were published within a much shorter period of time after their approval by the governor than elapsed between March 10th and the first Tuesday in April thereafter. We think it quite clear, therefore, that the legislature intended that the act should effect the establishment of the towns therein designated when published, and had the law been published before April 4, 1876, the officers would have been lawfully elected
The fact that it was not published until it was too late to hold an election at the time vprescribed by the act, cannot defeat the intention of the legislature to establish the town when the act took effect. It is possible that the inability of the people of the town to hold a lawful election for town officers on the day fixed by the act, because the act was not then in force, would have authorized the electors of the several towns to have held an election for town officers under the provisions of sec. 14, ch. 13, R. S. 1858 (1 Tay. Stats. 355, § 36), which reads as follows: “If the inhabitants of any newly-organized town shall fail to hold their first town meeting on the day specified by law, any three qualified voters of such town may call a meeting of the electors of such town for such town election at any time thereafter, by posting up notices thereof at not less than three public places in such town, at least ten days previous to the holding of such meeting.” This was not done, but the officers elected on the first Tuesday of April qualified and acted. If the town of Pine River was in existence after the publication of ch. 241, Laws of 1876, as we think it was, then these officers became officers defacto, and, although elected without authority of law, their acts bind all parties in all collateral proceedings.
The cases of Carleton v. People, 10 Mich. 250, and Fowler v. Bebee, 9 Mass. 231, were in their circumstances very much like the case at bar. In the Michigan case, county officers had been elected before the law organizing the county took
Having come to the conclusion that the town of Pine River was, in fact, a town after the act of 1876 took effect by its publication, the decisions of this court are conclusive upon the question of the binding force of the acts of the de facto officers of such town. State ex rel. Knowlton v. Williams, 5 Wis. 308; In re Boyle, 9 Wis. 264; Dean v. Gleason, 16 Wis. 1, 18; State v. Bloom, 17 Wis. 521; Laver v. McGlachlin, 28 Wis. 364; Cole v. Black River Falls, 57 Wis. 110, 113, 114; C. & N. W. R’y Co. v. Langlade Co. 56 Wis. 614. The evidence in the case shows the existence of the town of Pine River in 1876. It also shows the fact that town officers were, in fact, acting in such town under color of an election, and were, therefore, de facto officers. Consequently, their acts in assessing, levying, and collecting taxes in such town cannot be considered mere acts of usurpation, and the tax deeds issued upon the sales of land for the payment of taxes so assessed and levied are not void, but must have the same effect as evidence as any other tax deeds; and, for anything appearing in this case, the statute of limitations would run in their favor under the same condition of things that it would run in favor of any other tax deed.
The apparent mistake in the date of the certificate of the acknowledgment of the deed does not affect the validity of the deed, nor is the acknowledgment so defective in that re-
We think the court erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiff.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.