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Greenfield v. West Milwaukee

Supreme Court of Wisconsin
Mar 6, 1956
272 Wis. 215 (Wis. 1956)

Summary

In Greenfield v. West Milwaukee (1956), 272 Wis. 215, 226, 75 N.W.2d 424, we held that, "... A school district is a distinct and separate municipal entity...."

Summary of this case from Green Bay Metropolitan Sewerage District v. Vocational, Technical & Adult Education, District 13

Opinion

February 6, 1956 —

March 6, 1956.

APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Milwaukee county: LEO B. HANLEY, Circuit Judge. Affirmed.

For the appellant there were briefs and oral argument by Laurence C. Gram, special counsel, of West Allis.

For the respondent there were briefs by Maxwell H. Herriott, special counsel, and oral argument by Mr. Herriott and by Mr. Allen J. Busby, both of Milwaukee.



This proceeding was instituted April 15, 1954, by a petition of respondent village of West Milwaukee, hereinafter referred to as the "village," to the circuit court for Milwaukee county for a determination as to a division of the assets and liabilities of appellant town of Greenfield, hereinafter referred to as the "town," pursuant to sec. 66.03 of the Wisconsin statutes. The necessity for such determination by the court arose because of certain annexations by the village of territory belonging to the town, and because of the inability of the apportionment board created pursuant to sec. 66.03 to reach an agreement.

Sec. 66.03, Stats., upon which this proceeding is based, reads as follows:

"66.03 ADJUSTMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES ON DIVISION OF TERRITORY. (1) Definition. In this section 'municipality' includes school district, town, village, and city.

"(2) Basis. Except as otherwise provided in this section when territory is transferred, in any manner provided by law, from one municipality to another, there shall be assigned to such other municipality such proportion of the assets and liabilities of the first municipality as the assessed valuation of all taxable property in the territory transferred bears to the assessed valuation of all the taxable property of the entire municipality from which said territory is taken according to the last assessment roll of such municipality. . . .

"(3) Real estate. (a) The title to real estate shall not be transferred except by agreement, but the value thereof shall be included in determining the assets of the municipality owning the same and in making the adjustment of assets and liabilities.

"(5) Apportionment board. The boards or councils of the municipalities, or committees, thereof selected for that purpose, acting together, shall constitute an apportionment board. When any municipality is dissolved by reason of all of its territory being so transferred the board or council thereof existing at the time of such dissolution shall for the purpose of this section, continue to exist as the board or council of such municipality.

"(6) Meeting. The board or council of the municipality to which the territory is transferred shall fix a time and place for meeting and cause a written notice thereof to be given the clerk of the municipality from which such territory is taken at least five days prior to the date of the meeting. The apportionment may be made only by a majority of the members from each municipality who attend, and in case of committees, the action must be affirmed by the board or council so represented.

"(7) Adjustment, how made. The apportionment board shall determine, except in the case of public utilities, such assets and liabilities from the best information obtainable and shall assign to the municipality to which the territory is transferred its proper proportion thereof by assigning the excess of liabilities over assets, or by assigning any particular asset or liability to either municipality, or in such other manner as will best meet the requirements of the particular case. If a proportionate share of any indebtedness existing by reason of municipal bonds or other obligations outstanding shall be assigned to any municipality it shall cause to be levied and collected upon all the taxable property in such municipality in one sum or in annual instalments the amount necessary to pay the principal and interest thereon when the same shall become due, and shall pay the amount so collected to the treasurer of the municipality which issued said bonds or incurred such other obligations, who shall apply the moneys so received strictly to the payment of such principal or interest.

"(8) Appeal to court. In case the apportionment board is unable to agree, the circuit court of the county in which either municipality is situated, may, upon the petition of either municipality, make the adjustment of assets and liabilities pursuant to provisions of this section.

"(9) Transcript of records. When territory shall be detached from a municipality by creation of a new municipality or otherwise, the proper officer of the municipality from which the territory was detached shall furnish, upon demand by the proper officer of the municipality created from the detached territory or to which it is annexed, authenticated transcript of all public records in his office pertaining to the detached territory. The municipality receiving the transcript shall pay therefor. . . ."

Upon service of its petition, dated April 15, 1954, an order to show cause, dated April 14, 1954, was granted to the village. The town filed its response, dated May 13, 1954, and the matter was heard before the court July 6, 1954.

The petition of the village alleges that:

"1. Certain portions of the town of Greenfield were from time to time annexed to the village of West Milwaukee, a municipal corporation located in Milwaukee county, Wisconsin, effective on or about September 3, 1950, September 17, 1950, November 4, 1951, and December 16, 1951, respectively.

"2. On April 21, 1952, the village board of the village of West Milwaukee duly adopted a resolution fixing the time and place for a meeting of the president and trustees of the village of West Milwaukee and the supervisors of the town of Greenfield as the apportionment board defined in sec. 66.03 (5), for the adjustment of assets and liabilities, and written notice of said meeting was duly given to the clerk of the town of Greenfield at least five (5) days prior to the date of said proposed meeting on April 30, 1952, as provided in sec. 66.03 (6) of the Wisconsin statutes, and all members of said apportionment board attended said meeting.

"3. Said apportionment board has met on numerous other occasions to consider an appraisal of property of the town of Greenfield, prepared by the Fidelity Appraisal Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and paid for jointly by the two parties, and also a report by William C. Verzal of John G. Conley Company, certified public accountants, as to the assets and liabilities of the town of Greenfield as of September 30, 1950, but the only agreement reached was that the village of West Milwaukee was, on the basis of the 1950 annexations, entitled to 41.12789% of the assets of the town of Greenfield in excess of the liabilities of said town, but no agreement was reached as to the date as of which said adjustment was to be made nor as to the assets and liabilities of said town, the representatives of the town of Greenfield insisting that the apportionment should be as of March 31, 1950, and refusing to recognize as apportionable assets as of the effective dates of the said annexations, the statutory obligations of town residents to pay income taxes on income received prior to said date but during the calendar year 1950 or corresponding fiscal year, or the right of the town to receive state aids based upon a calendar year or fiscal year including the effective dates of said annexations.

"4. All efforts of your petitioner to compromise have been futile and although, as of September 30, 1950, the general-fund surplus of the town of Greenfield showed a net equity of $596,906.34 and the accrual of state aid and state-distributed taxes as of said date showed a net equity of $545,345.71, and your petitioner stood ready to agree upon any reasonable figure with respect to the value of the buildings and equipment of the town of Greenfield for the purpose of facilitating and consummating said adjustment of assets and liabilities of all said annexations, your petitioner has received nothing and the town officials insist they have not and will not make any proposal of settlement, and refuse to present any of its own data by responsible persons so as to permit of said statutory apportionment."

The town of Greenfield, in its response, admitted the annexations alleged in the petition and the creation of the apportionment board, also the notice and the holding of the meeting on April 30, 1952. The town, in effect, set up the following defenses, among others:

Denied that the town at any time agreed that the village of West Milwaukee was entitled to any payment whatever under sec. 66.03, Stats.

Denied that there was any general-fund surplus on September 30, 1950.

Alleged that the village annexed, on an assessed valuation basis approximately 42% of all the taxable property in the town.

Alleged that the total loss of assessed valuation to the village of West Milwaukee was $27,888,990.

Alleged that the apportionment of any of the assets of the town of Greenfield to the village of West Milwaukee would be unreasonable, unjust, unconscionable, inequitable, and arbitrary, and not within the intended purpose and purview of sec. 66.03, Stats.

Alleged that the accountant for the village of West Milwaukee claimed before the apportionment board the total sum of $545,345.71 based substantially on a claim for income-tax revenues due the town of Greenfield on a so-called "accrual" basis, contrary to the method used and allocation made by the Wisconsin department of taxation for the year 1950 and thereafter.

Alleged that the Wisconsin department of taxation made a proper adjustment and allocation of the income taxes paid by taxpayers located in the annexed area covering all 1950 income to the village of West Milwaukee under secs. 71.07 and 71.14, Stats.; and that all other state-shared or state-allocated revenues and aids were similarly and properly apportioned for 1950 and thereafter.

Alleged that the village of West Milwaukee is not now entitled to any share of such taxes as were finally allocated and lawfully paid to the town of Greenfield by the state of Wisconsin for the year 1950 and thereafter. Alleged that under all of the circumstances sec. 66.03, Stats., is unconstitutional and void.

Alleged, as a further and separate defense to the petition, that the village did not within a reasonable time after the annexations call the statutory meeting as required by sec. 66.03 (6), Stats.

An amended response to the petition was filed, alleging in substance:

That on the 14th day of May, 1954, the village of West Milwaukee, after receiving and considering the town of Greenfield's original response to the petition, did cause a claim to be filed with the town board of the town of Greenfield in the sum of $332,699.48, claiming said sum represented income-tax allocation erroneously paid by the Wisconsin department of taxation to the town of Greenfield and claiming that said sum should have been allocated to the village of West Milwaukee; that the claim was disallowed by the town board of the town of Greenfield on the 19th day of May, 1954, and is now claimed in the above-entitled proceeding for adjustment of assets and liabilities; that the issue raised under sec. 71.14 (7) of the Wisconsin statutes cannot be properly heard and tried in the above proceeding under sec. 66.03, Stats.

After hearing the testimony, the trial court made the following findings and order:

"1. That certain portions of the town of Greenfield were from time to time annexed to the village of West Milwaukee, a municipal corporation located in Milwaukee county, Wisconsin, effective on or about September 3, 1950, September 17, 1950, November 4, 1951, and December 16, 1951, respectively.

"2. That on April 21, 1952, the village board of the village of West Milwaukee duly adopted a resolution fixing the time and place for a meeting of the president and trustees of the village of West Milwaukee and the supervisors of the town of Greenfield as an apportionment board, as defined in sec. 66.03 (5) of the Wisconsin statutes, for the adjustment of assets and liabilities, and written notice of said meeting was duly given to the clerk of the town of Greenfield at least five days prior to the date of said proposed meeting on April 30, 1952, as provided in sec. 66.03 (6) of the Wisconsin statutes, and all members of said apportionment board attended said meeting.

"3. That the apportionment board organized pursuant to sec. 66.03 (5) of the Wisconsin statutes was unable to agree upon a division of assets and liabilities between the village of West Milwaukee and the town of Greenfield.

"4. That the assessed valuation of the town of Greenfield as of May 1, 1950, was $67,394,032; that the assessed valuation of property annexed to the village of West Milwaukee was $27,717,747; that the assessed valuation of the town of Greenfield on November 4, 1951, was $40,029,185; and that the assessed valuation of property annexed to the village of West Milwaukee was $171,243; that the apportionment percentage of the property annexed as of September, 1950, was 41.12789%; and that the percentage of property annexed in November and December, 1951, was .42780%.

"5. That the assets to be divided in accordance with the annexations of September, 1950, are:

"(a) General-fund surplus, September 30, 1950 .................. $596,906.34 Less: Adjustment paid by town of Greenfield for reassessment by Wisconsin department of taxation ......... $29,414.12 Liability for sewer-construction projects completed or in progress September 30, 1950 ............. 14,765.00 ---------- $44,179.12 General-fund surplus for distribution ..................... $552,727.22 "(b) Accrual of state aids and state-distributed taxes as of September 30, 1950 ............ $545,345.71 "(c) Buildings, machinery and equipment, and land Depreciated value September 1950 ....... $ 59,310.00 Town hall addition .... 40,875.00 Additional equipment purchased ......... 8,218.14 ----------- $108,403.14 "6. That in respect to the three small annexations in November and December of 1951, the village of West Milwaukee accepted the statutory proportion computed by the town of Greenfield accountant, to wit, .42780%, and its estimated proportion of the assets at the sum of $1,000. . . .

"It is therefore ordered, that the following distribution be made:

"1. The general-fund surplus as of September 30, 1950, in the amount of $552,727.22 be apportioned 41.12789% to the village of West Milwaukee and 58.87211% to the town of Greenfield.

"2. The accrued state aids and state-distributed taxes as of September 30, 1950, in the amount of $545,345.71 be apportioned 41.12789% to the village of West Milwaukee and 58.87211% to the town of Greenfield.

"3. The value of buildings, machinery and equipment, and land as of September 30, 1950, in the amount of $108,403.14 be apportioned 41.12789% to the village of West Milwaukee and 58.87211% to the town of Greenfield.

"4. The village of West Milwaukee is entitled to the sum of $1,000 as its proportion of the assets under the annexations of November and December, 1951.

"It is further ordered, that until August 15, 1956, the village of West Milwaukee shall be obligated to pay 41.12789% of all moneys disbursed by the town of Greenfield subsequent to July 7, 1954, and entitled to 41.12789% of all moneys received subsequent to July 7, 1954, by the town of Greenfield, if said moneys disbursed or received were assets or liabilities of the town of Greenfield on September 30, 1950, but were not included in the record because the existence of the liability or the asset was not known or was contingent on the action of third persons when the trial of this case was completed on July 7, 1954."

The above final paragraph of the court order contains the substance of a stipulation entered into between the parties after the trial but prior to the decision of the court.

A motion by the village to reopen the case for additional testimony was denied by the court in an order of June 17, 1955. A further motion by respondent village for judgment was denied by the court September 7, 1955.

A motion by appellant town for stay of execution was denied by the court in an order of September 7, 1955, because, by reason of appellant's service of its appeal, execution was stayed under sec. 274.26, Stats.


There is no dispute in the proceeding on appeal here as to the validity of the annexations involved. Appellant town advances as its two chief contentions: First, that sec. 66.03, Stats., is not applicable to the situation existing in the instant case; second, that the respondent village, in any event, has barred itself by laches from the division of assets and liabilities which it seeks.

As to its first contention, the town argues that sec. 66.03, Stats., is a general statute which merely sets up machinery for carrying out the provisions of certain special statutes which specifically invoke sec. 66.03, and calls attention to sec. 60.06 (5), pertaining to division of credits and liabilities when a new town is created; sec. 61.17, pertaining to division of joint property when a new village is created; and sec. 60.31 (2) (b), pertaining to division of assets when a part of a sanitary district is annexed to a village or city. It is maintained that because those sections specifically invoke the application of sec. 66.03, if the legislature had intended sec. 66.03 to apply to annexation of a portion of a town to an already existing municipality, it would, in the same manner, have specifically invoked sec. 66.03 in the annexation statutes. Thus, the town claims that sec. 66.03 does not apply to a situation in which a portion of a municipality, such as the town of Greenfield, is annexed to an already existing municipality, such as the village of West Milwaukee.

Prior to the commencement of this proceeding, except in school-district cases, sec. 66.03, Stats., has never been resorted to by any already existing municipality upon annexation to it of a portion of another municipality. The problem confronting us here with reference to the applicability of sec. 66.03 did not have to be dealt with in Cassian v. Nokomis, 254 Wis. 94, 35 N.W.2d 408, or in Bayside v. Milwaukee, 267 Wis. 448, 66 N.W.2d 129. Those cases concerned situations in which an entirely new municipality was created from a portion of an old one, and there was no question but that sec. 66.03 was applicable, because it was invoked by specific statutes governing those situations.

Appellant, further arguing that sec. 66.03, Stats., could not have been intended to apply to every case where the territory of one municipality is transferred to that of another municipality, points out that in the event of an annexation to a village of a portion of a town there is no division of assets of the school district. In such a situation it is provided by statute that there shall be no change in the boundaries of a school district. A school district is a distinct and separate municipal entity. If there is no change in its boundaries, no territory of the school district has been transferred, but it remains the same, and sec. 66.03, providing for a division of assets and liabilities "when territory is transferred . . . from one municipality to another" has no bearing upon the situation. There has been no division of the territory of the school district. However, as appellant points out, sec. 66.03 does apply when an annexation is made from a town to a city, because in that event the boundaries of the school districts involved are changed. It is noted that in spite of the fact that there is no specific statute invoking sec. 66.03 in such an event, and contrary to its contention that there must be such a specific statute in order that sec. 66.03 may be applied, appellant concedes that sec. 66.03 does apply to school districts where a portion of a town is annexed to a city.

In State ex rel. Thompson v. Beloit City School Dist. 215 Wis. 409, 417, 253 N.W. 598, Mr. Chief Justice ROSENBERRY, referring to Town of Milwaukee v. City of Milwaukee, 12 Wis. *93, pointed out that:

". . .there is a limitation upon the power of the legislature to abolish municipal corporations and to annex the property of the dissolved corporation to another municipal corporation without provision for a fair and equitable distribution of its property and liabilities. . . . It was there held that while such a corporation is subject to control, change, and even destruction, so far as its public function is concerned, it held its property as does any individual, and that these property rights must be fairly and equitably provided for in whatever changes are made in its franchises; that in default of this the corporation retains such entity as is essential to vindicate these property rights. In response to this decision a section was added to the statutes intended to provide a scheme to equitably distribute and to adjust property rights and debts in such a situation."

In the case of Town of Milwaukee v. City of Milwaukee, supra, it was held that no division of property was required under common law, and the court in that case said (pp. *110, *111):

". . . still the inhabitants of the city, by procuring it to be incorporated as such, without any provision as to the land, and by an acquiescence of six years and upwards, must be presumed to have released their interest in it, and to have consented that it remain the sole property of the town as it was after such division. . . . By incorporating the city, without dividing the land, it became the sole property of the town; and, if such effect was inequitable, it was not in the power of the legislature, without the consent of the town, afterwards to remedy the evil."

If, then, as stated in the Thompson Case, the legislature "in response to that decision" enacted sec. 944, Stats. 1898, in an effort to overcome possible inequities such as referred to in the Town of Milwaukee Case, supra, and to provide a fair and equitable distribution in such situations, the legislature must have contemplated from the beginning circumstances involving the annexation of a portion of a municipality to an already existing municipality. In that respect, the situation in the instant case is the same as it was in that early case which provoked or led to the act of 1898.

In 1921, sec. 944, Stats. 1898, was repealed, and, by sec. 4 of Bill No. 22, S., ch. 396, Laws of 1921, sec. 66.03 was created in substantially its present form. The purpose of the 1921 enactment is clearly stated in the revisor's note as follows:

"Uniform system is here substituted for the numerous repetitions of detail now in the statutes. The same principle of adjustment is provided in all cases by the various sections here consolidated, and the present system, provides one . . . procedure for all cases, in language sufficiently general to cover all cases." See Wis. Anno. (1930), p. 421.

The plain language of the statute directs that "when territory is transferred, in any manner provided by law, from one municipality to another, there shall be assigned to such other municipality, etc." Furthermore, sec. 66.03 (9), Stats., expressly refers to the detachment from a municipality "by creation of a new municipality or otherwise" and requires the transcript of records in respect to the detached territory to be delivered "upon demand by the proper officer of the municipality created from the detached territory or to which it is annexed."

Further, as stated in the Thompson Case, at page 414: "The statute itself is so clear as not to create any ambiguity calling for rules of construction." At page 418 of that same decision the following language occurs:

"The scope of the section is indicated in sub. (2), which provides that the section shall operate in every case where territory is transferred from one municipality to another, . . .

"It is obvious that the existence of sec. 66.03 destroys the force of the argument that the application of ch. 425 to the Beloit situation would produce an unconstitutional or an absurd result. It may be supposed that the legislature, having already by general law provided for the apportionment of property and debts in sec. 66.03, would not consider it necessary to expressly provide for the matter."

Sec. 66.03, Stats., then, embraces substantive as well as procedural law; and the trial court adhered to the provisions therein both in granting to the village its right to a division of assets and liabilities sought and in making the apportionment in accordance with the method fixed by the statute.

The sum of $1,000 as the village's proportion of assets under the 1951 annexations is not in dispute. The trial court adopted the estimated proportion computed by the town's accountant. Both the village accountant and the town accountant in their computations of net assets (Ex. 2, sec. 1, and Ex. 2, sec. 2, respectively) show the assessed valuation of the town of Greenfield as of May 1, 1950, to be $67,394,032, and the assessed valuation of the property annexed to the village of West Milwaukee on the September annexation dates to be $27,717,747 and determine the apportionment percentage to be 41.12789% to the village. These figures were adopted by the court, and the percentage of apportionment is the statutory percentage.

The dispute is over the amount of the town assets apportionable under the September, 1950, annexations. The village fixed September 30, 1950, as the date for computing the assets; the town computed its assets as of March 31, 1950. The court determined September 30, 1950, as the proper date for computing the assets. Taking the figures as of that date computed by the village accountant, he determined that the net assets attributable to the general-fund surplus, i.e., the excess of the general fund over liabilities, were $596,906.34. The town accountant claimed two corrections by way of items reducing those assets (Ex. 25, p. 12): (1) Liability to state of Wisconsin for 1949 assessment services not paid until April, 1951; (2) liability for sewer-construction projects completed or in progress September 30, 1950. Although the village accountant did not agree to the latter claim, the trial court allowed both reductions, aggregating $44,179, and found that the general-fund surplus for distribution was $552,727.34.

In the town's apportionment data, the town accountant reported unrecorded fixed assets (land, buildings, and equipment) on hand at the time of the 1950 annexations to be $59,310 (Ex. 25, p. 7). He also reported $40,875, the adjusted total for apportionment purposes of recorded net assets for a new addition to the town hall. The town accountant failed, however, to include in his report certain assets of equipment purchased by it between April 1, 1950, and September 30, 1950, but the testimony of the village accountant, from a check of the annual reports of the town, was that such equipment cost $8,218.14. This testimony was not disproved by any testimony of the town witnesses. The trial court, taking the lowest depreciated value of the unrecorded assets of land, buildings, and equipment computed by the town accountant ($59,310), adding the recorded net assets of land, buildings, and equipment as adjusted by the town accountant ($40,875), and further adding the cost of the equipment testified to by the village accountant ($8,218.14), found the value of the buildings, machinery and equipment, and lands to be $108,503.14.

As to accrued assets from state aids and state-distributed taxes, the village accountant, upon investigation, determined these to amount to $545,345.71 as of September 30, 1950. The town accountant reviewed the computations of the village accountant and found no fault with them mathematically. The trial court adopted the figure determined by the village accountant:

"The court in its order will consider accrued state aids and state-distributed taxes as of September 30, 1950, in the amount of $545,345.71 as an apportionable asset under the authority of the cases of Cassian v. Nokomis, 254 Wis. 94, and Bayside v. Milwaukee, 267 Wis. 448."

As was contended in Bayside v. Milwaukee, supra, the town here contends that any taxes and fees collected by the state after the date of annexation do not constitute assets within the meaning of sec. 66.03 (7), Stats. The Bayside Case has conclusively decided that issue. At page 459, Mr. Justice CURRIE stated:

"The issue of whether that part of such state income taxes and other state taxes remitted to the town by the state subsequent to February 13, 1953 [date of incorporation], which had not been received by the state treasurer until subsequent to February 13, 1953, constituted apportionable assets would appear to be ruled adversely to the claim of the town by our decision in Cassian v. Nokomis, (1948), 254 Wis. 94, 35 N.W.2d 408. In that case the town of Nokomis had been created out of part of the territory of the town of Cassian, and we quote the pertinent portion of the opinion in that case which we deem to be controlling here, as follows (P. 101):

"'Although the payment of delinquent taxes and the receipt of federal, state, and county aids are only contingencies they are generally regarded as assets of a town. See Owsley County Board of Education v. Owsley County Fiscal Court, 251 Ky. 165, 64 S.W.2d 179, and District Township of Jasper v. District Township of Sheridan, 47 Iowa, 183. If they are based on . . . conditions existing before the division of the town, justice requires that the taxpayers in the new town receive their proportionate share.'"

The town concedes that the department of taxation properly allocated to the village its one-fourth share of the 1950 levy of income to be allocated, that being the share due the village from October 1, 1950, to December 1, 1950. However, the town contends that such share having been allocated to the village, the village is not now entitled to an additional share by apportionment. This matter is well settled in the Bayside Case, where it was held, page 460, that "all state taxes received by the town subsequent to . . . [the date of incorporation], until such time as the state recognizes the village of Bayside as a separate municipality entitled to share in such taxes, constitute apportionable assets, . . ." In the instant case, the date of annexation, September 30, 1950, coincided with the date on which the state recognized the transfer of the annexed territory for tax purposes. Taxes collected from and remitted to the village after that date have no bearing upon the apportionable assets of the town as of September 30, 1950. As was stated by the trial court, "The distribution to the village pursuant to sec. 71.14 of a portion of the 1950 income taxes of residents and taxpayers of the annexed territory did not involve or foreclose an apportionment of town assets pursuant to sec. 66.03."

The village further contends that a claim filed with the Wisconsin department of taxation on May 14, 1954, for a share of the 1950 income taxes allocated to the town was a collateral attack on the allocation made in 1951. That claim was an alternative claim pending the outcome of this proceeding. The filing of the claim in no way affects the validity of the trial court's order, and the accrual-of-assets theory, and the court order of July 7, 1955, is not a collateral attack on such tax allocations as made by the Wisconsin department of taxation for 1950, even though the village did not protest the said allocations when made in 1950 and 1951.

The second contention of the appellant town is that the respondent village is barred from relief by laches. Respondent contends that laches cannot be pleaded as a defense, in the present action because of the rule that laches bars only suits solely cognizable in equity, and that such doctrine does not apply to actions at law, especially those based on rights created by statute, as here. However that may be, the appellant has pleaded laches, and we will consider that defense here. The elements of the defense of laches are (1) unreasonable delay, (2) lack of knowledge on the part of the party asserting the defense that the other party would assert the right on which he bases his suit, and (3) prejudice to the party asserting the defense in the event the action is maintained. 19 Am. Jur., Equity, p. 343, sec. 498; 30 C.J.S., Equity, pp. 531, 540, secs. 116, 118. The question as to whether the elements of laches have been established is one of fact, and we find no such facts established in the record.

There was no unreasonable delay in calling the meeting of April 30, 1952. The decision affirming the validity of the annexations was not entered until March 28, 1951. The time for appeal from that judgment would not have expired until at least the fall of 1951. The appellant admits the creation of the apportionment board; the notice of the meeting and the holding of the meeting, — all pursuant to sec. 66.03, Stats. The appellant town could have commenced an action in the circuit court under sec. 66.03 (8) as soon as it was aware of the fact that the apportionment board could not agree. Its claim that such an action would have conceded the jurisdiction of the court to apply sec. 66.03 has no foundation.

Appellant was advised by the village that it was claiming apportionment under the decision of the Cassian Case. It cannot be claimed by the town that it lacked knowledge of the size of the village's claim, because all the data for determining the amount of the claim appeared in the town records, audited by the town's accountant. The town counsel at the argument conceded:

"I admit that in the record there is nothing to show that when that [presentation of the village accountant's report to the apportionment board] was raised they were shocked and so on."

The further contention of the town that it has been prejudiced is unsupported by the facts. The assertion that a property-tax levy, if necessary to pay the village, would not reach town taxpayers who, since 1950, have departed by annexation or municipal incorporation is not persuasive. The town liability to the village established in this proceeding as of September 30, 1950, is an apportionable liability in apportionment proceedings. Sec. 66.03 (2), Stats., specifically provides that liabilities as well as assets are to be apportioned, and sec. 66.03 (7) recognizes that the municipality to which a liability is assigned may, in appropriate cases, be required to levy a property tax for payment thereof. It has been held by this court that the legislature having prescribed the method of ascertaining the liabilities of the respective municipalities, the remedy under sec. 66.03 is "exclusive." Emery v. Worcester, 137 Wis. 281, 118 N.W. 807; Wauwatosa v. Union Free H. S. Dist. 250 Wis. 266, 271, 26 N.W.2d 535.

By the Court. — The village of West Milwaukee being entitled to the relief granted in the circuit court, the ruling is in all things affirmed, and the cause is remanded with directions to enter an interlocutory judgment in respect to those issues there determined and for further proceedings according to law.


Summaries of

Greenfield v. West Milwaukee

Supreme Court of Wisconsin
Mar 6, 1956
272 Wis. 215 (Wis. 1956)

In Greenfield v. West Milwaukee (1956), 272 Wis. 215, 226, 75 N.W.2d 424, we held that, "... A school district is a distinct and separate municipal entity...."

Summary of this case from Green Bay Metropolitan Sewerage District v. Vocational, Technical & Adult Education, District 13
Case details for

Greenfield v. West Milwaukee

Case Details

Full title:TOWN OF GREENFIELD, Appellant, vs. VILLAGE OF WEST MILWAUKEE, Respondent

Court:Supreme Court of Wisconsin

Date published: Mar 6, 1956

Citations

272 Wis. 215 (Wis. 1956)
75 N.W.2d 424

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