Horan v. City of Eau Claire

Wisconsin Supreme Court
Horan v. City of Eau Claire, 123 Wis. 86 (Wis. 1904)
100 N.W. 1063; 1904 Wisc. LEXIS 210
Winslow

Horan v. City of Eau Claire

Opinion of the Court

WiNslow, J.

The charter of the city of Fau Glaire, like that of many other cities, prohibits the bringing of actions against the city in the ordinary way, and requires the claimant to file his claim with the city clerk, and to appeal from the decision of the common council thereon in case it be necessary to invoke legal remedies. The complaint in the present action shows that an injury was received by reason of a serious defect in one of the city’s sidewalks, - and further shows that the plaintiff has taken every step required of her by the charter of the city and by the general statutes of the state to fix the liability of the city, and to perfect her appeal from the council’s disallowance of her claim; but it does not allege that the city clerk of the defendant city, has made his return to the circuit court of the proceedings had before the council and the papers in the case, as the charter requires, and *88on this ground the defendant challenges the legal sufficiency of the complaint.

The simple question presented' is whether it is necessary for the plaintiff in his complaint to allege the making and filing of the clerk’s return in response to the appeal. The de-murrant’s contention is that the filing of the return is jurisdictional ; that, until the return is filed, the court cannot proceed ; nor is a cause of action stated, because the statute provides that upon the filing of the return “such appeal shall be entered, tried and determined in the same manner as cases originally commenced in the circuit court.” Laws of 1889, ch. 184, subch. VII, sec. 25. This court has said in a number of cases that in actions of this kind the complaint should allege the facts made requisite by the charter to give the court jurisdiction (Watson v. Appleton, 62 Wis. 267, 22 N. W. 475; Koch v. Ashland, 83 Wis. 361, 53 N. W. 674), and has also said that an appeal from a decision of the county board cannot be said to be pending in the circuit 'court, within the meaning of sec. 2811a, Stats. 1898, until the return of the county clerk is filed in court in response to the appeal. Rice v. Ashland Co. 108 Wis. 189, 84 N. W. 189. The present contention has not been made in this court before, although it would seem that among the great number of cases of a similar nature which have reached this court the objection, if tenable, Avould long since have been raised. However, a proposition is not to be condemned merely because of its novelty, though that fact may justify closer inspection. There is nothing in the charter of the city of Kau Claire,'hot do we know of any general statutory provision, which requires formal pleadings to be made in the circuit court. The entire matter evidently rests in the discretion of the court. Doubtless it is wise to order the making of formal pleadings in such cases, but the refusal to require formal pleadings could hardly be assigned as prejudicial error unless it appeared that the discretion vested in the court was abused. As the jurisdictional facts *89Telating to the proper taking of the appeal will always appear from the return, and thus he within the court’s knowledge, it may perhaps he doubtful whether it was wise or helpful to require that .the complaint should state them. But, as this •question has been settled by the cases cited, and we do not ■care to disturb the rule, we shall not discuss it. The question is, what are the facts made requisite by the charter to give the ■court jurisdiction ? We are not inclined to give these words a signification any broader than necessary. It must be conceded that the action cannot be tried in circuit court until the return is made. The action is not pending, for the purposes of trial at least, until the filing of the return. This must be -so not only as the result of the ruling in Rice v. Ashland Co., supra, but also from the language of the charter before quoted. But it is inaccurate to say that, because the court has no ■power or jurisdiction to try and determine the cause, it has no jurisdiction to do anything in the action. It may have jurisdiction for some purposes, though not for the trial. Thus, in case of an appeal from justice’s to circuit court the latter court cannot proceed to try the cause until the return •of the justice is made, but it may make an order in the cause compelling a return. Bruins v. Downey, 45 Wis. 496. So we have no doubt in the present case, if the city clerk neglects ■or refuses to make his return, the circuit court could make an order in the case requiring the return to be made, and not •drive the plaintiff to the necessity of commencing a separate action of mandamus. This can only be possible on the ground that the court has jurisdiction for some purposes upon the perfecting of the appeal, although not for trial of the case until the return is filed.

We do not feel disposed to place any greater burdens on litigants in the matter of drawing their complaints than necessary. It seems quite onerous enough that they are obliged to set forth all the facts necessary to make a complete common-law or statutory cause of action and to show a perfect *90appeal. Tlie complaint, we think, may well rest there. The-plaintiff has taken every step required of her, and has set it forth in her complaint. The act of the public officer which, is required to be performed in response to the plaintiff’s acts-before the case can be tried may well be allowed to be proven by the return, which is always before the court, like the officer’s return on a summons.

By the Court. — Order affirmed.

Reference

Status
Published