Court Opinion

ID: 8190986
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:13:59.462101+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:34.294030
License: Public Domain

Marshall, J.
It is conceded that the creation of plaintiff vacated the order assigning that part of the town-line road where the bridge was located to the town of Weston for maintenance and the responsibility for such maintenance devolved upon plaintiff and defendant, subject to a new arrangement between, them apportioning to each its particular part for such purpose. In such a case sec. 1273, Stats., provides, “A majority of the supervisors of each such town shall, before the time for making the next subsequent tax roll, meet together with a majority of the supervisors of such new town . . . and all of them when so convened shall, if they can agree, make a new order apportioning their liabilities on account of such highway, which shall be filed” as in case of the original order. In case of failure to make such new division in the manner indicated, the statute provides for accomplishing it in a different manner, — the whole scheme indicating that, as to a laid-out road, there shall be no divided responsibility respecting maintenance thereof.
Counsel for appellant, at the proper time in the course of the trial, endeavored to prove that there was a meeting of supervisors and an arrangement made for maintenance of the bridge, as the statute requires. All evidence in respect to the|matter was rejected, first, for want of proof of any discussion at the meeting of supervisors as to changing the original order made in 1898; second, for want of proof of any notice to each of the supervisors of the purpose of the meeting. Before the final ruling was made, evidence had been received, under objection, showing that a majority of the supervisors of each town convened, intending to make a division of the highway, and that a decision was made in respect to the matter; also evidence indicating, or an offer of such evidence, that the agreed arrangement was carried out and that it did not contemplate that defendant should bear any part of the burden of building the bridge, proper. All evi*661dence introduced or offered was held improper, for the reasons specified, and such as had been received was actually, or in effect, stricken out.
It seems clear that the ruling above mentioned was erroneous. The statute does not provide that the meeting of supervisors shall be upon notice specifying its- particular purpose. It merely provides that a majority of the supervisors of one town shall meet with a majority of the supervisors of the other and that they shall make an adjustment to fit the new condition, in case all agree. The statute does not seem to contemplate any board action of the supervisors of the respective towns for the purpose of providing for holding the meeting. No provision is made for notice of any sort. The meeting contemplated is neither a general nor a special one of the respective town boards; but is a meeting of at least a majority of the supervisors of one town with a majority of the supervisors of the other, and with authority, if all agree, to bind both towns; the result to be evidenced by an order made by them and filed for record in the office of the town clerk in each town. Furthermore, no notice was required in any event of a purpose to change the original order made in 1898.
The trial court seems to have dwelt much on that. Why so does not appear. The supervisors in making a new assignment had nothing to do with the original order. That was vacated by force of the statutes. They, met to deal with the matter from an original standpoint.
The error of the circuit court, as above indicated, disabled •appellant from having the benefit of evidence which might have established a perfect defense to the action. It may be it might not have been able to prove the filing of a new order; but the offer of evidence was ample to make a case with technical accuracy. However, if there were some failure to strictly follow the statute in respect to the matter, yet both towns having, for years, acted upon the faith of the agree*662ment, as there is strong indications that they did, respondent had no legitimate standing to justify it in changing its attitude. Whether an arrangement irregularly made between the two towns would be binding if objected to before expenditure of money thereunder, or form a legitimate basis for compulsory action, is one thing, and whether the irregularity would be material as to expenditures made while both parties were acting on the faith of the agreement being binding, is quite another. The latter seems to be respondent’s situation. While there has been some change in the statute since Montgomery v. Scott, 34 Wis. 338, the logic thereof supports the idea that a verbal agreement apportioning the burden of maintaining a town-line road is, to the extent of its mutual observance, binding.
So far as this case goes it bears out the idea of appellant that respondent regarded the responsibility for maintenance of the bridge, proper, to be wholly its own. No request to, or demand was made of, appellant in advance of constructing the bridge for its share of the expense which respondent incurred. The county was petitioned to assist plaintiff upon the theory of the bridge being wholly within its jurisdiction. The idea of holding appellant jointly liable seems to have been wholly an afterthought, and is inconsistent with everything which occurred theretofore, either in respect to the relations of respondent with the county or with appellant.
Much is made in the trial court’s disposition of the case of the circumstance that the chairman of supervisors of appellant was a member of the county board when respondent petitioned the county in respect to the bridge, acted with his associates on the petition and as a member of the committee of the county board in constructing the bridge. No reason is perceived why his performance of duty as a member of the county board in executing the statute respecting county aid to respondent in maintaining the bridge, considered as its duty, otherwise, to wholly maintain, should count against his *663town in this case. It seems that a circumstance which was, really, strongly persuasive against the theory, of liability of appellant to respondent, was turned the other way through a misconception of the real situation.
A further reason for disapproving of the decision below is this: This is not a case, in any view of it, of joint duty to do a particular act, requiring pecuniary outlay, and perform’ anee by one after refusal by the other to join in bearing the burden, as in Waupun v. Chester, 61 Wis. 401, 21 N. W. 251; West Bend v. Mann, 59 Wis. 69, 17 N. W. 972; and Bloomer v. Bloomer, 128 Wis. 297, 107 N. W. 974. The learned circuit judge seems to have relied on the rule of those cases, failing to see, however, absence of one of the circumstances vital to its application; viz. refusal of the town sought to be coerced, prior to performance of.the duty, to participate in such performance. The gist of the matter appears from this language in Waupun v. Chester, supra:
“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 learned circuit judge said:
“There being joint liability and duty, there arises an implied contract to repay. This rule applies to a case where money or other property is received under such circumstances that the general law, independently of express contract, imposes the obligation to do justice.”
The premises áre wrong. Mere joint liability and duty does not give rise to liability of one of two joint obligors to the other who may have voluntarily solely performed such duty. The implied contract to contribute springs from the necessary payment by one of that which the two, jointly, should pay. In case of a mere voluntary payment, as in this case, the law does not impose any obligation to contribute.
In each of the authorities cited by the trial court to sup*664port the conclusion reached there was, significantly, the vital element which is wholly absent here, such as Waupun v. Chester, supra. The cases cited to the'effect that, where a municipality contracts beyond its power, or'irregularly, but not in violation of an express prohibition, and obtains the benefit thereof for legitimate municipal purposes, it is liable, if not on the contract then upon equitable principles, such as Schneider v. Menasha, 118 Wis. 298, 95 N. W. 94, and Argenti v. San Francisco, 16 Cal. 255, are beside the one here. Neither the circumstance of previous agreement nor that of subsequent appropriation are now present. Mere use by the public of a bridge, as in this case, there being no opportunity for the municipality, as such, to accept or reject it, is not such an appropriation as the rule calls for.
On the whole, in any view we can take of this case, it does not seem that appellant had a fair trial, or that legal principles were correctly applied to the facts.
By the Court. — The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial
Timlin, J., dissents.