Court Opinion

ID: 6605203
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:11:32.360856+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:09.804653
License: Public Domain

LyoN, J.
These are special proceedings, and the jurisdiction of the circuit court over them depends entirely upon the statutes. When the proceedings were commenced, sec. 2205, as originally enacted in the Revised Statutes, was in force. It provides that “ the circuit courts may, on the application of the proprietors of any duly recorded plat of lands, whether made under the provisions of this chapter or under the provisions of any law of this state heretofore in force, and whether the same shall have been heretofore designated as a city or village plat, or addition thereto, or otherwise, alter or vacate such plat, or any part thereof.” This section was amended by ch. GO, Laws of 1885, to read as follows: “The circuit courts may, upon the application or petition of a majority of the proprietors of any duly recorded plat of lands, or any part thereof, or lot therein, whether such plat shall have been heretofore designated as a city or village plat, or addition thereto, or otherwise, alter or vacate such plat, or any part thereof, or any street, public walk, or alley therein.” The amendment was in force when the orders and judgments dismissing the proceedings for want of jurisdiction were made and entered.
Under the original section the petition of all the proprietors of any plat of land was undoubtedly essential to the jurisdiction of the circuit court. In like manner the petition of a majority of such proprietors is essential to such *208;juriscliction under the section as amended. We cannot doubt that the term “ proprietors,” as used in the above statutes, means the owners of the lands included in the whole plat at the time the petition is presented. Under the original statute all these must have joined in the petition, and under the amended statute a majoi'ity of them must so join, or the circuit court obtains no jurisdiction of the proceedings. And it should be made to appear to the court, either by the petition .or in some other appropriate manner, that the petitioners are such proprietors, or a majority of them. ■ The petitions before us fail to show the existence of this vital fact. On the contrary, the fair inference from them is that the petitioner was not the owner or proprietor of all the lands included in the plat of his addition to Wausau. We find nothing in the record which repels this inference, but much that strengthens it. The circuit court was of the same opinion, and we think the rulings that the court had not acquired jurisdiction of the proceedings were correct.
But we do not know of any statute which authorized the court to award costs against the petitioner. Even were these proceedings actions (which they are not), no costs could be given. Felt v. Felt, 19 Wis. 193. The court was powerless to do anything more than to dismiss the proceedings for want of jurisdiction.
By the Cotort.- — Those portions of the orders and judgments of the circuit court which dismissed the proceedings for want of jurisdiction are affirmed, and those portions which awarded costs against the appellant are reversed. Because there is an affirmance on the merits, the appellant must pay the clerk’s fees in this court on both appeals. No other costs are allowed to either party.