Court Opinion

ID: 8186359
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:08:52.385619+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:23.177696
License: Public Domain

The following opinion was filed June 2, 1899:
Dodge, J.
This is an appeal from an order made in an action to set aside an alleged invalid assessment of taxes staying proceedings until a tax can be levied in accordance with sec. 1210b, Stats. 1898, the court having first found facts and reached a conclusion of law that such assessment was invalid. The order, in terms, not only stays proceedings until a reassessment can be had, but also orders that the proper authorities of the town of Greenfield proceed to make a reassessment and levy.
With some reluctance we feel constrained to hold that this order is not appealable. It is clearly an order in an action, *672.and, to be appealable, must, “ in effect, determine the action, .and prevent a judgment from which a“n appeal may be taken.” It certainly does not do this. It merely postpones proceedings in the action until a certain fact is ascertained, whereupon judgment is to be rendered, from which an appeal can be taken. It is not enough that the merits of the suit are •all decided by the findings and conclusions of law, for that would be equally true in any case where the findings had been filed and an order for judgment made, in which case no appeal lies until the order has been carried out by the •entry of the judgment. Johns v. N. W. Mut. R. Asso. 94 Wis. 431. Orders which merely postpone the entry of judgment for the performance of some act have repeatedly been held not appealable. Cook v. McComb, 91 Wis. 445; Johnston v. Reiley, 24 Wis. 494; Felt v. Amidon, 48 Wis. 66; Peeper v. Peeper, 53 Wis. 507; Parmalee v. Wheeler, 32 Wis. 429. In Felt v. Amidon, supra, it was said: “We think this .section refers to such orders, and such only, as by their very nature determine the action or prevent a judgment. . . . But when an order stays proceedings until an act shall be performed which is not illegal, and which is such as can ordinarily be performed, such stay cannot be said to determine the action or prevent a judgment.” In that case, it is true, the act for which a stay was granted was one to be performed by the party appealing, but in Peeper v. Peeper, supra, the stay depended on the decision of an issue in probate in county court, and was held not appealable. We are aware that an appeal from an order exactly similar to the one at bar was entertained by this court in Pratt v. Lincoln Co. 61 Wis. 63, but the question of its appealability was not raised or considered by the court; and, further, at that time the statute authorized on appeal from an order “ involving the merits of the action, or any part thereof,” which authority was taken away by ch. 212, Laws of 1895. Under the statute as it now exists, we are denied jurisdiction.
*673Appreciating fully the objections to the practice heretofore followed in obedience to sec. 12105, whereby the burdens of a reassessment are cast on the town before an appeal can be had from the court’s decision upon substantially all the material issues of the case, although such decision is fully reached before such reassessment, we deem it proper to suggest to trial courts the probábility that new legislation contained in the revision of 1898 has now authorized a practice which may be free from those objections. Sec. 2883, Stats. 1898, brings into our practice and authorizes an interlocutory judgment in case of a finding or decision substantially disposing of the merits, but leaving an account to be taken or issue of fact to be decided; and sec. 3047 authorizes appeals from interlocutory judgments. We at present see no reason why that step might not hereafter be taken in cases of this sort at the stage at which the stay order is directed by sec. 12105. As the question is not before us, however, we cannot and do not authoritatively decide it, but content ourselves with this mere suggestion.
By the Court.— Appeal dismissed.
A motion for a rehearing was denied September 26,1899.