Court Opinion

ID: 8192132
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:15:13.90344+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:38.387610
License: Public Domain

Siebeckee, J.
The record shows that the defendants, as city officers, entertain a friendly attitude for the success of “The La Crosse Public Library,” but refuse to take the necessary steps to pay the $6,000 involved in this litigation to the trustees of the library on the ground that the levy and collection of this sum as a library fund tax and its appropriation by the common council of the city to support “The La *635Crosse Public Library” is without authority in law, and hence the action of the common council in raising this fund and so appropriating it is invalid and confers no right on the defendants to pay the money to petitioners as directed by the common council. This defense presents the question, Is the common council of the city authorized in law to levy and collect this tax and to appropriate the amount thereof for the maintenance of “The La Crosse Public Library” ? The facts of the case show that the library managed by this corporation is as free and public in its functions and services to the people of the city of La Crosse as a library established pursuant to the provisions of secs. 931 to 936a, Stats. 1915. The bequest of C. 0. Washburn indicates that he intended to . endow and establish in perpetuity a library in the city of La Crosse to he administered by its citizens for the free use and benefit of the people of the city. It is manifest that this library in its obj ects and uses is in fact serving the purposes of such a library as is contemplated by the provisions of the statutes above cited and which declare that it is the public policy of this state that the equipment and maintenance of such libraries, as therein described, serve a useful public purpose by promoting the general educational interests of the people. The legislature obviously regards free public libraries as appropriate agencies to carry out such public purpose and hence granted to municipalities and towns the authority to levy special taxes for their support. The power of taxation cannot be conferred on these subordinate state agencies for any other than a public purpose. This has been declared in many cases. In Att’y Gen. v. Eau Claire, 37 Wis. 400, this court states: “In legislative grants of the power to municipal corporations the public use must appear. . . . The legislature can delegate the power to tax to municipal corporations for public purposes only; and the validity of the delegation rests on the public purpose.” State ex rel. Garrett v. Froehlich, 118 Wis. 129, 94 N. W. 50; Brodhead v. *636Milwaukee, 19 Wis. 624; State ex rel. New Richmond v. Davidson, 114 Wis. 563, 88 N. W. 596, 90 N. W. 1061. Since the purpose is public it is within the provisions of sec. 3, art. XI, of the state constitution.
It is urged that the provisions of the statute conferring power on municipalities and towns to raise money by taxation for establishing and maintaining libraries limited the use of such power to raise money only for the support of libraries that are established under the provisions of, these statutes. The statutes in terms authorize the raising of library funds by taxation for the support and maintenance of any established secular and nonsectarian public library and reading room free to the inhabitants of a city, to be expended under the authority of its board of education. This indicates most directly that the legislative purpose in delegating this authority to raise money by taxation is not restricted to the support of libraries established pursuant to these statutes. ■ The provisions of the law contain no restrictive terms indicating a purpose to limit this public support to any specific class of libraries and no sufficient reasons are apparent why the power should not be exerted by the proper authorities in support of free libraries that serve the whole public, as do those established by cities under the law. As shown by the instant case, “The La Crosse Public Library” renders all the service to the people of La Crosse that any library established by the city under the statutes could render, and the only point wherein the administration of its corporate affairs differs from one established by the city is that six of its seven trustees are selected by the corporate trustees instead of the common council, and the city mayor is ex oficio made the seventh member. True, the expenditure of the money raised and the report thereof to the common council is not controlled by the statutory regulations which apply to trustees of libraries established by cities. However, the trustees of this library are in law required to devote the funds, furnished them by the city for its support, in all re*637spects as providently and appropriately for tbe benefit of all tbe people of tbe city as if they were selected by tbe common council. Should any delinquency occur in tbe faithful discharge of their public duties they would in equity be responsible for such defaults in tbe same measure as are tbe trustees of libraries established by cities. It is also obvious, should any occasion arise for complaint in any respect, that tbe people of tbe city would undoubtedly enforce their right of refusal to grant further support thereafter. We find no force in tbe argument that tbe levy, collection, and appropriation •of tbe library funds raised by taxation in La Crosse by tbe common council to support this public library is an invalid ■exercise of tbe taxing power because tbe corporation that administers its affairs is a private corporation and controlled by a board of trustees who, except tbe city mayor, ■ are privately appointed.
“The test to be applied in determining whether a particular agency may be employed by tbe state or some particular subdivision thereof by legislative authorization, to perform any particular work, is not whether tbe agency is public, but whether the purpose is public ivithin the legitimate functions of our constitutional government. If tbe purpose be public and constitutional, and tbe agency be an appropriate means to accomplish it, and not expressly or by necessary implication prohibited by state or national constitution, its employment, under reasonable regulations for control and accountability to secure public interests, is legitimate and constitutional. ... As indicated in Curtis’s Adm’r v. Whipple, 24 Wis. 350, it is not sufficient that an enterprise be one in which tbe public are interested and which might be conducted at public expense, to warrant tbe using of tbe taxing power to aid it ex donatio; but it may be used for tbe purpose of compensating for an equivalent in public service rendered under proper regulations to protect municipal interests, unless tbe particular governmental function to which it relates is expressly or by necessary implication restricted to public agencies.” Wis. Ind. School v. Clark Co. 103 Wis. 651, 667, 79 N. W. 422.
*638The city of La Crosse operates under a special charter. In 1889 the city charter was amended to read as follows: “The common council shall have power to appropriate and to pay out of the general fund for the support of the La Crosse Public Library such sums of money, not exceeding two thousand dollars per year, as it may deem expedient.” This conferred a special authority on the common council to appropriate moneys for this purpose to a limited amount. The power conferred by sec. 931, Stats. 1915, is to levy a tax upon the taxable property of the city to provide a library fund. The purposes to which this fund may be applied we have already considered. It is obvious that it contemplates support of a public library different in nature and broader in scope than the special charter provision above quoted. Conflicts in statutes are to be avoided if that can be reasonably done. Furthermore, a general statute is not to be construed as amending a special charter if the two acts do not of necessity conflict in their operation. By sec. 4986, Stats. 1915, it is also declared that a variance between a general law and charter provision shall not abolish the special charter provision when a different intention be plainly manifest. The authority to provide a library fund as provided in sec. 931, Stats. 1915, and the special provision of the La Crosse-city charter were manifestly enacted for different purposes and the exercise of one of these powers does not prevent the exercise of the other. Under such conditions it must be held that the general law does not affect the special charter provision and both can stand as enacted.
The result of the foregoing considerations is that the petitioners are legally entitled to have the $6,000, raised as a-library tax by the city, paid to them pursuant to the resolution of the common council.
By the Court. — The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded to the circuit court with direction to< grant the writ as prayed in the petition.