PUBLISHED OPINION
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Case No.:��� ���� 96-0877
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Complete
Title
of
Case:THERESA
DITTBERNER,
��������� ���� VERNON P. AND DOROTHY ROSKE,
��������� ���� AND JOHNSON CHEESE EQUIPMENT, INCORPORATED,
Plaintiffs-Respondents,
��������� ���� �����
v.
WINDSOR SANITARY DISTRICT NUMBER 1,
Defendant-Appellant.
����
Oral
Argument: November 21,
1996
������������������������������������������������������������
�� COURT���������� ����������� COURT OF
APPEALS OF WISCONSIN
Opinion
Released:���� March 20, 1997
Opinion
Filed: ���� March
20, 1997
������������������������������������������������������������
Source
of APPEAL��������������� Appeal from a judgment
Full
Name JUDGE��������������� COURT:���� Circuit
Lower
Court.������ ��������������� COUNTY:��� Dane
(If
"Special"��������� ��������������� JUDGE:���� Richard
J. Callaway
so
indicate)
����������������������������������� ������������������������
JUDGES:���� Eich,
C.J., Vergeront and Roggensack, JJ.
��������������� Concurred:��
��������������� Dissented:��
�����������������������������������������������������������
Appellant
ATTORNEYSFor the defendant-appellant the
cause was argued by Timothy D. Fenner of Axley Brynelson of
Madison.�
Respondent
ATTORNEYSFor the plaintiffs-respondents the
cause was argued by Nicholas J. Loniello of Loniello, Johnson &
Simonini of Madison.�
������ COURT OF
APPEALS ��������������� DECISION �� DATED AND
RELEASED ������������ March
20, 1997 |
����������������� NOTICE |
A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an
adverse decision by the Court of Appeals.�
See � 808.10 and Rule
809.62, Stats. |
This opinion is subject to further editing.� If published, the official version will appear in the bound
volume of the Official Reports. |
No.� 96-0877
STATE OF WISCONSIN�������������� IN
COURT OF APPEALS
����������������������� �������������
�����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������
THERESA
DITTBERNER,
VERNON
P. AND DOROTHY ROSKE,
AND
JOHNSON CHEESE EQUIPMENT, INCORPORATED,
����������������������� ����������������������� ����������� Plaintiffs-Respondents,
����������� ����������� v.
WINDSOR
SANITARY DISTRICT NUMBER 1,
����������������������� ����������������������� ����������� Defendant-Appellant.
����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������
����������������������� APPEAL
from a judgment of the circuit court for Dane County:� RICHARD J. CALLAWAY, Judge.�
Reversed and cause remanded.
����������������������� Before
Eich, C.J., Vergeront and Roggensack, JJ.
����������������������� EICH,
C.J.� The Windsor Sanitary District
appeals from a judgment voiding its attempted "amended assessment" of
property belonging to Theresa Dittberner, Johnson Cheese Inc. and Vernon and
Dorothy Roske.
����������������������� The
issues concern the District's power to amend an assessment after completion of
the project for which the assessment was made and to include property that was
outside the District's boundaries at the time of the original assessment.� We conclude that the District did not exceed
the authority granted it by � 66.60(10), Stats.,
to amend the assessment.� We thus
reverse the trial court's judgment.
�������������������� I.� Background
����������������������� Early
in 1994, the District's western boundary ran along Lake Road in the Town of
Windsor.� When the owners of businesses
to the east of Lake Road�property that was within the District�began expanding
their facilities, they approached the Windsor Sanitary Commission[1]
about the possibility of extending a sewer line to their lands.� After considering several alternatives, the
commission decided to run the line along Lake Road.� That plan, while more expensive than simply connecting the
businesses to an existing line, appeared to the commission to be the most
cost-effective because it would extend service to the western side of Lake
Road, including the Dittberner, Johnson Cheese[2]
and Roske lots, which were then outside the District's boundaries.
����������������������� In
mid-June 1994, the commission advertised for bids for the sewer extension
project.� By mid-summer, it had accepted
one of the proposals and adopted resolutions requesting the Windsor Town Board
to add the Dittberner, Roske and Johnson Cheese properties to the District.[3]
����������������������� On
September 16, 1994, the board entered an order adding the Johnson Cheese
property to the District.� Construction
of the extension proceeded, and by October it had been completed and paid for
by the commission.
����������������������� On
November 14, the commission adopted a "preliminary resolution"
declaring its intention to exercise its special assessment powers under
� 66.60, Stats.�the general
special-assessment statute�to pay for the extension.� The resolution stated that the assessment was being made under
its "police powers," and the engineer's report indicated that the
commission intended to assess the Johnson Cheese property immediately and make
the Dittberner and Roske lots subject to a "deferred
assessment."� On November 29, the
commission issued a notice that a hearing on the proposed assessment would be
held on December 12, 1994.� The notice
went to all affected property owners, although there is a dispute�apparently
never resolved below�as to whether Dittberner, Johnson Cheese and the Roskes
all received it.
����������������������� On
December 2, the board added the Dittberner and Roske properties to the
District, and the December 12 hearing proceeded as scheduled.� Vernon Roske and a representative from
Johnson Cheese appeared at the hearing and, at its conclusion, the commission
adopted a "final resolution" levying the assessments in question and
stating again that it was acting pursuant to its "police powers."� The Dittberner and Roske assessments were
not deferred, as proposed in the original resolutions, but were included in the
levy, notice of which was issued to all property owners.
����������������������� Realizing
that the assessment contained some "procedural irregularities," the
commission decided to reopen and reconsider it, which it did in February
1995.� A District engineer filed a new
report, and a public hearing was noticed and held on the proposed amendments to
the assessment.� Dittberner, Johnson
Cheese and the Roskes presented their objections to the assessments at the
hearing, after which an "amended and restated final resolution" was
adopted indicating that the Dittberner and Roske properties and the northern
portion of the Johnson Cheese property would be eligible for deferred assessment
with payment due on March 13, 2005, or when a sewer hook-up permit was issued
or ownership of the property changed, whichever occurred first.
����������������������� The
three property owners then brought this action, seeking to void the assessment
and reassessment and to prevent future reassessment.� The trial court ruled that the failure to follow the statutory
requirements was a jurisdictional error that could not be cured by the
attempted reassessment and granted the owners' motion for summary
judgment.� The District appeals.�
������������������� II.� Standard of Review
����������������������� Summary
judgment is appropriate in cases in which there is no genuine issue of material
fact and the moving party has established his or her entitlement to judgment as
a matter of law.� Germanotta v.
National Indem. Co., 119 Wis.2d 293, 296, 349 N.W.2d 733, 735 (Ct. App.
1984).� When, as is the case here, the
material facts are not in dispute, the only issue on appeal is whether the
moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.� Biggart v. Barstad, 182 Wis.2d
421, 428, 513 N.W.2d 681, 683 (Ct. App. 1994).�
Therefore, we apply the same methodology as the trial court and we
consider the issues de novo.� Green
Spring Farms v. Kersten, 136 Wis.2d 304, 315, 401 N.W.2d 816, 820
(1987).
����������������� III.� Validity of the Reassessment
������������������� A.
"Jurisdictional Defect"
����������������������� The District,
acknowledging that its original assessment was void, argues that the
reassessment statute,[4]
� 66.60(10), Stats., authorizes
the procedures it followed in this case.�
The statute provides in pertinent part as follows:
If ... any assessment is void or invalid for any reason,
or if the governing body shall determine to reconsider and reopen any
assessment, it is empowered, after giving notice ... and after a public
hearing, to amend, cancel or confirm any such prior assessment ....
����������������������� The
property owners maintain that the District could not properly include their
property in the reassessment because the sewer extension had been approved and
substantially constructed at the time their lands were added to the
District.� Citing two early cases, Schintgen
v. La Crosse, 117 Wis. 158, 94 N.W. 84 (1903), and Dean v.
Charlton, 23 Wis. 590 (1869), they argue, in essence, that the statute
does not give the District "the power to do after the fact that which [it]
lacked power to do in the first instance."
����������������������� In
Schintgen, the supreme court discussed the principles governing
reassessments at some length.� The court
said that whether an invalid assessment can be remedied by reassessment turns
on whether the invalidity is the result of a "jurisdictional defect,"
as opposed to a "procedural defect."�
Schintgen, 117 Wis. at 164, 94 N.W. at 86.� The court noted, however, that use of the
term "jurisdictional defect" is more confusing than it is helpful
because "the fact that a defect may be properly termed jurisdictional is
by no means a test" of whether a reassessment may be undertaken.� Id.� In other words, according to Schintgen, some
"jurisdictional" defects are truly jurisdictional, in that the
municipality lacks the power to correct them, while others are not.�
����������������������� It
is clearer, we think, to discuss the subject in terms of the nature of the
defects or improprieties that are subject to cure by reassessment or amendment,
and the nature of those that are not.�
����������������������� When
the municipality lacks power to levy the assessment from the start�in the Schintgen
court's words, when the law did not authorize the assessment against the
property "under any circumstances at the time the work was done and the
original assessment made"�that defect may not be cured by
reassessment.� Id. at 163,
94 N.W. at 86.� An assessment
"which could not be legally assessed under any circumstances, by reason of
the absence of any law authorizing it," cannot be validated by
reassessment.� Id. at 164,
94 N.W. at 86.�
����������������������� On
the other hand, where the original assessment is rendered invalid by
"nonconformity with or a minor deviation from the provisions of the
assessment statute"�or even by a "material defect or omission"
in the proceedings�that invalidity can be corrected "under the provisions of
a proper reassessment law," as long as due process is satisfied and the
municipality had the legal ability to levy the assessment in the
beginning.� Id. at 164-65,
168, 94 N.W. at 86-87; see also Bekkedal v. Viroqua,
183 Wis. 176, 196, 196 N.W. 879, 886 (1924).
����������������������� Because
the law states, in � 66.60(10), Stats.,
that a reassessment may be made whenever the first assessment is void "for
any reason," it follows that as long as the assessment could have been
levied "in the first instance," the fact that it was defective for
noncompliance with statutory procedures does not prevent correction of the
error by reassessment.[5]�
����������������������� The
only cases to which we have been referred that involved a
"noncorrectable" defect in the original proceedings are Schintgen�where
the property was specifically exempt from assessment by law�and Dean, where
the� underlying assessment was
illegal.� In the instant case, we are
never told precisely why the District considered the first assessment invalid.� While one might infer from the timing of the
addition of the plaintiffs' lots to the District that the District simply
wanted to "start over" in order to bring them in, the only reference
to the subject in the record is found in the commission's minutes dated
February 1, 1995, which state: "Whereas, the Commission ... has been
advised of certain procedural irregularities regarding the Lake Road Special
Assessments which may result in such assessments being declared to be invalid,
.... the Commission has pursuant to Section 66.60(10), ... decided to
reconsider and reopen such assessments."
����������������������� We
have not, in short, been referred to any evidence indicating that the defect
prompting the reassessment was not of a type that could be corrected by
reassessment under � 66.60(10), Stats.
����������������������� The
property owners disagree.� They argue first
that the District�by adopting the "preliminary resolution" stating
its intention to exercise its assessment powers after the improvement
had been put in place�"reversed the procedure required by ...
statute"[6] and that
such a "defect" may not be cured by reassessment.� We consider this the type of procedural
violation�the type of "material defect or omission in the
process"�that Schintgen and similar cases have recognized as
being "correctable" through reassessment.� As such, it is not fatal to the District's ability to reassess.
����������������������� In
Bekkedal, 183 Wis. at 198, 196 N.W. at 887, the supreme court
held that although the municipality failed to establish and record the grade of
a proposed street before levying the assessment to pay for it, as the
then-existing statute required, it was still entitled to reassess "even
though the work has been completed."�
Bekkedal was reaffirmed in Extrom v. Tomahawk,
257 Wis. 348, 43 N.W.2d 357 (1950), where the court again held that even though
the city levied a defective special assessment, it had jurisdiction to
reassess, although the work had been completed before the reassessment
proceedings began.� Id. at
350-51, 43 N.W.2d at 358; see also City of Milwaukee v. Taylor,
229 Wis. 328, 346-47, 282 N.W. 448, 457 (1938) ("We perceive no ground
upon which the taxpayer can legitimately object if he is assessed for special
benefits which have been conferred upon him although the benefit may have been
conferred prior to the making of the assessment.").[7]
������������������������ It is true that Bekkedal
and Extrom arose under a statute providing for reassessment when
the work "has been done, or may hereafter be done."[8]� We agree that � 66.60(10), Stats., does not contain that precise
language; but, by the same token, neither is there anything in its terms that
would limit a municipality's ability to reassess to situations in which
construction has not yet commenced.[9]� We believe that the statute's broad
"for any reason" language, coupled with its express recognition that
reassessment may be made after completion of the project when the final costs vary
from the original estimates, forecloses such a restrictive interpretation.[10]
����������������������� The
property owners next argue that the District, by reassessing after adding their
lots to the levy, in effect changed its boundaries on its own�something it is
not authorized by law to do.� We agree
that a sanitary district has no independent authority to alter its boundaries
but is limited to requesting the town board to add property to the
district.� See Haug v.
Wallace Lake Sanitary Dist., 130 Wis.2d 347, 353, 387 N.W.2d 133, 136
(Ct. App. 1986); � 60.785(1)(b), Stats.� That is what the District did here
and, as we have said, the fact that the work was either underway or had been
completed by the time this was accomplished is not the type of defect that is
beyond the District's power to cure via reassessment under � 66.60(10), Stats.�
� B. Estoppel
����������������������� The
property owners contend that even if the District had the ability to reassess,
it should be estopped from doing so�again because it failed to comply with the
statutory procedures in the initial proceedings.� In so arguing, they rely on Thomas v. City of Waukesha,
19 Wis.2d 243, 120 N.W.2d 58 (1963), where the supreme court applied estoppel
principles to prevent a city from arguing that it had proceeded under its
police power in levying a special assessment when it had plainly levied the
assessment pursuant to its general taxing power.� Id. at 250, 120 N.W.2d at 62.
����������������������� We
think Thomas is readily distinguishable.� First, it involved an assessment, not a
reassessment, proceeding, and, as indicated, the issue before the court was
whether the city could maintain on appeal that the assessment proceeded under
its police power when all of its actions clearly led to the conclusion that it
was acting under its general taxing authority in levying the assessment.� Second, in a later case, Christenson
v. City of Green Bay, 72 Wis.2d 565, 568, 241 N.W.2d 193, 195 (1976),
the court, facing a situation similar to the one before us here�a challenge to
a municipality's � 66.60(10), Stats.,
reassessment "where its original assessment ... had been found to be
procedurally invalid"�distinguished Thomas as arising on a
set of wholly dissimilar facts.� We
reach the same conclusion here and reject the property owners' estoppel
argument.
IV. Due Process
����������������������� As
we discussed above, under Schintgen, to be valid a
"corrective" reassessment procedure such as that provided by
� 66.60(10), Stats., must
"preserve[] to the property owner his [or her] right to be heard and all
the essentials of due process of law."�
Schintgen, 117 Wis. at 166, 94 N.W. at 87.� The property owners argue that because the
hearing on the reassessment came only after completion of the project, they did
not receive the process they were due.
����������������������� In
discussing the process due the parties to a reassessment proceeding, the Schintgen
court stated:�
[T]he legislature may ratify and cure, through
reassessment by the local authorities that which it might have constitutionally
and lawfully authorized in the first instance. By this it is not meant ... that
the constitutional requirement of "due process of law" can be
overridden.� This court has held that
... provisions authorizing assessments without notice, actual or constructive,
at any time to the property owner, are void because made without due process of
law.� But this notice need not necessarily
be before the improvement is made.� The
property owner has no constitutional right to be heard as to the character of
the improvement nor the manner of its construction.� It is enough if the law provides for notice and hearing at some
time during the proceedings .... if a reassessment law gives the property owner
full notice and opportunity to be heard as to the amount of his assessment, it
cannot be held unconstitutional ... provided there was a law in existence at
the time of the improvement authorizing such work to be done and paid for by
special assessments upon property owners.
Id. at 164-65, 94 N.W. at 86.�
����������������������� The
property owners rely on an Oregon case, Heritage Square Development Co.
v. City of Sandy, 648 P.2d 1317 (Or. Ct. App. 1982), which they say
upheld a claim similar to the one they make here: that when no hearings were
held prior to construction of the improvement, reassessment cannot cure such a
"defect."� The applicable
Oregon assessment laws, however, gave property owners within the area the right
of "remonstrance"�the power to nullify the proposed assessment by
filing or making objections at the hearing.[11]� In Heritage Square, the
original assessment was held invalid due to a procedural defect and while a
hearing was held in connection with the reassessment proceedings, the owners
were not permitted to "remonstrate."�
The Oregon court, voiding the reassessment, emphasized that the right to
"defeat [the proposal] by remonstrance" was such a "substantial
right" that it could not be taken away.�
Id. at 1323.� Thus,
concluded the court,
when reassessment provisions fail to afford substantial
rights equivalent to those mandated at each stage of the original proceeding to
[construct an improvement] ... the city must repeat the point of the first
defect that rendered the assessment void ....
Id. at 1324.[12]
����������������������� Unlike
Oregonians, Wisconsin landowners do not have the right to a hearing at which
they might vote to defeat the proposed assessment.� Indeed, the hearing required by the assessment statute, �
66.60(7), Stats., is limited in
scope.� The statute states only that,
after the municipality has prepared its "report" in support of the
preliminary resolution, a hearing must be held "at which all persons
interested ... may appear before the governing body ... and be heard concerning
the matters contained in the preliminary resolution and the report."� Section 66.60(7).� And, after the hearing, "the governing body may approve,
disapprove or modify ... the report."�
Section 66.60(8).
����������������������� Thus,
in Wisconsin at least, property owners do not have the power to veto a proposed
assessment.� They have the right to
judicial review of the municipality's action, and that recourse is not
affected, much less lost (as occurred in Heritage Square), by the
reassessment procedures utilized here.�
Indeed, as we noted, the property owners availed themselves of that very
remedy in this case.
����������������������� Section
66.60(10), Stats., mandates
notice and hearing in the reassessment process as well.� As a result, the affected owners have the
same rights to appear and voice their support or opposition at the reassessment
hearing as they do in original assessment proceedings.� There is no claim in this case that
Dittberner, Johnson Cheese or the Roskes were denied that right; indeed, the
record shows that they made their positions known at the reassessment
hearing.� They received the process that
was due them under the statutes and under the supreme court's decision in Schintgen
and similar cases, and we do not see Heritage Square as lending
significant support to their arguments to the contrary.[13]�
������������������� V.� Reasonableness of the Assessment
����������������������� Finally,
the property owners claim that the front-foot method used to assess their lots
was unreasonable as a matter of law.
����������������������� As
we have noted above, this was a "police-power" assessment.� A municipality's police power is broad and
courts may intercede only when the exercise of that power is clearly
unreasonable.� Lac La Belle Golf
Club v. Lac La Belle, 187 Wis.2d 274, 280-81, 522 N.W.2d 277, 280 (Ct.
App. 1994).� One challenging such an
assessment bears the burden of presenting evidence to overcome the presumption
that the municipality proceeded reasonably.�
Id. at 281, 522 N.W.2d at 280.� If the plaintiff establishes a prima facie case, the
burden shifts to the municipality to show that the assessment was made on a
reasonable basis.� Section 66.60(1)(b), Stats.; Peterson v. City of New
Berlin, 154 Wis.2d 365, 371, 453 N.W.2d 177, 180 (Ct. App. 1990).
����������������������� While
the front-foot method of assessment is commonly used, whether it is reasonable
in a given case turns on "[t]he facts of the particular situation,"
and whether it is "`fair and equitable and such that it will bring about
an assessment in proportion to the benefits accruing.'"� Peterson, 154 Wis.2d at
373-74, 453 N.W.2d at 180-81 (quoted source omitted).�
����������������������� Dittberner
and the Roskes claim they will incur additional expenses as a result of the
extension of service to their lands�for things like ground fill, grinder pumps
and lift stations�and they state that because the front-foot method does not
fairly apportion these extra costs, which they say were not imposed on other
property owners, it unreasonably burdens them.�
����������������������� � We held in Peterson that it is
unreasonable and unfair to use the same method to assess a group of property
owners when, because of differences in the situations of some members of the
group, it results in "an entirely disproportionate distribution of costs
which easily could be avoided by using another basis for assessment."� Id. at 373, 453 N.W.2d at
181.� But the property owners in this
case have not indicated to us how the benefits accruing to them are outweighed
by the assessment costs, whether and to what extent the assessment is
disproportionate among the assessed property owners, or how another method of
assessment might have brought about a fairer result. �����������������������
����������������������� The
property owners also contend that the sewer line is inadequate to service the
Dittberner and Roske parcels beyond the first fifty feet, and then it can serve
only an eight-foot strip of land because the properties have a forty-two-foot
zoning setback.� Again, however, even if
true, these assertions do not establish that the method of assessment is
unreasonable as a matter of law because whether a parcel is benefited by an
improvement does not depend on its development potential; a benefit may accrue
even when it is established that the land will not be developed in the
foreseeable future or when there is no present use of the improvement.� Soo Line R.R. Co. v. City of Neenah,
64 Wis.2d 665, 671-72, 221 N.W.2d 907, 910-11 (1974); Duncan Dev. Corp.
v. Crestview Sanitary Dist., 22 Wis.2d 258, 267-69, 125 N.W.2d 617,
621-22 (1964).[14]
����������������������� �We conclude, therefore, that the property
owners have not overcome the presumption of regularity attaching to the
District's actions and that their challenge to the assessment on its merits
must fail.� We therefore reverse the
judgment voiding the reassessment and remand for proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
�� ����������������������� By the Court.�Judgment
reversed and cause remanded.
���� [1] The commission is in charge of all affairs of
the town sanitary district.� Section
60.77(1), Stats.�
���� [2] In regard to the Johnson Cheese property,
only the northern portion is at issue in this case.
���� [3] Town sanitary districts do not have power to
alter their boundaries; the town board must undertake any such action.� Sections 60.785(1), 60.71, Stats.
���� [4] The cases refer to the � 66.60(10), Stats., "amendment" process
as a "reassessment."� See,
e.g., �Christenson v. City of
Green Bay, 72 Wis.2d 565, 567-69, 241 N.W.2d 193, 194-95 (1976); Area
Bd. v. Town of Burke, 151 Wis.2d 392, 400-01, 444 N.W.2d 733, 737-38
(Ct. App. 1989).�
���� [5] In Christenson, 72 Wis.2d at
565, 568, 241 N.W.2d at 194-95, for example, � 66.60(10), Stats., was applied to permit a
reassessment where the original assessment was void for the municipality's
failure to comply with statutes dictating the content of the city engineer's
report.� We reached a similar conclusion
with respect to absence of the required "statement of benefit" in Gelhaus
& Brost, Inc. v. City of Medford, 143 Wis.2d 193, 198, 420 N.W.2d
775, 777 (Ct. App. 1988).
���� [6] Section 66.60(2), Stats., provides: "Prior to the exercise of any
powers conferred by this section, the governing body shall declare by
preliminary resolution its intention to exercise such powers for a stated
municipal purpose."� (Emphasis
added.)
���� [7] Extrom v. Tomahawk, 257 Wis.
348, 43 N.W.2d 357 (1950), thus upheld the reassessment even though the
improvements had been installed absent compliance with the statutory procedures
for assessment, contrary to the property owners' position in this case.� The owners attempt to distinguish the case,
however, on grounds that it involved a "benefit" assessment, as opposed
to a police power assessment.� According
to the owners, the crucial difference is that in a benefit assessment, the
property owners remain "well protected" because they have the right
to a judicial determination on whether the assessment exceeds the benefit to
the property, and in a police power assessment no similar protection is
given.� The argument is without
merit.� Section 66.60(12)(a), Stats.�the very statute under which the
property owners brought this action�provides for judicial review of both police
power and benefit assessments.� Peterson
v. City of New Berlin, 154 Wis.2d 365, 371, 453 N.W.2d 177, 180 (Ct.
App. 1990).�
���� [8] The original Wisconsin reassessment statute,
� 1210d, Stats., 1898, as
amended by Laws of 1901, ch. 9, � 1, provided as follows:
Reassessment of void special assessments.� Section 1210d.� Where the work of constructing any sewer ...
in any city has been done or may hereafter be done, and any special assessment
has been or may be made against any property for such work, and such special
assessment ... is invalid because of said work having been done without
authority of law or for failure to make a proper assessment of benefits and
damages, or to observe any provision of law, or because of any act or defect in
the proceeding upon which assessment ... is based ... the city authorities shall
proceed to make a new assessment of benefits and damages in the manner required
by law in the case of such original assessment.�
Section
1210d was later renumbered as � 75.56, Stats.
����������� As originally enacted in 1945, the
reassessment provision of � 66.60, Stats.,
stated:
Whenever the actual cost of any project shall, upon
completion or after the receipt of bids, be found to vary materially from the
estimates, or whenever the governing body shall determine to reconsider and
reopen any such assessment of benefits or damages, it is hereby empowered,
after giving notice ... and after public hearing, to amend, cancel or confirm
any such prior assessment ....
Section
66.60(12), Stats., 1945, as
created by Laws of 1945, ch. 269.
����������� In 1957,
the legislature repealed �� 75.56 and 66.60, Stats.,
and created � 66.60 in its present form�no longer limiting reassessment to
excess-cost situations but permitting reassessment where the original
assessment was "void or invalid for any reason."� Section 66.60(10), Stats.; Laws of 1957, ch. 130, � 2, ch. 131, � 27.�
���� [9] An often-cited treatise on the subject notes:
Reassessments for improvements made are commonly allowed
under specified restrictions, e.g., where the original assessment is
unenforceable by reason of error or irregularity.� If the improvement has been made without any intention of meeting
the cost by local assessment, the municipal corporation cannot thereafter
reimburse itself for the cost by levying an assessment.� But if the improvement proceedings are
properly had with a view of paying for the same by local assessment, and the
improvement is made and paid for by the municipality, the municipality may
reimburse itself by imposing assessments.
Eugene McQuillan, The Law of
Municipal Corporations � 38.09 (3d ed. 1987)
(citing City of Milwaukee v. Taylor, 229 Wis. 328, 282 N.W. 448
(1938)).�����
���� [10] We think the District is also correct when it
notes that, given a municipality's authority to amend or confirm an assessment
that is invalid or void for any reason, it is to be expected that, in some
instances at least, the improvement will be in progress or substantially
completed when the municipality "starts over" under � 66.60(10),
Stats.� Indeed, that was the case in Extrom, and the
supreme court in both Extrom and Taylor rejected
the argument that the municipality lacked jurisdiction to assess or reassess
after completion of the project.
����������� A
reassessment proceeding, by its very nature, is a remedial procedure and we
think it is inevitable that there will be situations in which the improvements
set in motion by the original assessment may be in some stage of completion
when the original assessment is determined to be or is held invalid.� To interpret � 66.60(10), Stats., to allow a municipality to
reassess only in situations in which the construction of the improvement had
not yet begun, or was not completed, would frustrate the statute's plain
purpose, as evidenced by its plain language, to permit the municipality to
reassess when the original assessment is void "for any reason."
���� [11] The city ordinance under which the assessment
was undertaken included the following provision: "If, prior to or during
the hearing, written objections are received from owners, representing
two-thirds of the area to be assessed, the improvement proceedings shall be
abandoned ...."� Heritage
Square Dev. Co. v. City of Sandy, 648 P.2d 1317, 1318 n.1 (Or. Ct. App.
1982).
���� [12] In so concluding, the Oregon court noted
that, while reassessment could cure "defects in the assessment
proceedings," it could not cure the city's "lack of jurisdiction to
make the improvement" in the first place.�
Heritage Square, 648 P.2d at 1323-24.� It is, of course, a distinction the
Wisconsin Supreme Court recognized in Schintgen, which we
discussed at some length above.
���� [13] The property owners also discuss an earlier
Oregon case, Murray v. City of LaGrande, 149 P. 1019 (Or. 1915),
where the court held that the city could not reassess because the property
owners were entitled to a hearing prior to construction of the project.� The Oregon reassessment statute at the time
required any reassessment to be conducted "in like manner" to the
original proceedings, which, the court said, plainly required a hearing in
advance of construction.� Id.
at 1021.� The court noted, however, that
the city could have, by ordinance, "dispense[d] with all previous notice
of intention to install betterments and ... empower[ed] the council to call
upon the taxpayer for the first time after the work was completed, but it has
not done so."� Id.
����������� There is
no "in like manner" language in � 66.60(10), Stats.�
Indeed, as we stress throughout this opinion, the Wisconsin statute
permits reassessment when the original assessment is void for any reason and
provides for new hearings as part of the reassessment process.�