
    Agnew, Respondent, vs. Milwaukee County and others, Defendants: City of West Allis, Appellant.
    
    
      March 13
    
    April 24, 1944.
    
    
      
      John C. Doerfer, city attorney, for the appellant.
    
      Charles L. Goldberg of Milwaukee, for the respondent Andrew D. Agnew.
    Briefs amici curice were filed by E. A. Kletsein of Menomo-nee Falls and Clarence P. Nett of Milwaukee, and by Fred R. Wright of Milwaukee.
    
      
       Motion for rehearing denied, with $25 costs, on June 6, 1944.
    
   Fowler, J.

The plaintiff is the owner of lots in the city of West Allis. Special assessments running over a series of years were levied against those lots to pay for improvements thereon. Bonds were issued to the contractors who made those improvements payable only out of the assessments so levied. These assessments when imposed were a lien on the plaintiff’s lots. The plaintiff claims that by reason of facts alleged those liens have been outlawed and brings action to have the court so adjudge and to free his lots from the.cloud resting thereon by reason of the original imposition.

Answer to the complaint was made by the city of West Allis. Certain other defendants also answered. The plaintiff moved to strike the answer of the city of West Allis and for summary judgment in accordance with the prayer of the complaint on the ground that the answer stated no defense and that there is none to the action. Affidavits were presented by the plaintiff and the city of West Allis in support of and in opposition to the motion. This motion was duly served, pursuant to order to show cause upon all defendants who answered or appeared in the action. The motion was granted and judgment was entered as prayed. The defendant city of West Allis appeals from the judgment.

From the complaint and answers and the affidavits accompanying the motion for summary judgment it appears that there is no dispute as to the facts. The sole questions at issue are of law and arise under the statutes. The assessments were levied under sec. 62.20, Stats. 1931, and the bonds issued under sec. 62.21 (2) (c). Both the bonds and the assessments are valid. The assessments involved are those of the years 1931 to 1934, inclusive. The assessments not having been paid whpn due the lots were sold pursuant to the statutes. No other bids being made the lots were bid in by the county treasurer, who holds the certificates of sale, upon which no payments have since been made. The primary difference between the parties arises from sec. 75.20 which provides that except as to tax sale certificates owned by counties and municipalities no deed shall issue or action be brought on a certificate after six years from its date; but that as to counties and municipalities the six years shall begin to- run on the assignment of the certificate and that in such case the limitation shall extend to fifteen years from date of the tax sale. The instant tax certificates have not been assigned. Thus if the certificates in suit are not owned by Milwaukee county or the city of West Allis the lien of the certificates is lost and the judgment must be affirmed. As to the ownership of the certificates the city of West Allis makes two contentions : (1) That the county of Milwaukee is the owner of the certificates and the fifteen-year limitation applies; (2) that the city has purchased for its fire and police pension fund some of the bonds to pay which the assessments were imposed and this carried ownership of the certificates and the fifteen-year limitation applies to' them. The plaintiff contends as to (1) that the county holds the certificates in trust only and that the real owner of the certificates is the owner of the bond for payment of which the assessments were made; and (2) that not the city of West Allis but the trustees of the fire and police pension fund are the owners of the certificates.

(1) The contention of the plaintiff under (1) is ruled in his favor by Gross v. Sommers, 225 Wis. 266, 269, 271 N. W. 11, 274 N. W. 255. It is there held that the county treasurer holds the tax sale certificates in trust to collect the assessment for the owner of the bond for payment of which the property was sold. The -owner of the bond is therefore the beneficial owner of the certificates. Within six years from the date of the tax sale the county treasurer may take a tax deed for the benefit of that holder or take any other remedy he may have to collect the amount covered by the certificates, but the deed in the one case or the money collected in the other case is held in trust for the owner of the bond. Sec. 62.20 (3) (c), Stats. 1931, controls the assessments here involved. That section is the same as the section so numbered in Stats. 1923 which controlled the assessments involved in the Gross Case, so that the construction there given constitutes a construction of the instant section. This seems sufficient to say upon this point unless the case of Remington v. Wood County, 238 Wis. 172, 179, 298 N. W. 591, is to be taken as implying the contrary. The Wood County Case involved tax deeds taken by the county upon tax sale certificates which covered not only general taxes but special taxes imposed under drainage-district laws. The point at issue was whether the county, after having taken tax deeds, was obliged to sell the deeded lands for the benefit of the town which was entitled, when the county should sell the land covered by its tax deeds, to be paid so much of the amount received on the sale over the amount of the county tax covered by the certificates as was necessary to pay the taxes owing to the town. It was held that the county under its tax deeds took “an absolute estate in fee simple in the lands deeded to it.” No tax deed is here involved. And it is clear, by implication, from the reasoning of the Gross Case, supra, that when the county should sell the land it would hold the amount of the proceeds over the amount of the county taxes unpaid in trust for the benefit of the town for the town taxes and the excess over that for the drainage district. This would leave the rights of the town, the county, and the drainage district after the lands should be sold precisely as their rights were under the tax sale certificates on which the tax deeds were issued except that if the sale price of the land should exceed the amount of all the unpaid taxes against it the excess would belong to the county. We therefore do not perceive that the Wood County Case affects the application to the instant case of the construction of sec. 62.20 (3) (c) given in the Gross Case.

(2) The city contends that by virtue of the purchase by the trustees of the pension fund of the bonds to pay which the assessments were levied the city became the beneficial owner of the certificates; that by virtue of such ownership it is entitled to have the fifteen-year limitation applied; that the fifteen-year period has not expired; and that the lien of the assessments is not lost. The plaintiff contends that the trustees of the fund are the owners of the bonds and the beneficial owners of the certificates; that the city not being obligated on the bonds has no interest whatever in the assessments; and that the trustees of the fund stand in the same position as .any nonpublic owner and the six-year limit applies to them.

The trial court held that the city is not the owner of the bonds but the trustees of the pension fund are such owners and that the trustees not being a municipal corporation the six-year statute applies. We consider that it is immaterial under sec. 75.20, Stats., whether the city is the owner. If it is the owner, it holds the bonds as an investment — as a purchaser from the contractor to whom the bonds were originally issued. And as such owner, such ownership of the tax sale certificates as it has is by virtue of such purchase and not as the one to whom the certificates were issued. The exception to the six-year limitation of sec. 75.20 applies only to the county or a municipality to whom a tax sale certificate was originally issued not to one who has purchased a bond the tax for which the land was sold was imposed to pay. When a city so purchases, it stands in no better position, than any other purchaser would stand. The statute reads : “Such limitation [six years] shall not apply to certificates issued to and ozvned by counties or municipal corporations.” Under this express language ownership alone does not exempt frorii the six-year statute. As the six-year statute of limitation has run, the.defendant is without remedy to enforce the tax: and the lien thereof is lost.

By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

Fowler, J.

(on motion for rehearing). The appellant city of West Allis moves for a rehearing. The ground oí the motion is that the court wrongly stated in its opinion that the assessments involved were made under sec. 62.20, Stats., and the bonds were issued under sec. 62.21 (2) (c), Stats. 1931, whereas the bonds were issued under ch. 406, Laws of 1927, which first provided for the issuance of area bonds. But although the latter statement is correct it does not affect the application of the statutes cited because sec. 2 (1) (d) of ch. 406, Laws of 1927, provides that “if any instalment so entered on the tax roll shall not be paid to the city treasurer with the other taxes it shall be returned to the county as delinquent and accepted and collected by the county in the same manner as delinquent general taxes on real estate.” The statutory provisions first cited governed the matter of collection and the rights of the county and the “owners” of the bonds under the tax sale certificate to the county. These statutes were the same in Stats. 1931 as they were in Stats. 1927 when ch. 406, Laws of 1927, of that year was enacted; and sec. 62.21 (2) (c) was enacted by sec. 2 (2) (c) of ch. 406, Counsel for movant is correct in stating as he does in his brief on the motion that “The problem in the case at bar is to find the true sense in which the legislature used the language it employed in writing ch. 406, Laws of 1927,-specifically sec. 62.21 (1) (d)” above quoted. We think we correctly carried out that “true sense” in the opinion filed.

Complaint is also made that Gross v. Sommers, 225 Wis. 266, 271 N. W. 11, 274 N. W. 255, was decided on statutes enacted before ch. 406, Laws of 1927, was enacted, and consequently that case does not govern bonds issued under that chapter as we held in the opinion. But it necessarily covers those bonds, because it covers “special improvement bonds” and the bonds issued under ch. 406, Laws of 1927, are such bonds, and no provision is made for their collection in case, of nonpayment with general taxes other than that provided by sec. 62.21 (2) (c), Stats.

It is claimed in the brief amicus curice filed on the motion that sec. 62.16 (7) (c), Stats. 1925, somehow affected the rights of the instant parties. The provision is “any special assessment for the construction of any local improvement shall be a lien on behalf of the municipality making the improvement on the property assessed.” This must refer to instances where the city pays for the improvement in “cash” as it may do under sec. 62.20 or “with certificates or bonds.” Obviously when paid for by certificates the lien is not in favor of the city, but in favor of the certificate holder, and when paid for in bonds it is in favor of the bondholder. The city has no interest to protect as it is under no obligation to pay when payments are made in certificates or bonds and consequently it can have no lien in such cases unless it subsequently acquires the certificates or bonds, in which case the lien is in its favor as owner of the certificates or bonds. Anyhow, if the city had a lien, however it came into existence, its lien was subject to be lost under the limitation of sec. 75.20 and the city lost its lien by not becoming an “owner” under that statute as pointed out in the opinion heretofore filed by purchase at the tax sale because of nonpayment by the landowner.

By the Court. — The motion for rehearing is denied, with $25 costs against the city of West Allis.  