The complaint substantially charges that the defendant Comstock fraudulently colluded with the chairman and other members of the board of supervisors of Lincoln county to obtain, at an exceedingly low and nominal value, the tax certificates belonging to said county, and that such corrupt and fraudulent scheme was carried into effect by the-sale by the county, by resolutions of the board, of a great, number of tax certificates, worth their face, if not worth more, at twenty-five per cent, of such value, and that such fraudulent scheme comprehended all the various purchases, which were made or to be made by said Comstock. The first, sale was made the 31st day of January, 1880, and the last, on the 8th day of October, 1881, and a similar sale of the-tax certificates belonging' to the county on the tax sale of' 1882 is threatened, unless enjoined. The tax certificates -were-valuable property belonging to the county, and if judiciously and honestly disposed of, or deeds taken. thereon to the county, would have been a valuable fund'of the county,., which would have greatly diminished the tax burthen of the; *569taxable inhabitants thereof, but by this fraudulent sale at suoh inconsiderable and unreasonably small consideration such, taxes will be greatly increased. It was a part of this scheme that the chairman of the board of supervisors and other supervisors should have some of the benefits of -this purchase, and that no taxes should be paid, but the said lands returned delinquent from year to year, and the certificates of sale purchased at a like small sum, which would save the defendant Comstock and his co-conspirators from their full share of such taxation. All the various sales are alleged to be within one corrupt and fraudulent scheme to defraud the county of its valuable property, and the plaintiff Willard obtained knowledge of the facts just before the suit was brought. The suit was brought by Willard for himself, and on behalf of the property owners and tax-payers of said county, and, since it was commenced, many other persons similarly situated, and some of them the owners of the lands embraced, in the certificates, have become joint party plaintiffs in the action. The defendant Comstock has realized about $7,000' on redemptions paid into the county treasury from the sales, and by redemption from other owners paid to himself of a. large amount, and has obtained many deeds upon the certificates. The prayer is for an injunction against further sales of like character by the supervisors or county treasurer on behalf o'f the county; that Comstock be declared a trustee of the county, and be compelled to account for the proceeds, and moneys derived from such certificates; and that the tax deeds be set aside, as well as all such fraudulent sales, and for further relief. The answer need' not be noticed, as the complaint is alone on trial, by an objection to any evidence under it, on the ground that it does not state facts which constitute a cause of action.
The main question raised on this demurrer ore terms, and the one mainly considered by the circuit court and upon which the decision was made by that court, as we are in*570formed by counsel, is whether the plaintiff, as a resident taxpayer, property owner, and voter in the county, for himself and on behalf of other tax-payers, property owners, and voters in said county, has the right to bring this suit.
It is objected that this defect, if it exists, cannot be reached by general demurrer. We do not think this objection well taken. The objection is not that the plaintiff has not capacity to sue, or that there is a misjoinder or non-joinder of parties, but that he has shown no cause of action in favor of himself, which may be reached by general demurrer. The true distinction is made by Mr. Justice TayloR in Nevil v. Clifford, 55 Wis., 161. After ruling that the objection of naisjoinder of parties cannot be taken by general demurrer, he says: “If, therefore, a cause of action is set out in favor of any party plaintiff, the demurrer or objection must be overruled.” The authorities cited by the learned counsel of the appellants do not apply to such an objection as is here made. In the case above referred to, the same objection made here was made on a similar demurrer ore. tenus; and the circuit court dismissed the complaint because the plaintiff had no such interest as would entitle him to bring the suit, and that question was passed upon by this court as being under the demurrer. See, also, Arzbacher v. Mayer, 53 Wis., 380.
The principles in regard to the interest of the plaintiff and other tax-payers,, property owners, and voters of the county, on whose behalf this suit is brought, to prevent future unjust taxation, which is likely to be occasioned by the unlawful or corrupt conduct of the supervisors, by which the property or other resources of the county will be diminished or its indebtedness increased, and in reference to the equity jurisdiction of the court to afford relief in their fullest breadth and scope, have been so long and so often recognized by this court that it is a matter of surprise that substantially the same question should again be raised. If it were not for the *571distinguished ability and great eminence of the learned counsel of the respondents, who insist that this case does not lie within the principle of the cases referred to, but rather within a class of cases in which this court has decided that a court of equity ought not, by injunction, to arrest the ordinary course of tax proceedings or interfere with the preliminary duties of the taxing officers, and for the eminent ability and usually sound rulings of the learned judge by whom the demurrer to the complaint was sustained, I should not hesitate to say with emphatic brevity that the matters of this suit have long been stare decisis in this court. As it is, we shall extend this opinion no further than to refer briefly to the cases in this court where we think precisely the same principles have been recognized. Outside of this state the authorities may be somewhat in conflict, but we' have the authority of so able a jurist and writer as Judge Oooley for saying that “the decided preponderance of authority is in support of the right of the tax-payers to file bills on their own behalf in such a case.” The principle seems to be that individual tax-payers may restrain municipal action when it constitutes the preliminary step leading to taxation, such as the contracting of a debt ultra vires, the allowance of an illegal claim, consent to a collusive judgment, dr 'the misappropriation of the public moneys. The jurisdiction is sustained on the ground that the injury would be irreparable. The misappropriation of corporate funds ’frould not render the tax levied to repair the waste or supply the deficiency illegal. Oooley on Taxation, 548. Citizens and taxpayers may prevent the issue and sale of void bonds by the municipal corporation. Delaware Co. v. McClintock, 51 Ind., 325. The misappropriation of the public moneys forms good ground for such an injunction by the citizen and taxpayer, because the corporation holds its moneys for the cor-porators, to be expended for legitimate purposes, and a misappropriation of the funds is an injury to the tax-payer *572for which, do other remedy is so effectual or appropriate. When the amount thus misappropriated is subsequently needed for legitimate purposes a citizen cannot resist the necessary tax to supply the deficiency. Dillon on Mun. Corp., § 917; New London v. Brainard, 22 Conn., 552. Ira Scofield v. Eighth School Dist., 27 Conn., 499, the same principle is applied to the misappropriation of the corporate property.
It is impossible to see any distinction between the misappropriation of the funds and of the property of the corporation. If the funds cannot be taken from the treasury and divided between the supervisors and strangers by a corrupt combination and fraudulent scheme, neither could its property be so divided, or sold to the conspirators for a grossly inadequate price. The tax-payer is liable to suffer by taxation from both causes alike. In Mayor of Baltimore v. Bill, 31 Mid., 375, an ordinance was passed for the sale or hypoth-ecation of a large number of shares of the capital stock of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company belonging to said city. The ordinance was void as being unconstitutional. The plaintiff and other owners of property, and tax-payers in said city, brought their bill to restrain the city from such únauthorized disposition of the property of the city. This is one of the most elaborate and well-considered cases ever decided in the United States, and the whole subject was most thoroughly examined in the light of the authorities, and the bill was sustained on the ground that the tax-payers had no other remedjq and that they were directly interested in the subject matter of the suit, as being the special class damaged by such unlawful act of the corporation, which would increase the burthen of taxation upon them and all others similarly situated. It is not perceivable how this case differs in principle from the one at bar in any particular, except it be in the fact that in the case under consideration the sale and disposition of the valuable property of the *573■county was made, not merely without right, but by fraud .and collusion between the purchaser and the officers and-.agents of the county, and for their joint benefit.
"We have thus gone outside of our own decisions, as to some questions directly involved, which by the facts are precisely the same as in this case, but not to sustain our own .authorities. It is about time that we may rely solely on the •decisions of this court, where they have been many and uniform upon the same question, and for a long series of years. 'This court may review and overrule its previous decisions, but it is not likely to do so where its uniform decisions upon ■one question have for a long time become a rule of property, and especially as they are supported by the weight of .authority elsewhere. To go outside may show learning and .great industry in the examination of cases, but to rest the principle upon our own decisions, when they have been numerous, uniform, and consequently well considered, would show a commendable confidence in our own courts, as patriotic as it is generally deserved.
In Peck v. School Dist., 21 Wis., 516, the contract for building a school-house and the leasing of ground upon which it was to be located was clearly illegal. The plaintiff on his •own behalf and on behalf of other tax-payers, brought his bill to restrain the tax on account thereof, and to set aside the contract and have it declared void. This case was well considered, not only on the first hearing, but upon a rehearing, .and the bill was sustained.- Wherein does that case differ •in principle from the one at bar? The illegal contract, which resulted or would necessarily result in the increase of taxation, is the ground of the action. The contract set .aside and annulled, the tax would not be levied or enforced. The gravamen is the illegal contract. So, here, the ground is the fraudulent sale of the valuable property of the county, ,to be divided up among the defendant Gomstock and the dishonest officers and agents of the county. If the sale stands, *574an excessive taxation will be required to supply the deficiency caused by this dishonest and fraudulent diversion and conversion of the property of the county. If the sale is set aside, the threatened excessive taxation will go with it, and the plaintiffs will be relieved from just so much of an unjust burthen of taxation as the real value of the property is, which, according to this fraudulent contract, was four times in excess of the consideration to be paid. The case above referred to is distinguished by the learned chief justice from a mere injunction to restrain the sale of personal property for tax.
In Whiting v. S. & F. du L. R. R. Co., 25 Wis., 167, the bill was brought by Whiting, a freeholder, tax-payer, citizen, and resident of Fond du Lac county, in his own behalf, and in behalf of all others of like interest with himself, to restrain the county authorities from issuing to the railroad company the orders of the county, on the ground of their illegality. The issuing of these orders would necessarily increase the burden of taxation, and the suit was sustained and the injunction maintained.
In Lawson v. Schnellen, 33 Wis., 288, complaint was filed and injunction granted, on behalf of the tax-payers of the towm of Menasha, to restrain the issuing of bonds for railroad purposes. The point, was made by the appellants that such a suit should have been brought by the attorney general and not by the tax-payers. On the other hand, the counsel of the respondent cited Peck v. School Fist., supra, and New London v. Brainard, 22 Conn., 552, and other like cases. Chief Justice Dixon cites in his opinion Whiting v. S. & F. du L. R. R. Co., supra, and Judd v. Fox Lake, 28 Wis., 583, as also Phillips v. Albany, id., 340, and sustains the bill. In the latter case, the tax-payers brought their bill . to restrain the town of Albany from issuing bonds in exchange for railroad stock, and the jurisdiction was conceded. In Judd v. Fox Lake, Peck v. School Dist. and Whiting v. *575S. & F. du L. R. R. Co., were specially approved, and this case distinguished because it was asking for an injunction against the preliminary proceedings of taxation, and would suspend all proceedings to collect the taxes.
In Roe v. Lincoln Co., 56 Wis., 66, a bill was filed to enjoin a sale for illegal taxes, and sustained, as being a threatened cloud upon the title, and the case of Judd v. Fox Lake was distinguished, and the case of Peck v. School Dist. approved. In a late case in this court of Lynch v. E., L. F. & M. R'y Co., 57 Wis., 430, the complaint was to enjoin the delivery of the town bonds to the railroad company, by a tax-payer of the town, on account of the illegality of the contracts and proceedings, and this same question of jurisdiction was again raised, and it was again decided that the plaintiff as a taxpayer could bring such an action; Mr. Justice Tayloe citing Lawson v. Schnellen, Whiting v. S. & F. du L. R. R. Co., Phillips v. Albany, and Peck v. School Dist., supra, as approved authority.
There are many other cases in this court in which a similar jurisdiction in equity has been sanctioned, but it is profitless -to pursue the subject further. If these authorities do not establish the right of the plaintiffs to bring this action, then no possible decision except one in this identical case would justify it, for this case cannot possibly be distinguished in principle from the cases above referred to. But, at the expense of lengthening this opinion still further, I cannot forbear to cite one other and a very late case in this court, where the analogy of facts is even closer than in some already cited. In Nevil v. Clifford, supra, the school district board entered into an unauthorized and void contract with the Cliffords to build a school-house, and afterwards the Cliffords brought suit against the school district, and by collusion with its officers obtained a judgment. The plaintiff, a tax-payer, for himself and on behalf of • other tax-payers of the district, brought suit to enjoin the use of the school*576house, and the collection of any tax therefor, as illegal and void, and to set aside such judgment. The same objection was made, by demurrer ore tenus that the complaint did not state a cause of action, as in this case, and the objection was sustained by the circuit court. This whole subject of jurisdiction in such cases again underwent a full examination and consideration, and the complaint was sustained by the authority of Peck v. School Dist. and the other like cases in this court.
The last case meets the objection that the court cannot by such an action set aside the sale already made, but may enjoin future threatened mischief. It may be said, touching the objection that this sale has already been consummated, that the complaint charges that other similar sales are threatened to be made by the same fraudulent scheme and arrangement to the defendant Gornstoclc, and an injunction is .asked against such, and the court, having obtained jurisdiction for such purpose, may hold the case to set aside the fraudulent sales which have already been made in carrying ■out the same corrupt scheme.
The objection is taken that there has been too much laches .and delay for a court of equity at this late day to intervene. According to the complaint there has been no delay, and the complaint must be taken as true. (1) It is stated therein that this fraudulent scheme did not come to the knowledge of the plaintiff until just before the suit was brought; and (2) that the scheme has not yet been fully carried out, and the fraud consummated, which contemplated still other and future sales of certificates belonging to the county at like unreasonably low prices.
It is objected that the plaintiff, as a mere tax-payer, has no such interest as to entitle him to bring this suit when the grievance concerns the entire public and the state, and that it is the business of the state, through the attorney general, to take proper legal action to restrain municipal officers *577from violating their trusts. In Lawson v. Schnellen, supra, it is said by Chief Justice Dixon: “If the tax-payers and real parties in interest have not the remedy by injunction, then there exists none whatever for the wrong.” In Mayor of Baltimore v. Gill, supra, the same point was made, that the attorney general should have filed the bill, and it was held that the state had no interest in it, and that the tax-payers were the only proper parties plaintiff. In Colburn v. Chattanooga, 17 Am. Law Reg., 191, it was held that the state had no interest in such a suit, but only the tax-payers, and the case of Newmeyer v. M. & M. R. R. Co., 52 Mo., 81, is to the same effect.
It is objected that no tender back of the moneys received, by the supervisors has been made. Whether the county has ever received any such moneys as the product of such a fraudulent transaction of the supervisors, quaere? See Smith v. Supervisors, 44 Wis., 686. If the county has received the moneys, it can be ordered to restore them as a condition of relief, for the county is before the .court as party defendant. The supervisors represent the county and no others can; and if the supervisors become a party to fraudulent transactions with strangers, by which the property or funds of the county have been disposed of for a grossly inadequate consideration,, and that consideration has been paid, how, possibly, can the tax-payers be required to tender it back, when they have never received it, as a ground of relief? If this consideration can be reached by a court of equity, which generally leaves the parties to a fraud where it finds them, its restoration may be decreed in this suit. JSTo tender is necessary in a case of an unlawful or fraudulent sale. Kling v. Childs, 30 Mich., 366. The principle that the funds and property of the county are a trust in the hands and under the control of the board of supervisors, is denied with considerable emphasis, and that the tax-paying inhabitants are the cestui que trusts or beneficiaries. Why not so ? Who are interested in *578such fund or property if such inhabitants are not? It may be that all the relations of a trust are not present, but that this is a trust committed by the law to the officers of the county, and that they are responsible to account for their trusteeship to the county, or to those who constitute the county, and the only ones interested, there can be no doubt.
Finally, according to the facts alleged in the complaint, and which for the present purpose must be taken as true, this was one of the most outrageous cases of fraud-in-which public officers participated, as well as in the fruits of it, ever brought into court. If there is no remedy, and if this is not the remedy (which is the same thing, for there is no other), then one of the greatest wrongs ever perpetrated by fraudulent collusion with the officers of the county, by which its unsuspecting tax-payers have had their burthen of taxation increased at least threefold, in consequence of the valuable property of the county having been thus despoiled and sacrificed in violation of the maxim of civil government, is without a remedy. Take-any case where it is possible for the supervisors to sell and dispose of the property of the county and confer a title, unless by ultra vires or fraud. Suppose they sell the court-house property by fraudulent collusion with the purchaser, reserving an interest in the property, for one fourth of its market value, or any other valuable property of the county, upon the same terms and by the same fraud, is there no remedy? They may be proceeded against criminally, but that would not restore the property. A new court-house must be built, and that bj7 greatly increased taxation to supply the deficiency in the means and funds of the county occasioned by such an outrageously fraudulent transaction. Is there no remedy ? Are the hands of the victimized tax-payers tied by technical rules, when they are, really the only persons injured or interested, so that they have no standing in court ? The idea is simply preposterous, and that is really all that ought to be said about *579it. We do not think there is the slightest question but that the tax-payers of Lincoln county have the right to bring this suit, but that they are the only proper parties plaintiff in such a case; or but that, if the facts stated in the complaint are sustained by proof, they are entitled to the relief prayed; or but that they have been reasonably diligent in bringing their suit. In simple justice to Mr. Hurley, the eminent counsel of the appellants, we may well say that he presented his side of the case with great ability and zeal.
The demurrer ore terms should have been overruled.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.