58 P. 509 | Or. | 1899
delivered the opinion.
In the case at bar, there was a petition presented to
In view of this state of the record, plaintiffs advance three propositions, which we will now examine : First, that the petition was insufficient to confer jurisdiction on the common council to make the improvement. It is maintained that it should show the requisite facts affirmatively, so that it would be perfectly patent and apparent, without evidence or further inquiry aliunde, that it was subscribed by the owners of one-half the property affected; that is to say, it should show the area to be affected, then the exact area owned by each petitioner, with definite location and description, so that there would remain but a simple mathematical deduction to ascertain whether that subscribed for equals one-half of the property affected; second, that the burden of proof in the establishment, of the jurisdictional facts was with the city, and this required it to show primarily not only the representative character of the supposed agents signing the names of their principals, but their authority to so act; and, third, that the petition was not in fact subscribed by the owners of the requisite proportion of the property affected.
In Bewley v. Graves, 17 Or. 274 (20 Pac. 322), the question came up touching the sufficiency of a petition for the laying out of a county road, and it was held, under
Hudson County v. City of Bayonne, 54 N. J. Law, 293 (23 Atl. 648), is a case where the proceeding was attacked upon the ground that a signature upon the petition was not authorized, or was not the signature which it purported to be. The court held that “the circumstance that the body to whom it was presented has acted upon it as genuine is prima facie evidence that it is what it purports to be.” In another case reported (Tibbetts v. North and South Towns St. Ry. Co., 153 Ill. 147, 38 N. E. 664) the court said : “Appellant’s theory seems to be— and on that theory alone he attacks the validity of these ordinances — that the petitions are invalid because they show on their face that the names of some of the signers were signed by agents, and the agents’ authority does not appear on or with the petitions themselves, and that
Nor are. the cases of Sharp v. Speir, 4 Hill, 76 ; Mulligan v. Smith, 59 Cal. 206; In re Second Ave. M. E. Church, 66 N. Y. 396; Oshkosh City Ry. Co. v. Winnebago County, 89 Wis. 435 (61 N.W. 110), or either of them, opposed to this view. In the first case noted, the want of jurisdiction in the common council to act appeared upon the face of the record, which was offered in evidence. This, of itself, was sufficient to impeach the action of the council. In the second case, the party attacking the record gave evidence showing the want of authority of certain supposed agents' to sign for their principals. The New York case seems to be a special proceeding to vacate an assessment instituted under the revenue laws of the state, and it was there held that the city had the substantial affirmative; that is, it should have produced express power in legislative enactment, and shown that, in its attempt to tax, it strictly followed the legal requirements; and this is the holding of the Wisconsin case. The idea of these latter cases is that, primarily, when the authorities are proceeding with the assessment, they must substantiate their acts as they proceed by warrant of law. The effect of their acts in a proceeding to avoid the assessment, whether direct or collateral, was not considered, nor did it become a question in the cases. The record here was therefore prima facie sufficient to establish the authority of Dan J. Malarkey to subscribe the name of Mrs. Fannie E. Kelly
There was also a controversy at the argument as to what property was affected by the improvement; that is to say, whether the lots or parts of lots specified in the charter had reference to original and fractional lots, as designated upon the maps and plats of the city, or as subdivided by purchasers, and therefore represented by present ownership. But this we are not called upon to decide. If the plaintiff’s contention be conceded, that the area affected aggregates four hundred and sixty-seven thousand seven hundred and sixty-six and six-tenths feet, the half of it would be two hundred and thirty-three thousand eight hundred and eighty-three and three-tenths feet. The area properly represented on the petition, excluding any consideration of that represented by Eliza Young, is two hundred and thirty-four thousand five hundred and eighty-four and two-thirds feet, or a fraction over seven hundred and one feet more than one-half; so that the council, in any event, as shown by the record and the evidence, acquired the necessary jurisdiction to make the proposed improvement.
"We are of the opinion, however, that the federal question cannot be considered, as it is not appropriately presented by the record. The complaint sets up with some minutóse the history of the proceedings which they desire to have annulled and set aside; but it nowhere sets forth any particular section or provision of the Charter
Then follows this allegation: “That no other or further notice for the improvement of Sixth Street between the points named was ever published, and that said notice is void for the reason that it does not specify with convenient certainty the street or part thereof to be improved, or the kind of improvement to be made, and no notice for the improvement of said street, as required by the charter of said city, has ever been published; that no other or further petition for the improvement * * * was ever presented to said common council, save the one presented May 3, 1893 ; that said petition presented May 3, 1893, as well as the action of the common council thereon, and said notice published in pursuance thereof, was and is, and each of them is, void and unauthorized, for the reason that said petition was not signed by the owners of one-half of the property to be affected by said
The assignments of error, as contained in the abstract .of the record, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6, pertain to the exceptions taken to the findings of the referee, to whom the case was referred by the court below to take the testimony and make his findings of fact and law. Assignment No. 7 is as follows: “The court erred in holding and deciding that said petition, filed May 3, 1893, for the improvement of.Sixth Street, was not void on its face;” and (No. 8) “in holding and deciding that said petition filed May 3, 1893, gave the common council of the City of Portland jurisdiction to act in the matter of said improvement of said Sixth Street.” Assignments 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16 refer to the findings of the referee touching the holdings and property ownership of several of the petitioners. Assignment No. 17 reads: “The court erred in computing or taking into account the area , of any of said lots, in estimating the amount of property signed for on said petition;” (18) “the court erred in holding and deciding that the owners of one-half the amount of property abutting on Sixth Street, and affected by. said improvement, had signed said petition therefor;” (19) “the court erred in not holding and deciding that the owners of one-half of the property abutting on Sixth Street, and affected by said improvement, had not signed ■ said petition;” and (20) “the court erred in dismiss
The reason advanced for the twenty-first assignment is that the respondent had recently filed a supplemental brief, wherein it was urged that by section 156 of the charter of 1898 the assessment complained of was cured and rendered valid. In our decision of the case thus far we have had no occasion to refer to the said supposed curative section, and have made no application of it to the present controversy ; hence, the assignment is without relevancy. It will thus be seen, from a synopsis of the complaint and the findings of the referee, that no question has been made upon the record touching the unconstitutionality of any clause of the city
• In Powell v. Brunswick County, 150 U. S. 433 (14 Sup. Ct. 166), it was held, in accord with previous decisions of the same court, that the certificate of the presiding judge of the state court as to the existence of a federal question in the record was not alone sufficient to confer jurisdiction upon the federal supreme court. Such a question must in reality exist by the record. Passing to the manner in which it should appear, Mr. Chief Justice Fuller says : “As many times reiterated, it is essential to the maintenance of jurisdiction upon the ground of erroneous decision as to the validity of a state statute, or a right under the Constitution of the United States, that it should appear from the record that the validity of such statute was drawn in question as repugnant to the constitution, and that the decision sustained its validity, or that the right was specially set up or claimed and denied. If it appear from the record by clear and necessary intendment that the federal question must have been directly involved, so that the state court could not have given judgment without deciding it, that will be sufficient; but resort cannot be had to the expedient of importing into the record the legislation of the state as judicially known to its courts, and holding the validity of such legislation to have been drawn in question, and a decision necessarily rendered thereon, in arriving at conclusions upon the matters actually presented and considered. A definite issue as to the validity of the statute or the possession of the right must be definitely deducible from the record, before the state court can be held to have disposed of such a federal question by its decision.” In Oxley Stave Co. v. Butler County, 166 U. S.
In Hoyt v. Shelden, 66 U. S. (1 Black) , 518, 521, the learned chief justice says: “This provision of the constitution is not referred to in the plaintiff’s bill of complaint in the state court, nor in any of the proceedings there had. It is true, he sets out the act of the legislature of New Jersey, the proceedings and decree of the chancery court of that state under it, and the sale of the property in dispute by the authority of the court, which he alleges transferred the title to the vendee, under whom he claims, and charges that the assignment set up by the defendants was fraudulent and void, for the reasons stated in his bill. But all of the matters put in issue by the bill and answers,-and decided by the state court, were questions which depended for their decision upon principles of law and equity, as recognized and administered in the State of New York, and without reference to the construction or effect of any provision in the constitution or any act of congress. This court has no appellate power over the judgment of a state court pronounced in such a controversy, and this writ of error must therefore be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.” And again, in Sayward v. Denny, 158 U. S. 180 (15 Sup. Ct. 777), it is said : “The contention is that the result of the rulings and decisions of the trial court in these respects, as affirmed by the supreme court, was to hold plaintiff in -error conclusively bound” by the judgment rendered against Crawford in any action ‘in which he was not a party, and of which he had no notice,’ and that this was, in effect, to deprive him of his property without due process of law, or to deny him equal protection of the laws, and amounted to a decision adverse to the right, privilege, or immunity of plaintiff in error under
While these cases are all touching the requisite state of the record for the conferring of jurisdiction upon the Supreme Court of the United States by writ of error to the highest court of a state, we take it to be a principle of law deducible from them that it is not sufficient to assign error upon the federal question for the first time in the supreme court of the state, unless by fair inference and intendment it may be said to exist in the record as made by the parties in the trial court. “If it appear from the record,” as was said in Powell v. Brunswick County, 150 U. S. 433 (14 Sup. Ct. 166), “by clear and