182 P. 165 | Or. | 1919
“The way in question described in the pleadings and evidence herein as ‘Seventh Street’ in the city of Seaside (formerly town of Seaside) in Clatsop County, State of Oregon, was at the date of and for many years prior to the adoption of the original act incorporating the town of Seaside (now City of Seaside) had been a public highway by user, the same having been used and employed by the public as a common public highway for travel for over twenty years prior to the adoption of the original act incorporating the town of Seaside.”
It is in testimony that the county authorities caused the road to be surveyed before Seaside was ever incorporated, and that the county also expended money and labor in improving it both before and after the incorporation of the city. This amounts to a dedication of the road for public use by acts in pais coupled with an acceptance by the county, thus constituting it a regular county road. This is the doctrine taught in the cases of Bayard v. Standard Oil Co., 38 Or. 438 (63 Pac. 614); Nosler v. Coos Bay R. R. Co., 39 Or. 331 (64 Pac. 644, 22 Am. & Eng. R. R. Cas. 720); Ridings v. Marion County, 50 Or. 30 (91 Pac. 22), and Eastman v. Clackamas County (C. C.), 12 Sawy. 613 (32 Fed. 24). The stipulation together with the undisputed facts relating to the control exercised over the way by the County Court stamp it indubitably as a county road.
“Whether a certain way is a street or county road is purely a matter of geography. If beyond the boundaries of a municipality, it is a county road; if within the boundaries of a municipality, it is a street.”
These precedents have had our careful consideration and while some of them declare as a conclusion from the legislation involved that the incorporation of a road within the city limits makes it ipso facto a street, a careful analysis shows that the rule announced in those decisions rests upon a construction of the statute there under consideration. For instance, in Benton v. State, 168 Ala. 175 (52 South. 842), the legislative charter required the city to keep in repair “all bridges, public roads and streets.” McGraw v. Stewart, 51 Kan. 185 (32 Pac. 896), depends upon a general statute giving cities control of all ways within their boundaries. In such instances the state law has visited upon the cities authority over county roads within their limits to the exclusion of the county authorities. There are instances of the kind in Oregon, but this is not one of them. County Commissioners v. City of Jacksonville, 36 Fla. 196 (18 South. 339, 29 L. R. A. 416), states the principle thus:
“That whether the county commissioners had been deprived of a jurisdiction of such road within the new town organization depends upon the legislation upon the subject of public roads and municipal corporations, and that the intent of. the legislature as manifested by the statute would control. ’ ’
Again, Sanderson v. Texarkana, 103 Ark. 529 (146 S. W. 105), uses this language:
*70 “The state in its sovereignty over all public highways has full power over the streets as well as over all public roads and unless prohibited by the Constitution the legislature may confer on such agency as it may deem best the power of supervision and control over streets.”
In the light of these authorities cited by the defendants in support of their postulate, we are brought back to the rule declared by Mr. Justice Bean in Bowers v. Neil, 64 Or. 104 (128 Pac. 433), that:
“Whether a county road becomes a street when included within the corporate limits of a city depends upon the intention of the legislature as gathered from the city charter, general laws and the whole course of legislation on the subject.” -
Under these circumstances it is not deemed necessary to reopen the discussion or to vary from the conclusions on the law reached in the former decision. As already pointed out by the testimony, the fact is that the way here involved is a county road as alleged in the complaint, so that thus far in the investigation both the law and the fact are with the plaintiff.
“We, the undersigned., property owners in the district to be assessed for the improvement of Seventh Street, formerly and commonly known as Main Street, from its intersection, with the south boundary line of Avenue B, produced westerly, formerly and commonly*71 known as Washington Street; to its intersection with the north boundary line of First Avenue, east of said Seventh Street, formerly and commonly known as Duane Street, in the city of Seaside, Oregon, in the following manner, to-wit: by paving said street forty feet in width, twenty feet on each side of the center line of said street, with gravel bitulithic pavement, by constructing artificial stone curbs along each said pavement, by making the necessary excavation and fill to bring said street to the established grade as established by Ordinance No. 107 of the city of Seaside, Oregon; hereby remonstrate against said improvement for the following reason:
“That the present street is in a good condition and that it is an unnecessary expense to the property owners to make such improvements until such time as the sewer shall have been laid upon the said street, also the present water mains will have to be changed within a short time, and until said sewer and water mains are laid permanently it would be an unreasonable expense to put on the property owners along said street.
“Trusting that you will give this remonstrance your careful consideration, we remain, your petitioners.”
Admittedly this paper was signed by the plaintiff with others. First of all, this is a remonstrance, an objection. No importance can be attached to the fact that the way is called a street in the writing. That portion of the instrument is substantially a quotation of the language used by the city authorities in framing the ordinance and was probably used by the plaintiff and his associates to make the remonstrance correspond in nomenclature with the proceeding it was designed to oppose. The whole instrument amounts to no more than their saying:
“On the assumption of the city that this is a street we remonstrate against its improvement.”
The council had no jurisdiction over the subject matter of improving a county road at the expense of the abutting property owners. Mere consent will not confer jurisdiction upon a tribunal having limited authority in matters where it has no power to conduct such a proceeding. Since the case of Strout v. Portland, 26 Or. 294 (38 Pac. 126), it has been the rule in this state that:
“When in proceedings for the levy of an assessment for a public improvement, the common council is without jurisdiction from the beginning, a person whose property is benefited by the improvement, but who did not ask for such improvement, may deny the validity of the proceedings, although he made no objection while the improvement was in progress.”
The doctrine is thus stated in Ladd v. Spencer, 23 Or. 193, 198 (31 Pac. 474) : '
“But the respondent objected by written protest at the inception of the proceedings, and he thereby challenged the act of the council and its officers. It cannot be said that he encouraged the improvement. The charter made no provision that before a person could be heard in an equitable proceeding he must tender the amount of benefits. If an owner of property were obliged to do this as a condition precedent before he could maintain a suit, it would tend to do away with every jurisdictional requirement in the proper levy of special assessments, as the council of a city could, without observing the requirements of a charter, order the improvement of a street and compel the owner of the property benefited to tender the amount of the benefits before he could enjoin the officer from executing a void process.”
The defendants count on Grimes v. Seaside, 87 Or. 256 (170 Pac. 310), to sustain their contention that the plaintiff on account of his knowledge that the way in question, whether county road or city street, was being improved by the city, coupled with his failure to protest, is now equitably estopped to maintain this suit. In that case, however, as the opinion of Mr. Justice Moore points out, the plaintiff himself with others had dedicated an extension of Bridge Street which was afterwards renamed Broadway Street, “no part of the improvement abutting upon his premises was made upon the county road,” the street'at that point as so dedicated being wholly south of the road and the charter formula for acquiring jurisdiction having been followed. There the way- to be improved had been dedicated as a street and not as a road. Here it was dedicated as a county road before the city existed. There the county had not accepted the dedication so far as the record discloses. Here the county did accept the dedication by assuming control and expending money in its improvement even after the city was incorporated. There the charter gave the city juris
This rule of construction was followed in the decision of the former appeal of this case. In the later opinion by Mr. Justice Harris in Portland v. Portland Ry. L. & P. Co., 80 Or. 271, 297 (156 Pac. 1058), treating of municipal power of taxation, we find this language :
“The rule is especially applicable to the power to tax (4 Dillon Mun. Corp. [5 ed.], Section 13,78), because a city possesses no inherent power to tax and ‘the grant relied upon must be evident and unmistakable and all doubts will be resolved against its exercise and in favor of the taxpayer’: Corbett v. City of Portland, 31 Or. 407, 415 (48 Pac. 428); Stevens v. Taylor, 79 Or. 424 (154 Pac. 896).”
I Prom the same pen came this excerpt in Robertson v. Portland, 77 Or. 121, 128 (149 Pac. 545):
*75 “It is hornbook law that municipal corporations have no powers except such as are granted in express words by their charters, or such as are necessarily implied from those granted or those essential to the declared objects and purposes of the corporations: Corvallis v. Carlile, 10 Or. 139 (45 Am. Rep. 134); Beers v. Dalles City, 16 Or. 334 (18 Pac. 835); Pacific University v. Johnson, 47 Or. 448 (84 Pac. 704); McDonald v. Lane, 49 Or. 530 (90 Pac. 181); Naylor v. McColloch, 54 Or. 305 (103 Pac. 68); Mutual Irr. Co. v. Baker, 58 Or. 306 (110 Pac. 392, 113 Pac. 9); Rosa v. Bandon, 71 Or. 510 (142 Pac. 339).”
In State ex rel. v. Port of Astoria, 79 Or. 1 (154 Pac. 399), the court had under consideration two sections of our state Constitution, viz.: Article XI, Section 2, giving to the legal voters of every city and town “power to enact and amend their municipal charter, subject to the constitution and criminal laws of the State of Oregon,” and Article IV, Section la, reserving the initiative and referendum powers “to the legal voters of every-municipality and district as to all local, special and municipal legislation of every character in or for their respective municipalities and'districts.” By analogy the doctrine of strict construction in such matters and the reason for it are there given utterance as follows:
“While the prime purpose is to ascertain and give effect to the intention as expressed in the language employed, yet the two sections now being considered are designed to grant attributes of sovereignty to specified local subdivisions and such grant being a limitation on the power of the legislature, it should be strictly construed, as was properly held in Thurber v. McMinnville, 63 Or. 410, 414 (128 Pac. 43); and this rule of construction must be applied here notwithstanding the suggestion broached in State v. Schluer, 59 Or. 18, 27 (115 Pac. 1057), and regardless of the*76 inference that may possibly be drawn from Schubel v. Olcott, 60 Or. 503, 515 (120 Pac. 375).”
Before the advent of the initiative and referendum the reason for construing strictly the legislative grants of power to municipalities in the form of charters was that they were in derogation of the sovereignty of the state. This being true as' a canon by which to construe an act of the legislature which, as a law-making body is restrained only by the Constitution, it is equally applicable to a mere local fraction of the people exercising the initiative in enacting and amending charters, for this power is expressly subject not only to the same Constitution that controls the legislative assembly but also to “the criminal laws of the State of Oregon.” It would be fallacious to lay down as a premise that all power over municipalities has been wrested from the legislative assembly and set at large to be employed only by those institutions themselves. On the contrary, we are taught in State ex rel. v. Port of Astoria, 79 Or. 1 (154 Pac. 399), that while the legislature cannot create a corporation by special law, yet “it has the power to provide for the formation of corporations under general laws, whether such corporations be private or public, essentially proprietary, or purely municipal.” Not only so, but municipalities in their charter schemes are subject to the Constitution and criminal laws which are themselves restrictive in their operation. It logically .follows that that which is the product of a limited authority and is in derogation of the primal sovereignty of the people, as embodied in the state government, should be strictly construed.
Drawing an analogy from such cases as Northern Pacific Terminal Co. v. Portland, 14 Or. 24 (13 Pac. 705); Bewley v. Graves, 17 Or. 274 (20 Pac. 322); Sime
The state is yet the chief and principal manifestation of the governmental power of the people. All .other agencies, including cities, are subordinate. A little leaven of charter power will not leaven the whole lump of jurisdiction, and until the county as the agency of the state constituted for that purpose through some recognized' procedure has surrendered its authority over the county road, or there is some competent legislation on the subject, the city cannot assume control of it in excess of the powers granted.
The decree of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Affirmed.