158 P. 945 | Or. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
“The true test is this: Could the legislature before it was deprived of the power to enact or amend charters have enacted this revision?”
Tested by this canon, a change in the boundaries, whether for greater or less, is a legitimate amendment of a charter, the power to effect which is committed to the legal voters of the municipality by the constitutional provisions above mentioned.
An amendment implies an addition or change within the scope of the original instrument so as to effect an improvement or better carry out the purpose for which it was framed, while a repeal signifies an utter abrogation of the previous legislation. McKeon v. Portland, 61 Or. 385 (122 Pac. 291), was an effort on the part of the municipal government of the defendant, without consulting its own electors, to extend its authority over the entire territory of the adjoining City of St. Johns upon the assent of the majority of those voting upon the question in the latter municipality, but without any action or sanction of its governing authorities. It amounted to an absolute repeal of the charter of St. Johns, a prerogative not permitted even to the legal voters of any city, and much less of any neighboring borough. Cooke v. Portland, 69 Or. 572 (139 Pac. 1095), was a case where extraurban electors
The present case is not like any of those. The record discloses that the legal voters of the town of Clatsop amended its charter so as to contract its municipal boundaries. This was legitimate because the same thing could have been done by the legislative assembly under the former régime before the Constitution was amended, thus meeting the test of State ex rel. v. Portland, 65 Or. 273, 285 (133 Pac. 62). Clatsop did not amend itself to death so as to be guilty of suicide
Reduced to its lowest terms upon the issue presented for our consideration, an affirmative answer must be given to the question stated by the appellant in his brief. We hold, therefore, that a change in the boundaries of a municipality excluding territory, theretofore subject to its authority, is a legitimate amendment of its charter which may be accomplished by the vote of its legal electors.
The decree is affirmed. Affirmed.