63 P. 14 | Or. | 1900
delivered the opinion.
This suit was instituted by nearly 200 merchants, firms, and corporations engaged in business of various kinds in the City of Portland, who refused to- pay the license fees or taxes required by Ordinance No. 11736, upon wagons, hacks, and other vehicles used by them in connection with their business enterprises, and its purpose is to enjoin the collection thereof. The ordinance in question is entitled “An ordinance licensing, taxing, and regulating, for the purpose of city revenue, all vehicles of any description whatsoever, in use in, upon, or through any of the streets within the limits of the City of Portland.” Section 8 thereof provides that “all moneys derived from license taxes under the pro
The city charter provides (Laws 1898, p. 109) : “The council has power and authority within the City of Portland: (1) To assess, levy and collect taxes for general municipal purposes not to exceed eight mills upon the dollar upon all property, both real and personal, which is taxable by law for city and county purposes. And when the council shall have made their estimate and declared the necessary amount of money to be raised by general taxation, as provided in section 51 of this act, they shall by said ordinance set apart not to exceed one and one-half mills for lighting the streets of the city; not to exceed two mills for the fire department of said city, and not to exceed one and three-fourths mills for the maintenance of the police department; and shall appropriate and set apart one-fourth of one mill on the dollar on the assessed valuation of all property liable to assessment and taxation, which shall constitute funds, respectively, for the fire department, police department, lighting department, and the repair of streets, and shall not be used for any other
The charter elsewhere provides (section 71) that the police commissioners shall on the first day of January of each year report to the common council the estimated amount of salaries and other necessary expenses of the police department for the ensuing year, and the council shall make an appropriation not to exceed one and three-fourths mills on the dollar upon all taxable property within the city, to meet the expenses of the department, and pay the same monthly as other accounts are paid out of the city treasury. Section 94 requires that the board of fire commissioners shall, on the first day of January of each year, or as soon thereafter as practicable, rqiort to the common council the estimated amount of salaries and other necessary expenses for the fire department for the ensuing year, and that the council shall make an appropriation not exceeding two mills on the dollar upon all-the taxable property within said city to meet the same, and, to the extent that the tax levied on said property
These comprehend about all the sections and clauses of the charter that have any particular bearing upon the present controversy. When construed in pari materia, as it was, no doubt, intended they should be, they indicate a legislative purpose of providing four several, separate, and distinct funds, to be set apart and used as therby directed, which funds are all limited by the charter with a view to keeping the expenditures of the several departments within the bounds thereby prescribed. The remaining two and one-half mills constitute the fifth fund, but it does not appear to have been limited and restricted in amount, or otherwise, except that it shall be used exclusively to pay the interest on the bonded indebtedness of the city. As we have seen, section 32, subd. 1, requires that the common council shall set apart by ordinance not to exceed one and one-half mills for lighting streets, two mills for the fire department, one and three-fourths mills for the police department, and appropriate and set apart one-fourth of one mill on the dollar, which shall constitute a fund for the repair of streets, and that no other dr greater sum shall be appropriated for the purposes named. This latter limitation, however, does not apply to the interest fund. Section 71 also requires that an appropriation not exceeding one and three-fourths mills on the