23 Or. 199 | Or. | 1892
The plaintiffs are owners of several separate parcels of real estate in the city of Portland. The common council of such city caused a sewer to be
The only question raised is, whether the common council had the power under its charter to apportion and assess upon the property directly benefited the cost for the construction of the sewer. The contention for the plaintiffs is, that the common council had no power or authority to determine the amounts the different parcels of realty should pay for a sewer improvement, but that it must appoint assessors for that purpose as directed by the proviso of section 121 of the charter (Sess. Laws, 1882, 171). This section provides as follows: “The council shall have the power to lay down all necessary sewers and drains,- and cause the same to be assessed on the property directly benefited by such drain or sewer, but the mode of apportioning estimated costs of improvements of streets prescribed in sections 112 and 113 of chapter X. of this act shall not apply to the construction of such sewers and drains; and when the council shall direct the same to be assessed on the property directly benefited, such expense shall, in every other respect, be assessed and collected in the same manner as is provided in the case of street improvements; provided, that the council may at its discretion appoint three disinterested persons to estimate the proportionate share of the cost of such sewer or drain to be assessed to the several owners of the property benefited thereby.” In the view urged by plaintiffs the power of the council to snake assessments for sewer purposes cannot be exercised in any other manner than as prescribed in the section set out. This construction is based on the idea that the words
It is a familiar rule of interpretation that the word “may” in a statute is sometimes used in a directory, and sometimes in a permissive sense. It has always been construed “must” or “shall” whenever the rights of third persons or the public good requires it. But this is so only when it is necessary to give effect to the intention of the legislature, as where it is clear that such intention is to impose a positive and absolute duty, and not merely to give a discretionary power. Hence the rule is laid down that where power is given to public officers by a statute, whenever the public interests or individual rights call for its exercise, the language used, though permissive in form, is in fact peremptory: Supervisors v. U. S. 4 Wall. 446; 14 Am. & Eng. Enc. 979. Nor does counsel for the defendant deny this rule of construction, but contends that there is no occasion for its application. While it is admitted that the public, as well as third persons, have an interest in the construction of sewers, and in the assessments levied to defray the costs thereof, he insists that when section 121, supra, is taken in connection with section 100, to which its language is claimed to refer, the intention is to give the common council of the city the power to make the apportionment itself, or at its discretion to appoint three disinterested assessors for that purpose. It thus appears that while the power to apportion the cost for the construction of a sewer upon the property directly benefited is not claimed to be conferred on the council by direct statement, yet the power is derived, and is vested in the council by the reference made in that portion of the section which provides that such expense or cost shall be assessed in the same manner as is provided in the case of street improvements. It
The point of the city’s contention, therefore, is that when a public officer or tribunal is by statute invested with authority to do some act itself which affects individual rights or the public, or in its discretion to appoint some other person to perform the act in its stead, and no constitutional objection intervenes, the rule of interpretation requiring “may” to read “must” can have no application. Our first inquiry, then, is to ascertain the construction to be given to section 121; and if that be to authorize the council itself to assess the proportionate share of such cost against the property directly benefited thereby, as in the case of street improvements, or in its discretion to appoint three disinterested persons in its stead to estimate such proportionate cost, then our next Inquiry is to ascertain if the rule invoked that “may” should read “must” applies to this section.
Under section 121 the council has the power to order sewers or drains to be constructed, and to cause the cost thereof to be assessed on the property directly benefited. Then follows an exception to the effect that the “mode of apportioning estimated cost of street improvements prescribed in sections 112 and 113, chapter X., of this act shall not apply t<? the construction of sewers or drains. ” These two last sections limit the boundaries within which” the street assessments may be made, and prescribe the method of apportionment of the cost of the improvement of intersections. After making these exceptions, the section then proceeds to provide that, “when the council shall direct the same,” (that is, the cost of constructing such sewers or drains), “such cost shall, in every other respect,” (that is, in every respect except as prescribed in sections 112 and 113), “be assessed and collected in the same manner as is provided in the case of street improvements.” The provision that such expense shall be
The intent of section 121, as construed, is to grant power to the council itself to apportion the cost of constructing sewers, or in its discretion to appoint assessors in its stead for that purpose. The intent of the section cannot be carried into effect, but will be defeated in a material part, if the council itself shall be deprived of the power to apportion such cost in order to compel it to appoint three assessors for that purpose. The effect would be to destroy a power granted by statute to the
The judgment is reversed.