132 P. 538 | Or. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
“Immediately upon the filing of any such petition * * signed . by the number of voters and filed within the time required by the ordinance, the auditor and police judge shall cause notice thereof, * * with a brief statement of its tenor and effect, to be given by publication for eight successive days in one daily newspaper printed and published in the city of Astoria. ’ ’
The initiative petition was filed October 31, 1912. The police judge was required to examine and compare the signatures on the petition with the handwriting of the electors on the registration books and blanks, and to determine whether or not the petitioners were entitled to have the proposed measure submitted to the voters. In order to comply with these requirements, it was necessary that time should be occupied in ascertaining and determining the facts essential to the jurisdiction of the proceedings. The word “immediately,” as used in section 6 of the ordinance, herein-before quoted, must be so construed as to give force and effect to each provision of the municipal law. The publication of the notice of the filing of the petition was not commenced until November 5, 1912. Excluding October 31st, the day the petition was left with the police judge, he had November 1st, 2d and 4th (the third day of that month being Sunday) in which to com' pare the signatures and to determine if the petition was in due form, presented within the prescribed time, and subscribed by the requisite number of electors. It is evident that the time so employed by the police judge in the performance of the services demanded was not unreasonable, and that the notice was published “im
O. B. Estes, a physician, who had practiced his profession at Astoria twenty-seven years, testified that the tide flats referred to brought diseases to the people who lived over them, saying: “Most of the typhoid fever we have here is traceable to them.” He remarked, however, that they had less diseases of that kind than in any city in the state. He further stated upon oath that the condition of the tide flats was very filthy, and the stench arising therefrom offensive to persons who were not accustomed to it. The witness also made the following declaration: “If God Almighty didn’t wash this town out twice a day, in five years there wouldn’t be anybody here.”
Dr. Calvin S. "White, state health officer, referring to these flats, testified as follows: “Parts of them are not entirely covered by tides and are visible. It is very unsanitary.” This witness, having gone beneath the planking on the streets and under the buildings in the reclamation district, testified that in one place he found a broken sewer, one third of the contents of which formed a lake under some of the houses; that there were two or three toilets that emptied into this lake, which filth was not carried away by the flood tide; and that the flats were unhealthy and unsanitary, caused by the sewers dumping their contents thereon.
E. P. Pernot, state bacteriologist, made some examination of the flats in question from the elevated streets, saying: “I saw a great deal of rubbish and debris, and I observed a great many houses had chutes
The, sworn declarations of these witnesses are corroborated in many instances by the testimony of Dr. L. H. Henderson, Dr. W. C. Logan, and the defendant, Dr. Alfred Kinney.
There appears to be no difference in the condition of plaintiff’s land within the district and the real property of all the other owners therein. The plaintiff’s unreasonable use of his own property, whereby injury to the rights of the public producing annoyance, discomfort and hurt, evidences such a wrong as will be declared a nuisance: 29 Cyc. 1156. No barrier or obstacle has been placed by the city of Astoria, or by any other corporation, firm or person that tends in any manner to impede the outflow of the accumulated filth from the district when the tide ebbs. The plaintiff, therefore, in common with all other owners of land within the reclamation district, is equally responsible for the unsanitary condition described by the medical experts to whose testimony reference has been made.
A statute of New Jersey, providing for the drainage of any tract of land within that state, instituted and prosecuted in a designated manner, and authorizing the assessment by commissioners, after notice and hearing of the expenses upon all the owners, was not to deprive them of their property without due process of law, nor to deny to them the equal protection of the laws within the meaning of the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution of the United States: Wurts v. Hoagland, 114 U. S. 606 (29 L. Ed. 229, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1086). A statute of Nebraska authorizing municipal councils to drain, fill, or grade lots or pieces of ground within the corporate limits so as to prevent stagnant water, banks of earth, or other nuisances accumulating or existing thereon, and providing for the assessment of the entire expense of the improvement against the property so drained, filled or graded, was held not to be a violation of the provision of the Constitution relating to special assessments for local improvements, but that such an enactment was a warranted exercise of the police power of the state: Horbach v. City of Omaha, 54 Neb. 83 (74 N. W. 434).
In the interest of public health a legislative assembly may empower the common council of cities to pass ordinances requiring either the filling up or the draining of excavations on lands within the corporate limits, which hollow places are filled with stagnant, foul, and unwholesome water; and an ordinance passed pursuant to such authority has the same force and effect as an act passed by the legislature itself: City of Rochester v. Simpson, 134 N. Y. 414 (31 N. E. 871). In construing a statute authorizing the common council of a city to order the owners of lands, situated in a certain district, “to raise the grade of their said lands, filling up the same with good materials to such permanent grade as may be deemed necessary by the board of aldermen in order to secure a complete drainage thereof, so as to abate and prevent nuisances, and to preserve the public health of the city,” and “if the owner of such lands fails to comply with the order, to fill up the land, all necessary expenses incurred thereby shall constitute a lien upon the lands filled.” It was held that such an enactment was constitutional, and that under it the whole expense of filling the land was to be borne by the owner without regard to the question whether the land was benefited by such filling: Nickerson v. Boston, 131 Mass. 306. “Where undrained land will jeopardize the health of a city, a statute requiring the filling of such real property at the expense of the owner was held to be a proper exercise of the police power: Bowes v. City of Aberdeen, 58 Wash. 535 (109 Pac. 369, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.) 709).
The decree is therefore affirmed. Affirmed.