202 P. 734 | Or. | 1921
Plaintiff assigns as error the sustaining of the demurrer.
While the location of the building is given in the writ, it is not directly alleged that it is located within the fire limits of the City of Pendleton. The plaintiff does not show that he owns buildings in close proximity to the one in question, so that he would sustain or be likely to sustain some injury differing from that sustained by the general public. The record does not show that this proceeding is authorized or prosecuted by the district attorney or any officer on behalf of the state or municipality.
Section 8 of Ordinance No. 405 of the City of Pendleton provides:
“Every tent or building or addition to a building or tent erected within or moved within said fire limits contrary to the provisions of this ordinance, is hereby declared and ordained to be a nuisance and liable to be abated as such unless the same be removed within five days after notice so to do, given by the city marshal to the person occupying the same or the person owning the same or causing the same to be erected or repaired or removed within such limits, that officer together with such person or persons as he may summon to his assistance or as the Common*404 Council may direct to assist him, shall immediately proceed to tear down and remove such building or tent or addition thereto, and the costs and expenses of so doing- and of the removal thereof shall be charged against and collected from the owner of the land upon which the same shall be so unlawfully erected, moved or repaired, if the same shall have been so erected, moved or repaired with his consent, or from both such owner and such occupant, and proper proceedings for the purpose of collecting such costs and'expenses may be instituted in the proper courts in the State of Oregon.”
Section 10, of Ordinance No. 405, reads as follows:
“The Common Council may, in its discretion, upon application made, grant a permit to any person for the erection of a wooden building within said fire limits for water closet or wood shed, or a permit for the erection of a building as described in Section 9 of this ordinance, of larger dimensions than therein specified. ’ ’
It is noted that the writ does not show that the building in question was such a one as might be erected by permission of the common council, nor that the same was not so permitted.
Section 11 reads thus:
“The Chief of the Fire Department of the City of • Pendleton, under the authority conferred upon him by the ordinances of the said city, as fire warden of the said city, is hereby clothed and vested with full authority to enforce this ordinance.”
The fire limits of the city, as they now exist, are prescribed by Ordinance No. 1053.
In Van Buskirk v. Bond, 52 Or. 234, at page 237 (96 Pac. 1003, 1104), this court speaking by Mr. Justice Moore said:
“The right to restrain a public nuisance by a private party is not recognized, unless he has sustained some damage or injury differing in kind from that suffered by the general public. (Parrish v. Stephens, 1 Or. 73; Esson v. Wattier, 25 Or. 7, 34 Pac. 756; Blagen v. Smith, 34 Or. 394, 56 Pac. 292, 44 L. R. A. 522).”
The writ of mandamus “may be issued to any inferior court, corporation, board, officer, or person, to compel the performance of an act which the law specially enjoins, as a duty resulting from an office, trust, or station.” Section 613, Or. L.
The right of the plaintiff to maintain the proceeding depends upon the facts in the case. "We have merely referred to some matters in a general way, as it may be they could have been corrected by amendment. As we view it, the vital question in the case is, assuming that a wooden building was erected within the fire limits of the City of Pendleton in violation of the ordinance, upon whom does the duty devolve to abate the same?
We do not think that the specific provisions relating to the duties of the city marshal contained in Section 8 of the ordinance are in any way changed or affected by the general provision relating to the chief of the fire department in Section 11.
The demurrer to the writ was therefore properly sustained, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed. Affirmed.