21 Or. 251 | Or. | 1891
The real contention here is, that the act consolidating the cities of Portland, East Portland, and Albina into one municipal corporation repealed by implication the Meussdoffer Act, and that is the only question presented by this appeal. A brief summary of the act will render the question at issue more apparent. The first section provides in substance that the cities of Portland, East Portland, and Albina are hereby authorized and empowered to provide one or more suitable and commodious bridges over and across the Willamette river, at such points between the north line of section 28, township 1 north, range 1 east, and the south line of section 3, township 1 south, range 1 east, as to the persons herein authorized to purchase, construct, hire, maintain, conduct and control the same may be deemed most necessary and convenient; said bridge or ibridges to be forever free to all pedestrians and all classes of vehicles and traffic except railways and street railways; and to that end said cities may acquire by construction, purchase, or otherwise, and own and possess all said bridges and all such real and personal property within the limits hereinbefore mentioned as in the judgment of the persons herein authorized to construct, purchase, keep up and maintain the same may be necessary, and for such purpose may also issue bonds and dispose of the same as hereinafter provided; provided, the place or location of any bridge constructed and the plan thereof shall be submitted to and be approved by the secretary of war.
Section 2 in substance provides that the power and authority given to said cities by section 1, to construct, purchase, hire, keep up and maintain bridges across the Willamette river and to issue and dispose of bonds therefor,
Section 5 empowers the committee to fill vacancies in that body by death, resignation, or removal from the city of which he was a resident, or otherwise; defines the qualification a person must possess to fill a vacancy, and the number of members necessary to constitute a quorum. Section 6 defines the chairman’s duties, and authorizes the committee to appoint a chairman from their number for the time being when the chairman is absent. Section 7 further defines the duties of the chairman. Section 8 defines the duties of clerk of the committee. Section 9 empowers the committee to appoint a treasurer, who shall give bond in such sum as it may require, and defines his duties. Section 10 makes it the duty of the clerk and treasurer to perform such other duties as the committee may require, fixes the tenure of their offices during the pleasure of the committee, and their salaries, such sums as the committee may prescribe. Section 11 authorizes the committee to employ and discharge such other agents, workmen, laborers and servants at such compensation or wages as it may deem necessary for the accomplishment of the purposes of the act. Section 12 makes it the duty of the committee to meet in one of said cities at such times and places as it may designate, at least ones a month and at such other times
Section 14 is as follows: “ For the purpose of carrying this act into effect, the committee is authorized to issue and dispose of bonds of said three cities of the denomination of from one hundred dollars to one thousand dollars, as the purchaser may desire, with interest coupons attached thereto, the par value of which shall not exceed five hundred thousand dollars, signed by its chairman and countersigned by its clerk; said bonds to be issued as the joint obligation of the three cities, whereby each of said cities shall be held and considered in substance and effect to undertake and promise, in consideration of the premises, to pay to the bearer of each of said bonds, at the expiration of thirty years from the date thereof, the sum named therein, together with interest thereon at the rate of five per cent per annum, payable yearly as provided by said coupons.”
Section 15 provides in effect that whenever such bridges have been constructed, purchased, or hired, and are all ready for use, or the limit of the sum authorized to be expended has been reached, there shall be selected as therein provided four persons for the purpose of maintaining, managing, and keeping in repair said bridges, who shall be styled individually bridge commissioners and collectively the bridge commission; and thereafter the power and authority given to said cities to construct, purchase and hire one or more bridges shall be exercised as therein-after provided by said commission. Section 16 provides how the commissioners shall be selected, their places of residence, term of office, and how their successors shall be appointed, etc. Section 17 provides how the commission shall organize, what officers it may appoint, and regulates its meetings. Section 18 provides when and in what manner the commission shall succeed to the powers and duties of the committee; and section 19 contains a succinct enumeration of the powers and duties of the commission. Section 20 provides the method of levying a tax annually
Two sections of the Portland consolidation act which was filed in the office of the secretary of state on the nineteenth day of February, 1891, and it is alleged took effect ninety days thereafter, it is claimed, either repealed the foregoing act by implication or rendered it nugatory. The sections of the act are as follows:
“Section 189. Except as otherwise expressly provided or permitted by this act, indebtedness of the city of Portland must never exceed in the aggregate one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, except that said city may in addition thereto incur an indebtedness of five hundred thousand dollars for the erection and furnishing of a city hall, in addition to the one hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars heretofore authorized for that purpose; two million five hundred thousand dollars, heretofore authorized for the purpose of furnishing the city and the inhabitants thereof with water; two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for the purchasing and improving city parks, and five hundred thousand dollars for building, buying, leasing, or otherwise providing free bridges across the Willamette river; nor shall said city ever contract any debt or assume any liability in any manner whatever by means of which it may be called upon or be bound to pay any sum of money at any time beyond the period of two years from the date of such contract or assumption, except by the issue of negotiable bonds.
“Section 190. The city of Portland has power and authority to provide by ordinance for dredging the bars in the Willamette river and for improving and keeping*257 improved the navigation of the same within and below the city of Portland; and in the exercise of such power and authority may provide and use all means necessary or con-venint therefor not prohibited by this act, including the levying and collecting of the tax provided for in subdivision 2 of section 37; and said city is hereby authorized and empowered to construct and maintain bridges across the Willamette river at any point within the limits of the said city not already occupied by bridges or ferry lines, with such suitable draws and openings as said city may deem proper; and it shall.have power to purchase or lease any bridge or bridges already existing across said river within said city limits.”
Two main questions were relied upon by the appellant. The first was that the Muessdorffer Act was repealed by implication; and the. second was that it was rendered nugatory and incapable of being enforced by reason of the changes wrought in the three cities affected by the consolidation in uniting them into one municipal corporation. These questions will be separately considered.
It is elementary law that repeals by implication are not favored. It is a reasonable presumption that the legislature did not intend to keep really contradictory enactments in the statute book, or to effect so important a measure as the repeal of a law without expressing an intention to do so. Such an interpretation, therefore, is not to be adopted unless it be inevitable. Any reasonable construction which offers an escape from it is more likely to be in consonance with the real intention. Hence it is said to be a rule founded in reason as well as in abundant authority, that in order to give an act not covering the entire ground of an earlier one nor clearly intended as a substitute for it the effect of repealing it, the implication of an intention to repeal must necessarily flow from the language used, disclosing a repugnancy between its provisions and the earlier law, so positive as to be irreconcilable by any fair, strict or liberal construction which would, without destroying its evident intent and
Applying these principles to the two acts in question, and construing them in pari materia, is there such a repug-nancy between them that they cannot stand together? We think not. Section 189 of the consolidation act does not in any way conflict with the Meussdorffer Act. That section was doubtless inserted in the charter in obedience to article. XI, section 5, of the state constitution, which requires that acts of the legislative assembly incorporating towns and cities shall restrict their powers of taxation, borrowing money, contracting debts, and loaning their credit. The only repugnancy that was claimed upon the argument to exist between the two acts, was that section 189, supra, authorized the city to contract an indebtedness of five hundred thousand dollars for building, buying, leasing or otherwise providing free bridges across the Willamette river, and these other words in that section, “except by the issue of negotiable bonds.” But if these two acts, or at least the parts under consideration, are in pari materia as they must be, because they relate to the same subject, the whole difficulty vanishes.
On the subject of bridges and issuing negotiable bonds, the two acts are to be read as one entire act — in other words, so much of the consolidation act as relates to bridges and the issuance of negotiable bonds, is to be read as if they were actually inserted in the Meussdorffer Act as a part of it. And viewing the two acts in a broader sense, and looking at the object the legislature had in view in passing them, and the means and agencies to be employed to work out results, we can have no doubt of the correctness of our conclusions on this subject. One purpose was paramount, and that was, to secure one or more free bridges across the
The other objection relates to the changes made by the consolidation act in reducing the three cities of Portland, East Portland, and Albina, into one city, to be known as the city of Portland. It is suggested that the Meussdorffer Act by its terms contemplated the existence of the three cities, and that since two of them have ceased to exist, the execution of the act has been rendered impossible by operation of law. It must be conceded that the power of the legislature over public corporations within the state, so far as concerns their existence and boundaries, is practically without limit, unless restrained by some provision of the constitution. (Martin v. Dix, 52 Mo. 53; City of St. Louis v. Russell, 9 Mo. *507; Smith v. McCarthy, 56 Penn. St. 359; Commissioners of Laramie Co. v. Commissioners of Albany Co. 92 U. S. 307.) And several municipal corporations may be consolidated into one even without the consent of the corporations affected, if the legislature so provide.
It would seem to result as a consequence of this doctrine that if a duty is created by law and made to rest upon several municipal corporations, and afterwards they should be consolidated into one corporation, which was given the name of one only of such corporations, such duty being a continuing one, rests upon the new corporation created by the consolidation. This is a necessary consequence arising
The provisions in section 18, and perhaps in some other parts of the Meussdorffer Act referring to the three cities, each of said cities, and other similar expressions, will have to be read in the singular and be held to refer to the city of Portland only. This is the necessary effect of the adoption of the consolidation act. By that act the charters of the cities of East Portland and Albina were repealed, leaving the duty created by the Meussdorffer act to be performed by the city of Portland, but having the added territory and inhabitants of the other two cities to aid it in its performance.
The decree appealed from must be affirmed.