Allied Veterans Council v. Klamath County

544 P.2d 190, 23 Or. App. 653, 1975 Ore. App. LEXIS 1076
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 22, 1975
Docket74-156 E, CA 4233
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 544 P.2d 190 (Allied Veterans Council v. Klamath County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allied Veterans Council v. Klamath County, 544 P.2d 190, 23 Or. App. 653, 1975 Ore. App. LEXIS 1076 (Or. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

LANGTRY, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a decree of the circuit court “barring and estopping” it from asserting any claim to “ownership, use or possession” of the Veterans’ Memorial Building located within the city of Klamath Falls, and declaring that defendant Klamath County can “continue to use said Veterans Memorial Building exclusively for governmental purposes.”

The complaint, filed April 5, 1974, sought a declaratory judgment decreeing that the Memorial Building be maintained — at county expense — as a clubroom and meeting place for servicemen and ex-servicemen residing in Klamath County. The complaint alleged:

“II
“At a special session of the Oregon State Legislature in 1920 * * * Chapter 16, Oregon Laws *656 1920, Section 1 and 2 * * * empowered the Several County Courts in the State of Oregon to expend County funds to erect and maintain a building to be used as a clubroom and meeting place for servicemen and ex-servicemen. * * * The building was to be maintained by the County at its expense.
“HI
“On October 13, 1925, Klamath County through its then legally constituted Board of Commissioners implemented the authority granted it by the Oregon State Legislature and authorized construction of a Veterans Memorial Building * * *.
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“VII
“[From the time of its completion in 1926] Klamath County steadily encroached upon the use of the building by servicemen and veterans. * * * [Subsequent to August 1956[ ]] the County * * * took complete and exclusive possession of the Veterans Memorial Building and converted said building from a public memorial to a County governmental building and has since that time and now, used the building for County purposes to the *657 complete exclusion of servicemen and ex-servicemen in Klamath. County.
# # * * »

After hearing, on January 16, 1975 the circuit court issued the decree from which this appeal has been taken. In a memorandum opinion the court emphasized that its decision was based in large part upon a finding that the Memorial Building had been used exclusively for county purposes since 1956, had been remodeled as office space at some expense to the county in 1971 and 1972, and as a building used for “governmental purposes” presently served a function of “substantial value to all persons in Klamath County, veteran and non-veteran * * *,” concluding:

“It has to be assumed that all citizens of Klamath County assume the county was taking over the [Veterans’ Memorial] building in 195 [6] * * * [F]or [17] years, everyone was presumably satisfied. No protests were ever made known until * * * December 4, 1973. It seems inconceivable to now invite judicial intervention to undo, at a substantial cost, something that everyone thought was a closed issue.”

Plaintiff contends that because the Veterans’ Memorial Building was constructed pursuant to a statute which authorized the expenditure of public funds by the county for a specific purpose — the building and maintenance of a “clubroom/meeting place” for veterans — the county lacks authority to employ that structure for any other purpose even where the “inconsistent” use is one of general public benefit.

As a subdivision or agency of state government, “created by legislative fiat for political and civil purposes * * a county has only such powers as are conferred upon it by statute. Powell Grove Cem. v. Multnomah Co., 228 Or 597, 600, 365 P2d 1058 (1961); *658 Highway Com. v. Clackamas W. Dist., 247 Or 216, 428 P2d 395 (1967). This rule is not entirely accurate where a county has adopted a home rule charter as authorized by Oregon Constitution, Art VI, § 10. Among those powers conferred by the legislature of this state are those of acquiring, holding and managing real and personal property necessary to the proper exercise of any power specifically granted or essential to the purpose of county government.

Where property has been lawfully acquired, a county is generally permitted to exercise a broad discretion in its management, a general limitation upon which is the rule that county property must be employed to meet “public” needs. County governing bodies are not, however, always free to manage county property in such a way as to serve any valid public purpose. Where a specific tract or building either is held “in trust” for a specific purpose or has been “dedicated” to a particular use, a county — like any municipal corporation — is without power to change the use of that property without either specific legislative direction or, if the dedication is from a private source, appropriate consent of the dedicator. Raley v. Uma *659 tilla County, 15 Or 172, 13 P 890, 3 Am St R 142 (1887); City of Klamath Falls v. Flitcraft, 7 Or App 330, 490 P2d 515 (1971), Sup Ct review denied (1972); 38 Am Jur 164, Municipal Corporations § 485.

The threshold question here is, therefore, whether, as plaintiff alleges, the Veterans’ Memorial Building was acquired by Klamath County under circumstances sufficient to impose a “trust” upon that property requiring that it be used solely as a veterans’ clubroom/meeting room.

It is undisputed that the Veterans’ Memorial Building was constructed under authority of Oregon Laws 1920, ch 16 (Oregon Laws 3199-3200 (Olson 1920); Oregon Code 1930, §§ 27-109 - 27-110; §§ 86-119, 86-125, OCLA) which in part authorized counties to draw upon county funds to

“* * * [erect] and [maintain] a building to be used as a clubroom and meeting place for service and ex-service men of the army, navy and marine * # #
“The county courts * * * may receive financial aid and assistance from municipalities of the state or donations from the public in the construction of such * * * building * * * and such property shall belong to the county and be used for the purposes herein provided.”

Amended insignificantly during subsequent legislative sessions (Oregon Laws 1931, ch 17, § 1; Oregon Laws 1945, ch 395, § 1), the Act was eventually “repealed” by the legislature in Oregon Laws 1947, ch 595, § 4. As part of that same chapter, however, the legislature also enacted a measure which authorized counties, upon the application of two or more recognized veterans’ organizations, to

“* * * pay out of county funds such amounts *660 as the respective county courts may deem to be necessary or advisable to assist in the construction or acquisition of buildings to be used as club rooms and meeting places for service and ex-service veterans of any war in which the United States was a participant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
544 P.2d 190, 23 Or. App. 653, 1975 Ore. App. LEXIS 1076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allied-veterans-council-v-klamath-county-orctapp-1975.