Bechtold v. Wilson

187 P.2d 675, 186 P.2d 525, 182 Or. 360, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 234
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 187 P.2d 675 (Bechtold v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bechtold v. Wilson, 187 P.2d 675, 186 P.2d 525, 182 Or. 360, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 234 (Or. 1947).

Opinions

*362 LUSK, J.

In the view we take of the case the only question that need be decided is whether the remedy of writ of review was available to the appellants: If it was not, it makes no difference whether the ruling on the demurrer was erroneous or otherwise.

*363 In Asher v. Pitchford, 167 Or. 70, 76, 115 P. (2d) 337 (1941), we had occasion to say that the scope of the writ of review and the character of decisions of inferior tribunals that may be called in question by that proceeding “are matters not always easy of solution and which have not been clearly defined by the previous decisions of this court.” The re-examination of the subject which this case has demanded has given us no reason to doubt the accuracy of that observation. If anything, it is an understatement. The question now presented is essentially the same as that which we found it unnecessary to decide in Asher v. Pitchford, namely, whether a mere error of judgment of an inferior court in passing upon a question of pleading is the kind of error which can be corrected on writ of review. To determine that question, and, we hope, to settle it, a somewhat extensive review of the Oregon decisions is deemed advisable.

Writ of review in this state is a statutory remedy. The sections of O. C. L. A. pertinent to the present discussion are as follows:

“§11-201. The writ heretofore known as the writ of certiorari is known in this Code as the writ of review.”
“§11-202. Any party to any process or proceeding before or by any inferior court, officer, or tribunal may have the decision or determination thereof reviewed for errors therein, as in this chapter prescribed, and not otherwise. Upon a review, the court may review any intermediate order involving the merits and necessarily affecting the decision or determination sought to be reviewed.”
“§11-204. The writ shall be concurrent with the right of appeal, and shall be allowed in all cases where the inferior court, officer, or tribunal in the exercise of judicial functions appears to have exer *364 cised such functions erroneously, or to have exceeded its or his jurisdiction, to the injury of some substantial right of the plaintiff, and not otherwise.”
‘ § 11-210. Upon the review, the court shall have power to affirm, modify, reverse, or annul the decision or determination reviewed, and if necessary, to award restitution to the plaintiff, or by mandate direct the inferior court, officer, or tribunal, to proceed in the matter reviewed according to its decision. From the judgment of the circuit court on review, an appeal may be taken to the supreme court in like manner and with like effect as from a judgment of such circuit court in an action.”

The foregoing provisions read today as they did in 1862 when they were enacted, except § 11-204, which originally provided:

“The writ shall be allowed in all cases where there is no appeal or other plain, speedy, and adequate remedy, and where the inferior court, officer, or tribunal in the exercise of judicial functions appears to have exercised such functions erroneously, or to have exceeded it [s] or his jurisdiction, to the injury of some substantial right of the plaintiff, and not otherwise. ’ ’ 1 Hill’s Ann. L. 501, § 585.

The change in this section to its present form was effected by an amendment adopted in 1889. L. 0.1889, p. 135. The amendment, it will be observed, eliminates the provision that the writ shall be allowed “in all cases where there is no appeal or other plain, speedy, and adequate remedy”, and provides instead that it “shall be concurrent with the right of appeal”. No other change was made.

It is § 11-204 to which we must look to ascertain the class of eases in which the remedy of review may be used. There is no difficulty in applying the provision *365 that the writ shall be allowed in all eases in which the inferior tribunal, in the exercise of judicial functions, appears “to have exceeded it[s] or his jurisdiction”; the confusion in the decisions has come in interpreting the provisions that “the writ shall be concurrent with the right of appeal”, and shall be allowed when the inferior tribunal “appears to have exercised such functions erroneously”.

Hill v. State, 23 Or. 446, 32 P. 160 (1893), appears to have been the first case in which the 1889 amendment was construed. It was there held that review was the proper remedy where the defendant in a criminal case in a justice’s court was convicted under a complaint which did not charge an offense against the defendant. Referring to the 1889 amendment, the court said in an opinion by Chief Justice Lord:

“It is manifest, as the section now stands, that where there is a right of appeal there is a right to a writ of review, as the latter is made concurrent with the former, so that in all cases where the inferior tribunal exceeds its jurisdiction, or exercises its powers erroneously, and a right of appeal exists, there is the concurrent right of review.”

To the objection that there was no right of appeal in the particular case (the fine being less than $20.00), and therefore no right to the. writ, the court answered that this would be so if the section, as amended, only made the right of review concurrent with the right of appeal. But it was said “it not only provides that the writ shall be concurrent with the right of appeal, but that it ‘shall be allowed in all cases’ where the inferior tribunal acts without jurisdiction, or exercises its powers erroneously to the injury of the plaintiff”; and, since it was conceded that the court acted *366 without jurisdiction, the plaintiff was entitled to the writ.

It should be observed that this decision goes no further than to hold that, where an inferior court exceeds its jurisdiction, review will lie even though there is no right of appeal. The language of Chief Justice Lord, first above quoted, is not, in our opinion, to be taken as meaning that the writ of review is given in every case where there is a right of appeal; but, rather, that in every case where an inferior tribunal exceeds its jurisdiction, or exercises its judicial functions erroneously, resort may be had to review, even though an appeal is authorized. It was certainly not intended to suggest, for example, that a decision of a question of fact may be corrected on writ of review. Questions of fact may be determined on appeal from the justice’s court to the circuit court; but it is held consistently that, on review, the court will not pass upon questions of fact and that “questions presented by a writ of review must be tried by the record of the inferior tribunal whose proceedings cannot be contradicted at the trial.” Lechleidner v. Carson, 156 Or. 636, 645, 68 P. (2d) 482 (1937); Cookinham, v. Lewis, 58 Or. 484, 488, 114 P. 88, 115 P. 342 (1911); Dayton v. Board of Equalization, 33 Or. 131, 139, 50 P. 1009 (1897); Oregon Coal Company v. Coos County, 30 Or. 308, 47 P. 851 (1897);

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Bluebook (online)
187 P.2d 675, 186 P.2d 525, 182 Or. 360, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bechtold-v-wilson-or-1947.