Bell v. City of Corvallis

551 P.2d 125, 25 Or. App. 821, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 2165
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 21, 1976
Docket29435, CA 5155
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 551 P.2d 125 (Bell v. City of Corvallis) 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
Bell v. City of Corvallis, 551 P.2d 125, 25 Or. App. 821, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 2165 (Or. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

*823 LANGTRY, J.

The plaintiff, J. Richard Bell, appeals from an adverse decision in a declaratory judgment action in which he seeks to have a contract between the City of Corvallis and the Hewlett-Packard Corporation (H-P) declared invalid. H-P has purchased a tract of land outside and near but not contiguous with the boundaries of the city with the intention of erecting thereon a large manufacturing plant. H-P expects to hire and necessarily bring into the area several thousand workers with the result that the population of the City of Corvallis and surrounding area will be substantially increased.

The proposed plant, aside from the increased population, will require extensive sewer, sewage treatment and water services and it is for the fulfillment of these needs that the contract was made. In the contract H-P and the city agree that H-P desires to annex the property to the city so that municipal services including water and sewer will be available thereto. The city agrees that it is willing to consider annexation but requires that any actual annexation be delayed until the improvement is completed so that upon annexation the land will reflect its improved true cash value for tax base purposes.

Among the mutual promises made by the respective parties is that the city will make available to H-P water and sewer services subject to city regulations and H-P will pay therefor all usual and applicable fees. H-P agrees that it will conform with the long-range water and sewer plans of the city and that within 60 days after substantial completion of the plant it will deliver to the city its consent to the annexation of the area to the city. The parties mutually agree that the city "cannot bind itself by an enforceable contract to pass future legislation annexing the building site * * *” but the city agrees it will process and consider in a manner usual in such a request the application and consent of H-P for the annexation.

*824 The plaintiff in this action purports to act on behalf of himself, a resident and taxpayer in the city, and all others similarly situated. The trial court held that he had not properly brought himself within the applicable class action statute (ORS 13.220). No challenge to this holding has been made in the appeal. Consequently, in our consideration of the case the action stands as an action by the plaintiff on his own behalf. We cannot see that this has any material bearing on the outcome of the case, in any event.

After a number of preliminary complaints, motions and demurrers the plaintiff filed a third amended complaint upon which the action was tried. (A fourth amended complaint was filed which simply deleted the matter eliminated by the last demurrer, but the denials to the third amended complaint stood as denials to the fourth, by agreement of counsel.) The third amended complaint recited background facts, including those we have related above, alleged that the plaintiff is prepared to seek a referendum election in the city on the question of whether the site should be, annexed to the city and then asserts that the action of the city is illegal in that (1) the purpose of the contract is to "delay the right” of the plaintiff and others to use the referral process in relation to the annexation; (2) the effect of the same is "to delay and make ineffectual the right of the plaintiff * * * to meaningfully engage in and use the referral process” to vote on the question of annexation; (3) the contract and its execution by the city violates ORS 224.020 and 454.175 "because such service is not necessary for the protection of the public health * * * is not in the public interest, and is not necessary or desirable for the proper disposal of sewage * * * within the corporate limits of the city or adjacent thereto”; (4) the action violates ORS 225.020 and 225.030 in that it "will not be to the use, benefit or profit of the city”; and (5) the city did not provide adequate opportunity to citizens to participate in the decision, did not place a burden of proof on H-P to show a public need for the contract, *825 and did not provide an impartial decision-making body at the hearings in that the officials had ex parte contacts with H-P representatives, etc. (Another allegation in this regard alleged one member of the city council was a stockholder of H-P and improperly partook in the negotiations. This allegation was abandoned on trial.) A copy of the contract was annexed to and made a part of the complaint.

With reference to contentions (1) and (2) above the trial court sustained demurrers. The ground assigned was that the council action in executing the contract was an administrative, not a legislative, matter and that the action therefore was not subject to referendum provisions of the Oregon Constitution. Thereafter, the court tried the other issues made by the complaint and defendants’ answers, which were in the nature of general denials. In its memorandum decision the court held that the statutes upon which plaintiff primarily bases issues (3) and (4), above, gave the city the authority to make the contract and that the same is valid, that there was no conflict of interest on the part of the council members, or other reasons under (5) above to declare the contract invalid, and that the injunction request of the complaint was denied.

In this appeal, plaintiff contends it was error (1) to sustain the demurrers; (2) to hold the applicable statutes conferred authority upon the council to make the contract; (3) to exclude evidence about the effect of the contract on the life of the city’s sewage treatment plant and evidence about the city’s alleged present and prospective violation of its waste discharge permit from the state; and (4) to hold that the "doctrine” of "appearance of fairness” does not apply.

(1) The demurrers were properly sustained. The contract does not purport to, nor does it, effect an annexation. It specifically states that both parties recognize that the city cannot bind itself to a future annexation. Plaintiff argues that if the city proceeds with the contract, it will so involve the city in the *826 enterprise that citizens will be faced, when any election does occur, with a situation that will dictate an affirmative vote on the question. This may or may not be so — that is conjecture — but the fact remains that the statutes, discussed infra, with the city charter, authorize the council to take the action it did. Plaintiff did not plead that he or anyone else made an effort to refer that action (the making of the contract) to the electors. Hence, the question of whether the action was legislative and subject to referendum, or administrative and not' subject thereto, simply is not presented. 1

If a complaint for a declaratory judgment presents a justiciable controversy, the matter cannot be decided on a demurrer. Cabell v. Cottage Grove, 170 Or 256, 262, 130 P2d 1013, 144 ALR 286 (1942).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
551 P.2d 125, 25 Or. App. 821, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 2165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-city-of-corvallis-orctapp-1976.