Blaser v. Dalles City

137 P.2d 991, 171 Or. 441, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 52
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 137 P.2d 991 (Blaser v. Dalles City) 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
Blaser v. Dalles City, 137 P.2d 991, 171 Or. 441, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 52 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

BAILEY, C. J.

This suit was instituted by Walter Blaser, a resident and taxpayer of Dalles City, Oregon, a municipal corporation, against that city and its mayor, councilmen and recorder, to enjoin the defendants “from issuing or disposing of any of the bonds attempted to be authorized by” chapter XL *443 of the charter of Dalles City, and for a decree declaring that chapter null and void. The demurrer of the defendants to the complaint was sustained and upon the refusal of the plaintiff to plead further a decree was entered dismissing the suit. The plaintiff has appealed.

Chapter XL was adopted as an amendment of the charter of Dalles City by the legal voters of that municipality, on November 3, 1942. Section 1 of this chapter authorizes and empowers the council of the city “to purchase land for Dalles City in such amounts and such locations either within or without the corporate limits of Dalles City as the council of Dalles City shall deem proper or expedient and . . . to construct sewers, roads, tracks and approaches thereto and to survey, improve, or develop same as in the judgment of the council may be for the best interest of Dalles City and ... to thereafter lease such land or any portion thereof for such amounts or such periods of time or such uses as in the judgment of the council of Dalles City may be for the best interests of such city, and ... to sell all or any portion of such land so purchased for such price or prices as in the judgment of the council may be reasonable and for the best interests of such city.”

Section 2 of the chapter in part thus reads: “For the purpose of providing funds for the purchase of such land for surveying, improvement, and development of the same and for the improvement and construction of sewers, roads, tracks or approaches thereto, the council of Dalles City is hereby authorized and empowered to issue and dispose of general obligation bonds of Dalles City in the sum of $100,000 or any lesser sum”. The remainder of this section pre *444 scribes the denominations of the bonds and other details of their issuance.

Section 3 of chapter XL provides that the bonds shall be sold by the council “as in its judgment may be best but not for less than par and accrued interest.”

After setting forth verbatim the above charter amendment and stating the foregoing facts the complaint alleges that this amendment is void “because it contains a provision attempting to authorize and empower said city to enter into transactions which are not municipal in character or necessary or required for any municipal purpose, in that such charter amendment attempts to authorize and empower the city ‘to thereafter lease such land or any portion thereof for such amounts or such periods of time or such uses as in the judgment of the council of Dalles City may be for the best interests of such city, and ... to sell all or any portion of such land so purchased for such price or prices as in the judgment of the council may be reasonable and for the best interests of such city. ’ ” '

It is further asserted that the charter amendment is void for the reason “that it attempts to authorize the city to purchase land without the limits of said city, to construct sewers thereon and build roads, tracks and approaches thereto”. The complaint next alleges that the mayor and common council of the defendant city “are threatening to and will issue and dispose of a series of bonds of Dalles City attempted to be authorized by said amendment for the purpose of acquiring the property and doing and performing the acts and things with reference to said property, which said charter amendment pretends to authorize, thus wrongfully and unlawfully incurring a debt and *445 obligation for purposes which are not municipal and will wrongfully increase the taxes upon plaintiff’s property”.-

The complaint does not allege definitely what the mayor and common council are threatening to do. It does not state what property they are proposing to buy, whether it is within or without the corporate limits of Dalles City, or the purpose for which the property is to be used. The recital that those officials are threatening to incur wrongfully and unlawfully “a debt and obligation for purposes which are not municipal” is merely a conclusion of law. Apparently no resolution or ordinance has been adopted or enacted to provide for the sale of bonds or for the purchase of any land. If such an ordinance had been passed, that fact would undoubtedly have been alleged.

The charter amendment, chapter XL, was adopted pursuant to article IY, § 1-a of the constitution, which reserves to the legal voters of every municipality and district the powers of initiative and referendum ‘ ‘ as to all local, special, and municipal legislation, of every character, in or for their respective municipalities”. Those powers, however, are to be exercised subject to the constitution and the general laws of the state of Oregon: Burton v. Gibbons, 148 Or. 370, 36 P. (2d) 786, and authorities therein cited.

The legislature, in a number of instances, has by general laws conferred upon municipalities power and authorization to acquire property within and without their corporate limits. For example, § 95-1808, O. C. L. A., authorizes “any incorporated city or town” in the state of Oregon “to own, acquire, construct, equip, operate and maintain, either within or without the statutory or corporate limits of such *446 municipality, in whole or in part, sewers, sewer systems,” disposal plants and similar facilities. By § 95-1712, O. C. L. A., any incorporated city haying 5,000 inhabitants or more is authorized to purchase land either within or without its corporate limits, “for the purpose of public squares, parks, memorial monuments or buildings, pioneer memorials, pioneer museums, memorials and monuments to United States war veterans, auto campgrounds, playgrounds,” and other public uses. (The 1940 United States census shows Dalles City as having a population of 6,266.) Chapter 189, Oregon Laws 1941, confers upon cities the right, as their charters may permit, to acquire land for airports, within or without their corporate limits. Section 114-101, O. C. L. A., authorizes incorporated cities and towns, “when the power to do so is conferred by or contained in their charter or act of incorporation,” to build, own, operate and maintain waterworks, water systems, railways and electric light and power plants, within and without the boundaries of such municipalities, “for the benefit and use of the inhabitants thereof, and for profit”. And by § 114-104, O. C. L. A., incorporated cities and towns are empowered, if their charters or acts of incorporation permit, to purchase, build, own, operate and maintain telephone and telegraph systems within or without their corporate limits. Numerous other general enactments of the legislature could be mentioned that also confer upon municipalities the authority to acquire land within and without their corporate limits, for many purposes.

It will thus be seen that the defendant municipality has authority to acquire, improve and develop real property both within and without its corporate *447 limits.

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Bluebook (online)
137 P.2d 991, 171 Or. 441, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaser-v-dalles-city-or-1943.