City of Coos Bay v. Aerie No. 538 of Fraternal Order of Eagles

170 P.2d 389, 179 Or. 83, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 162
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 170 P.2d 389 (City of Coos Bay v. Aerie No. 538 of Fraternal Order of Eagles) 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
City of Coos Bay v. Aerie No. 538 of Fraternal Order of Eagles, 170 P.2d 389, 179 Or. 83, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 162 (Or. 1946).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

One of the principal questions involved on this appeal is whether ordinance No. 1590, passed by the city of Marshfield on March 13, 1944, is repugnant to and incompatible with the statutes of the state of Oregon relating to the regulation and control of traffic in alcoholic beverages. This ordinance, as far as material here, reads as follows:

“Section 6. There are hereby levied and shall be collected quarter-annual occupation taxes upon the persons on account of the business activities and in the following amounts, to-wit:
“Upon persons engaged in and carrying on the business of operating Clubs, Night Clubs and Service Establishments where liquor is served and which are licensed by the State of Oregon under Club or Service License pursuant to the laws of the State of Oregon and of the rules and regulations of the Oregon Liquor Control Commission, an occupation tax in the sum of One Hundred Twenty-five Dollars ($125.00) per quarter year, * # # M

Ordinance No. 1590 was enacted pursuant to the following provision of the charter granted to the city of Marshfield by a special act of the legislature in 1905:

“Section 28. The Council has power and authority within the City of Marshfield:
*
“33. To license, tax, and regulate, for the pur *87 pose of city revenue, all such, business, callings, trades, employments, and professions as the Council may require to be licensed, and as are not prohibited by the laws of the State of Oregon.” Chap. 251, Special Laws of Oregon, 1905.

At an election held on November 7, 1944, the electors of the city of Marshfield adopted a new charter which changed the name of that city to “City of Coos Bay” and repealed all charters previously enacted for the city of Marshfield. This new charter, in chapter I, provides as follows:

“Section 5. Prior Ordinances. All Ordinances and regulations (1) heretofore enacted by the City, and (2) in force when this Charter takes effect, shall, insofar as consistent with this Charter, remain in full force, (1) after it takes effect, and (2) until they are repealed.
“Section 6. Succession of Rights and Liabilities. The City of Coos Bay shall be the legal successor to the City of Marshfield as it existed under its old Charter, and shall succeed as such to all the rights, privileges, duties and liabilities of the former City existing at the time this Ordinance takes effect.”
Chapter II contains the following provisions:
‘ ‘ Section 100. General Grant of Power. The City of Coos Bay shall have all the rights, powers, privileges and immunities which the constitutions, statutes, and common law of the United States and of this State expressly or impliedly grant or allow municipalities, as fully as though this Charter expressly stated each of those rights, powers, privileges and immunities.
“Section 101. Specific Grants of Power. The following shall be deemed a part of the powers conferred upon the City by this Charter: * * *
“(7) Occupational Taxes. To license, tax and regulate for the purpose of city revenue all busi *88 nesses, callings, trades, and employments as the City Council may require and as are not prohibited by the laws of Oregon.”

The amended complaint, filed in January, 1945, in addition to setting forth the hereinbefore mentioned facts, alleges that defendant, Aerie No. 538 of Fraternal Order of Eagles, is a nonprofit corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Oregon; that the individual defendants are officers, and as such conduct the business, of the corporation; that the defendants, on March 13, 1944, the date of the passage of ordinance No. 1590, and ever since, “have been and are now engaged in operating a club and service establishment within” the city of Coos Bay, Oregon,

“where liquor is served, and which club and service establishment was and at all times herein mentioned has been and is now licensed pursuant to the laws of the state of Oregon, under the rules and regulations of the Oregon Liquor Control Commission of said State of Oregon, and in the conduct of said club and service establishment at all times herein mentioned has and does now sell beer, soft drinks, and has mixed hard liquor with mixers for the persons frequenting said establishment and club, for which service and mixers the defendants have made a charge which was collected by the defendants for and in the name of said Lodge; * # * and at all said times has maintained a bar and tables where patrons thereof might drink intoxicating liquor furnished by themselves and served by the defendants.”

It is then alleged that by virtue of ordinance No. 1590 there became due and payable by the defendants to the plaintiff, for the period from March 13, 1944, to December 31 of that year, the sum of $399.19, which the defendants have refused to pay; that the defend *89 ants assert that they have been duly licensed by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to operate their club and service establishment, and that by reason thereof ordinance No. 1590 “is invalid insofar as it purports to levy or assess any tax against defendants’ said club and service establishment business within” the city of Coos Bay.

In its prayer the plaintiff asks judgment against defendants for the sum of $399.19, or, in the alternative, for a declaration of “plaintiff’s rights and duties in the premises and of the rights and duties of the defendants and each of them.”

Defendants’ demurrer to the amended complaint, on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendants, nor to entitle the plaintiffs to the relief demanded, was sustained and upon the plaintiff’s failure to plead further, judgment was entered in favor of defendants. Plaintiff has appealed.

Article I, § 36, and article I, § 36a of the Oregon constitution were adopted in November, 1914 and 1916 respectively. Section 36 prohibited, after January 1, 1916, the manufacture or sale of intoxicating liquors within the state except for medicinal, scientific, sacramental, or mechanical purposes, and § 36a prohibited the importation into the state of intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes.

The adoption of these two last-mentioned amendments to the constitution repealed § 2 of article SI “so far as it delegates authority to municipalities to control and regulate the sale of alcoholic beverages”, and it was not revived by the repeal of § 36 and § 36a in July, 1933. City of Klamath Falls v. Oregon Liquor Control Commission, 146 Or. 83, 29 P. (2d) 564. We *90 are therefore not concerned with the amendment of § 2, article XI, in 1910, which vested in each municipality “the exclusive power to license, regulate, control, or to suppress or prohibit, the sale of intoxicating liquors” within its territorial limits.

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Bluebook (online)
170 P.2d 389, 179 Or. 83, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-coos-bay-v-aerie-no-538-of-fraternal-order-of-eagles-or-1946.