City of Salem v. Marion County

137 P.2d 977, 171 Or. 254, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 41
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 137 P.2d 977 (City of Salem v. Marion County) 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 Salem v. Marion County, 137 P.2d 977, 171 Or. 254, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 41 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

BAILEY, C. J.

The city of Salem brought this suit to enjoin Marion county and A. C. Burk as sheriff and tax collector thereof from selling the real and personal property comprising the city’s water system, for delinquent taxes assessed and levied in 1935 and payable in 1936, and to obtain a declaration that such assessment and levy were invalid. The plaintiff also asked, by way of alternative relief in the event that the assessment be upheld, that a judgment be entered declaring that the defendant Peoples Water and Gas Company, a corporation, should pay the 1936 taxes on the above-mentioned water system.

*257 The court held that the taxes were valid and constituted a lien on the water system, hut enjoined the sale of that property for the taxes. It further decreed that the defendant Peoples Water and Gas Company was not liable for the payment of the taxes. Prom the part of that decree unfavorable to it the plaintiff has appealed. No cross-appeal is prosecuted by Marion county or Burk as tax collector.

At the outset it is necessary to determine the date of acquisition of the water system by the city of Salem. If the city became the owner of that property prior to June 12, 1935, the effective date of chapters 274 and 305, Oregon Laws 1935, such property, according to the decision in Portland v. Multnomah County, 135 Or. 469, 296 P. 48, was exempt from taxation during the year 1935, as the taxes for the year 1936 were not assessed and levied until on or after October 28, 1935. In the case cited, the city of Portland for corporate purposes acquired title to property after March 1 but before any levy of taxes was made for the year of purchase. It was therein held that under the statute then, and until the effective date of the enactments above referred to, in force, “no valid and enforceable lien is upon the land which passed to the city prior to the levy of the tax.” Subsequently to that decision the above-noted chapters of Oregon Laws 1935 were enacted, and it is contended by the defendants herein other than the corporation that § 1 of chapter 274, supra, and § 9 of chapter 305, supra, so amended the tax law as to render the decision in that case no longer controlling. If, therefore, it be found that the city of Salem became the owner of the water system prior to the effective date of the two 1935 acts referred to, and the ruling in Portland v. Multnomah County, supra, be adhered to, it *258 will be unnecessary to consider tbe effect of those acts on the tax levy made in 1935.

The facts in connection with the city’s acquisition of the water system are, briefly, the following: On January 9,1934, the city of Salem filed a complaint in the circuit court of the state of Oregon for Marion county against Oregon-Washington Water Service Company, a corporation (the name of which was later changed to Peoples Water and Gas Company), to condemn the Salem wafer system owned and operated by that company. The case was removed by the defendant to the United States district court for the district of Oregon.

Thereafter, on May 6,1935, the city of Salem passed a resolution in which it offered “to compromise and settle the condemnation suit” then pending in the United States district court, by paying the sum of $1,000,000 “as and for all damages, inclusive of costs and attorneys ’ fees, to be awarded the defendants ’ ’ (the corporation and its trustees) in that proceeding, “upon acquisition by the city of Salem of the properties described, in the complaint in” the condemnation action, “such payment to be subject to adjustment at the date of transfer of the properties on account of additions, betterments, improvements and retirements in and to said properties between September 27, 1934, and the date of the transfer”. Payment of the purchase price by the city was “to be made in cash upon transfer of the properties on August 1, 1935, or at any ■ earlier date which may be agreed upon” by the interested parties.

The resolution concluded with the following provision: “. . . the compromise and settlement to be carried out through stipulation to be entered into by counsel for the respective parties in the pending suit, *259 the city attorney and the special counsel for the city being hereby authorized to join in such stipulation on behalf of the city, upon acceptance of this offer by” the water company and its trustees. The offer of compromise and settlement was accepted by the water company and its trustees on or shortly after the day of the city council’s passing the resolution embodying it.

In accordance with the provisions of the resolution a stipulation was entered into by the city of Salem and the water company and its trustees on June 21, 1935, in which it was provided that upon the trial of the condemnation proceedings the court “may make and enter its interlocutory judgment and decree ordering, adjudging and decreeing”, among other things: (1) that the plaintiff “is authorized and entitled to take and condemn the properties described in” the complaint; (2) that the total amount of “compensation and damages of defendants” (the water company and its trustees) for acquisition of the water system “by the plaintiff on or before August 1, 1935, ... is the sum of one million dollars ($1,000,000) . . . subject to adjustment”; (3) that upon the payment of the amount of compensation specified, on or before August 1,1935, the plaintiff “shall be entitled to a final decree” condemning the properties of the water company to the use of the city of Salem; (4) that the amount of compensation and damages specified in the stipulation ‘ ‘ shall not bear any interest, but that defendant Oregon-Washington Water Service Company shall be entitled to the possession and earnings and income of the properties until payment of all said compensation and damages; and (5) “that if the city shall not pay the compensation and damages for the properties described in subparagraph (a) above in the amounts provided above within a reasonable time after the entry of the *260 said interlocutory decree, which reasonable time, it is agreed, shall terminate on November 1, 1935, a final decree shall be entered in this action adjudging and decreeing that the plaintiff has not elected within a reasonable time ■ to take and acquire the properties involved in this action and that the complaint of plaintiff and all proceedings herein be dismissed and that defendants retain the said properties and all their rights therein and all properties and rights involved in this action and recover their costs from the plaintiff.”

The above-mentioned stipulation was filed in the condemnation proceedings on June 22, 1935, and an interlocutory judgment was entered, based on that stipulation. No copy of the judgment is before us, but it is reasonable to assume that the judgment as entered contained provisions in accord with the stipulation.

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Bluebook (online)
137 P.2d 977, 171 Or. 254, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-salem-v-marion-county-or-1943.