Cottam v. Oregon City

98 F. 570, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3422
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedDecember 14, 1899
DocketNo. 2,553
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 98 F. 570 (Cottam v. Oregon City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cottam v. Oregon City, 98 F. 570, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3422 (circtdor 1899).

Opinion

BELLINGER, District Judge.

This is an action brought against Oregon City, a corporation, and against Ryan, who is the recorder, and Burns, the acting chief of police, of the city, for damages resulting from the arrest and imprisonment of the plaintiff on what is admitted to have been a groundless complaint. The action taken by the officers grows out of an ordinance passed by the city requiring all persons selling goods, or soliciting the sale of goods, to pay a license tax therefor. It is alleged that the plaintiff is a citizen of the state of California, and is engaged in soliciting contracts for the sale of merchandise, by the use of samples, in the states of Oregon and Washington, for the M. J. Keller Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of California, and a resident and citizen of said state of California, engaged in the business of tailors and manufacturers of shirts. The material allegations of the complaint are:

[571]*571“That on the 28⅛ day of December, 1897, at Oregon City, Clackamas county, Oregon, the defendants Thomas S’. Ilyan and Chas. E. Burns, while acting in Their official capacities as recorder and chief of police, respectively, of defendant Oregon City, and within the scope of their authority and powers as such officers of said Oregon City, falsely and maliciously, and without reasonable or probable cause, arrested and imprisoned the plaintiff, and deprived him of his liberty for the space of a portion of two days, unlawfully and with force, on a pretended charge of soliciting contracts for the sale of goods, wares, chattels, and merchandise, hy canvassing from house to house in Oregon City, without first having obtained a license from said city. That, at said time and place, defendants maliciously, unlawfully, and with force imprisoned plaintiff in the city jail of defendant Oregon' City, and forcibly confined him there, in a foul and loathsome cell, during the night of December 28, 1897, whereby plaintiff was subjected to great suffering, pain, and humiliation, and to the great danger of his health. That thereafter plaintiff filed his petition in ihe county court of the state of Oregon for Clackamas county for a writ of habeas corpus, and on the 30th day of December, 3897, upon the trial of said canse, rhe plaintiff was released and discharged from the custody of defendants, and said prosecution, arrest, and imprisonment of plaintiff; by defendants is wholly ended and determined.’’

To this complaint the defendants demur.

It is claimed that the ordinance under which the license tax was attempted to be collected from the plaintiff for soliciting orders for goods manufactured in another state is an attempted restriction upon interstate commerce, and is therefore void; that the proceeding under such an ordinance was not for the enforcement of a police regulation, but for flse collection of a license tax, and was solely for the private and pecuniary benefit of the city, as distinguished from the public good, public morals, peace, and good order; and that it is only when the acts complained of are in the exercise of this general or police power that the city and its officers are exempt from civil liability.

It is established, upon ihe authority of the supreme court of the United Hi ates, that an ordinance of ihe character in question, so far as it applies to persons soliciting the sale of goods in behalf of those doing business in another state, is a regulation of interstate commerce, and void. Robbins v. District, 120 U. S. 489, 7 Sup. Ct. 592, 32 L. Ed. 292. The rule does not extend so far as to make the ordinance void, except as it is applied to interstate business, and not then if the solicitor carries his goods with him, and thereby becomes a peddler, and so comes within reach of the general or police power of ihe state, — a distinction, whether wise or otherwise, that is clearly made, although (here was a strong dissent from the chief justice, concurred in by Justices Field and Gray.

If the officers of the city acted without any jurisdiction, if there was a dear absence of jurisdiction, if the ordinance was of such a character that any authority exercised under it was a void authority, the defendants are liable, and this would result in any such case, whether the court was of general jurisdiction or was inferior. There is a, presumption that a court of superior jurisdiction acts within its jurisdiction, unless a clear absence of jurisdiction is shown. This presumption does not arise where the jurisdiction of the court is limited, and this puts upon the latter a liability that does not exist in other cases. Oooley on Torts states the reason why the law should [572]*572protect the one judge, and not the other, and why, “if it protects one only, it should he the very one who, from his higher position and presumed superior learning and ability, ought to be most free from error,” to be because, “a limited authority only having been conferred,” “he best observes the spirit of the law by solving all questions of doubt against his jurisdiction”; that, “if he errs in this direction, no harm is done, because he can always be set right by the court having appellate authority over him, and he can have no occasion to take hazards so long as his decision is subject to review”; that, therefore, “the rule of law which compels him to 'keep within Ms jurisdiction at his peril cannot be unjust to him, because, by declining to exercise any questionable authority, he can always keep witMn safe bounds, and-will violate no duty in doing so.” But what is to happen when the inferior judicial officer acts upon the opinion that the authority which he exercises is not questionable? When there is not a clear absence of all authority, but merely the exercise of an erroneous judgment in determining the extent of his authority? What is “questionable” jurisdiction, for the exercise of which judges of inferior courts are liable in damages? Does it mean such jurisdiction as may be or as is in fact questioned, or does it mean such a clear absence of jurisdiction as is at once apparent to the ordinary understanding, —such as the taking cognizance of criminal matters by a court of probate? In other words, does “questionable” jurisdiction mean an unquestionable want of jurisdiction? Does the inferior court exist merely for the purpose of refusing jurisdiction, or may it exercise the right to determine as to the particular case where jurisdiction of the subject-matter is clearly conferred, without making the judge liable for damages for an erroneous judgment? The reasons which exempt the court of superior jurisdiction apply equally to the courts of inferior jurisdiction. If, as is stated, “this rule of exemption from civil liability exists for the benefit of the community, which must have the services of judges unharassed by the continual questioning of their conduct and motives by disappointed litigants” there seems to be no reason why the courts of limited jurisdiction should not, as well as those of superior jurisdiction, be relieved from the consequences of the disappointment caused by the erroneous exercise of their judicial judgment. The distinction between the two cases is confined to the mere presumption that exists in favor of the court of superior jurisdiction, — to the presumption, in other words, that the court of superior jurisdiction, in acting, has acted within its jurisdiction, unless the absence of all jurisdiction is shown; but, where there is an absence of all jurisdiction in either case, the liability is equal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 F. 570, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cottam-v-oregon-city-circtdor-1899.