Fay v. Portland

195 P. 828, 99 Or. 490, 1921 Ore. LEXIS 70
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 195 P. 828 (Fay v. Portland) 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
Fay v. Portland, 195 P. 828, 99 Or. 490, 1921 Ore. LEXIS 70 (Or. 1921).

Opinion

BURNETT, C. J.

1. A petition for a writ of review is presented to the Circuit Court or judge thereof, and the writ is allowed thereon ex parte. The only answer to the writ is a return. No demurrer will lie on account of any defect in the petition. If that document is insufficient, the only remedy for the defendant in the writ in that respect is to move to quash the writ: McCabe-Duprey Tanning Co. v. Eubanks, 57 Or. 44 (102 Pac. 795, 110 Pac. 395); Kinney v. Astoria, 58 Or. 186 (113 Pac. 21). There was no such motion in the instant case. On the other hand, “if the return to the writ be incomplete, the court may order a further return to be made”: Or. L., § 610. There is no motion in the record before us calling for a further return. The petition for the writ is fuMctus oficio when the return is made, and “thereafter ceases to be operative for any purpose except possibly that reference may be had to it to ascertain the errors assigned”: Curran v. State, 53 Or. 154 (99 Pac. 420); Reiff v. Portland, 71 Or. 421, 429 (141 Pac. 167, 142 Pac. 827, L. R. A. 1915D, 772). Under these circumstances the only basis we have for our consideration of this case is the record of the city council sent up as a return to the writ. In othfer words, the return has submitted to the examination of the court the doings of the city authorities as preserved in their own record, and it is for the court to determine from an inspection of that record whether the officers of the city are justified or condemned by that memorial. No issue dehors the rec[493]*493ord presented for review can be litigated in this proceeding.

2. By Section 374 of the charter of the City of Portland, the council, when it deems it expedient, is empowered to improve the streets of the city, to determine the character, kind, and extent of such improvement, “to levy and collect an assessment upon all lots and parcels of land specially benefited by such improvements, to defray the whole or any portion of the cost and expense thereof, and to determine what lands are specially benefited by such improvement and the amount to which each parcel or tract of land is benefited.”

Section 383a substantially adopts what is popularly known as “the Bancroft Act,” as a system for the benefit of the rate-payer in allowing his assessment to be paid in ten equal installments. That act is embodied in Chapter XV of Title XXVII, Or. L., and, according to Colby v. Medford, 85 Or. 485 (167 Pac. 487), is paramount in its operation as a general state law, and must prevail over the charter in case of a conflict. In substance, the act provides respecting street improvements that when the city shall have proceeded to improve a street and shall have assessed the cost thereof to the property benefited thereby or liable therefor according to the provisions of the municipal charter, the owner of property assessed for $25 or more, at any time within ten days after the notice of the assessment is first published, may file with the auditor or other official keeping the records of the town, a written application to pay the assessment in installments. The applicant and property owner is required to waive in his petition all irregularities and defects, jurisdictional or otherwise, in the proceedings for the improvement for which the [494]*494assessment is levied, and in the apportionment of the cost, and must agree to pay the assessment in ten equal installments with interest at the same rate expressed in the bond issued to pay for such improvement. A description of the property assessed must be furnished. No application shall be entertained if the amount of the assessment together with any previous assessment for improvement of the same property and remaining unpaid shall equal or exceed the valuation of the property as shown by the last tax-roll of the county in which it is situated. This inhibition may be avoided by a cash payment of the excess of unpaid assessments over the tax-roll valuation. All applications are to be kept and entered in a book from which, after the time for filing such petitions has expired, a lien docket shall be made up, covering unpaid assessments described in the petitions.

Under Section 394 of the charter, after the completion of any improvement, or when it has reached a stage so that the whole cost can be determined, the city engineer shall file with the auditor a report of the cost of the betterment. The latter officer “shall apportion the cost thereof (except the share to be paid in ease of a street improvement by railroad or street railway companies, by reason of their use of the streets) upon the lots, parts of lots, and parcels of land benefited thereby and within the assessment district.” The cost within the terms of this section is the contract price, plus cost of right of way, expense of condemnation, and a sum not to exceed 5 per cent of the contract price, for advertising, engineering and superintendence. After the apportionment, the auditor gives notice of the same in the manner provided, declaring that the assessment has been apportioned, [495]*495is on file in Ms office subject to examination, and also that any objection to such apportionment shall be made in writing and filed with the auditor within ten days from the first [last] publication, and that the objection will be heard and determined by the council before the passing of any ordinance assessing the cost of the improvement.

Section 389 provides that if it be found upon the completion of the improvement that the sum assessed therefor is insufficient to pay the cost thereof, and the amount charged to any lot or part thereof or tract of land, is less than the benefits accruing thereto, the council must ascertain the deficit and by ordinance reassess the land so benefited in excess of the original assessment. The assessment for the deficit is entered in a separate column in the docket of city liens, with the date thereof, and becomes thereafter a lien upon the lot, the same as the sum originally assessed.

It is set down in Section 400, known as “the reassessment section,” that when any'assessment has been set aside, annulled, declared, or rendered void or its enforcement refused by any court of this state or any federal court having jurisdiction, or when the council shall be in doubt as to the validity of the assessment or any part thereof, that body may by ordinance make a new assessment or a reassessment upon the lots, blocks, or parcels of land which have been benefited by the improvement, to the extent of their respective and proportionate shares of the full value thereof; but the assessment shall not exceed the amount of such original assessment, and the council may adopt a different plan of apportionment of such cost, when in its judgment necessary to secure an equitable assessment. It is said in that section:

[496]*496“The proceedings required by this charter to be had prior to the making of the original assessment shall not be required to be taken or had within the intent of this section.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 P. 828, 99 Or. 490, 1921 Ore. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fay-v-portland-or-1921.