Griggs v. Port of Tacoma

273 P. 521, 150 Wash. 402, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 1009
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1928
DocketNo. 21646. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 273 P. 521 (Griggs v. Port of Tacoma) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griggs v. Port of Tacoma, 273 P. 521, 150 Wash. 402, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 1009 (Wash. 1928).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

On September 10, 1928, the port commission of the port of Tacoma adopted a resolution, numbered 233, appropriating thirty-five thousand dollars of the general fund of the port of Tacoma, or so much thereof as might be necessary, to be used to dredge and improve Hylebos creek waterway by straightening, widening and deepening it.

*403 Respondent, a resident and taxpayer in the port district of the port of Tacoma, conceiving himself to be injured by the proceeding, began suit against the port commission and the port district to restrain the expenditure of any of this money, setting forth the resolution.

It is alleged in the complaint that, long prior to the resolution complained of, a certain portion of the harbor and waterways of the city of Tacoma, including what was and is known as Hylebos creek, was, by due and legal action of the residents, voters and electors thereof, and in accordance with the statutes applying thereto, segregated and separately organized as and under the name of commercial waterway district No. 1 of Pierce county, Washington, for brevity therein called “Hylebos district”; that a board of commissioners was duly elected, qualified therefor, and their successors in office constitute the only official body qualified to act for and on behalf of Hylebos district with reference to the care or improvement of Hylebos district, and of any and all waterways included therein, including the making of necessary improvements by raising of necessary funds therefor by lawful asess-ments against the property included in the district; that on September 10,1928, the port commission of the port of Tacoma passed the resolution complained of; that unless restrained they will carry out and perform the terms of the resolution contrary to their rights, duties and limited powers, and will assist in financing certain extensive and expensive improvements in the Hylebos district, all without any lawful authority or jurisdiction so to do, and will divert to such unlawful and improper purposes the sum of thirty-five thousand dollars of the accumulated funds of the port of Tacoma, to the great loss and damage of plaintiff and *404 all other owners of property in Pierce county which is not included in Hylebos district.

It is alleged that none of the proposed improvements were ever duly adopted or ratified as a part of the original “comprehensive scheme” of harbor improvements in and for the port of Tacoma, and have not since been adopted or ratified, as required by law, by the port commission of the port of Tacoma,.or the qualified electors thereof.

It is further alleged that, since the organization of the Hylebos district, its board of commissioners is the only board or power authorized to make any improvements or to expend any money for any construction, superintendence or care of the improvements in the Hylebos district, or to loan or expend money for such purposes.

The complaint prayed that appellants be restrained and enjoined from diverting or using any of the credit or money of the port of Tacoma for the unauthorized purposes set forth in the resolution, or at all.

Resolution No. 233, in brief, recites the creation of the commercial waterway district No. 1 in Pierce county under the law, and that it is a waterway district duly constituted and existing; that the waterway district had theretofore caused assessments to be made against the real property in the waterway district beneficially affected by such improvement, for the purpose of dredging and improving a stream commonly known as Hylebos creek, for the purpose of creating therefrom a commercial waterway, and that the total funds derived from such assessments had been found inadequate and insufficient to complete the waterway, and that the waterway district and its commissioners had not the lawful power to make further and additional assessments against that property, for the purpose of completing the waterway, the waterway being *405 then, in an unfinished condition and partially closed to ocean commerce.

It was then recited that a petition had been presented to the port commission of the port of Tacoma, requesting that commission to appropriate from its general fund a sum not exceeding thirty-five thousand dollars for the purpose of dredging and otherwise improving the commercial waterway known as Hylebos creek waterway.

It was then recited that Hylebos creek waterway and the waterway district were wholly within the territorial limits of the port district of the port of Tacoma and constituted a vital part of the harbor development of the harbor of Tacoma, and that the improvement of the waterway by additional dredging was deemed by the port commission to be of vital importance to the development of the harbor of Tacoma,

“. . . although such waterway and the improvement thereof as herein proposed is not a part of the comprehensive scheme of harbor improvement adopted by the port commission and ratified by the voters of the port district of the port of Tacoma.”

The resolution of the port commission to grant the appropriation and let contracts for dredging and improving the waterway, as requested, then followed.

To the complaint appellants demurred. Their demurrer was overruled, they declined to plead further and a decree permanently enjoining the proposed action of the port district and commission was entered.

There is nothing in the record before us showing the nature and extent of the “comprehensive scheme” of the port of Tacoma for improving the harbor, navigable waters and other waterways within the limits of the port of Tacoma, except as shown by the complaint and the resolution passed by the commissioners *406 of the port. By the complaint and the resolution as quoted, it affirmatively appears that the improvement of the Hylebos waterway was not a part of the comprehensive scheme of harbor improvement adopted by the port commission and ratified by the voters of the port district of the port of Tacoma.

As stated by appellants, there is only one question before us. Is the port act sufficiently broad in terms to permit the port commission to expend funds in the improvement of Hylebos waterway in the manner contemplated by the resolution?

Bern. Comp. Stat., § 9692, defining the powers of port districts, is cited and in part quoted as follows:

“To improve navigable and non-navigable waters of the United States and the state of Washington within the port district; ... to regulate and control all such waters and all natural or artificial waterways (waterways of commercial waterway districts excepted) within the limits of such port district so far and to the full extent that this state can grant the same, and remove obstructions therefrom; . . .”

Another portion of the same section is also quoted as follows:

“To straighten, widen, deepen and otherwise improve any and all waters, watercourses, bays, lakes or streams, whether navigable or otherwise, flowing through or located within the boundaries of such port district; . . .”

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Bluebook (online)
273 P. 521, 150 Wash. 402, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 1009, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griggs-v-port-of-tacoma-wash-1928.