Grigsby v. Miller

25 P.2d 908, 144 Or. 551, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 103
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 P.2d 908 (Grigsby v. Miller) 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
Grigsby v. Miller, 25 P.2d 908, 144 Or. 551, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 103 (Or. 1933).

Opinion

BELT, J.

This suit was commenced on January 7, 1932, to foreclose a mortgage for $5,000 executed on June 12, 1930, by Roy G. Miller and Lena Miller, his wife, on lots 10, 11, and 12, in block 45, Lakeview addition to the city of Klamath Falls, Oregon. The land in controversy lies just outside the corporate boundaries of Klamath Falls and is now a part of The Dalles-California highway. A decree of foreclosure was rendered, but the plaintiff mortgagee appeals from that part of the decree which excludes a strip of land ten feet wide and 150 feet long across the west end of the above lots, alleged to have been acquired by Klamath county for state highway purposes.

Pursuant to the request of the state highway commission that Klamath county acquire certain land for state highway purposes, the county court, on April 30, 1931, initiated proceedings by passing a resolution declaring the necessity for taking such land. Thereafter a condemnation action was commenced but, since some of the land was acquired through agreement or purchase, it seems that the action was not prosecuted. At any rate, the proceedings were abandoned so far as the property in question was involved.

On or about June 4, 1931, Klamath county paid to James. Barrett $3,200 to cover damages to the lots by reason of taking the ten-foot strip for state highway purposes and the latter thereupon executed a deed *553 to the county conveying his interests in such strip of land. Barrett acquired title to the lots from the Millers subject to the mortgage of the plaintiff. This payment was made to Barrett without notice to the mortgagee, although the county had at least constructive notice of the mortgage which was duly recorded on the day of its execution. It appears from the agreed statement of facts upon which this case is submitted that the plaintiff mortgagee learned of this transaction on or about November 25, 1931, and on December 18, 1931, filed a written demand with the county court for $2,000, calling attention to the fact that the land’ was incumbered by his mortgage lien. Upon refusal of the county court to pay the claim, the plaintiff instituted this suit to foreclose the mortgage. Thereupon the county court, on February 18, 1932, passed a resolution declaring the necessity for taking the strip of land for state highway purposes and mailed a certified copy thereof to the plaintiff. In this same resolution a board of viewers was appointed to determine the amount of damages to be awarded plaintiff by reason of his mortgage lien. On April 22,1932, after considering the claim of plaintiff who appeared in person before it, the board made a report assessing him damages in the sum of $150. The plaintiff filed a protest against the award of damages, asserting that the county court could not, by the resolution method, acquire a right of way for state highway purposes. This protest was overruled by the county court, however, and, on July 14, 1932, the court, by resolution, approved the report of the viewers. A county warrant of $150 was tendered to the plaintiff but he refused to accept the same. Plaintiff did not appeal to the circuit court but was content to rely upon the foreclosure proceedings which he had already instituted.

*554 The title of Klamath county to the ten-foot strip of land in possession of the state highway commission — which ever since October, 1932, has been open to. travel as a part of The Dalles-California highway- — - is based upon: (1) The deed from Barrett; and (2) certain proceedings initiated by the resolution passed by the county court on February 18, 1932, culminating in an award of damages to plaintiff, from which he never appealed. It is clear that the mortgagee’s interest was not divested by reason of the Barrett deed since the latter purchased the land from the Millers subject to the mortgage. The only legal effect of this deed was to convey the interests of the grantor. Relative to the second alleged basis of title, the question is presented as to whether the interest of the mortgagee was foreclosed by reason of the proceedings above mentioned.

Plaintiff contends that the proceedings instituted by Klamath county to acquire title to the land in question follow the statutory method of acquiring rights of way for county roads but have no validity so far as acquiring rights of way for state highways is concerned. In this connection the plaintiff asserts that the Legislature has designated methods for acquiring land for state highway purposes, separate and distinct from those to be used in securing rights of way for county roads and that in the instant case the county followed the wrong procedure.

The methods of acquiring rights of way for state highways are specifically enumerated in section 44-131, Oregon Code 1930, which so far as material herein provides as follows:

“The rights of way for state highways, and roads improved or constructed under this act, shall be ac *555 quired by the counties in which the highways are situated by either donation, purchase, agreement, condemnation, or through the exercise of the power of eminent domain by the county before any contract shall be let. In case of neglect or refusal on the part of the county to so acquire said right of way, the state shall have power, through the ‘ state highway commission’, to acquire said right of way either by donation, purchase, agreement, condemnation, or through the exercise of the power of eminent domain, * * It will thus be seen from the above section that it was the clear statutory duty of Klamath county to acquire this right of way for state highway purposes when requested to do so by the state highway commission.

Mr. Justice Rand, speaking for the court in Foster v. Lake County, 132 Or. 374 (284 P. 830), had occasion to construe section 44-131 in a case wherein Lake county had contracted to purchase from Poster certain land to be used as a right of way for state highway. It was urged as a defense in an action for breach of contract that the county had no authority to enter into the contract, but this contention was held to be untenable. The court said:

“Section 4436, Or. L. [now section 44-131, Oregon Code 1930], expressly declares that rights of way for state highways shall be acquired by the counties in which the highway is situated and provides that such rights of way may be acquired by either donation, purchase, agreement, condemnation or through the exercise of the power of eminent domain by the county before any contract shall be ratified.”

In this ease Klamath county undertook to acquire the interests of the mortgagee through the resolution method. It is not one of the methods specified in the above section of the statute. True, the adoption of the resolution was one of the necessary preliminary *556 steps to be taken by the county court before it could have instituted a condemnation action (section 44-4208, Oregon Code 1930; Kerns v. Union County, 123 Or. 103 (261 P. 76)), but certainly the property interests of the plaintiff could not be acquired merely by the passage of the resolution.

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Related

State v. Fitzgerald
58 P.2d 508 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
25 P.2d 908, 144 Or. 551, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grigsby-v-miller-or-1933.