Hauke v. Ten Brook

259 P. 908, 122 Or. 485
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 259 P. 908 (Hauke v. Ten Brook) 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
Hauke v. Ten Brook, 259 P. 908, 122 Or. 485 (Or. 1927).

Opinion

*487 McBRIDE, J.

This is a suit to enjoin the city council of the City of Astoria from putting into effect Section 81 A, being an amendment to the city charter, which amendment is as follows:

“The common council of the city of Astoria shall have and it is hereby given power and authority, by ordinance, to cancel and discharge any and all liens or other charges which may have been heretofore levied by the city of Astoria against any lot, block, land or premises, including water frontage to the harbor line, by reason of any improvement for streets, sewers, reclamation, retaining walls or otherwise, not exceeding in the aggregate the sum of $150,000.00, inclusive of penalties and interest. Such ordinance or ordinances shall direct the proper official or officials of the city of Astoria to so cancel and discharge such lien or liens on the lien dockets of the city of Astoria and from and after the adoption of such ordinance or ordinances, such lien or liens so ordered, cancelled and discharged, shall cease to be incumbrances thereon, and such lots, lands and premises shall thereafter be free of the lien or liens so cancelled.”

The complaint alleges sundry defects, and informalities in the method of submitting said amendment, but, for the purposes of this case, we treat the proceedings, relative to the submission thereof, as regular and the charter, so far as technicalities are concerned, as regularly passed so that it is a valid amendment, unless its provisions are contrary to our Constitution. In addition to the alleged defects in the submission of the charter amendment above quoted, the plaintiff alleges:

“That the Astoria Box & Paper Co. is and was during all the times herein mentioned a corporation existing under the laws of the state of Oregon, and *488 engaged in operating sawmills and box factories in tbe city of Astoria, Oregon.
“That said Astoria Box & Paper Co. owns, and has owned for several years last past, real property and water frontage in said city, and which has been subjected to special assessment liens in favor of the city of Astoria for improvements to streets, reclamation, sea walls, etc., a large portion of such liens being at this time unpaid. That said defendants as the common council of said city, under the pretended power and authority claimed to be vested in them as such common council, propose and intend to cancel and discharge such liens, upon condition that said Astoria •Box & Paper Co. erect a wood pulp manufacturing plant on said property.
‘ ‘ That notwithstanding said common council had no legal authority for calling and holding said pretended special city election, in the manner hereinbefore stated, or at all, and notwithstanding said pretended special city election was held without warrant of law or any authority whatsoever, and its result, therefore being a nullity, the defendants are planning and proceeding to, and will, unless restrained by an order of the above entitled court actually cancel and discharge any and all liens or other charges, which have heretofore been levied by the said city of Astoria, against certain lots, blocks, lands, or premises, including water frontage to the harbor line situated in said city, owned by said Astoria Box & Paper Co., or such other property to be selected in the discretion of said common council, by reason of any improvement for streets, sewers, reclamation, retaining walls, or otherwise, not exceeding in the aggregate the sum of $150,000.00 inclusive of penalties and interest, all as set forth and by the pretended authority supposed to be embodied in said charter amendment, designated as ‘Section 81 A’ — all of which if done accordingly, would result in great damage and irreparable injury to the above named plaintiff, and to the thousands of other taxpayers, of and in the said city of Astoria, as said liens and/or assessments so cancelled and *489 discharged from the lien dockets of said city, would thereafter have, of necessity, to be paid out of the general fund of, and by general taxation in, said city of Astoria, Oregon. That the said city of Astoria, under the powers existing in same, and as a municipality existing under the authority and as a subdivision of the state of Oregon, nor the defendants herein, as the common council of said city of Astoria, have no power, right, authority or license to cancel, annul or discharge special assessment liens existing in favor of said city and levied upon real property within said city, except upon the payment thereof in the manner and form as now provided by the charter of the city of -Astoria, that is, by payment in cash or by sale of such property in the event of delinquency.”

These allegations are not denied.

The defendants moved for a decree and judgment in their favor on the pleadings. This motion was allowed, and plaintiff’s complaint dismissed. Plaintiff appeals.

We are clearly of the opinion that the amendment to the charter is a violation of both the letter and spirit of the Constitution. Section 20 of Article I of our Constitution provides that—

“No law shall be passed granting to any citizen or class of citizens, privileges or immunities which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all citizens.”

This amendment purports to grant to the city council the full power to release any lien or assessment that it may have on any property up to the amount of $150,000. It is true the provision is in the alternative “any or all”; but the discretion to release, by ordinance, one man’s liability to the city, and retain and enforce that of another precisely like it, is there notwithstanding. The effect is that, for *490 any reason, one citizen may secure an immunity from a liability in preference to another similarly situated.

All taxation is required to he “equal and uniform,” subject, however, to certain principles of classification; but there is no limitation, even to a particular class of citizens. The right, attempted to be conferred, is purely arbitrary.

Taxpayers, who consented to the laying of assessments upon the property to be benefited by proposed improvements, no doubt did so upon the presumption and implied promise that such property would bear the expense of such proposed improvements, and, without any obligation on their part, to contribute thereto. If this amendment is constitutional, they now find themselves in a position where the city council may arbitrarily remit to one person, or a number of persons, $150,000 of such expense and saddle it upon the general taxpayers.

The allegation that the council proposes and intends to remit a large sum of valid assessments as a bonus to a certain corporation in case they will establish a pulp and paper mill in Astoria, while admitted in defendant’s answer, has no legal place in this case; but only stands as an example of what might be done should we hold the amendment constitutional. Constitutional amendments, granting cities and towns the right to enact their own charter, were not intended to repeal those provisions of the Constitution which limit the extent to which municipal legislation may go upon particular subjects.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tillamook County v. State Ex Rel. State Board of Forestry
730 P.2d 1214 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1986)
Tillamook County v. State ex rel. State Board of Forestry
707 P.2d 585 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1985)
Wing v. City of Eugene
437 P.2d 836 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1968)
Greenberg v. LEE
248 P.2d 324 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1952)
Joplin v. Ten Brook
263 P. 893 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 P. 908, 122 Or. 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hauke-v-ten-brook-or-1927.