In Re Scappoose Drainage District

239 P. 193, 237 P. 684, 115 Or. 541, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 95
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1925
DocketCases Nos. 11,346 and 11,152.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 239 P. 193 (In Re Scappoose Drainage District) 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
In Re Scappoose Drainage District, 239 P. 193, 237 P. 684, 115 Or. 541, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 95 (Or. 1925).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 543 This suit was prosecuted in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Columbia County by the board of directors of Scappoose Drainage District, under the provisions of Chapter 390, General Laws of Oregon 1919 (Or. L., §§ 7358, 7359, 7360), for the purpose of obtaining a judgment of confirmation of the proceedings had in connection with the organization of the district and of the subsequent proceedings thereof. From the decree confirming the organization of the district a number of land owners have appealed, assigning the following alleged jurisdictional defects and irregularities in the organization of the district and subsequent proceedings thereof:

That the project is a diking project, and that the district should have been organized under the Diking Code (Or. L., §§ 7281-7300) and not under the Drainage Code. (Or. L., §§ 7247-7275.)

That the district, having been organized under the drainage laws of Oregon, has no jurisdiction to levy special assessments to defray the cost of constructing a dike, or to condemn land for the construction thereof.

That the County Court in creating the district was without jurisdiction.

That the district is without jurisdiction to divert the waters of Jackson Creek in accordance with the plan of reclamation. *Page 544

That the district is without power or jurisdiction to include therein lands which will not be benefited by the improvement as set forth in the plan of reclamation.

AFFIRMED. The record in this case is large and the exhibits many, but the questions at issue are few.

The appellants contend that the term "drainage project," as used in connection with this undertaking, is a misnomer, because, they say, the project is essentially a diking project. They base this contention upon the physical character of the lands within the district, which require for their reclamation the construction of a dike, or system of dikes, to protect the lands from the annual freshet overflow of the Columbia River and the Willamette Slough during the summer and winter months respectively. The land embraced within the district, comprising about 5,700 acres, lies along the west bank of Willamette Slough, in Columbia County, and immediately north of the Multnomah County line.

We have examined the record with care. It is admitted by all that the greatest problem in the reclamation of this body of land is that of keeping the annual freshets from overflowing the land.

The appellants invoke a number of the averments of the petition for the organization of the district in *Page 545 support of the contention that this is not a drainage project. The petition describes the land as follows:

"The said lands in general are bottom lands lying between the Willamette Slough and the mainland, which are of little value, due to their annual overflow or liability thereto, and from excess water entering from mainland drainage to the West and which lands would be very greatly benefited with much increase in value by virtue of the construction of the proposed work. The land in the proposed district is fairly smooth, but lower in the center than along the Willamette Slough, and contains a number of so-called lakes at low water, which will require drainage with suitable outlet gates through the dike, to discharge excess water, when there is no flood in the Willamette Slough, or necessary pumping equipment, when the water outside the dike is higher than the water inside the dike."

In order to sustain their position, appellants quote these additional paragraphs of the petition:

"The said district is to be organized for the construction, operation and maintenance of a drainage system for the reclamation of the said lands and the protection thereof from overflow of the Willamette Slough caused by either high water in the Willamette River or backwater from the Columbia River when in flood, and to divert the waters of Jackson Creek and Scappoose Creek," etc.

"The proposed plan of reclamation and protection is to provide where necessary, proper and suitable dikes or embankments to protect the above-described lands from overflow from the Willamette Slough at periods of high water, and to divert the streams which flow into said Willamette Slough from the West, around the proposed district, and to drain the land by ditches or otherwise, supplementing said works by pumping plants or other methods of affording drainage and protection as may be best suited to accomplish the purpose." *Page 546

Again, they quote from the decree, as stating the purpose of the district, as follows:

"To provide where necessary, proper and suitable dikes or embankments to protect the above-described lands from overflow from the Willamette Slough at periods of high water, and to divert the streams which flow into said Willamette Slough from the West, around the proposed district, and to drain the land by ditch or otherwise, supplementing said works by pumping plants or other methods of affording drainage and protection as may be best suited to accomplish the purposes."

They further quote from the plan of reclamation as follows:

"The problem for the reclamation of this area is, first, protection from the annual overflow by the river, which must be accomplished by means of dikes surrounding the district. The second problem is to reduce the water level inside of the district to an elevation which will permit of the cultivation of all except the extremely low lake bed and slough areas. This involves the diversion or removal by means of gates and pumping, of all water which may reach the inside of the dike from rainfall, from hillside streams, or from possible seepage, either from the upper slopes or from the river."

The reclamation plan provides for the interior drainage of the district. However, the nature of the improvements contemplated by the plan shows that the cost of construction of the levee exceeds by far the cost of the interior drainage; and the appellants rely chiefly upon this fact in their contention against the validity of the organization.

Under Section 7247, Or. L., 50 per cent of the record owners of the acreage in any contiguous body of swamp, wet or overflowed lands may form a drainage district for the purpose of having such lands *Page 547 reclaimed and protected by drainage or otherwise. The end and aim of the act is to reclaim land. And it is not material whether the reclamation is brought about by draining the land of its surplus water or by constructing levees for the purpose of excluding it from entering upon the land.

That the construction of levees for the purpose of reclaiming wet or overflowed lands is within the purview of the Drainage Code is apparent from the language thereof. It is provided at Section 7254 that the engineer appointed by the board of supervisors shall make the necessary surveys of the land within the boundaries of the district that may or will be improved or reclaimed in part or in whole by any system of drainage or levees that might be outlined and adopted. Section 7272 provides that, where "the plan for reclamation" is insufficient to reclaim, in whole or in part, the lands of the district, "the board of supervisors shall have the right to formulate new or amended plans containing new ditches, levees, or other works." At Section 7259, levees are deemed a part of the system of reclamation which may be constructed under the provisions of the drainage law.

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In Re Scappoose Drainage District
239 P. 193 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
239 P. 193, 237 P. 684, 115 Or. 541, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-scappoose-drainage-district-or-1925.