Johnson v. City of Pendleton

280 P. 873, 131 Or. 46
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 280 P. 873 (Johnson v. City of Pendleton) 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
Johnson v. City of Pendleton, 280 P. 873, 131 Or. 46 (Or. 1929).

Opinion

RAND, J.

Plaintiffs, as citizens and taxpayers of the city of Pendleton, brought this suit to restrain the city, its mayor and councilmen, from executing or carrying into effect certain powers purporting to have been conferred upon the city by an amendment of the city charter and by certain ordinances, which had been submitted to and adopted by the legal voters of the city at an election called for that purpose. The purpose of the amendment and of said ordinances was to authorize the city to accept and comply with the requirements of a written proposal made by one of its citizens to construct at his expense on a site to be furnished by the city and to donate to it a memorial building for the use of its citizens as a community building and museum. •

The cause was heard below on a demurrer to the second amended complaint and resulted in a decree sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the suit.

It appears from the amended complaint that on March 1,1928, John Vert, a citizen of Pendleton, made a written proposal to the common council of that city in which he agreed to construct, according to plans which he had had already prepared, a memorial building to be known as “The Vert Memorial Community Building and Museum” at a cost of approximately $65,000 and to donate such building to the people of *48 the city of Pendleton upon condition that certain requirements, which he set forth in his written proposal, should be first met and complied with by the city. These requirements were that the city should provide a suitable site satisfactory to him; that the electorate of the city should agree by ballot to provide annually sufficient funds to maintain and operate the building, grounds and museum; that the form of ballot to be submitted to the voters and the matter to be printed thereon should conform to the views of his attorney; that he was to retain control and attend to the purchasing and construction contracts and convey the structure, when completed, free of all incumbranches, to the city of Pendleton; “that a self-perpetuating board of trustees shall be created to assume the management, care and administration of the building, auditorium and museum, including its community features and grounds, when turned over by me to the city in completed form”; that the said board of trustees shall consist of the mayor, the president of the Pendleton Commercial Association, the chairman of the finance committee of the common council, the presidents of three woman’s clubs, and of the donor during his lifetime; that the board shall be self-perpetuating in that each of the officials named shall be succeeded by his successor in office when elected and that upon donor’s death the vacancy caused by his death shall be filled by the remaining trustees by appointment of some citizen of Pendleton interested in public affairs; that should any of said woman’s clubs go out of existence the vacancy caused thereby shall be filled by appointment of a representative, by the trustees either of some other woman’s club or of some other suitable citizen of Pendleton; that his proposal should be submitted to the people for their *49 approval, with an ordinance to be adopted by the people requiring the city council to levy an annual tax upon the taxable property in the city of Pendleton sufficient to raise the sum of $5,500 for use by the trustees in the maintenance, operation and upkeep of the building and grounds; that any surplus resulting from the levying of such tax shall be invested in securities to be approved by the mayor and the chairman of its finance committee, the proceeds of which shall be used only for the purchase of additional articles or fixtures for the museum, the enlargement of the building or the purchase of additional space, and to require the custodian of the property and also the treasurer of the funds to furnish bonds satisfactory to the trustees.

The complaint also alleges that in order for the city to accept the proposal and obligate itself to comply with its conditions it was deemed necessary by the common council that the charter of the city be amended and that an ordinance proposing said amendment and authorizing and directing the council to comply with the terms of the proposal should be submitted to the legal voters of the city for their adoption or rejection; that an ordinance proposing such amendment and accepting said proposal and providing for the creation of a self-perpetuating board of trustees to consist of the persons named in the proposal, the membership thereof to be perpetuated as provided in the proposal and also authorizing and requiring the common council to levy on all taxable property of the city of Pendleton an annual tax sufficient to produce the sum of $5,500 each year and providing that in the event any surplus should remain on hand at the end of any year, after the payment of the expenses during that year, such surplus should be invested in securities *50 to be approved by the mayor and chairman of the finance committee and that the funds so invested shall be devoted only to the purchase of additional articles or fixtures for the museum or for the enlargement of the building itself, was submitted and adopted by the people; that as so submitted the ordinance authorized and empowered the city of Pendleton to issue and sell bonds in an amount not exceeding the sum of $7,500, the proceeds of which were to be used for procuring a site for the proposed building, the bonds to be designated as “Community Hall Bonds,” and the amount thereof to be in addition to the indebtedness theretofore authorized; that the ordinance also provided that said annual tax shall be “in addition to all other taxes authorized by the charter of the city of Pendleton and to be exempt from, and not included within, any limitation upon the taxing power of the council of the city of Pendleton”; that said measure was not submitted to the taxpayers of the city only but was submitted to the legal voters of the city and adopted by a majority of the votes cast at the election.

It is also alleged that in 1876, and prior to the incorporation of the city of Pendleton, Aura M. Raley and H. J. Raley conveyed to three named trustees in trust a certain tract of land containing approximately three acres, which is now within the limits of the city, for cemetery purposes; that said trustees accepted such trust, took possession of said property for the uses and purposes of a public cemetery and that said tract of land ever since said time has been and is now being used as a public cemetery and several hundred bodies are now buried therein; that since the acceptance of said proposal and the adoption of said charter amendment and ordinances, Vert, with the council of the city, has selected a portion of said cemetery as the *51 site upon which said memorial building is to be constructed, and that prior to said acceptance of said proposal and under a similar proposal made by Vert to the city, an ordinance was passed to prevent the burial of any other bodies in said cemetery and requiring all bodies now buried in that portion so selected to be removed and buried elsewhere at the expense of the city.

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

Related

Shady Cove Water District v. Jackson County
179 P.3d 698 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2008)
Crossler v. Hille
961 P.2d 327 (Washington Supreme Court, 1998)
Board of Klamath County Commissioners v. Select County Employees
939 P.2d 80 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1997)
Nottingham v. City of Yukon
766 P.2d 973 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1988)
W. R. Chamberlin & Co. v. Northwestern Agencies, Inc.
600 P.2d 438 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1979)
Veatch v. City of Cottage Grove
289 P. 494 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1930)
Loe v. Britting
287 P. 74 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 P. 873, 131 Or. 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-city-of-pendleton-or-1929.