Palmberg v. Astoria

127 P. 32, 63 Or. 222, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 220
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 127 P. 32 (Palmberg v. Astoria) 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
Palmberg v. Astoria, 127 P. 32, 63 Or. 222, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 220 (Or. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs from a decree dismissing their suit instituted to enjoin the Sanitary and Reclamation Commission of the City of Astoria from constructing retaining walls, filling tide flats, levying assessments, and issuing bonds to defray the expenses of making such improvements, and to have an alleged amendment of the municipal charter decreed to be null and void. The question to be determined is whether or not the proceedings undertaken to amend the charter of the City of Astoria, initiated by petition and asserted to have been adopted by a majority vote of the qualified electors of that city, were such a departure from the mode prescribed as to invalidate the proposed measure. It appears from the evidence that the common council of Astoria, exercising the authority reserved by Section la of Article IV of the organic laws of the State, enacted Ordinance No. 3315, prescribing the form of an initiative petition, and providing that 200 legal voters were required to inaugurate any measure to be ratified or rejected at a general election. Section 6 of the ordinance declares generally that immediately upon the filing of an adequate petition the auditor and police judge is required to cause notice thereof, with a brief statement [224]*224of the terms and effect of the application, to be given by publication for eight consecutive days in a daily newspaper printed and published in Astoria. Section 9 of such municipal law enacts, in the main, that the auditor and police judge cause to be printed a pamphlet containing a true copy of the title and text of any amendment of the charter, proposed by initiative, and to furnish a printed copy thereof to any person offering to register as an elector.

Complying with the requirements of such ordinance and pursuant to a resolution of the common council, the mayor of Astoria appointed a committee, consisting of 17 qualified electors, to prepare an amendment to the city charter, to be voted upon .at the genéral election held December 14, 1910. The persons thus appointed performed the duty required of them, and in the contemplated alteration of the fundamental law of the municipality declared it to be essential that the tide lands within the city be reclaimed by filling the flats above high water; that retaining walls be constructed within the municipal limits for the purpose of holding such fills; that city bonds be issued and sold to defray the expense of making such betterments; that improvement districts be established; and that all acts necessary to be done or performed in carrying- out the proposed changes should be exercised by nine resident taxpayers composing a body to be known and styled as “the Sanitary and Reclamation Commission of the City of Astoria.” The proposed amendment stated the names of the designated number of persons chosen by the committee as commissioners, including that of Frans Kankkonen. The contemplated measure provided that five of the persons so selected should constitute a quorum for the transaction of business, and that, if either of such electors failed or refused to qualify' or serve as a commissioner, the majority of the members should appoint another tax[225]*225payer to fill the vacancy. When the proposed amendments were completed, an initiative petition was also prepared and signed by 11 of the committee, who mutually agreed that, if Kankkonen refused to act as a member of the commission, the name of Guy W. Spicer should be substituted in lieu thereof. When the petition was presented to Kankkonen, he drew a pencil line through his name, and refused to act as one of the commissioners. Five other names were added to the petition before Spicer’s name was written in the place of Kankkonen’s, and thereafter 196 other electors subscirbed their names to the application, so that by omitting the five names which were obtained without their being notified that Spicer would be a commissioner, and including the 11 who had agreed upon the substitution if necessary, 207 petitioners were secured with knowledge that Spicer was to be a member of the commission instead of Kankkonen. Upon the filing of the petition, the auditor and police judge determined that it had been signed by more than the requisite number of legal voters and filed within the time limited. He then caused a notice, declaring that the petition had been filed, and containing a brief statement of its tenor and effect, to be published in the Morning Astorian, a daily newspaper printed and published-at Astoria, in all the regular issues from November 12, 1910, to the 24th of that month both included, except that on Monday the 21st the paper was not published or printed nor on any other Monday. The auditor and police judge also caused to be printed and sent out to the legal voters a pamphlet containing what purported to be a true copy of the proposed amendment to the charter, but the booklet inadvertently contained the name of Kankkonen as one of the commissioners and the name of Spicer was omitted. At the general election held at the time specified a majority of all the votes having been cast in favor of the proposed amendment, the alteration was declared to have been duly adopted. Spicer, [226]*226however, refused to qualify, whereupon a majority of the commissioners appointed to fill the vacancy the defendant Jens H. Hansen. The commission having adopted plans for making the specified improvements, this suit was begun and resulted in the decree herein-before mentioned.

Plaintiff’s counsel particularly point out in their brief the alleged facts in the procedure which they assert render the proposed amendment to the city charter invalid. We shall consider only the pamphlet which inadvertently contained Kankkonen’s name as one of the members of the Sanitary and Reclamation Commission of the City of Astoria, when more than 200 legal voters of that municipality had by their petition recommended Spicer for the position. It will probably be conceded that if persons of good repute and business sagacity are selected to manage public improvements, requiring the outlay of vast sums of money to be raised by assessment of real property benefited and from the issuing of municipal interest-bearing bonds, the measure providing therefor, when initiated by petition, will undoubtedly receive more support and be entitled to greater confidence than when such public work is supervised by persons of inexperience or of doubtful probity. The owner of real property might favor a local improvement that would burden his land if he knew that the money obtained for that purpose by assessment or in any other manner would be wisely expended. If he had doubts in regard to the disbursement of the fund, he would probably hesitate before ratifying a measure, initiated by petition, that would be a charge upon his real property, or he might vote against an amendment of a city charter, when .inaugurated in the same manner, if it imposed an exaction upon his premises. Section 9 of Ordinance No. 3315 prescribing the manner of exercising the initiative powers, as far as deemed material herein, reads as follows:

[227]*227“The auditor and police judge shall, not later than the third Wednesday of the first month next before any general election at which any proposed ordinance or amendment to the charter of the City of Astoria is to be submitted to the people, cause to be printed a true copy of the title and text of such ordinance or amendment to be submitted with the number and form in which the question shall be printed on the official ballot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 P. 32, 63 Or. 222, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmberg-v-astoria-or-1912.