Peninsula Drainage District No. 2 v. City of Portland

320 P.2d 277, 212 Or. 398, 1958 Ore. LEXIS 197
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 320 P.2d 277 (Peninsula Drainage District No. 2 v. City of Portland) 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
Peninsula Drainage District No. 2 v. City of Portland, 320 P.2d 277, 212 Or. 398, 1958 Ore. LEXIS 197 (Or. 1958).

Opinion

*400 BRAND, J.

This is a suit hy the plaintiff Peninsula Drainage District No. 2 for the foreclosure of certificates of delinquency issued and held by the plaintiff district. The defendants are the City of Portland and the State of Oregon. The certificates were issued on account of purported assessments levied against a tract of land which at the time of the levy was owned by the United States of America. Subsequent to the making of the assessments the tract against which the assessments were made was acquired by the defendants severally. Parcel “A” of said tract described in the complaint became the property of the City of Portland, and Parcels “B” and “C” as described, became the property of the State of Oregon. All three tracts were within the territorial area of the plaintiff Drainage District. The learned circuit court entered a decree in favor of the defendants. Plaintiff appeals.

Title to part of the tract was acquired by the United States on 12 January 1943 and title to the balance was acquired on 7 January 1944. The assessments against the tract were made for the year July 1, 1946-June 30, 1947, and for the ensuing three years, and certificates of delinquency were issued on 16 February 1948,15 March 1949,15 March 1950, and 15 March 1951 on account of the nonpayment of the four assessments respectively. The United States continued to be the owner of the tract during the four tax years in suit and refused to pay the assessments. The assessments were all levied against the United States and the certificates of delinquency in each case show the United States as the owner of the tract.

The tract in question is generally known as the East Vanport Project which was instituted by an agency of the United States and which was terminated and com *401 pleted by an instrument described as a “Program Action, Public War Housing” effective 28 February 1946. Thereafter the property was sold to the city and state. Suit to foreclose was filed on 21 May 1952 against the defendants as owners.

The pleadings are heavily encumbered by conclusions of law, but from them we find the following issues presented. Plaintiff is organized under ORS 547.005 et seq. It contends that it was required by state law to make the assessments which are in issue and relies upon two provisions of our statutes, which read as follows:

“(1) The board of supervisors shall each year make a computation of the whole amount of money to be raised by the district through assessments for the ensuing year for any purposes whatsoever in carrying out the provisions of the Drainage District Act, including maintenance and operation and estimated delinquencies on assessments. This amount when determined by the board shall constitute an assessment upon all the land • included in the district and shall be apportioned by the board in accordance with the report of the commissioners as confirmed or amended by the court as provided for in ORS 547.235.
“(2) Any land owned by any person totaling less than one acre shall be assessed as one acre.
“(3) Any land, the title to which is vested in the state, or state lands sold under contract in any drainage district, shall be subject to taxation by the district, and the full amount of assessment due against such lands shall be paid to the district at the same times and in the same manner as other drainage district assessments are paid.
“ (4) The tax collector shall receive any past due bond of the drainage district or any past due interest coupon from any bond of the district in payment of any assessment made for the purpose of *402 paying bonds or bond interest of tbe district, and shall receive in payment of assessments levied for operation and maintenance purposes any warrants drawn upon the operation and maintenance fund, such warrants received in payment of assessments to be in order of issuance.” ORS 547.455.
“The certificate of delinquency and all receipts for assessments, charges or tolls paid by the irrigation or drainage district subsequent thereto shall be prima facie evidence in the suit that the real estate described in the certificate and receipts was located in the irrigation or drainage district and was subject to be assessed or charged by the district for dis- • triet purposes, and that the assessments, tolls or charges were regularly levied as provided by law, and were not paid except by such irrigation or drainage district.” ORS 548.655.

Plaintiff contends that the liens and certificates of delinquency were valid prior to and at the time the defendants acquired the property from the United States and remained valid against the defendants. In its reply brief plaintiff states the issue as follows:

“* * * The issue is * * * whether or not the drainage district, having at the time of its organization included -within its boundaries land in private ownership, which are thereafter acquired by the United States, can continue to assess said lands during their ownership by the United States their proportionate share of the costs of the original construction of the protective works and the continued maintenance thereof. We submit that this is a very real and vital distinction which must be drawn in this ease. We are not in this litigation concerned with the problem of whether lands owned by the United States can be forced by a state or political subdivision thereof into an improvement district without the United States’ consent and then subjected to assessment for the benefits which fol *403 low. The question is rather whether or not the benefits, in effect having been ‘built into’ the lands prior to their acquisition by the United States in such a manner that they are continuing and impossible of removal, can be enjoyed by the United States without its land being subjected to assessments.”

The defendants contend that under the Constitution and laws of the United States and the laws of Oregon, the United States is exempt from taxation by any state or its subdivision; that the special assessments constituted taxes and that the United States had never given its consent to be so taxed. The conclusion suggested is that since the assessment was void when made, the subsequent acquisition of title by the defendants could not breathe life into a void assessment.

The defendants have presented other affirmative defenses which need not now be considered. In plaintiff’s brief it states that it “did not attempt to enforce by adversary proceedings [against the United States] collection of the assessments in suit.” Any such attempt, they concede, “would have been futile, solely because the national government is not amenable to the process of Oregon’s courts.”

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Bluebook (online)
320 P.2d 277, 212 Or. 398, 1958 Ore. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peninsula-drainage-district-no-2-v-city-of-portland-or-1958.