Pringle Falls Power Co. v. Patterson

128 P. 820, 65 Or. 474, 1913 Ore. LEXIS 284
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 128 P. 820 (Pringle Falls Power Co. v. Patterson) 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
Pringle Falls Power Co. v. Patterson, 128 P. 820, 65 Or. 474, 1913 Ore. LEXIS 284 (Or. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the court.

1. This is a motion to dismiss an appeal on the grounds that the transcript was not filed within the time limited nor at the place prescribed by law. The defendants herein, desiring to review a decision of the Circuit Court for Crook County, caused to be served and filed a notice of appeal and an undertaking thereon, October 5, 1912. No exception was taken to the sufficiency of the sureties, whereupon the appeal became perfected in five days or on October 10, 1912: [477]*477L. O. L., § 550. Within 30 days therefrom the appellants were required to file with the clerk of this court a transcript or such an abstract as is demanded by our rules, unless in the meantime an order had been secured enlarging the time: L. O. L., § 554. The time within which an act prescribed by statute is to he done is computed by excluding the first day and including the last, unless the last day falls upon Sunday or some other nonjudicial day, in which case the last day is also to be .excluded: L. O. L., § 531. The appeal in the case at bar having been perfected October 10,1912, the following day was the first upon which the transcript could have been legally filed. Excluding October 11th, the 30 days in which to file the transcript expired November 10, 1912, but as that day fell upon Sunday, the appellants were allowed all of the following day, or Monday, November 11, 1912, when they delivered to our clerk a transcript of the record on appeal which filing was made within the time prescribed: Boothe v. Scriber, 48 Or. 561 (87 Pac. 887, 90 Pac. 1002); McCabe-Duprey Tanning Co. v. Eubanks, 57 Or. 44 (102 Pac. 795, 110 Pac. 395).

2. Section 1 of the act of February 15, 1889, commanded that terms of the Supreme Court he held at Salem on the first Monday in March and October, and at Pendleton on the first Monday in May of each year: Laws Or. 1889, p. 4. Section 3 of the act was amended February 16, 1891, demanding that transcripts on appeal from any county lying east of the Cascade Mountains, except Wasco, Crook, Sherman, Klamath and Lake should “be forwarded to the clerk of said Supreme Court at Pendleton.” Appeals from Wasco, Crook or Sherman Counties, unless otherwise stipulated by the parties, were directed to be heard and determined at the next .succeeding term of the Supreme' Court after the appeal was perfected and the tran[478]*478script was required to be “forwarded” either to Salem or to Pendleton as the case might be “by the first day of said term”: Laws Or. 1891, p. 40. Section 2 of the act of February 15, 1889, was repealed February 18, 1899, by an act providing for the selection of but one clerk of the Supreme Court, who was required to appoint two deputies, one of whom should reside at Pendleton: Laws Or. 1899, p. 167. When the act was passed requiring a term of the Supreme Court to be held at Pendleton, the statute then in force demanded that, upon an appeal being perfected, the appellant “must by the second day of the next regular term of the appellate court thereafter, file with the clerk of such court the transcript of the cause”: Hill’s Ann. Laws Or., § 541.. Though this section was amended February 25, 1889, the alteration of the enactment made no change in the time of the filing of the transcript: Laws Or. 1889, p. 140. A different date, however, was prescribed by the act of February 22, 1899 (Laws Or. 1899, p. 229), which as far as material herein reads as follows: “Upon the appeal being perfected the appellant shall, within thirty days thereafter, file with the clerk of the appellate court a transcript or such an abstract as the rules of the appellate court may require”: L. O. L., § 554.

Construing these provisions in pari materia, it is evident that the. clause of the statute last quoted, requiring the transcript to be filed with the clerk within 30 days after the appeal is perfected, was intended by the legislative assembly as a general enactment applicable alike to all parts of the state. That part of Section 554, L. O. L., as repeated above, was an implied amendment of Section 3 of the act of February 16, 1891, hereinbefore referred to, amending the requirement that the transcript on appeal “shall be forwarded by the first day of said term at Pendleton,” and sub[479]*479stituting therefor the language quoted. When an appellant within the time limited gives the required notice of appeal and files a transcript thereon with the clerk of the court, he has complied with the requirements of the statute, whether the copy of the record is left with that officer either at Salem or Pendleton, for when the transcript has been filed jurisdiction of the cause has been secured and our clerk can send the copy of the record to the proper place for trial, or the court can make an order to that effect. The conclusion here recorded is at variance with the cases of Judkins v. Taffe, 2 Or. 89 (27 Pac. 221), Connor v. Clark, 30 Or. 382 (48 Pac. 364), and Gibbons v. Moody, 33 Or. 593 (55 Pac. 23). In those instances, however, the decisions were rendered before the statute (L. O. L., § 554) was amended in the particulars noted.

The transcript on appeal in the case at bar having been filed within the time limited and with the officer designated, the motion to dismiss the appeal is denied.

Denied.

Argued May 5, decided May 20, rehearing denied July 1, 1913.

On the Merits.

(132 Pac. 527.)

Statement by Mr. Justice Bean.

The defendants appeal from a decree in favor of plaintiff. The subject of this suit is the right to divert the waters of the West Pork of the Deschutes Biver on the land of the plaintiff, in Crook County, near Pringle Palls. Plaintiff is the owner of the northeast quarter of section 23, township 21 south, range 9 east, Willamette meridian. The West Pork of the Deschutes Biver flows through this quarter section in a northwesterly course. Pringle Palls, with a descent [480]*480of approximately 60 feet, is situated near the center of this tract. The estimated amount of water in the river is 1,364 second-feet. O. M. Pringle obtained a patent for this tract of land in 1893. In .November, 1906, he and three .others .incorporated the Pringle Falls Electric Power & Water Company, and on the 17th of that month Pringle and wife executed a deed conveying the land to plaintiff.

On the 15th of December, 1906, in conformity with the statutes of 1891 (Section 6528, L. O. L.) and 1899 (Section 6555, L. O. L.) plaintiff posted and filed a notice reciting that the Pringle Falls Electric Power & Water Company had appropriated and intended to divert 2,880 cubic feet per second of the waters of the Deschutes River, in Crook County, Oregon, “for general irrigation, manufacturing power, household, electrical power and generating purposes, and for the purpose of reclaiming the arid desert lands of Crook County”; that the point of diversion was on the left bank of the Deschutes River at a point S. 43 deg. W. 20 rods from the southwest corner of the northeast quarter of Section 23; that the canal was to be known as the “Pringle Falls Electric Power & Water Ditch,” to be used for power purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
128 P. 820, 65 Or. 474, 1913 Ore. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pringle-falls-power-co-v-patterson-or-1913.