Public Market Co. of Portland v. City of Portland

170 P.2d 586, 179 Or. 367, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 165
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 170 P.2d 586 (Public Market Co. of Portland 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
Public Market Co. of Portland v. City of Portland, 170 P.2d 586, 179 Or. 367, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 165 (Or. 1945).

Opinion

LUSK, J.

This case, involving the rights of the plaintiff, Public Market Company of Portland, under a contract by which it agreed to construct a public market building for the City of Portland and to deliver it to the City upon completion, is here for the third time. (For former opinions, see 160 Or. 155, 83 P. (2d) 440; 171 Or. 522, 130 P. (2d) 624,138 P. (2d) 916.)

Upon the last appeal, taken by the plaintiff from a decree of dismissal, we held that the contract which the plaintiff was then seeking to have specifically performed was not a general obligation contract of the City of Portland, but that the parties intended that the agreed purchase price was to be paid from the proceeds of the sale of public utility certificates theretofore authorized by the City. We held that the plaintiff had fully performed the contract on its part; that the City had wrongfully repudiated the contract; and that the plaintiff was entitled to relief by way of damages if the proofs should show that it had suffered damage. We said:

“The Market Company, therefore, is entitled to recover the difference, if any, between the contract price and the reasonable market value of the land, building and equipment at the time of the breach.” (171 Or. 591)

We reversed the decree and remanded the cause to the Circuit Court for the purpose of determining damages in accordance with that measure. On petition for rehearing, filed by the plaintiff, we held that any award *372 of damages should carry interest from the date of the breach.

Upon the remand the plaintiff filed an amended complaint alleging that the reasonable market value of the property involved on the date of the breach, November 14, 1934, was not in excess of $550,000.00, and praying for a judgment against the City in the amount of the difference between that sum and the amount which, upon an accounting, should be found to be the full purchase price agreed to be paid by the City. The City filed an amended answer setting up various affirmative matters. After a trial the court, on August 1,1944, entered its decree by which it found that the total purchase price was $1,463,943.96, and the market value of the property on November 14, 1934, was $963,943.96, and accordingly gave judgment against the City for $500,000.00 and the further sum of $291,666.67 as interest upon said damage award at the rate of six per cent per annum from November 14,1934, to the date of the decree, a total of $791,666.67. From that judgment the defendant City of Portland has appealed, and the plaintiff Public Market Company of Portland, and the defendants Reconstruction Finance Corporation and The First National Bank of Portland (Oregon)- have cross-appealed.

The first question for decision arises upon the contention of the City that the Circuit Court erred in confining the issues to the single question of damages according to the measure stated in our opinion in 171 Or. It is said that the true measure of damages is the difference between the value of the property and the amount in money which could have been obtained from a sale-of the public utility certificates. It is argued that what we said on this subject in our former opinion was *373 not intended to establish the law of the case, and that in any- event it was not conclusive upon the trial judge or upon this court now for the following reasons: (1) because this court is a court of review and we had no authority to decide matters which were not litigated and decided at the previous trial; (2) that the reversal of the former decree and a trial upon the question of damages involves new issues and new evidence and different legal principles; (3) that the doctrine in question-does, not apply to matters that might have been previously litigated but which were not; and (4) that if the doctrine should now be applied the City would be deprived of due process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution and Art. I, § 10, of the Constitution of Oregon, and would be denied its day in court.

.The-doctrine of “the law of the case” was thus expounded by this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Wolverton, in Stager v. Troy Laundry Co., 41 Or. 141, 142, 68 P.405:

‘ ‘ The rule has long been established, and is uniformly adhered to, that an appellate court will not revise or reverse its former decisions made in the same cause, and upon the same state of facts, and this for two reasons: (1) They stand as precedents and authority, as if made in any other case upon a like state of facts; and (2) as adjudications between the ¡same parties. The policy of the law and the practical administration of justice require that there should be an end of litigation, and the rule has grown up to meet this requirement. If parties were permitted to present the same issues in the same ease as often as they feel aggrieved by the result, litigation ivould descend into a contest for perseverance and persistence, rather than of legal rights, and it could not be brought to a determination' So long as human ingenuity could prevent it.”

*374 See Shaver Forwarding Co. v. Eagle Star Insurance Co., 177 Or. 410, 162 P. (2d) 789, 790, and Oregon cases there cited.

As to the first of the above-enumerated contentions of the City we think it necessary only to refer to pages 587 to 592 of 171 Or., where the question of plaintiff’s remedy is discussed. It will appear that the views there stated were expressed deliberately and with the purpose to provide a guide and rule of decision to the Circuit Court and to counsel for the litigants in future proceedings.

The other contentions are, we think, equally without merit. On the first appeal (the question arising on demurrer to the complaint) we construed the contract as one imposing a general obligation on the City, but, in view of certain ambiguities in the contract, left the way open for the adoption of a different construction after a trial upon the merits. (160 Or. 180) Such a trial was had, and the Circuit Court ruled that the contract was one for a special obligation and that the suit should be dismissed. The plaintiff then urged upon the court that, even so, it was entitled to a remedy if it had fully performed the contract and the City had wrongfully repudiated it. The court then reopened the case, and, after the taking of further testimony, held that the plaintiff had not fully performed; that, therefore, it was unnecessary to consider the question of plaintiff’s remedy, and dismissed the suit.

As stated, we reversed that decree. We concurred in the Circuit Court’s construction of the nature of the obligation imposed on the City by the terms of the contract. But we decided that the plaintiff had fully performéd the contract and the City had breached it, a conclusion in which all the members of this court con- *375 eurred (see dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice RaNd, 171 Or. 597). We were then faced with the question of what further disposition to make of the case. The plaintiff urged the application of the rule of the local improvement cases. The City contended that the question was not before us because the complaint stated a cause of suit for specific performance and not for damages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 P.2d 586, 179 Or. 367, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-market-co-of-portland-v-city-of-portland-or-1945.