Rasmussen v. City of Forest Grove

284 P. 197, 131 Or. 685, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 167
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 284 P. 197 (Rasmussen v. City of Forest Grove) 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
Rasmussen v. City of Forest Grove, 284 P. 197, 131 Or. 685, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 167 (Or. 1929).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is a motion to dismiss an appeal, prosecuted by the city of Forest Grove from a decree of the circuit court for Washington county, which held invalid a special assessment, made by the city in *686 the portion of that municipality, which is referred to as Storm Sewer District No. 1, to pay for the construction of a storm sewer therein. The facts out of which the suit and the motion to dismiss the appeal arose we shall now state briefly. May 5, 1925, the city council of Forest Grove passed a resolution of intention to form the storm sewer district which we have previously mentioned, June 2 of the same year the council adopted ordinance No. 396, which determined the details incidental to the construction of the sewer, and provided for its construction. July 8,1925, one H. E. Olds, was awarded the construction contract at a contract price of $25,908.71. December 29,1925, the city accepted the sewer, the contract having been completed; while the work was progressing the city issued from time to time, in payment of claims, its warrants. March 30, 1926, ordinance No. 407 was adopted by the council, which assessed the cost of the sewer to the property within the above mentioned district; the total cost, made up of contract price, incidentals, and extra items, aggregated $30,077.17. May 18, 1926, the plaintiffs, 75 in number, who owned property within the district, filed this suit to enjoin the enforcement of the individual assessments against their property and to have the above ordinances, which constitute the foundation of the assessment, declared invalid. The complaint alleged several grounds of invalidity, only two of which we deem it necessary to mention: (1) a contention that the storm sewer was of general benefit to the entire city and, therefore, the cost of its construction could not be assessed against a portion only of it; (2) in the enactment of the legislation, which created Storm Sewer District No. 1, which authorized the construction of the sewer and the assessment of property within the *687 district, the city failed to copy into the minutes of the council copies of the ordinances, and thereby violated article XIV, section 172, of the city charter, which is as follows:

“No ordinance or resolution passed by the council of the city of Forest Grove after taking effect of this act shall be of any force or effect unless copied upon the book of ordinances and the record of the minutes of the meetings of the council at which the same was passed. * * *”

The answer denied that the proceedings, which preceded the assessment of the property of the plaintiffs, were invalid, and that the sewer benefited equally all property in the city; it specifically alleged the validity of the various ordinances and resolutions. At the conclusion of the trial, July 19, 1928, the court entered its decree in favor of the plaintiffs declaring “that each and all of the resolutions and ordinances set forth in plaintiffs’ complaint, in relation to the construction of the storm sewer in the city of Forest Grove, Oregon, were of no force or effect at the time said storm sewer was constructed. ’ ’ Thereupon, the city prosecuted this appeal.

September 25,1928, the city council adopted a resolution that there be submitted to the voters of the city for their adoption or rejection, at an election to be held November 6, 1928, a proposed amendment to the charter of the city authorizing the council to issue bonds of the city in a sum not exceeding $35,000 and use the proceeds to pay the costs of the construction of the aforementioned storm sewer. The proposed amendment recited:

“For the purpose of procuring funds with which to pay the total cost, and accrued interest thereon, and *688 the construction of the storm sewer of the city of Forest Grove, Oregon, in district No. 1, and which shall he applied in the payment of warrants issued therefor and in the refunding to property owners cash payments made thereon, the common council of said city is hereby authorized and empowered to issue and sell negotiable coupon bonds of the city in a sum not to exceed $35,000 * * * said bonds to be a direct general obligation of the city of Forest Grove * * * which said bonds shall be known as ‘City of Forest Grove storm sewer bonds.’

‘ ‘ Said bonds, when authorized by a vote of the people shall be issued, notwithstanding any ratification of the assessment made by the city of Forest Grove against the property benefited for the cost of said storm sewer. * * * The common council shall each year at the time of making the annual tax levy for city purposes, make an additional levy in such a sum sufficient to pay interest on the outstanding bonds of this issue, and retire the principal thereof at maturity.

“Resolved further, that for the hereinabove proposed charter amendments the following ballot title be and the same is adopted by the council, to-wit:

“An act to amend the charter of the city of Forest Grove adopted by the people at an election held on January 11, 1909, and to amend all other amendments thereto, by adding article XVI authorizing the issuance and sale of $35,000 bonds of said city to provide funds with which to pay the total cost of the storm sewer in district No. 1 of said city, and the accrued interest thereon, and providing for a special tax levy to pay the interest and principal of said bonds.”

It will be observed that the suggested amendment declares “said bonds * * * shall be issued, notwithstanding any ratification of the assessment made by the city of Forest Grove against the property benefited”; this provision makes it pertinent to notice that at the same time the council also referred to a vote of the people a proposed amendment of section 172 of art. *689 XIV of the charter, which would eliminate the requirement that ordinances should be copied into the minute book, and which further provided: “Each and every ordinance and resolution heretofore passed, approved and adopted by the council of the city of Forest Grove, including each and every ordinance and resolution which has not been copied upon the records of the minutes of the meetings of the council at which the same were passed, are hereby ratified * * The proposed amendment declared all such ordinances valid and provided that all proceedings pursuant to them should never be questioned in any court by reason of the failure of the recorder to promptly copy the ordinance into the book of minutes.

The records show that at the election held November 6,1928, the proposal to amend the charter by authorizing the issuance of $35,000 sewer bonds was adopted while the proposal to amend section 172 was rejected. The minutes of a meeting of the city council held November 27,1928, recites the sale of the bonds. The minutes further record:

“Be it resolved by the common council of the city of Forest Grove, that the mayor and recorder of said city be and they are hereby authorized and directed to issue a warrant to each property owner who has paid cash for his storm sewer improvement, for the amount paid and accrued interest at 6% per annum from the time of payment to the date of said warrant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 P. 197, 131 Or. 685, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rasmussen-v-city-of-forest-grove-or-1929.