Stafford v. Multnomah County Drainage Dist. No. 1

204 P. 158, 103 Or. 197, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 145
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 204 P. 158 (Stafford v. Multnomah County Drainage Dist. No. 1) 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
Stafford v. Multnomah County Drainage Dist. No. 1, 204 P. 158, 103 Or. 197, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 145 (Or. 1922).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

— The question here involved is: “Was plaintiffs’ land lawfully condemned?”

1. Condemnation proceedings are controlled by the statute in all jurisdictions. It is a principle of law so well settled as to need no citation that condemnation proceedings are purely statutory and in derogation of common right, and the statutory authority [201]*201must be strictly pursued aud every condition or other prerequisite to the exercise of the jurisdiction observed.

There is no attempt by this suit to invalidate the organization of Multnomah County Drainage District No. 1. A careful examination of all the steps taken and acts done in forming the district shows that it was legally organized. Tract “E” of Love’s Addition, the property of plaintiffs, constitutes a part of the district. This does not mean, however, that the greater portion of this parcel of real property, as asserted by the defendant, has been condemned as a right of way for a levee. There is a marked distinction between the inclusion of one’s land in a drainage district and the condemnation of that same land for a right of way for a levee or other public use.

2. It appears from the testimony offered that the right of way for the levee involved in this controversy extends over Tract “E,” a triangular parcel of land containing 1.37 acre, with a frontage of 125 feet on Columbia Slough to the north. Plaintiff Wier has a boat-house there and uses the land as a parking ground for automobiles belonging to fishing parties to whom he rents row-boats. Plaintiffs claim that the value of this parcel of land is $2,500, or more. Defendant seeks to appropriate' all but .30 acre of this land for levee purposes, and to pay therefor in benefits because, when reclaimed, it will yield grass more abundantly.

The defendant contends that plaintiffs are bound to pursue their statutory remedy set down in the Drainage Act. Indeed, such is the general rule.

“It is settled by the great preponderance of authority, that when land is taken or damaged by authority of a constitutional statute and in compliance with its provisions, and the statute provides the means of [202]*202recovering damages which may he instituted by the owner of the land, the statutory remedy is exclusive. ’ ’ 10 E. C. L., § 190, p. 223.

But the editors of that work, based upon ample authority, wrote that:

“When an illegal entry upon private land under color of eminent domain is undertaken or threatened, it will be restrained by a court of equity without regard to the customary requirements of equitable jurisdiction. * * The equitable jurisdiction in such a case is based upon the attempted misu.se of the sovereign power delegated by the legislature and upon the inequality of the parties by reason of the grant of a prerogative right to one of them.” 10 R. C. L., § 193, ' p. 228.

In the case at issue, the drainage district has never taken possession of the land alleged to have been condemned; nor does it appear that the plaintiffs have ever treated the parcel sought by the defendant as other than their own property.

3. It is asserted that the plaintiffs are estopped from prosecuting this suit because of their failure to appear and show cause why the prayer in the petition to organize the district should not be granted. We will examine the petition. In complying with the provisions of section 7247, Or. L., it alleged that petitioners were persons shown by the records of Multnomah County to be the owners of 50 per cent of the acreage in a contiguous body of swamp, wet, or overflowed land, and that they presented to the County Court of the State of Oregon for the county of Multnomah their petition in order that they might form a drainage district for the purpose of having such lands reclaimed and protected by drainage from the effects of water, for agricultural purposes. As required by statute, the petition set forth:

[203]*203“(1) The name proposed for such district;
“(2) The boundary lines of the district * * ;
“(3) The total acreage included in the district * # ;
“ (4) The names of owners of land in said district;
“(5) An allegation that the proposed reclamation or protection is for sanitary or agricultural purposes, or both * * ;
“ (6) An allegation that all of the lands included in said proposed district are properly included therein * * ;
“(7) An allegation that the benefits of such proposed reclamation or protection will exceed the damages to be done * * ;
“(8) An allegation that the formation of a drainage district * * is a proper and advantageous method of accomplishing the reclamation * * of the lands included therein.
“(9) A brief, general, informal statement of a proposed plan of reclamation or protection and such general facts as will enable the court to determine that there is a reasonable probability that the objects sought by the formation of the district may be accomplished ;
“(10) An agreement that the signers will pay # * all expenses incurred # * or taxes that may be levied against their lands for the purpose of paying the expense of organizing * * ;
“ (11) A prayer asking that the lands described * * shall be declared organized into a district.”

Sections 7248 and 7249,. Or. L., relate to the procedure on the hearing on the petition and on objections to the organization of the proposed district.

The record thus far discloses nothing that relates to the condemnation of the lands of plaintiffs for the purpose of the construction and maintenance of a levee. The failure of plaintiffs to object to the formation of the district referred to does not constitute an estoppel.

[204]*2044. It is next averred that plaintiffs are estopped because of their failure to appear or file exceptions to the report of the commissioners appointed to view the premises and determine the value of all land within or without the district to be acquired and used for rights of way, holding basins, or other works set out in “the plan for reclamation.”

Tract “E” is embraced within the following excerpt from the report of the commissioners:

“Beginning at the Union Avenue approach to the Interstate Highway Bridge and extending to the proposed dam in Columbia Slough above the mouth of McBride Slough, we find that practically all the land required is covered at a stage of water equal to twenty feet, Portland gage, and that practically none of such land has ever been cultivated or used for any purpose other than pasture, and that most of it remains covered with timber and brush. The construction of an embankment upon such land will therefore permit of a greater use than at present, the levee affording pasturage of a better quality than that now ' existing upon the frequently overflowed banks of Columbia Slough, and we find that where\ only a right of way for a levee is required no damage is sustained, but that such land within the limits of such right of way shall be excluded from the assessment zones and bear no part of the cost of the proposed work.” Par. 16, p. 49.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 P. 158, 103 Or. 197, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stafford-v-multnomah-county-drainage-dist-no-1-or-1922.