State Ex Rel. City of Eugene v. Woodrich

665 P.2d 333, 295 Or. 123, 1983 Ore. LEXIS 1294
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1983
DocketTC 16-82-08260; SC 29275
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 665 P.2d 333 (State Ex Rel. City of Eugene v. Woodrich) 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
State Ex Rel. City of Eugene v. Woodrich, 665 P.2d 333, 295 Or. 123, 1983 Ore. LEXIS 1294 (Or. 1983).

Opinion

*125 LINDE, J.

By petition for a writ of mandamus the City of Eugene brings to this court the question whether a circuit court may deny or delay an order of immediate possession of land, when the city has brought an action to condemn the land and has deposited the estimated compensation with the circuit court. The course of the proceedings presents issues of mandamus procedure in this court interrelated with events in the condemnation action in the circuit court.

The city filed its petition on January 17,1983, and we issued an alternative writ on February 25. The writ recited the following facts.

In July 1982, the city by ordinance declared the necessity to acquire property outside the city to be used “at the earliest possible date” for sewers and facilities for the disposal of seasonal industrial wastes. On October 4,1982, the city filed in the circuit court a condemnation action to acquire fee simple title to 47.08 acres belonging to Chester A. Swenson and others, moving also for an order to interested parties to show cause why the city should not be granted immediate possession and depositing $141,000 as estimated just compensation with the clerk of the court. The owners objected to the city’s demand for immediate possession. They asserted that the city’s proposed use of the land would be unlawful for two reasons: first, because the land is zoned for exclusive farm use and the proposed use is not permissible under the governing statute, and second, because certain required permits had not been and might not be issued. After hearings on the city’s motion and the owners’ objections, the circuit judge, defendant in the present proceeding, denied the city’s motion on the grounds that there was no necessity for immediate occupation because required permits had not been obtained, and that proof of such necessity for immediate occupation would be required by “due process.” 1

*126 Defendant moved to dismiss the alternative writ, asserting that plaintiff had an adequate remedy by appeal from the circuit court’s order. We deal with that contention below. At the same time, the city answered the writ, admitting the factual allegations but denying those alleging legal implications therefrom.

Subsequently, on March 31, 1983, defendant filed a second motion to dismiss the alternative writ on the ground that later developments in the circuit court action “have caused the underlying issues in the instant mandamus proceeding to become moot.” These developments, according to a supporting affidavit, were that on March 4, the city obtained a permit for its proposed facility from the state’s Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ); on March 10, the city filed a renewed motion for immediate occupation; and after a hearing at which the landowners renewed their objection that the proposed use was an unlawful land use, the circuit court on March 23 granted the city’s motion subject to a stay pending a decision by the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) whether LUBA had jurisdiction to stay the DEQ permit. 2

The city opposed the second motion to dismiss, arguing that the defendant’s stay of his order of immediate occupation in fact kept the city out of possession, and that even if the issue made by the alternative writ was moot, it *127 should nevertheless be decided as an issue of public interest for other cases. 3

I. Appealability.

Defendant’s assertion that the city might have appealed the order denying it immediate possession is said to be implied by the opinion in City of Portland v. Anderson, 248 Or 201, 432 P2d 1020 (1967). That decision denied landowners an appeal from an order of immediate possession because it was not a final judgment within ORS 19.010; but the opinion added a caveat that if an owner contested the government’s right to condemn and showed that the property would be irrevocably damaged, the order might be appealable under ORS 19.010(2) (a) as an “order affecting a substantial right, and which in effect determines the action or suit so as to prevent a judgment or decree therein.” 4 Here the order denied the city immediate possession of the property it wants. There is no allegation that anyone is about to render the property irrevocably unfit for the city’s intended use. Whatever might be the case if a condemner sought to appeal under ORS 19.010(2) (a) because denial of immediate possession foreclosed the proposed use and thus prevented a judgment in the condemnation action, the city makes no such claim. Some claim of urgency may be implicit in the motion for immediate possession itself, but not necessarily to the extent that a denial will effectively terminate the action before judgment. We decline to dismiss the alternative writ on this basis.

*128 II. Mootness.

We also agree with the city’s contention that the present mandamus proceeding is not mooted by the city’s second motion for immediate possession and the defendant’s different order thereon after we issued the alternative writ. If the city demanded to be placed in immediate possession of the property and has not yet received an order with that immediate effect, neither the underlying controversy nor the city’s disagreement with defendant in this proceeding has disappeared. The problem, rather, is one of the present state of the proceedings under the terms of the alternative writ, and its disposition depends on the burden of pleading claims and defenses in mandamus proceedings. We hold that the alternative writ sufficiently alleges facts giving rise to a nondiscretionary duty of defendant to grant the city immediate possession of the property, allegations that entitle the city to a peremptory writ in the absence of an affirmative defense that the city could not legally put the specific property to the specific “public use” for which alone the law under which the city acts authorizes the condemnation. No such affirmative defense to the writ has been presented.

The alternative writ of mandamus plays the role of the complaint in a civil action. It “shall state concisely the facts, according to the petition, showing the obligation of the defendant to perform the act, and his omission to perform it ____” ORS 34.150. The defendant “may show cause by motion to dismiss or answer to the writ, in the same manner as to a complaint in an action.” ORS 34.170. The pleadings “have the same effect and construction, and may be amended in the same manner, as pleadings in an action.” ORS

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
665 P.2d 333, 295 Or. 123, 1983 Ore. LEXIS 1294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-city-of-eugene-v-woodrich-or-1983.