State ex rel. Cox v. Davidson Industries, Inc.

620 P.2d 942, 49 Or. App. 657, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 3873
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 8, 1980
DocketNo. 77-5311, CA 15484
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 620 P.2d 942 (State ex rel. Cox v. Davidson Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Cox v. Davidson Industries, Inc., 620 P.2d 942, 49 Or. App. 657, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 3873 (Or. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

JOSEPH, P.J.

Plaintiff brought this suit for an injunction against defendant Davidson Industries, Inc. (Davidson) to require it to restore Siboco Slough to its original condition (ORS 541-605 - 541.665). Plaintiff alleged that Davidson created a public nuisance1 by constructing an earth fill dike in "waters of this state” without a permit from the State Division of Lands (Division).

Davidson owns a large parcel of property on the Suislaw River near the ocean on the Siboco Slough. Its use of the land primarily involves the timber covering the hills on each side of the slough. Cattle pasture on the flatlands. In 1977, Davidson constructed a dike on its land as a roadway across the slough to provide access to the timber and to reduce mileage for transporting the timber to mill. The dike was pierced at both ends by large culverts with tide gates. Davidson did not secure a permit from the Division for the construction of the dike. It believed that the fill was above the high tide line and that therefore a permit from the Division was not required.

The trial court dismissed the complaint:

"IT IS HEREBY CONCLUDED that the Plaintiff failed to prove that the dike was constructed upon waters of the State of Oregon.
"Furthermore, even if it were determined that the dike was constructed on waters of the State of Oregon, the encroachment is upon waters so minimally within the waters of the State, and such minimal damages have been done and will be done to the State of Oregon and its people that removal of the dike would not be appropriate. Weighing the equities of the case and the statutory considerations set forth in ORS 541.605 et seq, the appropriate order would be to require the removal of the tide gates and the installation of a three foot culvert in the center of the dike.”

[660]*660The Division appeals, claiming that the trial court erred in finding that the fill was not constructed on waters of this state and in not ordering removal of the fill. It argues that the evidence showed that the fill was in fact within waters of the state and proposes three alternative arguments. It first claims that the fill is located below the line of mean higher high tide and is, therefore, within the waters of the state; second, that the fill is located below the highest predicted tide and is thus within the waters of the state; and, third, that the fill is constructed below the line of non-aquatic vegetation in the area and, therefore, is located within the waters of the state.

ORS 541.615(1) provides:

"Except as otherwise specifically permitted under ORS 541.605 to 541.665, no person or governmental body shall remove any material from the beds or banks or fill any waters of this state without a permit issued under authority of the Director of the Division of State Lands, or in a manner contrary to the conditions set out in the permit.”

ORS 541.605(12), formerly 541.605(8), defines "waters of this state”:

" 'Waters of this state’ means natural waterways including all tidal and nontidal bays, intermittent streams, constantly flowing streams, lakes and other bodies of water in this state, navigable and nonnavigable, including that portion of the Pacific Ocean which is in the boundaries of this state.”

The complaint alleged "that Siboco Slough, an arm of the Siuslaw Bay, is a tidal Bay.” It further alleged that "[defendant has not secured a permit from the Division of State Lands to place the fill” and "that a permit is required from the Division of State Lands to fill a tidal bay.” It was also claimed that the area surrounding the dike exhibited other marine characteristics: "The area behind the dike is salt marsh lands and are [sic] an important element of a productive estuary to provide organic nutrients and food organisms that enrich and sustain the estuarine food chain.”

Natural waterways, including tidal bays, are within the statutory definition of "waters of this state.” ORS 541.605(12). To prove that the dike was constructed in [661]*661waters of the state, the Division was required only to prove its allegation that the dike was in a tidal bay. Whether the other kinds of marine areas ("estuary” and "salt marsh lands”) are waters of this state is not the decisive issue.2 If the Division proved that the dike was constructed in a tidal bay, the other allegations were surplusage.

The evidence shows that Siboco Slough, as a part of Siuslaw Bay, is generally subject to tidal influence, and Davidson acknowledges that the dike is in an area that is actually subject to tidal influence. Its own evidence of tidal frequency shows that normal tidal action, albeit infrequently, perhaps, reached above the elevation of the location of the dike. The dike prevents that tidal water from flooding areas landward of the dike, except to the extent permitted by the gates Davidson built into it.

Davidson claims that the dike is not within waters of the state because it was constructed landward of the mean higher high water line. Of course tidal action reaches elevations above the line of mean higher high water, so that line could not define the boundary of a tidal bay.3 We conclude that the dike is constructed in a natural waterway, as defined in the statute.

The public policy of the Removal and Fill Law is expressed in ORS 541.610(1):

[662]*662"The protection, conservation and best use of the water resources of this state are matters of the utmost public concern. Streams, lakes and other bodies of water in this state, including not only water and materials for domestic, agricultural and industrial use but also habitats and spawning areas for game and food fish, avenues for transportation and sites for public recreation, are vital to the economy and well-being of this state and its people. Unregulated removal of material from the beds and banks of the waters of this state may create hazards to the health, safety and welfare of the people of this state. Unregulated filling in the waters of this state may result in interfering with or injuring public navigation, fishery and recreational uses of the waters. In order to provide for the best possible use of the water resources of this state, it is desirable to centralize authority in the Director of the Division of State Lands, and implement control of the removal of material from the beds and banks or filling of the waters of the state.”

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Related

State Ex Rel. Cox v. Davidson Industries, Inc.
635 P.2d 630 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
620 P.2d 942, 49 Or. App. 657, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 3873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cox-v-davidson-industries-inc-orctapp-1980.