State v. Foster

352 P.2d 502, 222 Or. 103, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 483
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 352 P.2d 502 (State v. Foster) 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 v. Foster, 352 P.2d 502, 222 Or. 103, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 483 (Or. 1960).

Opinion

McAllister, C. J.

The defendant, Carl Foster, was convicted of driving an overloaded track and fined $300, from which judgment he appeals.

The case was tried to the court upon an agreed statement of facts. It appears that Foster was employed by a private truck owner who leased his truck to an independent contractor engaged in street construction under a contract with the city of Baker. Defendant was arrested on state highway 86 in Baker while hauling a load of gravel from the Logsdon Pits just beyond the easterly boundary of the city to the place inside the city where the work was in progress. The arrest occurred within the city at a point outside the actual area under construction. At the time of the arrest, the truck was loaded with a gross tandem axle weight of 6,000 pounds more than the maximum weight set by ORS 483.506 (3)(c).

Defendant contends that his vehicle came within the exception created by ORS 483.502 (3) which read as follows:

“The provisions of ORS 483.502 to 483.536 governing size and weight do not apply to any vehicle, combination of vehicles, article, machine or other equipment while being used by the Federal Government, the State of Oregon, or any county or incorporated city in the construction, maintenance or repair of public highways, and at the immediate location or site of such construction, maintenance or repair.”

It will be noted that defendant is entitled to the benefit of the exception created by the statute only if his vehicle was “being used by” an incorporated city and also was being used “at the immediate location or site of such construction.” The trial court held that the [105]*105phrase “being used by” an incorporated city includes only vehicles owned or leased by the city and not vehicles operated by private contractors or subcontractors. "We reach the same conclusion.

The exemption of governmental vehicles from the statutory size and weight restriction originated with Oregon Laws 1925, ch 309, p 586, the pertinent portion of which read as follows:

“* * * The provisions of this section shall not apply to any vehicle, article, machine or other equipment used by any county in the construction, maintenance or repairs of its public highways, or in the transportation of county equipment.”

The above provision was broadened by Oregon Laws 1931, ch 360, § 80 (1), p 665 to include vehicles used by the state or federal governments and also to exempt “the transportation of federal, state or county equipment or supplies.”

The exemption was extended by Oregon Laws 1951, ch 405, p 628 to vehicles being used by any incorporated city or town but the provision exempting “the transportation of federal, state or county equipment or supplies” was eliminated.

By Oregon Laws 1953, ch 691, p 1314, the exemption of governmental vehicles from the statutory size and weight restrictions was further curtailed by the addition of the provision that it applied only “at the immediate location or site of such construction, maintenance or repair.”

We find in the legislative history of the statute exempting government vehicles from the statutory size and weight restrictions no indication of a legislative intent to exempt vehicles operated by private contractors.

[106]*106We attach considerable significance to the fact that in 1957 the legislature specifically provided that “common or contract carriers when acting as agent for or on direct orders of such a utility or district” should be entitled to the same exemption which had theretofore been granted only to vehicles “used” by public utilities, people’s utilities districts and cooperative rural electrification districts in the transportation and hauling of poles, piling or structures used in connection with their, business. See Oregon Laws 1957, ch 621, p 999.

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Related

Sorensen v. Tillamook County
467 P.2d 433 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
352 P.2d 502, 222 Or. 103, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-foster-or-1960.