Strawberry Hill 4 Wheelers v. Board of Commissioners

601 P.2d 769, 287 Or. 591, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 1193
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1979
DocketTC 33160, CA 11086, SC 26015
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 601 P.2d 769 (Strawberry Hill 4 Wheelers v. Board of Commissioners) 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
Strawberry Hill 4 Wheelers v. Board of Commissioners, 601 P.2d 769, 287 Or. 591, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 1193 (Or. 1979).

Opinion

*593 LINDE, J.

Plaintiffs’ effort to challenge the vacation of a county road by means of a writ of review, ORS 34.010 - 34.100, once again brings to this court the recurring problem of the use of the writ for judicial review of the actions of local governments.

Defendants, the Board of Commissioners of Benton County, conducted statutory procedures under ORS 368.565 - 368.582 on a resolution proposing to vacate a portion of County Road No. 26460, known as Old Peak Road. Spokesmen for the complaining associations appeared at the hearing and presented testimony in opposition to the proposal. After the board nevertheless decided to vacate the stretch of road in question, plaintiffs filed a petition for a writ of review attacking the legality of the board’s order in substance and procedure. The circuit court granted defendants’ motion to quash the writ on the ground that road vacation procedures are legislative and not judicial or "quasi-judicial” and therefore are not reviewable by writ of review under ORS 34.040. 1

The circuit court’s order was affirmed by a divided Court of Appeals, sitting in banc. Strawberry Hill 4-Wheelers v. Benton Co. Bd. of Comm., 37 Or App 575, 588 P2d 65 (1978). The majority, in an opinion by *594 Judge Johnson, found that the county’s action in vacating the road had the characteristics of legislative rather than adjudicative action. Judge Thornton’s dissent for three members of the court maintained that the majority’s decision departed from the established statutory scheme for the review of county decisions in road matters. Having allowed review to examine these competing positions, we conclude that notwithstanding the legislative elements in the county’s decision to vacate the road, the writ of review should not have been quashed.

The sources of the problem and of our conclusion take us back to the earliest years of the state’s history.

The writ of review and ’’county business. ”

The functions of county government and of the writ' of review have been intertwined from the beginning. County "courts” were known in England as early as the 11th century and in the colonies during the 18th century. 2 Historically, the use of the term "court” implied no distinction of adjudicative from lawmaking or executive functions, as is evident from its use to describe both the court surrounding a monarch and also a legislature like the "General Court” of Massachusetts. 3 When county government was established in the Oregon territory in 1854, the statute assigned the management of county business but no judicial powers to three county commissioners. Statutes of Oregon, An Act Relating to County Commissioners, Jan. 24, 1854. The state constitution, prepared in 1857 and effective in 1859, authorized county courts as part of the state’s judicial system, to be conducted by an *595 elected county judge. Or Const art VII (orig) §§ 1, 11-14. Section 12 authorized the Legislative Assembly to provide for the election of two county commissioners "to sit with the County Judge whilst transacting County business.” The General Laws of 1859 provided for the election of a county judge who would exercise the powers of the county court. The statute was almost entirely concerned with proceedings within the court’s judicial jurisdiction, except for one section that provided that the county court "shall have cognizance of all county business, and perform the same duties that the board of county commissioners of the several counties were required heretofore to perform,” governed by the laws previously governing the county commissioners. Review from the county judge’s decisions was by appeal to the circuit court. General Laws 1859, An Act to Organize County Courts, §§ 11,12,17. June 4,1859.

The state’s original Code of Civil Procedure, enacted in 1862, set forth the provisions for judicial proceedings, including the several writs, and also the powers of the county courts. General Laws 1862, §§ 572-639, 867-878. Our continuing difficulties with the method of review of county action date from these initial acts, which continue essentially unchanged while modern ideas of the "jurisdiction” of local government and its lawmaking powers have undergone substantial reconsideration. See, e.g., Nyman v. City of Eugene, 286 Or 47, 57-58, 593 P2d 515 (1979).

The 1862 code listed the powers of the county courts under two heads. The county court had jurisdiction of actions at law involving claims up to $500 and exclusive jurisdiction in actions for forcible entry and de-tainer and in probate matters. General Laws 1862, §§ 868, 869. 4 With the participation of the two nonjudicial commissioners, the county court had the "authority and powers pertaining to county commissioners, to *596 transact county business. ” (Emphasis added.) County business was specified to include construction of county buildings, to provide offices and supplies for county officials, and to establish, vacate or alter county roads and bridges, to grant licenses, to levy county taxes, to look after paupers, to care for county property, and to settle contract claims against the county. 5 Gen Laws § 870. This list of "county business” still constitutes the *597 first ten items of ORS 203.120. The law distinguished clearly between the county court’s judicial jurisdiction and its conduct of county business. Section 876 prescribed that the court was to dispose first of its cases at law, second of its probate business (these by the county judge alone) and third of county business, with the participation of the commissioners.

The 1862 code was equally explicit on the mode of reviewing the actions of county courts. Section 875 provided that the code’s provisions for appeals to the circuit court were to apply "to judgments and decrees of the county court in all cases, but not to its decisions given or made in the transaction of county business. In the latter case, the decisions of the court shall only be reviewed upon the writ of review provided by this code.” Again, ORS 203.200

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Bluebook (online)
601 P.2d 769, 287 Or. 591, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 1193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strawberry-hill-4-wheelers-v-board-of-commissioners-or-1979.