Tillamook Peoples' Utility District v. Coates

149 P.2d 558, 174 Or. 476, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 37
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 149 P.2d 558 (Tillamook Peoples' Utility District v. Coates) 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
Tillamook Peoples' Utility District v. Coates, 149 P.2d 558, 174 Or. 476, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 37 (Or. 1944).

Opinion

BAILEY, C. J.

This suit was instituted by Tillamook Peoples’ Utility District, a municipal corporation, and E. E. Allen, Jr., John Sehild, A. D. Thompson and M. B. Terry, residents and taxpayers of that district, to enjoin W. Thomas Coates, county clerk of Tillamook county, from submitting to the voters of Tillamook Peoples’ Utility District at the November, 1944, election or any other election, the question of the approval or rejection by such voters of ordinance No. 4 of that district, and for a declaratory judgment to the *478 effect that ordinance No. 4 is not a proper subject of referendum.

The complaint alleges that Tillamook Peoples’ Utility District is a duly organized and existing utility district under the constitution and laws of the state of Oregon and located in Tillamook county, Oregon; that at a duly and regularly called election held on November 5,1940, the voters of that district authorized the issuance and sale of bonds by the district in the amount of $750,000, “for the purpose of acquiring, either by purchase and construction, or by construction, the. necessary plant, works, and other property for the development, transmission, and distribution of electric energy”; and that thereafter, on June 12, 1943,’the board of directors of that district duly adopted ordinance No. 4, providing for the issuance and sale of bonds of the district in the amount above specified, for the purpose of acquiring an electric utility system.

Plaintiffs further aver that thereafter, sometime in July, 1943, there were presented to the defendant county clerk “eighteen purported petitions denominated ‘Petitions for Referendum’, addressed to defendant as county clerk and being substantially in the form set out in section 81-2101, O. C. L. A., whereby the signers” of those petitions “purported to order that said ordinance No. 4 of plaintiff district be referred to the people of said district for their approval or rejection at the November, 1944, general election”; that the defendant accepted and filed such petitions over the objection of the plaintiff district; that by reason of such filing the question of approval or rejection of ordinance No. 4 may be submitted to the voters of the district, unless restrained by the court; and that the threat of the defendant to submit the ordinance *479 to the voters has rendered uncertain the sale of the bonds of the district.

“If said matter is so submitted by defendant” to the voters of the district, the plaintiffs state, Tillamook county under the law will be required to mail to each voter of the district a pamphlet containing a printed copy of ordinance No. 4, “and the expense required for that will be a large sum, probably $1,000.00 and upward and thereby the taxes on the property of plaintiffs and of other taxpayers in said county will be materially increased.”

To that complaint the defendant county clerk filed an answer, in which he admitted all the material allegations of the complaint and by way of affirmative answer alleged the filing, over the objection of the plaintiff district, of the referendum petitions above mentioned. The defendant further alleged that he “has no personal interest in the matters alleged in plaintiffs’ complaint, but desires only to perform his duty in accordance with the law”; and that he “does not know what course to follow and therefore alleges that this court should determine the issues involved, the rights of the parties hereto and the course to be followed by the defendant.” The prayer of the defendant is that the court “declare the rights, status and other legal relationship of the respective parties hereto ’ ’ and grant such other and further relief as may be proper.

Before the county clerk filed his answer, John Jenck filed a petition for leave to intervene, in which petition it is stated that Jenck is a resident, taxpayer and legal voter of the utility district and is one of the circulators of the referendum petitions mentioned in the complaint, and that he has an interest in the matter in litigation. Accompanying the petition for leave to *480 intervene and attached to it as an exhibit was a copy of the “complaint in intervention” which Jenek asked permission to file. The court permitted Jenek to intervene and to file his proposed complaint in intervention.

In that complaint the intervenor reiterates the statements set forth in his petition to intervene, and asserts that he has a right “to intervene in said suit, and either unite with the defendant in resisting the claims of the plaintiffs, or in the event the defendant refuses to appear and answer the complaint of the plaintiffs, to demand that the county clerk carry out his duties and place said referendum measure upon the official ballot in the next general election to be held in November, 1944.” In the prayer of the complaint in intervention the intervenor asks that the plaintiffs’ suit be dismissed, and that the court enter a decree directing and commanding the defendant to refer the measure to the voters of the utility district.

To the complaint in intervention the plaintiffs filed an answer, in which they reasserted all the allegations of their original complaint and denied all the allegations “contained in intervenor’s complaint herein, except as the same conform to the allegations of plaintiffs’ original complaint.”

After a hearing on the issues of law and fact involved in the case, the court entered a decree enjoining the defendant county clerk from referring the ordinance in question to the voters of the utility district for their approval or rejection. From that decree the intervenor alone has appealed. The defendant county clerk has made no appearance in this court.

Only one assignment of error is set forth in the appellant’s brief, to-wit, that the court erred in failing to sustain his demurrer to the complaint. The *481 demurrer of the intervenor was oral and was interposed by him at the beginning of the trial on the merits. The ground of demurring ivas that the “plaintiffs do not have legal capacity to bring the suit which was filed, and that the complaint... doesn’t state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of suit against defendant, Coates; and for the further reason that the court has no jurisdiction in an injunction case brought by individuals against an officer of the state.”

The ordinance against which the referendum is directed was designed to effectuate the will of the voters of the district expressed by their vote in approving the $750,000 bond issue. It specified the denomination and form of the bonds, the rate of interest to be paid, maturity dates and other matters common to utility bonds. Such an ordinance is administrative rather than legislative in character. In Whitbeck v. Funk, 140 Or. 70, 12 P. (2d) 1019, an attempt was made to refer to the voters of the city of Portland an ordinance enacted by that municipality selecting and designating certain real property for use as a public market and authorizing the purchase thereof and the preparation and execution of a contract. That ordinance was enacted in pursuance of a preceding ordinance which authorized the issuance of public market utility bonds for the construction or acquisition by purchase of a public market utility within the city.

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Bluebook (online)
149 P.2d 558, 174 Or. 476, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tillamook-peoples-utility-district-v-coates-or-1944.