Wing v. City of Eugene

437 P.2d 836, 249 Or. 367, 1968 Ore. LEXIS 650
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 437 P.2d 836 (Wing v. City of Eugene) 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
Wing v. City of Eugene, 437 P.2d 836, 249 Or. 367, 1968 Ore. LEXIS 650 (Or. 1968).

Opinion

LANGTRY, J.

(Pro Tempore).

Plaintiffs have appealed from a circuit court decree dismissing writs of review. The decree upheld the proceedings of Eugene’s city council in levying special assessments for an off-street parldng facility in downtown Eugene. The área determined to be specially benefited consists of several blocks and half blocks surrounding the proposed facility.

The special assessments are levied in four zones, the closest paying the heaviest and the farthest the least assessment. Plaintiff’s property is in the outer zone. Estimated cost of the facility is two million dollars. Within the assessed area are several parcels which the council found to be public parking lots operated for profit. They were not required to pay special assessments. After the proposed assessments were made, plaintiffs and another owner, whose property was described as the Fisk property, brought separate circuit court writs of review seeking to void the proposed assessments. Further consideration by the council resulted in the Fisk property being given a substantially reduced assessment proportionate to .parts of it found to be used as parking lots for the public, and Fisk dropped its court proceeding.

*370 Initially, notice of the proposed improvement and assessment required by statute was given. When the Fisk property’s proposed assessment was reduced no additional notices were given. The result of Fisk’s reduction is that other proposed assessments will rise substantially in proportion.

Authority for parking improvement facilities is in ORS 223.805 through 223.845, originally enacted by the 1949 Legislature and subsequently amended several times. Procedure for levying assessments for local improvements is in ORS 223.387 through 223.399. Reassessment procedure is in ORS 223.405 through 223.485. ORS 223.401 provides that review of the council’s action may be by writ of review under ORS 34.010 to 34.100. ORS 34.020 provides:

“Any party to any process or proceeding before or by any inferior court, officer, or tribunal may have the decision or determination thereof reviewed for errors * * * and not otherwise # * # «

ORS 34.040 provides that the writ shall be allowed in all cases where the functions appear to have been exercised erroneously or arbitrarily, or where jurisdiction is exceeded to the injury of some substantial right of the plaintiff.

Pursuant to the original writ and its supplements, the proceedings were returned in three parts. Included were records showing proceedings leading to the council’s action, the hearings, and the determination.

Plaintiffs assign a number of errors, which in substance allege that the trial court erred in dismissing the writs because: (1) the council acted in excess of its authority when it exempted commercial public park *371 ing lots from the assessment; (2) the exemption and procedures were unconstitutional; (3) reduction of the assessment on the Fisk property was erroneous; (4) the council acted arbitrarily; and (5) the court did not allow plaintiffs to introduce evidence outside the city’s returns to the writs to support plaintiffs’ contentions of arbitrariness and unconstitutional procedure.

With reference to the fifth assignment, the trial court was correct in refusing to allow additional evidence. In Silva v. State, 243 Or 187, 412 P2d 375 (March 1966), we held that a writ of review must be tried on the record brought from the inferior court. This decision leaves unchanged, after a 1965 amendment to the writ of review statutes, the practice in this regard. See Killingsworth v. Portland, 93 Or 525, 184 P 248 (1919).

The first, second, and fourth assignments of error will be considered together. Under OES 223.810 and 223.815, a city may establish parking facilities and acquire property therefor. Condemnation of property already being used for public parking purposes is prohibited if the owner resists. Broad powers conferred by the statutes allow planning, construction, financing and method of operation. Financing methods include:

“Special or benefit assessments * * * such assessment to be levied against property benefited in proportion to the benefit derived * * OES 223.825 (2).

Parking fees and other facility income are included as a financing method. OES 223.845 states, imter alia, that the city may provide, and if revenue bonds are issued to finance it it must provide, that the revenues from the facility shall be disbursed for some or all of: *372 payment of interest and retirement of bonds; payment of operating expenses; creation of a reserve account for replacements; payment in lieu of taxes; and “Reimbursement of owners of real property for special assessments paid by them * ®

ORS 223.399 says that the city council may by ordinance provide additional assessment procedural requirements. The city before proceeding passed procedural ordinances. Sections 28.66-9 to 28.66-30 of the city code. Therein it was enacted' that an existing public parking lot operated for profit within the assessed area is not deemed benefited and therefore exempted from assessment. Section 28.66-11 (c) provides in the event such lot were to later change its land use it would at such time be proportionately specially assessed and other assessments reduced accordingly.

A levy of a special assessment for a local improvement does not offend the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution unless it is palpably arbitrary. Only where there is a manifest or unreasonable discrimination in fixing the benefits between parcels of property can the legislative (council’s) determination be said to contravene the equal protection clause of the United States Constitution. Kansas City Ry. v. Road District, 266 US 379, 386, 45 S Ct 136, 69 L Ed 335 (1924); Houck v. Little River District, 239 US 254, 36 S Ct 58, 60 L Ed 266 (1915); Valley Farms Co. v. Westchester, 261 US 155, 43 S Ct 261, 67 L Ed 585 (1923). These cases hold that the levying body has a wide discretion to determine whether particular property is specially benefited and may lay benefit assessments in proportion to position, frontage, area, market values or to benefits estimated by commissioners. These cases are *373

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Bluebook (online)
437 P.2d 836, 249 Or. 367, 1968 Ore. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wing-v-city-of-eugene-or-1968.