Zilesch v. Polk County

215 P. 578, 107 Or. 659, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 181
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 215 P. 578 (Zilesch v. Polk County) 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
Zilesch v. Polk County, 215 P. 578, 107 Or. 659, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 181 (Or. 1923).

Opinion

McBRIDE, C. J.

The decision of the Circuit Court is not attacked as to the two points decided in favor of the appellants; so there remains only to consider the legality of the location of the highway in the manner that disregards the towns of Dallas and Independence as fixed monuments on the road. This, again, turns upon the construction to be given to subdivision 5 of Section 8, supra, which, if broad enough to confer the power exercised by the commission in changing the route of the highway, ends appellants’ case. Or, if the section last above quoted [664]*664shall be held valid, then, irrespective of any construction which may be put upon subdivision 5 of the original act, the same result must follow. We are of the opinion that subdivision 5 is in itself sufficient to authorize the changes in location made by the commission and are further of the opinion that Chapter 361, supra, was a valid exercise of legislative power; and, these two propositions being decisive of this case, it will be unnecessary to discuss the other issues disclosed by the pleadings and briefs of counsel.

In view of' the language employed in subdivision 5 of Section 8, above quoted, the designation of certain towns, including Dallas and Independence, as being-places through which the highway should run cannot be taken as a definite, unalterable location of the road. The description was general and was intended to be so. No survey or examination of the route had been made and it was evidently on the legislative mind that upon a survey being made it might turn out that it would be cheaper or more advantageous to deviate from the route specified in favor of a better route or one which required less expense in its construction. The section quoted either expresses this intent or it is meaningless except by a forced construction of the language used.

Subdivision 2 of Section 6, supra, describes a highway, with fixed termini and intermediate local calls, namely, Hillsboro, Forest Grove, McMinnville, Dallas, Monmouth, Independence, etc. These calls are a part of the description of the route to be pursued; but, no doubt for the reason above adverted to, it was thought best not to tie the hands of the highway commission to such an extent that if upon further investigation it should be found that a better route should be disclosed the commission would be prevented from giving the people of the state the advan[665]*665tage of such discovery. The act describes a general or tentative route, but permits the commission to make “such local changes in the location thereof as they may deem proper.” What is a local change? Bouvier defines “local” to mean “Relating to place. A particular place.” Now, the only “places” or “particular places” mentioned in the act are these towns; therefore it follows, necessarily, that in using the words “local changes” the legislature had reference to changes from the points or places specified in the act. No other construction is logically admissible. When the commission attempted to make the change shown by its present survey it soon found itself involved in a controversy with citizens of Dallas and Independence who denied its authority to make any change in the location of the highway which would deflect it from the points mentioned in the act of 1917, and at the 1921 legislative session, Chapter 361, Laws of 1921, contained a provision quoted herein which- in terms granted the commission plenary power to make such changes in the location “as in the judgment and discretion of the highway commission will result in better alignment, more advantageous and economical highway construction, or will contribute to and afford a better or more serviceable system of state highways than is possible under the present statutory locations.”

It is difficult to ?see how language could be more explicit of an intent to leave the whole matter of location of the route to the commission than that thus used. In the opinion of the writer the section was unnecessary, but it served to clear up any doubt which might have existed as to the true intent of subdivision 5 of Section 8, supra; and, but for a dictum in Rockhill v. Benson, 97 Or. 176 (191 Pac. 497), it is probable that this case would not have been [666]*666brought. Neither the construction of subdivision 2 of Section 8, supra, nor of the language quoted from Chapter 361, supra, was involved in that case. The town of Eiddle had not been named in the highway act as a point on the Pacific Highway, but because the main highway previously laid out by the County Court ran through Eiddle it was contended that the highway commission had no power to lay out a new highway but must conform the road to the then existing highway or to such other route as the county court should establish. Chapter 361, supra, was not in existence at the time Rockhill v. Benson was decided and was evidently passed with intent to clear up any doubt that might have been created by the dictum in that case to the effect that where the bonding act designated certain points on the route of the highway such route could not be changed by the commission. Under the conditions existing and the issues presented in the Eockhill case the expressions relied upon by appellants cannot be held to be the deliberate opinion of this court or even of the learned jurist who wrote the opinion.

Is Chapter 361 of the General Laws of Oregon for 1921 violative of any provisions of the Constitution? In discussing this question we must bear in mind the often repeated doctrine that the courts should exercise the power of declaring a statute-unconstitutional with extreme caution. When a statute is on trial for unconstitutionality it should be afforded every reasonable chance for its life. This court is committed to the doctrine that before a statute can be declared unconstitutional such unconstitutionality should appear to be free from all reasonable doubt: Cline v. Greenwood, 10 Or. 230; Crowley v. State, 11 Or. 512 (6 Pac. 70); Crawford v. Linn County, [667]*66711 Or. 482 (5 Pac. 738); State v. Cochran, 55 Or. 157, 180 (104 Pac. 419, 105 Pac. 884).

It is contended that the act is unconstitutional because it is an amendment to Chapter 423, Oregon Laws of 1917. We do not so regard it. It may be a piece of unnecessary legislation and an attempt to confer power, which we hold already existed in the commission; but it repeals nothing in the original act. The route of the highway was at least tentatively designated in the original act and, if we grant that such act located the highway even permanently through Dallas and Independence, the passage of a new and independent statute authorizing the commission to relocate it upon another route, if in the commission’s judgment such route was better for any reason, did not repeal the statute which located the route in the first instance; that statute still stood and furnished authority to the commission to build the highway to Dallas and Independence if in its judgment the highway should run through those cities. On appellants’ theory the state had in posse, if not in esse, a highway permanently located through Dallas and Independence. Having this, but being in doubt about the expediency of the location, it passed an independent act authorizing the commission to locate the highway elsewhere if it deemed such change advisable.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Prete v. Bradbury
438 F.3d 949 (Ninth Circuit, 2006)
Prete v. Bradbury Et
438 F.3d 949 (Ninth Circuit, 2006)
Warren v. Thomas
568 P.2d 400 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1977)
Allison v. Washington County
548 P.2d 188 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1976)
Luker v. Curtis
136 P.2d 978 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 P. 578, 107 Or. 659, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zilesch-v-polk-county-or-1923.