Court Opinion

ID: 6900124
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 21:54:05.849571+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:59:48.366564
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Hailey
delivered the opinion of the court.
1. The practice pursued in this- ease of attaching to the petition a number of exhibits and treating them as the record of the proceedings to be reviewed we do not regard as being in accord with the intention of our Code providing for a writ of review. The sole virtue claimed for such procedure is economy; but this doubtful claim should not supplant the necessity for regularity in compliance with the provisions of our statute. Section 596 of our Code (B. & C. Comp.) clearly does not intend that the petition shall do more than describe with convenient certainty the decision or determination sought to be reviewed, and set forth the errors alleged to have been committed therein. Section 598 of the Code (B. & C. Comp.) provides that before allowing the writ an undertaking with one or more sureties, to be approved by the court, must be filed by the plaintiff, and the statutory amount of such undertaking is sufficient to protect the defendant in such a proceeding against all reasonable pecuniary expenses,' and Section 599 provides for the return of the writ with a copy of the record or proceedings in question annexed, certified to by the clerk or *85other person having the custody of such record or proceedings. This court in Dayton v. Board of Equalization, 33 Or. 131-139 (50 Pac. 1009, 1012), in speaking of the office of the writ of review under our Code, said: “It is substantially the common-law remedy by certiorari, which was invoked for the purpose of having the entire record of the inferior tribunal brought up for inspection, to determine whether it had jurisdiction or had exceeded its jurisdiction, or had failed to proceed according to the essential requirements of the law.” The purpose' of the writ being thus clearly defined, it would seem unnecessary to encumber the petition with numerous exhibits which are copies of the record or proceedings to be reviewed, and like copies of which are to be annexed to and returned with the writ.
2. No provision is made in our Code for filing any pleading after the order directing the issuance of the writ, except the writ itself, with the return of the defendants annexed thereto. There being no provision for a motion to quash the writ, it is doubtful whether such a motion will lie under our Code, for such a motion under the writ of certiorari was made for the purpose of dismissing the proceedings, whereas, under our practice, if the return shows the decision or determination reviewed to be proper, the court must affirm such decision or determination, and, if improper or void, the court must modify, reverse or annul such decision or determination, as the case may be, or by mandate direct the inferior court to proceed in the matter reviewed according to its decision: Section 603, B. & C. Comp.; Woodruff v. County of Douglas, 17 Or. 314-320 (21 Pac. 49). Thus, under our Code, the proceedings are not to be dismissed, but acted upon in accordance with Section 603, B. & C. Comp. There being no return of the writ, the demurrers can only be treated as motions to dismiss the petition for insufficiency of facts to warrant the issuance of a writ, and while we deem such procedure decidedly irregular and not warranted by our Code, inasmuch as the lower court and all parties have practically so regarded the demurrers, they will be so treated in this case, but not to serve as a precedent; the *86proper procedure being, if such a'motion to quash the writ is necessary or permissible under our Code, to file the same on the return day after the return of the writ: 6 Cyc. 16. Under such a motion to dismiss the allegations of the petition are taken as true: 4. Encyc. Pl. & Pr. 250. It will only be necessary, then, to ascertain whether or not the petition states facts sufficient to warrant the issuance of the writ.
3. The petition, after alleging the ownership of three certain lots in the City of Portland by plaintiff, and the corporate, character of the city, and the official character of the other defendants, alleges. that defendants, by the passage of certain resolutions and ordinances, and doing other acts, .all of which are set out or referred to in the petition, assessed to plaintiff’s lots certain sums mentioned therein for the cost of making certain improvements on Main Street, upon which said lots are located, and that such assessments were entered in the docket of city liens, and that, plaintiff having failed to pay such assessments, the lots were afterwards advertised for sale and sold by the city to J. Erainey and J. Keating on June 29, 1903, for the full amount of such assessment and all costs, interest and penalties, and return made of such sale to the proper officer. It is also alleged that thereafter a second delinquent list was obtained by the treasurer from the city auditor and a false return made thereon, to the effect that two only of plaintiff’s lots had been sold and that the other lot had not been sold for want of bidders, which second list and false return thereon were substituted for said first list and true return, which latter had been removed and could not be found. It then alleges the adoption of a resolution by the council on October 5, 1904, directing the auditor of the city to prepare a reassessment on the lots of plaintiff and all other property within the district affected by that portion of Main Street where the improvements were made for which plaintiff’s lots had been sold, which reassessment was based upon the provisions of Section 400 of the charter, providing that a reassessment may be made for the improvement of any street when “the council shall be in doubt as to the validity of such assessment, *87■or any part thereof”; and then alleges various acts of the defendants toward the perfection of snch reassessment and the adoption of ordinances making such reassessment, and declaring the -same a lien upon plaintiff’s lots and authorizing the auditor to take the proper steps for the sale of such lots in case the payment of the assessment should not be made.
It then sets forth the errors alleged to have been committed in making such reassessment, and alleges that the defendants claim the right of selling plaintiff’s property under the following portion of Section 400 of the Charter of the City of Portland:
“And when it has been attempted to sell property for any assessment and such sale is found or declared void, upon the making of the reassessment, the property shall be resold and the proceeds of such sale shall be paid to the purchaser at the former void sale or his assigns.”
It is then alleged that this provision is in contravention of the constitution of this State, Art. I, § 18, in this: that it attempts to authorize the defendants to take private property without just compensation, and attempts to authorize defendants to take the private property of one person and give it to another person without the assent of the owner and without compensation. It also alleges that the defendants are without jurisdiction to reassess plaintiff’s property by reason of the fact that such property has once been sold by the city for the full amount of the assessment levied against the same for the same improvements for the cost of which defendants are seeking to reassess it. Several other errors are alleged, but we deem it unnecessary to consider them. Several other allegations are made in the petition which we do not think can be considered at this time, as they are not material to the issuance of the writ of review, among them being the allegation that the sale of plaintiff’s lots on June 29, 1903, was after-wards, by decree of the circuit court of Multnomah County, set aside and declared void, and the assessment upon which it was based also declared void. ' ■
It will be noted that the petition alleges the sale of plaintiff’s *88lots on June 29, 1903, for the full amount of the original assessment against them for the improvements - on Main Street. In the case of Dowell v. Portland, 13 Or. 248 (10 Pac. 308), certain lots in the City of Portland had been assessed for street improvements and entered in the docket of city liens against a person who- was not the owner of the lots, and were after-wards sold and the purchase price paid therefor. Such sale being void, it was contended on the part of the city that it had a right to reassess the property by making a correct entry in the docket of liens, and ilpon the failure of the true owner to pay the reassessment to sell the property. But the court held that, the property having been sold and the assessment paid into the city treasury, the power on the part of the city to sell' had been executed and exhausted,' and that the city had no power to reassess and resell the- property-of. the plaintiff, and that the purchaser who had bought the lots at the void sale had done so under the doctrine of caveat emptor, and, there being-no provision in the charter for refunding the purchase price to him, the city’s claim against the lots for improvements was fully satisfied. The doctrine of caveat. emptor, as declared in the above case, has since been followed by this court in Keenan v. Portland, 27 Or. 544 (38 Pac. 2), and Gaston v. Portland, 41 Or. 373-376 (69 Pac. 34, 445).
It is claimed, however, by the defendants that the doctrine of Dowell v. Portland has no application to this ease, as the power to reassess is given by Section 400 of the charter of-1903, whenever the original assessment has been declared void, or the council has doubt as to the validity of the original assessment or any part thereof. This contention would no doubt be true if the. city had not sold the property assessed for its claims for improvements, as the city would have the right to reassess and sell under Section 400 as long as its claim was unpaid by sale of the property or otherwise. If the doctrine of caveat emptor, as declared in the eases cited, still obtains under the present charter of the City of Portland, the city undoubtedly cannot resell the property for its own benefit after having once satisfied its claim for improvements by a sale of the property. *89We find nothing in the charter authorizing the city to refund the purchase price to the purchaser at a void sale. Consequently the doctrine of Dowell v. Portland applies to like cases, unless it has been changed by'that part of Section 400 authorizing the city ’ to reassess property where a sale has been declared void, in which event “the property shall be resold and the proceeds of such sale shall be paid to the purchaser at the former void sale or his ■ assigns.” This provision clearly does not permit the city to resell for it's own benefit.
4. The question, then, is whether or not the city has a right to reassess and resell the plaintiff’s property for the benefit of the purchaser at the void sale. Section 412 of the charter provides:
, “Each piece or tract of land shall be sold separately, and for a sum not less than the unpaid assessment thereon ■ and the interest and cost of'advertising and sale; and where there shall be more than one bid, the land shall be sold to .the bidder offering to' take the same for the least amount of penalty and interest.”.
Section 400 provides that .reassessment liens shall be enforced and collected in' the same manner that other assessments for local improvements are enforced and collected under the charter. Bearing in mind, then, that the proceeds of the resale shall be paid to the purchaser at the void sale or his assigns, and not to the city, and that there is no provision in the charter whereby a purchaser at a void sale shall be reimbursed for his purchase price other than receiving the proceeds at a resale upon a reassessment of the property, we have the peculiar condition existing under the provisions of this charter whereby upon a reassessment and resale of the property, if it should sell for a greater sum than the original purchaser paid at the first' sale or for more than the amount of the reassessment, such purchaser would receive the entire proceeds of the resale, thus causing the owner of the property to'pay him, not only the amount of his original purchase price, but all the excess of the second bid over such original price or reassessment. Such a procedure would compel the owner of property wrongfully sold to repay to the purchaser of his property, not only *90the purchase price, but possibly many times that; for, upon a reassessment and sale, the irregularities of the first assessment and sale would presumably be cured and the property possibly sell for a better price by reason thereof. It in effect would sell the owner’s property and give the proceeds to the former purchaser, to whom neither the city nor the owner owed any moral or legal obligation to pay anything. This, we think, cannot be done under our constitution, as it is clearly taking one man’s property and giving it to another: Witham v. Osburn, 4 Or. 318, 322 (18 Am. Rep. 287). We therefore hold that the petition states facts sufficient to warrant the issuance of the writ, and that the motions should have been denied and a full return made upon the writ.
5. It is claimed by the defendants, also, that the purchasers, Frainey and Keating, having been the contractors who made the improvements upon the street for which the assessments were made against the plaintiff’s property, should be considered more favorably than ordinary purchasers. This contention, however, has been decided to the contrary by this court in the ease of Keenan v. Portland, 27 Or. 544 (38 Pac. 2).
The .judgment of the lower court will therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. Reversed.