Court Opinion

ID: 6897223
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 21:51:05.827993+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:06:02.548434
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Mr. Justice Bean.
The record discloses that in January, 1895, the County Court of Clackamas County levied a tax of four mills on the dollar on all the taxable property within that *217county, and a poll tax of $2 upon each and every person liable therefor, for road purposes, as authorized by subdivision 4 of section 4085, Hill’s Code, as amended in 1893 (Laws 1893, p. 60); and that pursuant to such levy there has been collected from the property and inhabitants of Oregon City, and paid over to the defendant, the sum of $2,874.77, which the plaintiff claims by virtue of subdivision 28, chapter V, of its charter, which reads as follows : “The council shall have exclusive control and direction of all funds collected under general laws for the improvement of roads and streets within said corporation, and the street superintendent shall perform the duties of supervisor as required by the general laws of this State relating to streets and highways; but he shall report to and be under the direction of the city council, and not to the board of county commissioners of Clackamas County; provided, that the city council may, by ordinance, direct that any or all of such funds collected for road purposes be expended on any main county road leading into Oregon City, when in their judgment the city would be benefited thei-eby; provided, that the city council shall turn over to the County Court of Clackamas County forty per cent, of the funds so collected each year, and the same shall be expended under the direction of said County Court on main county roads leading into Oregon City.”
1. In behalf of the defendant, it is contended that this provision of plaintiffs charter is in conflict with article IV, § 23, subd. 7 and 10, of the State constitution, which inhibits the legislature from passing special or local laws “for laying, opening, and working on highways, and for the election or appointment of supervisors,” and “for the assessment and collection of taxes for state, county, township, or road purposes,” and is therefore void. But it seems to us that upon this question the case is ruled by City of East Portland v. County of Mult*218nomah, 6 Or. 62, in which it was held that a provision in an act incorporating a city, excepting the territory within the limits of the municipality from the jurisdiction of the County Court for road purposes, and vesting the same in the municipality, was not violative of the provisions of the constitution referred to. This case was re-affirmed in Multnomah County v. Sliker, 10 Or. 65; and City of Astoria v. Clatsop County, not reported. Now, if the legislature may, by a special law incorporating a city, constitutionally vest in the municipality exclusive jurisdiction over the count}'- roads within its boundaries, it seems to us no valid objection can be made on constitutional grounds to a provision in such an act merely conferring upon the municipal authorities the right to control the expenditure of funds applicable to the improvement of roads and streets within the municipality, collected under general laws.
2. But, notwithstanding the constitutionality of plaintiff’s charter, the demurrer to the alternative writ was properly sustained because it does not appear from the record that the portion of the taxes collected under the levy of January, 1895, to which plaintiff is entitled, has ever been ascertained or determined by the proper tribunal, or at all. The statute under which it was levied provides : That in any county in this State the County Court of such county, at the time of levying the tax for county purposes, may, if in the judgment of the County Court it is for the best interests of the county, levy a tax upon all the taxable property in the county, not to exceed five mills on the dollar, and in addition thereto a poll tax of $2 be assessed upon every person who shall be liable to pay a state poll tax, which taxes shall be collected with and at the same time and in the same manner as county taxes shall be collected, and shall be paid into the county treasury, and shall be kept as a separate fund to be known *219as the road fund, and shall be used for the purpose of laying out, 'opening, making, and repairing county roads, and building and repairing bridges; and no other tax or other taxes for the purpose in this section mentioned shall be levied or collected, except that the County Court may order bridges built or repaired out of the general fund. Such County Court shall apportion the taxes so collected among the several road districts in the county, having due regard to the amount of taxes collected in the several road districts, to the condition of the roads, and necessity for repairs, and to the amount of travel thereon. The county clerk shall thereupon notify the road supervisor in each of the road districts in his county of the amount of the road fund set apart for the use of his road district, for opening, making, and repairing county roads, and building bridges in his road district; and such supervisor shall direct and supervise the expenditure of such amount of the road fund so set apart for the purpose herein named, and certify his accounts for labor performed or material furnished to the County Court; and if the County Court approves the same, it shall order warrants on the county treasurer in favor of the person performing such labor or furnishing such material, payable out of the fund to the credit of such road district, and until such fund is exhausted”: Laws 1893, p. 60. Under the general law, the County Court is invested with jurisdiction to divide the county into road districts, and, by the statute in question, to levy and collect a special tax for road purposes, and apportion the same among the several road districts of the county in the manner therein provided, and, through supervisors appointed by it, to control and direct the expenditure of the amount set apart for each road district. This jurisdiction extends to all parts of the county, including the territory of Oregon City, except as it may be limited and qualified by the city charter. And *220the only limitation to be found in the charter is that the municipal and not the count)' authorities shall “have the control and direction of all funds collected under the general laws for the improvement of roads and streets within said corporation,” and the right to appoint the road supervisor. In all other respects the jurisdiction of the County Court over the territory of Oregon City remains unimpaired. It may divide it into road districts, levy and collect from the inhabitants thereof, and the property therein, in connection with the remainder of the county, a road tax, ascertain and determine the amount thereof, which shall be apportioned to and expended in the road district or districts within the limits of the municipality, but when the apportionment is made its jurisdiction ceases so far as the expenditure of the amount set apart for the district or districts within Oregon City is concerned, and that of the municipality begins. Until such apportionment, there can be no fund arising out of the tax “for the improvement of roads and streets” within Oregon City or in any other district of the county. The statute does not require the tax to be expended in repairing the roads and highways in the district from which it is collected, but it becomes a common road fund to be apportioned by the County Court among the several districts of the county, having due regard to the amount of tax collected from each district, the condition of the roads, and the amount of travel thereon. This apportionment is a judicial act, and until it is made the county treasurer certainly cannot be. compelled by mandamus to pay over any part of the fund to the plaintiff. No such proceeding seems to have been had, and therefore the judgment must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Affirmed.