Farrell v. Port of Columbia

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Bean.

This suit involves the constitutionality of an act of the legislative assembly of 1907 to establish and incorporate the Port of Columbia: Laws 1907, p. 182. By this act the counties of Multnomah, Clatsop and Columbia are created a separate district, and the inhabitants thereof are constituted and declared to be a corporation by the name and style of the “Port of Columbia,” and as such to have perpetual succession; to hold, receive and dispose of real and personal property; to sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded in all suits or. proceedings brought by or against it. The declared object of the corporation so formed is to promote the maritime shipping and commercial interest of the Port of Columbia. For that purpose, it is given power and made it.s duty to own, operate and maintain a towage service from the open sea, at the entrance of the Columbia River, to all points upon the river extending as far inland as Tongue Point, near Astoria; to purchase, own, lease, control and operate tugs and pilot boats'; to appoint and license pilots; to fix and collect charge.for pilotage; to acquire, nown and dispose of real and personal property; to make any contracts the making of which is not in this act expressly prohib*171ited; and to do all other acts and things which may be requisite, necessary or convenient in carrying out the powers conferred. For the purpose of acquiring tug and pilot boats, and providing the same with necessary appliances, the corporation is given power to issue, sell and dispose of bonds not exceeding the aggregate sum of $400,000, and power and authority to assess, levy and collect each year a tax upon all property, real or personal, within its boundaries, which is by law taxable for state and county purposes, not to exceed a rate therein specified, to retire such bonds at maturity and the payment of interest thereon. The power and authority given to the corporation is to be exercised by a board of commissioners, and their successors in office to be appointed as in this act provided.

1. This law was evidently modeled after that creating the Port of Portland (Laws 1891, p. 791), and, if the constitution had not been amended since the enactment of the latter statute, it could possibly be sustained, if otherwise valid, on.the ground that it is a corporation created for municipal purposes. At the time of the passage of the Port of Portland act, the Constitution of Oregon (Article XI, §2), provided that corporations might be formed under general laws, but should not be created by special laws, except for municipal purposes, and it was held that the Port of Portland was a corporation formed for municipal purposes within the meaning of this provision: Cook v. Port of Portland, 20 Or. 580 (27 Pac. 263: 13 L. R. A. 533). In June, 1906, the section referred to was amended to read:

“Corporations may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by the legislative assembly by special laws.- The legislative assembly shall not enact, amend or repeal any charter or act of incorporation for any municipality, city or town. The legal voters of every city and town are hereby granted power to enact and amend their municipal charter, subject to the Constitution and criminal laws of the State of Oregon.”

By this amendment the power to create corporations for municipal purposes by special act was not only eliminated, but the creation of a corporation by such an act is expressly prohibited, and it is no longer in the power of the legislative *172authority to create a corporation, public or private by a special law. It would seem, therefore, that the act incorporating the Port of Columbia is in violation of this section, as amended, and void.

2. But counsel argue that it is a. general and not a special law, and therefore not prohibited by the constitution. It - is not easy to define the distinction between a general law and one that is special, and, to use the language of the Court of Appeals of New York: “It has been found expedient to leave the matter, to a considerable extent, open, to be determined upon the special circumstances of each case”: Ferguson v. Ross, 126 N. Y. 459 (27 N. E. 954). Statutes are often classified as public or general and private or special, a public statute being one of which the courts will take judicial notice, while a private statute must he pleaded: 1 Kent, *460; 1 Blackstone; *85. That this is a public law must be conceded, not only because it is one of-which the courts will take judicial notice, but because the constitution provides that every statute shall be a public law unless otherwise declared by the statute itself r Article IV, § 27. It does- not follow, however, that because it is a public law it is a general one. “Public” and “general” as applied to statutes are sometimes synonymous, depending upon the context, but they are not so in all eases. Every general law is necessarily a public one, but every public law is not a general one. Thus, an act incorporating a city is a public law, but it is not a general one, because it is applicable to a particular locality. Also, an act authorizing a certain school district to issue -bonds for the purpose of erecting a sehoolhouse, and purchasing a site therefor, is a special law, and in violation of a constitutional provision that “the legislature shall pass no special act conferring corporate power”: Clegg v. School District, 8 Neb. 179; School District v. Insurance Co. 103 U. S. 707 (26 L. Ed. 601). And, again, laws amending a city charter in respect to making local improvements, or extending the limits of a particular city, are special acts, and held unconstitutional under a provision that “the legislature shall pass no *173special act conferring corporate power”: Atchison v. Bartholow, 4 Kan. 124; City of Wyandotte v. Wood, 5 Kan. 603; State ex rel. v. City of Cincinnati, 20 Ohio St. 18. When used as opposite to “private,” and having reference to the subject-matter of a statute, the term “general” is equivalent to “public.”

When, however, it is used in reference to the territory embraced within a law, and in opposition to “local,” it means operating over the whole jurisdiction of the lawmaking power, instead of a particular locality. And, when it is used in contradistinction to “special,” it signifies relating to the whole community or all of a class instead of to a particular locality •or a part of a class. In this latter sense a law is general when it operates equally and uniformly upon all persons, places or things brought within the relation and circumstances for which it provided. But when it is applicable only to. a particular branch or designated portion of such persons, places or things, or is limited in the object to which it applies, it is special: Lippman v. People, 175 Ill. 101 (51 N. E. 872); Wheeler v. Pennsylvania, 77 Pa. 338; 26 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.), 532; 1 Lewis, Sutherland, Stat. Const. §195. It is in this sense that the- terms “general” and “special” are used in the provision of the constitution now under consideration. The .object of-the amendment was -to deprive the lawmaking po-wer of the right to create particular corporations, either public or private,-and to require that all corporations be formed under a law the provisions - of which shall be applicable alike to all. A general law, within -this section of- the constitution, is one by which all persons or localities complying with its provisions may be entitled to exercise the-powers and enjoy the rights and privileges conferred. A special law,’ on the other hand, is one conferring upon certain individuals or citizens of a certain locality rights and powers or liabilities not granted to, or imposed upon, others similarly situated. The act creating the ■Port of Portland is clearly a' special law as so defined, and cannot be upheld without doing violence to the expressed and plain language of the constitution. The provision of Article *174IV, § 23, prohibiting the passage of special and local laws on enumerated subjects, was under discussion in Allen v. Hirsch, 8 Or. 412, and Maxwell v. Tillamook County, 20 Or. 495 (26 Pac. 803). What is there said in reference to the distinction between general and special laws must be understood as applying to the construction of that provision of the constitution and has only a general bearing upon the present case.

The cases of Dunn v. State University, 9 Or. 357, and Liggett v. Ladd, 23 Or. 26-45 (31 Pac. 81), are cited as authorities supporting defendants’ position. It is argued that the regents of the University and of the Agricultural College are not corporations for municipal purposes, and, since at the time of the passage of the laws providing for their appointment and defining their duties the legislature was inhibited from creating corporations-by special law, except for such purposes, the court necessarily must have concluded in ruling that they are incorporations and that the act providing for their appointment was a general one. Dunn v. University, (which was cited in Liggett v. Ladd, as authority for holding that the regents of the Agricultural College are a body capable of taking and holding title to real property) was a suit to avoid a deed made to the regents. The defense was that they were agents of and held the property in trust for the State, and therefore could not be sued. The court considered this position unsound. The effect which the provision of the constitution inhibiting the creation of corporations by special act had on the question for decision is not referred to or mentioned by the court. It is said in the opinion, however, that the University itself' is not a corporation, but that the regents are an incorporated body, although not made so by the legislature.' But, after discussing this question, it is finally concluded that, whether am incorporation or not, they were agents of the State, holding the legal title to the property then in controversy, and for that reason possessed no immunity from being sued, and that was the only point in the case. Its determination in favor of the plaintiff was sufficient for the purpose of the decision, and what is said about the *175regents being an incorporation may, with propriety, be deemed dicta. But, however that may be, the decision is not an authority supporting the act now under consideration. The regents of the University, if an incorporation, in the sense that they may take and hold title to property, and sue and be sued, are not a corporation in the ordinary meaning of that term. They are merely administrative agents of the State, charged with the control and supervision of one of its educational institutions, with no power to levy or collect taxes, or impose burdens upon the people of the State or any particular locality thereof.

Decided 8 January, 1908. 93 Pac. 254.

Having reached the conclusion that the act under consideration is unconstitutional and void, because it is an attempt to create a corporation by a special law, it is unnecessary to consider the question as to whether a corporation of the kind sought to be created is a municipality, within the meaning of that portion of Article XI, § 2, as amended, which prohibits the legislature from enacting, amending or repealing the charter or the act of incorporation .of a municipality, city or town. The decree of the court below will be reversed and one entered here in favor of plaintiff. Reversed.

Mr. Justice Moore did not sit in this case.