Bedford v. Merety Monger Trust

286 P.3d 912, 251 Or. App. 778, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1030
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 22, 2012
Docket09CV0709CC; A146562
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 286 P.3d 912 (Bedford v. Merety Monger Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bedford v. Merety Monger Trust, 286 P.3d 912, 251 Or. App. 778, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1030 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

NAKAMOTO, J.

This dispute began when defendant shut off a water system located on its property that diverted water from a nearby spring or creek to plaintiffs’ property, and it now concerns an attorney fee award under ORS 20.080 after plaintiffs prevailed at trial. Plaintiffs’ complaint included two tort claims and a request for attorney fees under ORS 20.080, which provides a right to fees on small tort claims. The trial court did not aggregate the economic damages alleged in the tort claims when it determined that plaintiffs met the pleading requirements of ORS 20.080 and were entitled to attorney fees. Defendant pursues a single assignment of error concerning the supplemental judgment awarding plaintiffs their fees, arguing that plaintiffs pleaded an aggregate damage amount over the statutory maximum in ORS 20.080. The legal issue on appeal concerns whether to aggregate the same economic damages pleaded in separate and distinct claims for relief to determine the amount pleaded for purposes of the statute. Because plaintiffs pleaded the same economic damages under sepárate tort theories, we affirm.

We briefly summarize the facts, which are primarily procedural. Plaintiffs Dan Bedford and Crystal Bedford and defendant Merety Monger Trust are neighbors. At one point, both plaintiffs’ property and defendant’s property were owned by one person, Walter Monger, who obtained water rights and an easement from an adjoining land owner and put into place a water delivery system for the benefit of the property plaintiffs now own. That water system runs from somewhere near the confluence of a spring and nearby creek and then through a pipeline mostly on defendant’s property to a water storage tank on plaintiffs’ property. Both plaintiffs and the prior owner of their property used the water system for all of their water needs. In 2008, Curtis Monger, trustee of the Merety Monger Trust, shut off the water delivery system.

Plaintiffs sent a demand letter to defendant stating that defendant’s termination of the water system was wrongful and that plaintiff had incurred $2,500 in expenses for equipment and supplies to obtain and treat water from the nearby creek. Plaintiffs demanded that defendant [781]*781reconnect the water system to plaintiffs’ property and pay them $2,500 within 10 days, otherwise plaintiffs would pursue legal action and seek attorney fees under ORS 20.080. Defendants did neither, and plaintiffs filed this action.

In their second amended complaint, plaintiffs alleged that (1) they were entitled to a declaration that they had an implied easement to draw water from the creek to their property; (2) defendant interfered with their use and enjoyment of that easement by shutting off the water system, either intentionally or negligently; (3) defendant breached a separate logging easement agreement between the parties; and (4) defendant’s shutting off the water system was a nuisance because it directly interfered with plaintiffs’ use and enjoyment of their property. In their prayer for judgment, plaintiffs sought a declaration that they had an implied easement; $2,500 in economic damages for their interference with easement claim; $12,500 in economic damages for breach of the logging easement agreement; and $5,000 for their nuisance claim — $2,500 for economic damages and $2,500 for noneconomic damages. Additionally, plaintiffs claimed entitlement to attorney fees under ORS 20.080.

Plaintiffs prevailed on all of their claims. The jury found that plaintiffs had an implied easement to use the water system on defendant’s property and that defendant intentionally interfered with the implied easement, and it awarded plaintiffs $2,500 in economic damages. Plaintiffs also won their claim for breach of the logging easement agreement, and the jury awarded plaintiffs $854 in economic damages. On plaintiffs’ nuisance claim, the jury awarded plaintiffs $1,250 in economic damages and nothing for noneconomic damages. The trial court’s general judgment included a declaration that plaintiffs have an easement for the water system, an award of the contract damages, and an award of $2,500 in economic damages for both of plaintiffs’ tort claims for interference with easement and nuisance together. The judgment also allowed plaintiffs to seek attorney fees under ORCP 68.

Plaintiffs subsequently submitted a statement seeking an award of attorney fees limited to their two tort claims, i.e., their interference with easement and nuisance [782]*782claims. See ORS 20.080 (a plaintiff is entitled to attorney fees for claims predicated on “an injury or wrong to [plaintiffs] person or property[]”). Defendant objected, contending that, because plaintiffs’ operative pleading claimed a total of $20,000 in damages,1 the total amount pleaded was over the $7,500 statutory maximum in ORS 20.080 (2009), amended by Oregon Laws 2009, chapter 487, section 3.

The trial court ordered an award of attorney fees to plaintiffs over defendant’s objections. The trial court explained that the tort claims were merely two different theories to recover the same damages:

“It is clear from the operative pleading that [the] second claim for relief (counts one and two) and the fourth claim for relief were based upon the same facts, the same damages but alternate theories.”

Citing Beers v. Jeson Enterprises, 165 Or App 722, 998 P2d 716 (2000), and Barnes v. Bob Godfrey Pontiac, Inc., 41 Or App 263, 597 P2d 1285, modified on recons, 41 Or App 745, 598 P2d 1289 (1979), the trial court awarded plaintiffs the sum of $2,500 for their interference with easement and nuisance claims. The trial court also concluded that because ORS 20.080 did not authorize attorney fees on plaintiffs’ claim for breach of the logging easement agreement, plaintiffs’ request for attorney fees had to be reduced. Accordingly, the trial court entered a supplemental judgment awarding plaintiffs 75 percent of the amount of attorney fees they had requested.

Defendant does not contest the reasonableness of the fees awarded. Rather, defendant assigns error to the trial court’s award of any attorney fees to plaintiffs when, according to defendant, they pleaded an aggregate amount of damages over the statutory maximum allowed in ORS 20.080. Before we reach the merits of defendant’s argument, we address a preliminary issue, the applicable version of ORS 20.080.2

[783]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 P.3d 912, 251 Or. App. 778, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bedford-v-merety-monger-trust-orctapp-2012.