Braatz v. Braatz

438 P.3d 479, 296 Or. App. 484
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 6, 2019
DocketA167165
StatusPublished

This text of 438 P.3d 479 (Braatz v. Braatz) 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
Braatz v. Braatz, 438 P.3d 479, 296 Or. App. 484 (Or. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

PER CURIAM

*485This is an appeal from a judgment of remedial contempt1 in which the trial court found that appellant had violated the parenting time provisions of a dissolution judgment. The court imposed, among other sanctions, a determinate term of "24 months of bench probation, with a stay of imposition of six months of jail," and a related bench probation fee in the amount of $100. On appeal, appellant assigns error to the imposition of those sanctions. Although appellant did not object to the challenged sanctions below, she relies on a series of our decisions to contend that the trial court plainly erred by imposing the determinate term of probation, and that we should exercise our discretion to correct that plain error.

Appellant is correct that we routinely have held that it is plain error for a trial court to impose a determinate term of probation as a sanction in a remedial contempt proceeding. Lamm and Lamm , 290 Or. App. 351, 354, 416 P.3d 310 (2018) ("We have consistently held that it is plain error to impose a determinate term of probation in a remedial contempt proceeding."); State v. Gardner , 287 Or. App. 225, 227, 401 P.3d 292 (2017) (trial court plainly erred by imposing a determinate term of probation in a remedial contempt proceeding because a determinate term of probation is a punitive sanction, not a remedial one); Altenhofen and Vanden-Busch , 271 Or. App. 57, 61-62, 349 P.3d 655, rev. den. , 358 Or. 449, 366 P.3d 719 (2015) (same). For that reason, we conclude that the trial court plainly erred in this case by imposing a determinate term of probation. We further conclude, for reasons similar to those in Altenhofen , that it is appropriate to exercise our discretion to correct that error. See Altenhofen , 271 Or. App. at 62, 349 P.3d 655 (concluding that "the interests of the parties, the gravity of the error, and the ends of justice" weighed in favor of correcting erroneously imposed term of probation, where the erroneous term exposed the defendant to the risk of sanctions and further proceedings to which he would not otherwise be subject).

*486Portions of judgment (1) imposing determinate term of probation, with stay of imposition of six months jail, and (2) imposing *481supervision fee reversed and remanded; otherwise affirmed.

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Related

Lamm v. Lamm
416 P.3d 310 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2018)
State v. Vanden-Busch
349 P.3d 655 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2015)
State v. Gardner
401 P.3d 292 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
438 P.3d 479, 296 Or. App. 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braatz-v-braatz-orctapp-2019.