Brown v. Adult and Family Services

643 P.2d 1266, 293 Or. 6, 1982 Ore. LEXIS 859
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1982
DocketCA 16980, 17206, 17870 and 18398 SC 27838
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 643 P.2d 1266 (Brown v. Adult and Family Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Adult and Family Services, 643 P.2d 1266, 293 Or. 6, 1982 Ore. LEXIS 859 (Or. 1982).

Opinions

[8]*8LENT, J.

We review the decisions of the Court of Appeals in four cases, consolidated for review before this court, to consider the common question concerning the Court of Appeals’ exercise of its discretion to award attorney fees under ORS 183.495, which provides:

“Upon judicial review of a final order of an agency when the reviewing court reverses or remands the order it may, in its discretion, award costs, including reasonable attorney’s fees, to the petitioner to be paid from funds appropriated to the agency.”

In each of these cases, petitioner initially sought judicial review of an action or determination of a state administrative agency, and in each case the petitioner prevailed in the Court of Appeals.1 Following those decisions, each petitioner petitioned the Court of Appeals for an award of attorney fees pursuant to ORS 183.495. In each case, the Court of Appeals denied the petition for attorney fees. The court held in Brown v. Adult and Family Services, 51 Or App 213, 625 P2d 160 (1981), that attorney fees would not be awarded because the record showed that the agency had not acted arbitrarily. In a footnote the court indicated the standard which it regarded as controlling: attorney fees would be awarded only when an agency action had been “arbitrary.” 51 Or App 217 n. 2, 625 P2d 161 n. 2. The Court of Appeals similarly denied petitions for attorney fees in Howard v. Adult and Family Services, 51 Or App 206, 625 P2d 666 (1981), and Evans v. Adult and Family Services, 51 Or App 367, 625 P2d 687 (1981), in per curiam opinions relying on Brown, supra. The court denied the petition in Davidson v. Employment Division, 51 Or App 219, 625 P2d 162 (1981), stating that attorney fees were inappropriate where “the Employment Division and its Appeals Board acted not in the capacity of a party, but rather as a disinterested tribunal with quasi-judicial powers * * * which adjudicated rights between the employer and the employe.” 51 Or App at 221, 625 P2d at 163.

[9]*9Petitioners Brown, Davidson, Howard, and Evans filed a consolidated petition for review, which we allowed, 291 Or 151 (1981), ORS 2.520, in order to consider whether, in exercising its discretion, the Court of Appeals has taken action that is inconsistent with legislative intent as expressed in the statute.2

Petitioners advance a variety of arguments, the gist of which is that the award of attorney fees should be made largely as a matter of right to a prevailing petitioner, absent some unusual circumstances which would justify denying [10]*10these fees. Petitioners rest this argument primarily on Executive Management Corporation v. Juckett, 274 Or 515, 547 P2d 603 (1976). In effect, petitioners contend that that case, which construed another provision for the discretionary award of attorney fees, established a rule applicable to all statutory provisions allowing the discretionary award of attorney fees. Executive Management Corporation should not be read in such an expansive way. It concerned the application of ORS 91.755, which allowed attorney fees in landlord/tenant litigation. The case held, without discussion, that attorney fees generally should be awarded in cases brought under that statute. That terse conclusion was not intended to establish a general rule for all statutes allowing for attorney fees.

In enacting legislation covering landlord/tenant disputes, the legislature may have decided that these contests were best resolved through out-of-court settlement and concluded that the provision for attorney fees would encourage settlement by discouraging litigation. Several factors distinguish cases governed by ORS 91.755 from those governed by ORS 183.495. One difference is apparent on the face of the statute: ORS 91.755 provides for attorney fees to the prevailing party. ORS 183.495 does not allow an administrative agency to recover attorney fees in any circumstances. We conclude that Executive Management Corporation is not persuasive authority with respect to ORS 183.495.

.Petitioners also argue that attorney fees should be a matter of course in order to insure that persons dependent on various public assistance programs have full access to the appellate process. In Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 US 254, 25 L Ed 2d 287, 90 S Ct 1011 (1970), the United States Supreme Court held that due process required that welfare recipients have a meaningful pre-termination hearing on decisions threatening the cut-off of welfare benefits. The Court, however, specifically noted that it did not require that welfare recipients be provided with counsel in such hearings. See 397 US at 270, 25 L Ed 2d at 300, 90 S Ct at 1022. We know of no decision since Goldberg which has held that fundamental due process requires that the state must provide counsel in situations such as this. For us to hold that ORS 183.495 provides the automatic award of [11]*11attorney fees to the prevailing party would, by indirection, go far toward requiring the state to provide counsel. We decline to take this step.

We also do not believe that a ruling establishing attorney fees as a matter of course would be consistent with the statutory language. The legislature clearly could have adopted language mandating the award of attorney fees to prevailing petitioners. There is nothing to indicate that in ORS 183.495 the legislature used the word “may” to mean “shall.”

We conclude that ORS 183.495 vests the reviewing court, the Court of Appeals, with broad discretion in these cases. In adopting ORS 183.495, the legislature realized that it could not anticipate the wide variety of situations in which petitioners might prevail on judicial review, or decide a priori in which of these situations the granting of attorney fees would be appropriate. Therefore, it vested the Court of Appeals with the task of evaluation according to the general or specific situation presented. The sparse legislative history of this statute suggests no clear standard for awarding attorney fees.

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Brown v. Adult and Family Services
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Bluebook (online)
643 P.2d 1266, 293 Or. 6, 1982 Ore. LEXIS 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-adult-and-family-services-or-1982.