CACV OF COLORADO, LLC v. Stevens

274 P.3d 859, 248 Or. App. 624, 2012 WL 839259, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 265
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 14, 2012
DocketC075265CV; A144594
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 274 P.3d 859 (CACV OF COLORADO, LLC v. Stevens) 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
CACV OF COLORADO, LLC v. Stevens, 274 P.3d 859, 248 Or. App. 624, 2012 WL 839259, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 265 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

*626 ARMSTRONG, J.

Defendant appeals general and supplemental judgments in plaintiffs favor in a contract action. The trial court concluded that Oregon’s statute of limitation for contract claims, which requires parties to file claims within six years of their accrual, applies to plaintiffs contract claim rather than Delaware’s comparable statute, which requires parties to file claims within three years of accrual. Defendant’s first two assignments of error challenge the court’s conclusion on that issue. We reject defendant’s challenge and, accordingly, affirm the general judgment. In her third assignment, defendant contends that the court erred in awarding attorney fees to plaintiff under ORS 20.096(1), which does not impose a specific monetary limit on attorney-fee awards, rather than under a Delaware statute that imposes such a limit. We agree with defendant and, accordingly, reverse and remand the supplemental judgment.

The pertinent facts are undisputed. Defendant is an Oregon resident who opened a credit card account in 2001 with Chase Bank USA, N.A. (Chase), which is a Delaware corporation. The cardholder agreement for the account includes a choice-of-law provision that provides that the agreement is “governed by the laws of the United States and the State of Delaware.” The agreement also provides that, in the event that defendant fails to make payments due on the account, Chase is entitled to recover its attorney fees and other costs incurred in collecting the amount that defendant owes.

Defendant eventually defaulted on her accrued credit card debt in May 2003, and Chase charged the debt off roughly seven months later, declaring, in essence, that the debt was unlikely to be collected. Shortly thereafter, Chase sold the account to plaintiff, a Colorado corporation. Plaintiff brought this breach-of-contract action against defendant in Washington County, Oregon, in November 2007, seeking, among other things, recovery of the amount that defendant owes on the account and an award of attorney fees under the attorney-fee provision in the agreement. After unsuccessfully moving to dismiss the case as untimely, defendant filed an answer that alleged a defense that plaintiffs contract claim is time barred.

*627 The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on defendant’s statute-of-limitation defense. Notwithstanding the provision in the agreement that makes Delaware law the law that generally applies to the agreement, plaintiff contended that its claim was governed by Oregon’s statute of limitation for contract claims, ORS 12.080, 1 rather than the comparable Delaware statute, Del Code Ann title 10, § 8106(a). 2 Plaintiff reasoned as follows: Delaware’s statute requires contract claims such as plaintiffs claim against defendant to be brought within three years of their accrual. However, Delaware’s tolling statute, Del Code Ann title 10, § 8117, 3 delays the running of the Delaware statute of limitation when a defendant resides outside of Delaware and is not otherwise subject to service of process in Delaware, which are conditions that apply to defendant. The result is that the Delaware statute of limitation could be tolled indefinitely. Under ORS 12.450, a court can apply the appropriate Oregon statute of limitation, rather than another state’s otherwise applicable statute, if the court determines that the two statutes impose substantially different limitation periods and the other state’s statute imposes an unfair burden in defending against the claim. According to plaintiff, those conditions are met in this case because the Delaware statute might never run, so Oregon’s six-year limitation period under ORS 12.080 is the applicable limitation period in this case, and plaintiffs claim was timely under it.

*628 Conversely, defendant contended that Delaware courts would not interpret the Delaware tolling statute to provide for indefinite tolling in a case such as this case and would, as a consequence, conclude that the tolling statute has no application in this case. Because the tolling statute does not apply, Delaware’s three-year statute of limitation applies, not Oregon’s six-year statute, and plaintiffs claim was untimely.

The court agreed with plaintiffs contention that Oregon’s six-year statute of limitation applies to plaintiffs claim, not Delaware’s three-year statute, and accordingly granted plaintiffs motion for summary judgment and rejected defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment on defendant’s statute-of-limitation defense. After a jury verdict in plaintiffs favor on its claim, the court entered a general judgment awarding plaintiff the entirety of the outstanding balance owed by defendant on the account, $2,183.03.

I. STATUTE-OF-LIMITATION DEFENSE

Resolution of the central issue raised in defendant’s first and second assignments of error — whether plaintiffs breach-of-contract claim was timely under the applicable statute of limitation — hinges on the outcome of the following successive inquiries: 4 (1) under Oregon’s choice-of-law statutes, does Delaware’s limitation period — derived from the state’s three-year statute of limitation and relevant tolling and accrual laws — apply to plaintiffs claim; (2) if Delaware’s limitation period applies, does Delaware’s tolling statute toll that period until defendant becomes subject to service of process in Delaware; and (3) if the Delaware tolling statute does that, does Oregon law, viz., ORS 12.450, compel the use of Oregon’s rather than Delaware’s limitation period in order to remedy the unfair burden that Delaware law would *629 impose on defendant — namely, the elimination of a statute-of-limitation defense.

A. The Applicable Limitation Period

Under the Uniform Conflict of Laws-Limitations Act (UCLLA), ORS 12.410 - 12.480, if a claim brought in an Oregon court is based on the substantive law of another state, then the other state’s limitation period applies to the claim. ORS 12.430. As a corollary principle, the Oregon court must employ the other state’s tolling and accrual policies in calculating the other state’s limitation period. ORS 12.440.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 P.3d 859, 248 Or. App. 624, 2012 WL 839259, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cacv-of-colorado-llc-v-stevens-orctapp-2012.