Caffey v. Lane County

691 P.2d 94, 298 Or. 183
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1984
DocketTC 16-81-08893 CA A23661 SC S30264, SC 30608
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 691 P.2d 94 (Caffey v. Lane County) 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
Caffey v. Lane County, 691 P.2d 94, 298 Or. 183 (Or. 1984).

Opinion

*185 LINDE, J.

Petitioner Lane County sought review of a decision of the Court of Appeals that the county cannot enforce its dog control ordinance by means of an adjudication of infractions by a county hearing officer. The Court of Appeals held that such adjudicatory authority was reserved by statute to the state courts. Caffey v. Lane County, 65 Or App 470, 671 P2d 727 (1983), 67 Or App 315, 677 P2d 713 (1984). The court therefore did not reach the issues raised by respondent’s appeal. Having allowed review because of the importance of the court’s holding to the enforcement of county ordinances, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and remand the case to that court for consideration of those other issues.

The Court of Appeals summarized Lane County’s procedure for adjudicating infractions of county ordinances as follows:

“The Lane County Code defines in detail the procedure for cases before the Infractions Section. The process is initiated when the county sends a summons and complaint to a person alleging that he or she has Committed an infraction. If the person does not file an answer to the summons and complaint, a decision is automatically made against the person. If an answer is filed admitting the infraction, it must be accompanied by a check for the amount of the forfeiture on the infraction. If an answer is filed denying the infraction, $15 ‘security’ must be paid to guarantee that the person will appear at the hearing. The hearing is held before a hearings officer, who is appointed by the director. The accused is entitled to have counsel at the hearing if he wishes. The burden of proof is on the county. At the hearing, evidence is presented. The hearings officer has the authority to administer oaths, take testimony of witnesses and issue subpoenas, either by the county or by the accused. Witnesses are entitled to the same fees and mileage as in civil cases in district court. The accused person has the right to cross-examine witnesses and to submit rebuttal evidence. The hearings officer is required to make a determination whether the infraction occurred. If he determines that it did not occur, he dismisses the complaint. If he determines that it has occurred, he is required to make necessary findings of fact to establish the infraction, and he could, under the rules in effect at that time, levy a ‘forfeiture,’ which could not exceed $100 for each infraction.”

*186 65 Or App at 472-73, 671 P2d at 728. 1

The hearing of the charges against respondent Michael Caffey resulted in an order levying a fine of $100 for each of two dogs who were found to have attacked a sheep and destruction of the dogs. Caffey sought review of this order by means of a writ of review in the Circuit Court for Lane County, which affirmed the hearing officer’s order.

Caffey’s appeal did not question the authority of the county’s Infractions Section. The Court of Appeals, however, decided to examine whether the Infractions Section “exceeded its jurisdiction in hearing civil cases in which the county is seeking civil redress of violations of county ordinances.” 65 Or App at 472, 671 P2d at 728. The court concluded that the Infractions Section exceeded its jurisdiction because the county lacked judicial authority in such cases by virtue of ORS 3.130.

ORS 3.130 provides for counties covered by that statute, including Lane County:

“(1) All judicial jurisdiction, authority, powers, functions and duties of the county courts and the judges thereof, except the jurisdiction, authority, powers, functions and duties exercisable in the transaction of county business, are transferred to the circuit courts and the judges thereof.

The Court of Appeals held that “[u]nder the unequivocal language of ORS 3.130, Lane County has retained only the judicial authority ‘exercisable in the transaction of county business’ ” and that the transaction of county business did not include the enforcement of county ordinances regulating private ownership of dogs. Caffey v. Lane County, 65 Or App at 473-74, 671 P2d at 729.

In its petition for review, which is first a petition for reconsideration by the Court of Appeals, ORAP 10.10, Lane County objected to the court’s invocation of ORS 3.130 on the ground that the governing statute is ORS 203.810, which deals with jurisdiction over offenses made punishable by county law. Upon reconsideration the Court of Appeals rejected that *187 argument, applying a “rule of statutory construction” under which a specific or special act (ORS 3.130) controls a general act (ORS 203.810). Caffey v. Lane County, 67 Or App at 318, 677 P2d at 715. This court has cautioned against invoking “rules” or “maxims” of statutory construction as a substitute for discerning a particular legislative scheme. See, e.g., Whipple v. Howser, 291 Or 475, 481-83, 632 P2d 782, 784-86 (1981). In this case, examination of the statutes indicates that the county’s position is correct.

ORS 3.130 is the current version of a statute whose earliest predecessor was enacted in 1913. Its purpose was and is to transfer to the circuit courts the jurisdiction under state law that previously was exercised by the county judge or the county court, first with respect to Multnomah County 2 and in successive versions with respect to other counties. The jurisdiction so transferred included probate jurisdiction and jurisdiction in juvenile cases, as well as jurisdiction in actions at law for amounts less than $500 and in forcible entry and detainer actions. Lord’s Oregon Laws §§ 935,936,2153, 2171. 3 ORS 3.130 and its predecessors from the beginning excluded cases arising “in the transaction of county business.” These statutes, however, were not concerned with general jurisdiction over the enforcement of county ordinances regulating private conduct, because the counties exercised no autonomous authority to enact regulatory ordinances apart from specific authority under state statutes. See Carriker v. Lake County, 89 Or 240, 171 P 407 (1918).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
691 P.2d 94, 298 Or. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caffey-v-lane-county-or-1984.