City of Medford v. Herbison

645 P.2d 563, 57 Or. App. 496
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 8, 1982
Docket79-3617, CA A21151
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 645 P.2d 563 (City of Medford v. Herbison) 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
City of Medford v. Herbison, 645 P.2d 563, 57 Or. App. 496 (Or. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

*498 GILLETTE, P. J.

The City of Medford (City) brought this action against defendant and his surety for accrued civil penalties for false burglar alarms. The penalties were assessed against defendant under a City ordinance. The trial court directed a verdict for defendant, ruling that there was insufficient evidence to bring defendant within the scope of the ordinance and that the ordinance violated the Equal Protection Clause. 1 The City appeals. We reverse.

Defendant owns a Medford alarm company which is licensed under a city ordinance. He installs, services and repairs holdup and burglar alarms. In 1974, he volunteered to install a burglar alarm panel in the dispatch center of the City’s police station. The panel displays 150 lights; each is connected through leased telephone lines to private burglar alarms throughout the city. When one of these alarms is activated, a display light on the panel begins blinking and alerts the police, who then investigate. Under defendant’s agreement with the City, any interested individual alarm user or other alarm company that wished to display signals from their alarms could purchase a place on the panel by paying defendant a one-time fee. The fee included installation' and the cost of a module that converts the user’s alarm signal to the flashing light. Throughout the period relevant here, 112 of the 150 lights were in use. Seventy-two were connected to users with whom defendant maintained a service relationship; the other 40 spaces were sold to 23 private users who either serviced their alarm system themselves or employed another alarm company to do so. Defendant disavows any business relationship with these 40 beyond the initial sale of space on the panel. 2

Many things besides break-ins will trigger a burglar alarm — the most frequent cause of false alarms is *499 employe error, but there are others — and false alarms have become a problem for the City. As a result, in 1976, the City enacted an ordinance 3 designed to reduce the number *500 of false alarms. The ordinance provides that, with certain exceptions irrelevant here, a $10 civil fine be assessed against the “alarm company” responsible for each false alarm to which the police respond, whether caused by inadvertence or fault of the alarm company or the user or by malfunction of the alarm. The rationale for holding the alarm company responsible is that the company is in a better position to reduce the instances of false alarms through proper maintenance of alarms and proper instruction to users. Subsection (1) (b) of the ordinance defines “Alarm Company” as

“* * * any firm, person, partnership, or corporation required to be licensed under Section 8-505 hereof, which, with respect to any alarm installed upon any premises within the city, has servicing, maintenance, or monitoring duties or responsibilities under the terms of any agreement or arrangement with an alarm user.”

The ordinance became effective in October, 1976, and between that date and October 1, 1979, the City billed defendant for each false alarm which was reported on the panel, for a total penalty of $16,880. Defendant did not pay; the City then brought this action.

In its first assignment of error, the City contends that the trial court erred in directing a verdict for defendant on the ground that there was insufficient evidence for the jury to find defendant to be an “alarm company” within the meaning of the ordinance, i.e., that there was insufficient evidence that defendant had “servicing, maintenance, or monitoring duties or responsibilities under the terms of any agreement or arrangement with an alarm user.” A directed verdict is proper only if an allegation is not supported by any substantial evidence; the court is not to weigh conflicting evidence or evaluate credibility. Hansen v. Bussman, 274 Or 757, 763, 549 P2d 1265 (1976). Here the City seeks to recover the $10 fine from defendant for false alarms originating from any of the 112 alarms connected to the panel. The evidence at trial showed that, as to 40 of the alarms involving 23 individual users, defendant’s only responsibility was the initial installation of the module. These users either serviced their own alarm or employed another alarm company to do so. One self-servicing user testified that it had no arrangement with defendant to *501 maintain, repair, or monitor its alarm; instead, its employes did all such work themselves, including the instruction of other employes in the proper use of the alarm. That user further testified that, if there is a malfunction of the module itself, there is no prearrangement that defendant repair it; rather, the user could arrange for defendant or any other alarm company to do the work. An employe for an alarm company testified that his company had a maintenance agreement with some of the alarm users connected to the panel, but that it was not billed for these users’ false alarms. He also testified that his users have no service arrangement with defendant. If there were problems in the display panel, he would call defendant for assistance, but there were virtually no problems.

The City offered no direct evidence to show that defendant had a service relationship with any of these 23 users. It argues instead that defendant’s maintenance responsibilities as to the panel itself, the fact that the module is an integral part of each alarm system and the fact that defendant informed all users that he would bill them for any fines charged to him because of a false alarm originating on their premises creates a jury question as to whether defendant comes within the ordinance. We agree. The alarm systems included the board, for which defendant was responsible. A jury could reasonably find defendant’s activity constituted service and maintenance under the ordinance.

It was also error to direct a verdict as to the fines for alarms from the 72 users who were “serviced by” defendant, according to a letter he wrote to the City on September 24, 1979. The letter itself is substantial evidence from which a jury could determine that defendant came within the ordinance.

In its third 4 assignment, the City contends that the court erred in holding that the ordinance violates the Equal Protection Clause in that it does not apply civil penalties if a false alarm originates with a user who does not have a service arrangement with a licensed alarm company, thus improperly singling out licensed alarm companies. The *502 criticism here is one of underinclusion: in attacking a general problem (false alarms), the ordinance does not penalize all who contribute to it. In such cases, courts have traditionally been very reluctant to strike down a legislative classification. As the Supreme Court stated in McDonald v. Board of Election, 394 US 802, 809, 89 S Ct 1404, 22 L Ed 2d 739 (1969):

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
645 P.2d 563, 57 Or. App. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-medford-v-herbison-orctapp-1982.