Class v. Carter
This text of 624 P.2d 626 (Class v. Carter) 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.
Opinion
This case began as an FED action in district court. Plaintiff Zusman’s predecessors in interest owned land abutting the Columbia Slough and a submerged lands lease in the slough from the state. They leased the premises to defendant Carter, who installed floating moorage facilities and leased spaces to the other defendants and the plaintiffs Class. Zusman purchased the land and took an assignment of the state lease and leased the entire property to the Classes. The sellers, the Classes and Zusman gave Carter the notice to vacate required under his original lease.1 The FED action followed.
Some of the defendants filed counterclaims, Carter’s alone being in excess of the district court’s $3,000 statutory limitation. ORS 46.060. Pursuant to ORS 46.070, defendants moved to transfer the cause to circuit court, and it was transferred.2
On plaintiffs’ motion the circuit court struck the counterclaim and ordered that the cause be returned to district court and that the defendants not be allowed to plead counterclaims in excess of the district court’s jurisdictional limit. The basis for the motion was that the Carter counterclaim was not permissible under the Residential Landlord and Tenant Act. ORS 91.700 et seq; see Ingersoll v. Mattson, 47 Or App 463, 614 P2d 1197 (1980). The circuit court order, however, was made "[w]ithout making a determination as to whether or not the Residential Landlord Tenant Law [sic] applies in this matter, * *
The district court again exercised jurisdiction over objections, and after further proceedings it entered an order and judgment awarding restitution of the premises and dismissing defendants’ affirmative defenses and counterclaims. All of the defendants except Perry and Dixon appealed to this court.
When the case came on for argument in this court, plaintiffs filed a stipulated order for dismissal of the [6]*6appeals of defendants Halbrook, Bridwell and Jorgensen and a motion to dismiss the appeals of defendants Carter and Hollriegal on the ground that their appeals had become moot by reason of their no longer being in possession. The facts asserted in the affidavit supporting the motion have not been denied. Carter had moved his houseboat and his boat from, the moorage and sold the floating facilities to one Roe, who in turn sold them to the Classes. Hollriegal was evicted by the sheriff under a writ of restitution.
Under Pacific N.W. Dev. Corp. v. Holloway, 274 Or 367, 370, 546 P2d 1063 (1976), "the basic controversy between the parties [Classes and Zusman as plaintiffs and Carter as defendant] — possession — was moot.” Defendant Hollriegal’s rights as a subtenant of Carter could be no greater than Carter’s (in the absence of some reservation of right by Carter which could have protected Hollriegal), and his appeal is also moot. We will therefore not discuss any of the arguments relating to the plaintiffs’ right to possession.
However, mootness of the FED issues does not dispose of the whole case. Under ORS 46.075(1), once a transfer to the circuit court has been accomplished, "* * * thereupon the district court shall proceed no further with the cause. The case shall be considered transferred to the circuit court which shall then have jurisdiction to try and determine the cause.” There is no. statutory provision for remanding such a case to district court.* *3 Essentially, the defendants’ argument is that the circuit court’s order was a void order, a nullity, because it was made without any authority in statute or case law.4 Had the circuit court decided the motion to strike on the basis that the FED [7]*7action was under the Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, then the motion would have been controlled by our decision in Ingersoll v. Mattson, supra.
The only issue before us is whether the district court recovered jurisdiction by the order the circuit court entered. We hold that it did not, for the reason that once the circuit court had jurisdiction it was required to proceed with the cause, subject only to the limitation in ORS 91.810(1) as interpreted and applied in Ingersoll v. Mattson, supra.
Reversed and remanded with instructions to vacate the order and judgment of restitution entered on June 16, 1980, to reinstate the counterclaims of Carter and Hollriegal and to transfer the cause to circuit court for further proceedings.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
624 P.2d 626, 51 Or. App. 3, 1981 Ore. App. LEXIS 2127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/class-v-carter-orctapp-1981.