CONIFER RIDGE HOMEOWNERS ASSOC. v. Hayworth

32 P.3d 929, 176 Or. App. 603, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 1411
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 26, 2001
DocketC990122CV; A110100
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 32 P.3d 929 (CONIFER RIDGE HOMEOWNERS ASSOC. v. Hayworth) 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
CONIFER RIDGE HOMEOWNERS ASSOC. v. Hayworth, 32 P.3d 929, 176 Or. App. 603, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 1411 (Or. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

*605 BREWER, J.

In this action for injunction, plaintiff Conifer Ridge Homeowners Association, Inc., appeals from the trial court’s denial of its request for attorney fees. We review for errors of law, AutoLend, IAP, Inc. v. Auto Depot, Inc., 170 Or App 135, 138, 11 P3d 693 (2000), rev den 332 Or 240 (2001), and affirm.

Defendants Stephen and Tamara Hayworth own real property in the Conifer Ridge Subdivision (Conifer Ridge), a residential development in Washington County. The lots within Conifer Ridge are subject to certain restrictive covenants detailed in the Homeowners Association’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs). One of the CC&Rs provides that all plans for construction must be approved by plaintiffs Architectural Control Committee (ACC). In 1998, defendants submitted to the ACC a set of building plans for a home on their lot in Conifer Ridge (Lot 25). Shortly thereafter, the ACC rejected the plans. In early 1999, despite not having approval from the ACC, defendants began construction using the rejected plans. Plaintiff then filed this action to enjoin the construction.

Plaintiff moved for a preliminary injunction, and the court held a show-cause hearing. After hearing evidence and argument, Judge Kohl granted the motion for a preliminary injunction. 1 The order provided, in part:

‘T. The Plaintiffs request for a Preliminary Injunction is hereby granted;
“2. Defendants * * * are hereby enjoined from any further construction of any type on LOT 25, CONIFER RIDGE SUBDIVISION, without prior approval of the Conifer Ridge Homeowners Association Architectural Control Committee;
“3. The Plaintiff shall post a bond in the sum of $122,800.00.”

*606 In a handwritten notation above the judge’s signature, the order also provided that “[t]his order shall only be effective upon the posting of the bond.” The order was signed and dated April 22, 1999. Plaintiff never posted the bond.

In May and June of 1999, plaintiff and defendants negotiated and agreed upon plans for defendants’ lot. The plans were approved by the ACC on June 30. On July 30, defendants moved to dismiss plaintiffs action, arguing that it was moot because the ACC had accepted defendants’ modified plans. Plaintiff objected, arguing that it would not be entitled to attorney fees if the action were dismissed as moot. On October 20, Judge McElligott granted defendants’ motion to dismiss and ordered the resolution of the attorney fee issue pursuant to ORCP 68. Both parties petitioned for attorney fees.

The attorney fee hearing focused on whether plaintiff was the prevailing party in this action. The court gave the parties permission to request that Judge Kohl certify a prevailing party in the action. Plaintiff made such a request, but the court did not make a certification. Subsequently, Judge McElligott issued an order concluding that no effective preliminary injunction had been entered. Accordingly, the court determined that there was no prevailing party under ORS 20.096 and denied both petitions for attorney fees. 2

On appeal, plaintiff assigns error to the court’s denial of its motion for attorney fees on the ground that there was no prevailing party. Relying on our decision in Meduri Farms, Inc. v. Robert Jahn Corp., 120 Or App 40, 44, 852 P2d 257 (1993), plaintiff first asserts that it ultimately attained the result it sought when it brought this action to stop defendants from building a house that had been rejected by the *607 ACC. Therefore, plaintiff reasons, it was the prevailing party. Defendants respond that, because plaintiff did not file the required undertaking, the preliminary injunction never became effective, and there was no prevailing party.

In Meduri Farms, a lessor brought an action to enjoin a lessee from interfering with the lessor’s orchard operation. The trial court first granted a temporary restraining order, and it later issued a preliminary injunction. Id. at 42. When the lease expired during the pendency of the action, the trial court dismissed the lessor’s claim for a permanent injunction as moot; however, the court entered judgment against the lessee for the lessor’s attorney fees. Id. The lessee appealed, arguing that the court erred in awarding attorney fees where the lessor’s claim was dismissed, because there was no “prevailing party,” as required by ORS 20.096. We noted that the lessor sought to enjoin the lessee from interfering with its orchard operation and “[t]he trial court granted that relief first by a temporary restraining order and then by a preliminary injunction.” Id. at 44. We affirmed the award of attorney fees, holding that, “[w]hen one party seeks nonmonetary relief* * *, to determine who is the prevailing party, courts weigh ‘what was sought by each party against the result obtained.’ ” Id. (quoting Lawrence v. Peel, 45 Or App 233, 243, 607 P2d 1386 (1980)).

Plaintiff first argues that Meduri Farms “is directly on point” because

“[i]n both cases the plaintiff sought to permanently enjoin the defendants’ actions. In both cases the ‘plaintiff received everything it sought.’ In both cases the suits were dismissed as moot, prior to the entry of a permanent injunction. Therefore the outcome of both cases should be the same. Plaintiff is the prevailing party and is entitled to the award of attorneys’ fees and costs in this case.”

We disagree.

In Meduri Farms, an effective preliminary injunction was issued by the trial court. Here, however, the preliminary injunction was to become effective only upon the posting of a bond by plaintiff. Because plaintiff never posted the bond, the injunction never became effective. 3 The lessor in Meduri *608 Farms was a prevailing party because it received judicial relief in the form of a preliminary injunction. “Although the claim for permanent injunction was dismissed as moot * * *, [the lessor] had received everything it sought. * * * [The lessor] prevailed on the injunction claim.” 120 Or App at 44. In the present case, although defendants ultimately complied with plaintiffs demands, they did not do so as a result of judicial compulsion. Without an effective order granting plaintiff the injunctive relief it sought, plaintiff could not be a prevailing party under ORS 20.096.

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Bluebook (online)
32 P.3d 929, 176 Or. App. 603, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 1411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conifer-ridge-homeowners-assoc-v-hayworth-orctapp-2001.