Cramblit v. Diamond B Constructors

105 P.3d 906, 197 Or. App. 358, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 102
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 2, 2005
Docket1201-20364; A119934
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 105 P.3d 906 (Cramblit v. Diamond B Constructors) 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
Cramblit v. Diamond B Constructors, 105 P.3d 906, 197 Or. App. 358, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 102 (Or. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

*360 SCHUMAN, P. J.

This litigation began four years ago as a dispute between plaintiff, a sheet metal worker, and defendant, his employer, over allegedly unpaid wages amounting to approximately $200.00. During the litigation, plaintiffs demand for relief grew to over $100,000, defendant rejected an arbitrated resolution, and each side’s attorney fees reached well into the realm of five figures. Ultimately, the trial court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss and taxed plaintiff for $20,031.03 in attorney fees and costs. Plaintiff appeals. We vacate the trial court’s supplemental judgment awarding fees and otherwise affirm.

Plaintiff belonged to the Sheet Metal Workers’ International Association, Local Union No. 16. Defendant contacted plaintiffs union hall in Gresham and hired plaintiff for a project some 40 miles away in Salem. Halfway through his third day on the job, plaintiff was fired. Defendant immediately issued him a check that included pay for most of the hours worked on the site. Plaintiff, believing that his employment contract also entitled him for payment for travel time and mileage between the union hall and the job site, complained to his union, which promised to undertake grievance proceedings. By the seventy-fifth day after his termination, defendant paid plaintiff for travel time and mileage, explaining to him in a letter that, contrary to defendant’s original understanding, it now acknowledged that the collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between defendant and plaintiffs union governing work at the Salem job site required payment as plaintiff demanded.

Plaintiff, however, believed that he was entitled not only to compensation for travel time and mileage, but also for penalties due to defendant’s delay in paying that compensation. A document titled “Standard Form of Union Agreement, Form A-5-98 Revised,” governed terms and conditions of employment between members of plaintiffs union and their employers. 1 It contained a provision requiring payment for *361 “all hours up to the time [the employee] receives pay,” including, in the event that employer did not fully pay amounts due at the time of termination, payment at overtime rates for all hours between that termination and actual payment.

Initially, the union notified plaintiff that, under the CBA, he could not seek penalties for the unpaid travel time and mileage. Subsequently, however, a union representative told plaintiff that he was entitled to penalties for the late payment of travel time and mileage. The representative calculated the penalty under the terms of the agreement to be $104,131.44, that is, the amount plaintiff would have earned working eight hours per day at overtime rates from the time he was terminated until the time he was fully paid. In the same letter, however, the representative proposed to settle for $8,724.00. According to the representative, that amount constituted the total penalty to which plaintiff was entitled, not under the CBA, but under ORS 652.140(1) and ORS 652.150. Those statutes, according to the union, would require defendant to pay a penalty in the amount of all wages plaintiff would have earned at his regular hourly rate for 30 eight-hour days. Defendant refused to pay either sum, and plaintiff brought this action. The complaint clearly specifies that plaintiff seeks penalty wages under ORS 652.140 and ORS 652.150, not under the CBA.

The matter went to court-ordered arbitration. The arbitrator resolved the dispute in plaintiffs favor and awarded him $4,362.48 in penalty wages, $697.00 in costs, and $4,900.00 in attorney fees. Pursuant to ORS 36.425(2)(a), defendant rejected the arbitration and requested a trial de novo. 2 At that trial, defendant moved for dismissal under ORCP 54 B after the close of plaintiffs case. The trial court granted the motion and entered judgment accordingly. In a supplemental judgment, the court awarded defendant $20,031.03 in attorney fees and costs. Plaintiff *362 appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in allowing defendant’s motion to dismiss; in failing to make findings and conclusions; in denying plaintiffs motion to vacate “all proceedings” after the arbitration because defendant did not timely pay required court fees; and in awarding attorney fees. 3

Before addressing plaintiffs assignments of error, we address defendant’s argument that we must dismiss the appeal because we lack jurisdiction. That argument stems from the unexplained fact that two judgments were filed dismissing this case. One was dated October 16, 2002, and entered on October 23; the other was dated October 28,2002, and entered on November 1. Except for the dates, the judgments are identical. Plaintiffs notice of appeal, which was timely as to both, advised defendant that the appeal was from the later, October 28, judgment, a copy of which was attached. After the supplemental judgment awarding attorney fees was entered, plaintiff timely filed an amended notice of appeal.

Defendant argues that the earlier, October 16, judgment is the only operative one; the later judgment, defendant maintains, is null because it did not expressly supersede the earlier one. Thus, defendant argues, by appealing from a “nullity,” plaintiff did not provide “notice * * * that an appeal is taken from the judgment” as required under ORS 19.250(l)(c). 4 Defendant further argues that plaintiffs *363 amended notice of appeal from the trial court’s supplemental judgment awarding attorney fees is not cognizable because the •underlying judgment on which the attorney fee entitlement depends is not final. King v. Clements, 143 Or App 462, 470, 923 P2d 688 (1996).

We disagree. Even if the earlier judgment was the proper document from which plaintiff should have appealed — and defendant offers no reason why we should consider the later judgment, rather than the earlier one, “a nullity” — plaintiffs failure to refer to and attach the correct judgment is not a fatal defect. Plaintiffs notice of appeal referred to a judgment that is identical in content to the first judgment in every way except for its date, as was the copy he attached to the notice. Thus, plaintiff s error is essentially the same as if he had mistakenly included an erroneous date. That is not a jurisdictional defect. See, e.g., Fuller v. Blanc, 160 Or 50, 55, 77 P2d 440 (1938) (notice of appeal is not insufficient because it specifies a wrong date as date of judgment); Lee v. Gram,

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Bluebook (online)
105 P.3d 906, 197 Or. App. 358, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cramblit-v-diamond-b-constructors-orctapp-2005.