Edwards v. Edwards
This text of 773 P.2d 809 (Edwards v. Edwards) 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.
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Plaintiff appeals from a judgment granting defendant’s motion to dismiss after plaintiff filed a claim to partition military retirement benefits not included in a judgment dissolving the parties’ marriage. ORCP 21A(5). The issue is whether plaintiff obtained service on defendant.1 We affirm.
Plaintiff mailed the summons and complaint to defendant at a Nevada post office box address that defendant had given to relatives and government agencies as a mailing address while he traveled. She also mailed copies of the summons and complaint to defendant’s former attorney,2 to defendant in care of his mother, and to defendant in care of his daughter.3 Plaintiffs summons and complaint were returned from the Nevada address “unclaimed” after being sent by certified mail, return receipt requested. Plaintiff argues that she obtained service on defendant by complying with the provisions of ORCP 7D(2)(d). This issue involves consideration of the relationship among three subsections of ORCP 7, which provides, in part:
“D.(l) Notice Required. Summons shall be served, either within or without this state, in any manner reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise the defendant of the existence and pendency of the action and to afford a reasonable opportunity to appear and defend. Summons may be served in a manner specified in this rule or by any other rule or statute on the defendant or upon an agent [626]*626authorized by appointment or law to accept service of summons for the defendant. Service may be made, subject to the restrictions and requirements of this rule, by the following methods: personal service of summons upon defendant or an agent of defendant authorized to receive process; substituted service by leaving a copy of summons and complaint at a person’s dwelling house or usual place of abode; office service by leaving with a person who is apparently in charge of an office; service by mail; or, service by publication.
“D.(2) Service methods.
<<* * * * *
“D.(2)(d) Service by mail. Service by mail, when required or allowed by this rule, shall be made by mailing a true copy of the summons and a true copy of the complaint to the defendant by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested. * * *.
“D.(3) Particular defendants. Service may be made upon specified defendants as follows:
“D.(3)(a) Individuals.
“D.(3)(a)(i) Generally. Upon an individual defendant, by personal service upon such defendant or an agent authorized by appointment or law to receive service of summons or, if defendant personally cannot be found at defendant’s dwelling house or usual place of abode, then by substituted service or by office service upon such defendant or an agent authorized by appointment or law to receive service of summons.” (Emphasis supplied.)
ORCP 7D(1) imposes a constitutional standard of “adequate notice,” which is distinguished by the rule from “actual notice.” In Jordan v. Wiser, 302 Or 50, 59 n 2, 726 P2d 365 (1986), the court quoted with approval this statement:
“ ‘First, it is true that Rule 7 does not eliminate the requirement that a summons in fact be served. Adequate service of a summons does not require that the defendant actually receive notice, but only that summons be served in a manner reasonably calculated to give notice.’ * * * Merrill, Jurisdiction and Summons in Oregon 140-41, § 2.01 (1986).”
If a method of service under ORCP 7D(2) is listed in ORCP 7D(3) as a method to serve a particular class of defendants, then compliance with that method is presumed to be service reasonably calculated to apprise the defendant of the [627]*627pendency of the action. Because service by mail is not provided for individuals in ORCP 7D(3)(a), no presumption arises here. See Lake Oswego Review v. Steinkamp, 298 Or 607, 613, 695 P2d 565 (1985).
Plaintiff argues that service by mail under the circumstances of this case was “reasonably calculated” to give notice to defendant. We disagree. The summons and complaint were not mailed by certified mail, return receipt requested, delivery restricted to addressee, as in Lake Oswego Review v. Steinkamp, supra. Plaintiffs letter could have been signed for by anyone. Additionally, mailing the summons and complaint to defendant’s post office box while he was traveling did not reasonably insure that he would receive notice of the pendency of the claim in time to make an appearance. A default could have occurred before he picked up his mail.4
The dissent dwells on the laudable efforts of plaintiff to give notice to defendant by mailing copies of the summons and complaint to defendant’s former attorney and to defendant in care of his relatives and by having a friend mail a summons and complaint to defendant. The dissent would apparently agree that none of those efforts standing alone was reasonably calculated to give notice. Combined they were not either. It follows that those efforts do not aid plaintiffs argument.
The dissent further focuses on the fact that, without opening them, defendant mailed back the envelopes sent to him in care of his relatives and then forwarded to his post office box. It implies that, because defendant may have been attempting to avoid service, plaintiffs efforts are adequate. That implication blurs the distinction between “actual [628]*628notice” and the requirement that service be reasonably calculated to give a defendant notice, regardless of whether the defendant has actual notice. While sensitivity to the inference that this defendant intentionally attempted to avoid service is commendable, the dissenter would leave Oregon residents who are regularly out of state vulnerable to service of process and default because they did not receive service in time to appear. We conclude that the manner of mailing under the circumstances of this case was not reasonably calculated to apprise defendant of the pendency of the action.5
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
773 P.2d 809, 96 Or. App. 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-edwards-orctapp-1989.