Goeddertz v. Parchen
This text of 701 P.2d 781 (Goeddertz v. Parchen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Petitioner, the personal representative in the probate estate from which this present controversy arose, sought reversal by the Court of Appeals of two circuit court determinations entered in the probate estate. The relief sought before the Court of Appeals was, in principal part, reversal of a “Judgment-Order”1 entered in circuit court in respect of a hearing upon an objection to the final account in the probate estate. The Court of Appeals affirmed without opinion.
We do not reach the merits of this case. The two documents upon which petitioner bases her appeal are entitled, respectively, “ORDER DIRECTING PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE TO PAY AN ALLOWED CLAIM” and “JUDGMENT-ORDER ON HEARING ON OBJECTIONS TO FINAL ACCOUNT.” To the best that we are able to determine from the probate file in this case, no decree of final distribution has been entered. The threshold question is whether either document from which appeal was taken is a judgment, decree or appealable order.
Appeals from a circuit court sitting in probate are taken in the same manner as other appeals from circuit court. ORS 111.105(2). ORS 19.0102 specifies what lower court [280]*280determinations are appealable. The character of a document is to be determined by its content and not by its title. Cockrum v. Graham, 143 Or 233, 242, 21 P2d 1084 (1933). However, to constitute a judgment, the document must be so labeled, ORCP 70 A.; City of Portland v. Carriage Inn, 296 Or 191, 194, 673 P2d 531 (1983). We conclude that neither document relied upon by petitioner is a judgment, decree or appealable order. A “judgment” is the “final determination of the rights of the parties in an action.” An “order” is “any other determination * * * which is intermediate in nature.” ORCP 67 A.
The first document, entitled an “order,” merely directs the personal representative to pay a previously allowed claim, pursuant to ORS 115.185.3 The second document, entitled “judgment-order,” in effect, allowed an objection relating to a purported inter vivos gift and denied an objection to the claim underlying the first order.
Neither document is a judgment or decree, ORS 19.010(1), nor the kind of order described in ORS 19.010(2), which is treated as a judgment or decree for the purpose of being reviewed on appeal. Neither document qualifies as an order embraced within ORS 19.010(4) which confers appellate jurisdiction in special statutory proceedings. Cf ORS 28.040 and 28.070. This appeal must be dismissed on our own motion for want of appellate jurisdiction. Meyer v. Joseph, 295 Or 588, 590, 668 P2d 1228 (1983).
The appeal is dismissed, and the case is remanded to the circuit court.
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701 P.2d 781, 299 Or. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goeddertz-v-parchen-or-1985.