Hunt v. City of Eugene

278 P.3d 70, 249 Or. App. 410, 2012 WL 1421778, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 528
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 25, 2012
Docket120614854; A134660; 160120047; A139749; 169404823; A141288; 160120047; A142266; 160607152; A144320
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 278 P.3d 70 (Hunt v. City of Eugene) 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
Hunt v. City of Eugene, 278 P.3d 70, 249 Or. App. 410, 2012 WL 1421778, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 528 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

*414 SCHUMAN, P. J.

This 18-year plague on the judicial system is before us yet again, this time with six judgments in four different actions, 13 assignments of error on appeal, four assignments on cross-appeal, and 200 pages of appellate briefing — all because of “unsightly” yard debris. For the reasons that follow, we affirm in part and reverse in part.

I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The relevant procedural history of this metastasis begins in the fall of 1993, when the City of Eugene ordered Nick Shevchynski and Philip M. Newman to either correct city code violations on property on Skyline Boulevard or else face a daily penalty. The code violations were based on an accumulation of“unsightly” debris, the storage of wood scrap, and vehicles in the yard. In March 1994, a hearing officer for the city concluded that a leaf pile and wood scrap were in violation of the city code and imposed a $4,000 fine ($100 per day for violations over 40 days) on Shevchynski, the property’s occupant, and Newman, one of its owners.

What followed was the result of procedural mishaps, as well as confusion and disagreement about who, exactly, owned the Skyline property. Shevchynski had purchased the property on a land sale contract from Sharlee Wood in 1981. Eight years later, he transferred the property to Newman, the trustee of the Halverson trust, which Shevchynski had created for the benefit of his daughter. By the terms of the Halverson trust, Newman was then required to deed the Skyline property four or five years later to a different trust, the Clarabell trust, whose primary beneficiary was Shevchynski’s mother, Clara.

Two months after the hearing officer imposed the $4,000 fine, Newman, the Halverson trustee, recorded a deed to transfer ownership of the Skyline property to the Clarabell trust. The day after recording the deed, Shevchynski and Newman filed a petition for issuance of a writ of review, challenging the imposition of the $4,000 fine. Their writ of review *415 petition alleged that the city had failed to follow its own procedures, that the fine was not supported by substantial evidence, and that the city’s nuisance ordinance was unconstitutionally vague. In the course of the writ of review proceedings, Judge Allen, the circuit court judge to whom the case was assigned, discovered that three-quarters of the audio recording of the administrative hearing was missing. On December 2,1994, Judge Allen ordered the city to hold a new hearing within 45 days but did not issue the writ of review.

The city held a new hearing 10 days later, but it did not give sufficient notice to Shevchynski and Newman, neither of whom appeared. The city then held a third hearing in January 1995, and the hearing officer imposed a fine of $3,400, reduced from $4,000. The hearing officer further concluded that Shevchynski alone was responsible for the fine (as opposed to Newman, the trustee, or Sharlee Wood, who still carried a contract on the property).

At that point, the parties returned to the writ of review proceedings before Judge Allen. Shevchynski argued that the January 1995 hearing (the third hearing) had not been held on the same basis as the first hearing, as the court had ordered, because the city did not call the same witnesses. Judge Allen agreed and, in April 1995, set aside the fine.

The city appealed the decision to set aside the fine, and this court vacated the judgment and remanded the case to the circuit court. Shevchynski v. City of Eugene, 157 Or App 355, 970 P2d 237 (1998). We held that the circuit court lacked authority to set aside the city’s order because the court had never actually issued a writ of review, as required by ORS 34.060 and ORS 34.080. Id. at 360.

By the time that the case was remanded to the circuit court, Judge Allen had retired, and the case was assigned to Judge Billings. However, Shevchynski and the other writ petitioners moved to disqualify Judge Billings, and the motion was granted. The case was then assigned to Judge Velure, and his rulings on various issues, including on another motion to disqualify and a third amended petition, yielded two notices of appeal. In February 2001, those appeals were dismissed by order (for lack of an appealable *416 order) and jurisdiction returned to the circuit court. At that point, the writ of review proceeding stalled — neither the court nor the parties did anything in response to the remand from this court.

A few months later, in August 2001, the city mailed a notice of two liens on the Skyline property — one based on the $4,000 fine (from the hearing officer’s original decision) and another for an unrelated $18,160 fine. But rather than mail the notice to Shevchynski, the city mailed it to Sharlee Wood, who still had an interest in the property according to the tax rolls. By 2001, Shevchynski had already paid off the land sale contract to Wood, but Wood had not recorded a deed transferring the property to him; one week after the city mailed the notice, Wood recorded a deed conveying the property to Shevchynski. The deed purported to be “the fulfillment of a land sale contract” and noted, in terms of encumbrances, “Decision - Findings of Hearing, City of Eugene Lien.”

In October 2001, the city filed a new action in Lane County Circuit Court in which it sought to foreclose the two liens. The city named Newman, Halverson trustee, and Sharlee Wood, Clarabell trustee, as the defendants in the lien foreclosure action. Wood, though, was never a Clarabell trustee, and the city dismissed her from the action. The city proceeded with only Newman, Halverson trustee, as the defendant. Newman, in his original answer, denied that he owned the Skyline property.

The parties to the lien foreclosure action — the city and Newman, as the Halverson trustee — filed cross-motions for summary judgment in the summer of 2002. Newman, in opposition to the city’s motion, argued that the writ of review proceeding regarding the $4,000 fine — a case that had been inactive since it was remanded in February 2001 — was nonetheless still pending, and that the $4,000 fine was not yet final. The trial court granted the city’s motion for summary judgment at a hearing in September 2002.

In early October 2002, Newman asked to be joined in the lien foreclosure action in a different capacity: that of a co-trustee of the Clarabell trust. 1 He also moved to join *417 Shevchynski, co-trustee of the Clarabell trust, while Shevchynski separately filed a motion to intervene in his individual capacity. The trial court denied the motions to join the Clarabell co-trustees and denied Shevchynski’s motion to intervene.

Four interlocutory appeals later, and after a failed attempt to remove the lien action to federal court, the parties in May 2006 litigated the form of judgment in the lien foreclosure action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 P.3d 70, 249 Or. App. 410, 2012 WL 1421778, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-city-of-eugene-orctapp-2012.