In re the Marriage of Harris
This text of 799 P.2d 699 (In re the Marriage of Harris) 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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Appellant petitions for review of our order dismissing his appeal from a judgment of dissolution because of a lack of timely service of the notice of appeal on respondent.1 We treat the petition as one for reconsideration, ORAP 9.15(1), allow it and adhere to our previous order.
The trial court entered judgment in this proceeding on January 11, 1990. On February 9, appellant’s attorney sent a notice of appeal by first class mail to the trial court reporter and the Umatilla County Trial Court Administrator, as required by ORS 19.028(2).2 However, the copy sent to respondent’s attorney was addressed to him at the post office box for the trial court administrator. On February 13, knowing that an appeal had been filed, respondent’s attorney notified the office of appellant’s attorney that he had not received the notice of appeal. That same day, a secretary mailed to respondent’s attorney a second copy of the notice. On February 14, he received both copies of the notice of appeal.
The issue is whether sending a notice of appeal to the wrong post office box is “service” for purposes of ORS 19.028(2). Appellant first argues that this defect is not jurisdictional, because neither the language nor the underlying history of ORS 19.028(2) expressly governs addressing an envelope containing a notice of appeal or requires dismissal if service requirements are not met.3 However, surely, the legislature intended, by allowing service of notices of appeal by mail, that notices be mailed to the correct address. Under appellant’s view, ORS 19.028(2) could be satisfied by depositing in a mailbox an envelope with the correct name and any address. That certainly would defeat the purpose underlying [212]*212ORS 19.028(2), which is to ensure that potential respondents are put on notice of the filing of appeals.
Appellant next contends that our amended order is inconsistent with our holding in Kahl v. SAIF, 86 Or App 203, 738 P2d 999 (1987). There, we held that the evidence was persuasive that claimant “mailed” a request for review to the Worker’s Compensation Board under ORS 656.2954 when he put in the mail a letter addressed to the proper party at the correct street address, but with an erroneous zip code. That mistake resulted in the claimant’s request being sent to SAIF, apparently because the address included a zip code used exclusively by SAIF. We said:
“The delivery by the Postal Service to a zip code instead of a street address does not nullify the fact that claimant complied with the requirement that he mail a request for review to the Board within 30 days of the referee’s order. Service was adequate.” 86 Or App at 206.
In contrast, appellant’s notice was addressed to the correct city and zip code, but the wrong post office box.
If service by mail of a notice of appeal is to be an adequate substitute for personal service, it must, as with other types of service, be reasonably calculated to apprise the other party of the existence and pendency of the appeal and to afford a reasonable opportunity to appear and defend. See, e.g., ORCP 7D(1). A wrong zip code with an otherwise correct address, as occurred in Kahl, is reasonably calculated to give that type of notice, because the claimant’s notice likely would have been delivered to the proper addressee. That probability does not exist when an address contains the wrong post office box or when personal service is on the wrong individual or substituted service is made by leaving a summons and complaint at the wrong address. See ORCP 7D(2)(b). Indeed, in [213]*213those situations there is the possibility that the intended individual will never receive notice of any pending proceedings.5
Appellant next argues that the legislative history of ORS 19.028(2) “establishes that the Oregon Legislature does not want litigants deprived of their appellate rights merely because of defects in the manner of service.” Before 1987, a party who sought to achieve service by mailing had to secure the receipt of the notice of appeal within the 30-day period. In 1987, the legislature amended ORS 19.028(2) so that service became effective at the time of mailing the notice, if it was mailed by registered or certified mail. In Hein v. Columbia County, 96 Or App 576, 773 P2d 791, rev den 308 Or 197 (1989), we held that a notice sent by regular mail still had to be received within the 30-day period. In response to Hein, the 1989 legislature amended ORS 19.028(2) to provide that the date of mailing by first class mail, as well as registered or certified mail, is the date of service of a notice of appeal. Or Laws 1989, ch 768, § 12. From that history, we discern no legislative intent to dispense with the requirement that the notice be mailed to the correct address.
Finally, appellant invokes the holding in Street v. Gibson, 60 Or App 768, 655 P2d 604 (1982), aff’d 295 Or 112, 663 P2d 769 (1983), in support of his argument that the mistaken address was a “mere scrivener’s error” that should not deprive us of jurisdiction. In Street, a notice of appeal was addressed to the respondent and his attorney, but did not name anyone as the appellant. However, the notice was signed by one of the attorneys for the appellants, so there was no question of which side was filing the appeal. We held that, because the respondent was neither misled nor prejudiced, the failure to name an appellant was a mere scrivener’s error, a defect that did not deprive the court of jurisdiction. Street v. Gibson, supra, 60 Or App 770.
[214]*214On review, the Oregon Supreme Court affirmed, stating:
“The question is whether the Court of Appeals obtained jurisdiction, by a textually faulty notice of appeal, to determine that the fault was a ‘scrivener’s error’ and to allow a correction of that error so as to establish its jurisdiction over the appeal. We hold that the court had jurisdiction to make this determination and corresponding correction.” 295 Or at 115. (Emphasis supplied.)
We reached similar conclusions in Guinasso v. Pacific First Federal, 89 Or App 270, 273-74, 749 P2d 577, rev den 305 Or 672 (1988), where we held that failure of notice of appeal to refer to the named plaintiffs as class representatives rather than as individuals was not a jurisdictional defect, and City of Portland v. Smith, 75 Or App 38, 41, 705 P2d 205, rev den
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
799 P.2d 699, 104 Or. App. 209, 1990 Ore. App. LEXIS 1412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-harris-orctapp-1990.