Janson v. Kore
This text of 301 P.3d 443 (Janson v. Kore) 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.
Opinion
Respondent appeals a judgment that imposed a permanent stalking protective order (SPO) against her, contending that the circuit court lacked authority to impose that SPO. Respondent also appeals an order of the circuit court that dismissed a temporary restraining order that had been imposed against her under the Family Abuse Prevention Act (FAPA). We reverse the judgment imposing the SPO and dismiss her appeal of the circuit court’s FAPA order.
The relevant facts are procedural. Petitioner filed a petition for a restraining order in circuit court under FAPA.1 ORS 107.700 -107.735. The FAPA case was assigned Case Number 111071754. The court issued a temporary restraining order against respondent and scheduled a hearing to determine whether that restraining order should be extended. At the close of that hearing, the court concluded that petitioner had not met her burden under FAPA and dismissed the FAPA temporary restraining order. Without any forewarning or an opportunity for respondent to object, the court then indicated to both parties that it would — on its own motion — enter a permanent SPO against respondent. The court subsequently entered an order dismissing the FAPA temporary restraining order in Case Number 111071754. The court also entered a judgment that imposed the SPO under a different Case Number, 111216634, which the trial court apparently created solely for the purpose of entering that judgment. Respondent filed two notices of appeal, one concerning the order dismissing the FAPA case and the other concerning the SPO judgment. Both appeals seek [516]*516reversal of the circuit court’s SPO judgment, and we have consolidated them for our review.2
We begin with the SPO judgment in Case Number 111216634. “The measure of the court’s authority in the administration of statutory remedies is to be found in the statute creating the procedure.” Parmele v. Mathews, 233 Or 616, 619, 379 P2d 869 (1963). Oregon law authorizes a circuit court to issue an SPO in only two circumstances. First, a circuit court may do so after a person brings a civil action and seeks an SPO as a remedy. ORS 30.866. Second, a court may do so after a person has presented a complaint to a law enforcement officer and that officer has served a citation containing specific notice requirements on the person sought to be restrained. ORS 163.735; ORS 163.738; ORS 163.744. Petitioner in this case took neither of those routes, and at no time did she ask the court to issue an SPO.3
The relevant statutes do not grant a circuit court the authority to impose an SPO sua sponte, let alone to create an entirely new case and enter a judgment imposing an SPO with no forewarning to either party. Thus, the circuit court erred by invoking an authority that it had not been asked to invoke.
We turn to respondent’s appeal from case number 111071754. Because we are reversing the SPO judgment, respondent has requested that we dismiss her appeal from [517]*517the FAPA case. The appeal from that case is therefore dismissed.
In A150433, appeal dismissed. In A150434, reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
301 P.3d 443, 256 Or. App. 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janson-v-kore-orctapp-2013.