Litvin v. Engesether

678 P.2d 1232, 67 Or. App. 240
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 7, 1984
Docket39-554; CA A21444; 39-966; CA A21143
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 678 P.2d 1232 (Litvin v. Engesether) 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
Litvin v. Engesether, 678 P.2d 1232, 67 Or. App. 240 (Or. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

*243 WARDEN, J.

This is a consolidated appeal of two actions, one by plaintiffs Litvin (the Litvins) for specific performance of a land sale contract, which we review de novo, and the other by plaintiff Maring & Associates (Maring) to recover a real estate broker’s commission on the sale to the Litvins, which we review for errors of law. The two cases were also consolidated for trial to the court.

The trial court advised the parties by letter dated February 27, 1981, that it found that the Litvins and defendant Engesether had entered into a binding contract on or about August 18,1978, for the purchase and sale of the subject property. Based on that finding, judgment for Maring was entered April 24, 1981. Defendant appealed from that judgment on May 22. Judgment in the Litvins’ action ordering specific performance and awarding defendant $22,295.63 on his affirmative answer and counterclaim for improving the subject property was entered May 27, 1981. The Litvins appealed from that judgment on June 26.

An amended judgment was entered in the Litvins’ action on June 30, 1981. Defendant moved to dismiss the Litvins’ appeal from the May 27 judgment on July 10. The Litvins appealed from the amended judgment on July 29, and defendant cross-appealed on August 10. On December 17, 1981, we allowed defendant’s motion to dismiss the Litvins’ appeal from the May 27 judgment, apparently because the parties and the court assumed that the amended judgment of June 30 was the final, appealable order. Because we are now satisfied that the trial court lost jurisdiction of the matter upon the Litvins’ filing of a notice of appeal from the May 27 judgment, we now reverse our order dismissing the Litvins’ earlier appeal and reinstate that appeal. See Mullinax and Mullinax, 292 Or 416, 430, 639 P2d 628 (1982).

The amended judgment, entered after the notice of appeal from the May 27 judgment had been filed, was apparently entered in an effort to make the record speak the truth, but it substantially altered the rights of the parties under the May 27 judgment by adding interest and making payment of the judgment for defendant a condition precedent to the Litvins’ right to specific performance. We find nothing in the *244 transcript or the letters from the trial judge to show that he originally intended to include those provisions.

After a judgment is entered, a trial court retains jurisdiction over a case on appeal only to facilitate the appeals process, to correct clerical errors and to make the record speak the truth. See, e.g., Gordon Creek Tree Farms, Inc. v. Layne, 230 Or 204, 358 P2d 1062 (1961); Caueny v. Asheim, et al. 202 Or 195, 274 P2d 281 (1954); Bank of Oregon v. Hiway Products, Inc., 41 Or App 223, 598 P2d 318 (1979). 1 Trial courts do not have jurisdiction substantially to alter the rights of the parties once an appeal has been taken. Caveny v. Asheim, et al, supra, 202 Or at 210. Because the June 30 judgment substantially altered the rights of the parties after the notice of appeal from the original judgment had been filed, it was beyond the trial court’s jurisdiction to enter it. It follows that the appeal and the cross-appeal from the amended judgment must be dismissed. Thus we have before us only defendant’s appeal from the April 24,1982, judgment and the Litvins’ appeal from the May 27,1981, judgment.

Defendant’s appeal from the judgment for Maring’s commission was taken while the action by the Litvins was still pending. Therefore, we must also determine whether we have jurisdiction over that appeal in the light of ORCP 67(B) which, together with ORS 19.010(2)(e), 2 bars an appeal from a *245 judgment for less than all claims or parties in an action except upon an “express determination that there is no just reason for delay * * ORCP 67(B); see Industrial Leasing Corp. v. Van Dyke, 285 Or 375, 591 P2d 352 (1979); Redmond Electric v. Gonzales, 63 Or App 606, 665 P2d 373 (1983). No such determination was made here.

Appeals held barred by ORCP 67(B) have included appeals from a judgment failing to adjudicate third party claims, Industrial Leasing Corp. v. Van Dyke, supra, from judgments on less than all claims, cross-claims or counterclaims in an action, Valdez v. Timmerman, 58 Or App 366, 648 P2d 365 (1982); Hill v. Oland, 52 Or App 791, 629 P2d 867 (1981); Kuvass v. Cutrell, 50 Or App 529, 623 P2d 1116 (1981), and from judgments against fewer than all defendants named in the complaint. State Farm v. Sommerholder, 59 Or App 697, 652 P2d 2 (1982); Adkins v. Watrous, 57 Or App 541, 645 P2d 591 (1982); First Nat’l Bank of Oregon v. Diversified Truss, 54 Or App 899, 636 P2d 991 (1981).

Those cases are not controlling here. These are separate cases. There are no third party claims, each judgment fully adjudicated all claims pled, and nothing was left pending between Maring and defendant after the entry of judgment in Maring’s action. Maring moved to consolidate the trials for reasons of economy and convenience, because each case involved similar questions of law and fact, requiring testimony from the same witnesses. Maring’s action was otherwise wholly independent of the Litvins’. We conclude that this is not a situation “[w]hen more than one claim for relief is presented in an action * * *,” ORCP 67(B) (emphasis supplied), and therefore ORCP 67(B) does not apply to this case. See Pacific Northwest Bell v. Davis, 43 Or App 999, 1002 n 4, 608 P2d 547 (1979).

We briefly summarize the facts. On March 10, 1978, an earnest money agreement was executed by the parties. It *246 provided that the defendant would sell the subject property to the Litvins and build a 12-unit apartment complex on it. Details regarding the construction of the apartments were to be agreed upon later. The agreement also included a promise by defendant to pay Maring a broker’s commission.

By the middle of May, 1978, it was clear that defendant no longer wanted to build the apartment complex and convey the property to the Litvins for the price stated in the earnest money agreement. The cost of financing the project was apparently greater than defendant had anticipated. The Litvins indicated that they might be willing to pay more for the property, considering defendant’s costs, and that matter was a subject of discussion between the parties through their attorneys for a period of two or three months.

On August 18, 1978, the Litvins and their attorney met with defendant and his attorney. At the end of that four-hour meeting, and after adjustments were made in the selling price and the financing arrangements, all the parties thought an agreement had been reached regarding the purchase and sale of the land and the uncompleted apartment complex. The terms of the agreement were put in writing by defendant’s attorney that same day.

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Bluebook (online)
678 P.2d 1232, 67 Or. App. 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/litvin-v-engesether-orctapp-1984.