Myers v. Carter

556 P.2d 703, 27 Or. App. 351, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 1415
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 15, 1976
DocketA76-03-03943, CA 6133
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 556 P.2d 703 (Myers v. Carter) 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
Myers v. Carter, 556 P.2d 703, 27 Or. App. 351, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 1415 (Or. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

*353 TANZER, J.

This is an appeal from an order granting a writ of review. Appellant brought a forcible entry and detainer (FED) action in the district court. There was a jury verdict and a judgment for appellant pursuant to which respondent was ordered to vacate appellant’s house and to pay $500 in attorney fees and costs. Appeal bond was fixed at $2,000.

Respondent then filed a petition for writ of review in the circuit court alleging that the district court had improperly construed the applicable law. The circuit court entered an order granting the writ and remanding the case for a new trial, and this appeal followed.

The threshold issue is whether a writ of review lies to obtain circuit court review of a district court’s construction of the applicable law.

The circumstances under which the writ is appropriate are set forth in ORS 34.040:

"The writ shall be allowed in all cases where the inferior court, officer, or tribunal other than an agency as defined in subsection (1) of ORS 183.310 in the exercise of judicial or quasi-judicial functions appears to have:
"(1) Exceeded its or his jurisdiction;
"(2) Failed to follow the procedure applicable to the matter before it or him;
"(3) Made a finding or order not supported by reliable, probative and substantial evidence; or
"(4) Improperly construed the applicable law; to the injury of some substantial right of the plaintiff, and not otherwise. The fact that the right of appeal exists is no bar to the issuance of the writ.”

The original predecessor to that statute, enacted in 1862, provided that the writ would lie, when no appeal was otherwise available, "where the inferior court, officer, or tribunal in the exercise of judicial functions appears to have exercised such functions erroneously or to have exceeded it or his jurisdiction * * 1 Hill’s Annotated Laws of Oregon, Tit 1, § 585.

*354 Amendment of the statute in 1889 made the availability of the writ expressly concurrent with the right of appeal. 1889 Laws of Oregon, General Laws at 134. Thereafter, the statute remained virtually the same until 1965.

During this time the availability of the writ was consistently limited to cases in which the inferior tribunal had exceeded its jurisdiction or had failed to follow the requisite procedures. Bechtold et al. v. Wilson et al., 182 Or 360, 186 P2d 525, 187 P2d 675 (1947); Dayton v. Board of Equalization, 33 Or 131, 50 P 1009 (1897). Mere error in the construction of the law was not deemed to be an "irregularity of a character to invoke a writ of review.” Baker v. Steele et al, 229 Or 498, 366 P2d 726 (1961).

ORS 34.040 was amended in 1965 to provide that the writ would lie if the tribunal acted "arbitrarily.” 1 This addition was to allow review for substantial evidence. It did not affect the established principle that the writ would not lie to correct erroneous rulings of law. See Vollmer v. Schrunk, 242 Or 196, 409 P2d 177 (1965) (Denecke, J., concurring specially).

The 1973 amendments to ORS 34.040, putting the statute in its present form, preserved, in subsections (1) and (2), the traditional grounds for obtaining the writ and substituted subsection (3) for the word "arbitrary.” None of these changes was intended to expand the scope of the writ. Western Amusement v. Springfield, 274 Or 37, 545 P2d 592 (1976). However, the addition of subsection (4) was so intended. Its purpose was to permit review, on the writ, of administrative rulings for errors of law. This was deemed necessary because the writ is the only means of *355 obtaining judicial review of the quasi-judicial rulings of bodies which are not subject to the Administrative Procedures Act. Subsection (4) was intended to make the scope of review, on the writ, the same as that under the APA. 2

Although subsection (4) was intended to provide review for errors of law where such was not otherwise available, nothing in ORS 34.040 limits its application to such cases. The writ is expressly made available where the "inferior court” has "improperly construed the applicable law,” even if there is an alternative right of appeal. 3 ORS 34.040.

In considering subsection (4), the legislature was advised that its adoption would create duplicitous appeal remedies. 4 In the case of agencies subject to the *356 APA, whose actions would be reviewable in the circuit court on writ of review on the same grounds for which they were reviewable in the Court of Appeals under the APA, such duplicity was deemed undesirable and the legislature expressly exempted those agencies from the purview of the writ. 5 They did not similarly eliminate alternative means of appealing district court decisions, although they might easily have done so. Whatever the legislature’s intent may have been, its words clearly subject inferior courts to review by the circuit court for error in the construction of the applicable law, under ORS 34.040(4), just as it does the quasi-judicial acts of nonjudicial, non-APA bodies.

A writ of review must be tried on the record brought from the inferior court. Wing v. City of Eugene, 249 Or 367, 437 P2d 836 (1968); Western Amusement v. Springfield, supra; Evans v. Schrunk, 4 Or App 437, 479 P2d 1008 (1971). The next issue is, therefore, whether the district court record in this case was sufficient to support the circuit court’s findings of error.

The first such finding was that the district court erred in overruling respondent’s demurrer to appellant’s reply.

*357 ORS 16.320 provides that a defendant may demur to a reply when it appears "on the face thereof” that it is not a sufficient response to the facts stated in the answer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
556 P.2d 703, 27 Or. App. 351, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 1415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-carter-orctapp-1976.