Nibler v. Oregon Department of Transportation

105 P.3d 360, 338 Or. 19, 2005 Ore. LEXIS 64
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 2005
DocketCC 0212-12262; SC S50351
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 105 P.3d 360 (Nibler v. Oregon Department of Transportation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nibler v. Oregon Department of Transportation, 105 P.3d 360, 338 Or. 19, 2005 Ore. LEXIS 64 (Or. 2005).

Opinion

*21 CARSON, C. J.

The issue in this original mandamus proceeding is whether defendants-relators, the Oregon Department of Transportation and the Oregon Department of State Police (defendants), are entitled to a peremptory writ of mandamus requiring the trial court to change venue in the underlying negligence action from Multnomah County to Washington County. We conclude that defendants are entitled to that relief and, accordingly, direct the issuance of a peremptory writ.

The relevant facts are few and undisputed. Plaintiff-adverse party (plaintiff) and his wife were involved in an automobile accident in Washington County that resulted in his wife’s death. As personal representative of his wife’s estate, plaintiff filed an action against defendants in Multnomah County, alleging negligence in a number of respects. Defendants responded with a motion that, for our purposes here, argued that ORS 14.060, set out post, required venue in Washington County, where the accident had occurred. 1 The trial court denied the motion to change venue, and we allowed defendants’ mandamus petition challenging that ruling and issued an alternative writ.

ORS 14.060, the statute upon which defendants rely, provides:

“Any suit against any department, official, officer, commissioner, commission or board of the state, as such, or in [sic] virtue of such status, other than a suit for the causes enumerated in ORS 14.040, may be brought in the county wherein the cause of suit, or some part thereof, arose.” 2

*22 The parties dispute the meaning of ORS 14.060 and, particularly, the effect of the legislature’s use of the ordinarily permissive word “may” in that statute. Before addressing those arguments, however, we first consider whether ORS 14.060 applies to plaintiffs action at all.

By its plain terms, ORS 14.060 applies to “any suit” that falls within the scope of that statute. In legal parlance, the word “suit” most specifically is used to refer to proceedings in equity, which plaintiffs action is not. See, e.g., Giant Powder Co. v. Oregon W. Ry. Co., 54 Or 325, 327,101 P 209, 103 P 501 (1909) (“An ‘action’ is a proceeding at law to enforce a private right or to redress a private wrong * * *; but in equity the compulsion for that purpose is known as a ‘suit[.]’ ” (internal citations omitted)). The legal usage of that word, however, is by no means always that specific. See, e.g., Thorp v. Rutherford, 150 Or 157, 163, 43 P2d 907 (1935) (“Text[-]writers and courts sometimes use the word[s] ‘suit’ and ‘action’ as synonymous.”). Thus, the question here is: what meaning did the legislature intend by using the word “suit” in ORS 14.060?

A casual reading of the venue statutes in ORS chapter 14 suggests a legislative intent for the more specific usage. Compare ORS 14.050 and ORS 14.080 (referring to “actions”) with ORS 14.060 (referring to “suits”) and ORS 14.030 and ORS 14.040 (referring to “any cause of action or suit” and “actions and suits,” respectively). The evolution of ORS 14.060 over time supports that view as well. See Krieger v. Just, 319 Or 328, 336, 876 P2d 754 (1994) (“[Warding changes adopted from session to session are a part of context of the present version of the statute being construed.”). As originally enacted in 1939, ORS 14.060 began with the phrase “[a]ny suit in equity * * Or Laws 1939, ch 284, § 1, *23 codified as OCLA § 9-109 (1940). Although the legislature condensed that introductory phrase to its present form by eliminating the words “in equity” when it enacted the Oregon Revised Statutes in 1953, compare OCLA § 9-109 (1940), with ORS 14.060 (1953), the legislature, as a general matter, did not intend to make any substantive changes in the law when it created Oregon’s present statutory scheme. See ORS 174.550 (so providing).

The foregoing contextual review, standing alone, strongly suggests that the legislature intended ORS 14.060 to apply only to suits in equity and not also to actions at law, such as plaintiffs case. There is, however, more. In 1979, as part of its adoption of the Oregon Rules of Civil Procedure, the legislature, through ORCP 2, largely abolished the procedural distinctions between law and equity practice. ORCP 2 provides:

“There shall be one form- of action known as a civil action. All procedural distinctions between actions at law and suits in equity are hereby abolished, except for those distinctions specifically provided for by these rules, by statute, or by the Constitution of this state.”

Additionally, and more importantly for our purposes, the legislature also enacted ORS 174.590 that same year, providing:

“References in the statute laws of this state, including provisions of law deemed to be rules of court as provided in ORS 1.745, in effect on or after January 1,1980, to actions, actions at law, proceedings at law, suits, suits in equity, proceedings in equity, judgments or decrees are not intended and shall not be construed to retain procedural distinctions between actions at law and suits in equity abolished by ORCP 2.”

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Bluebook (online)
105 P.3d 360, 338 Or. 19, 2005 Ore. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nibler-v-oregon-department-of-transportation-or-2005.