Premier Technology v. OR. STATE LOTTERY

901 P.2d 883, 136 Or. App. 124, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 1162
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 23, 1995
Docket92C-10520; CA A83481
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 901 P.2d 883 (Premier Technology v. OR. STATE LOTTERY) 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
Premier Technology v. OR. STATE LOTTERY, 901 P.2d 883, 136 Or. App. 124, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 1162 (Or. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinions

[126]*126WARREN, P. J.

Plaintiff appeals a judgment dismissing plaintiffs claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. It assigns error to the trial court’s granting of defendant’s motion for summary judgment, ORCP 47, and to its denial of plaintiffs motion to compel defendant’s production of certain documents, ORCP 46. We reverse.

On February 3, 1992, plaintiff and defendant executed a document entitled “Video Lottery Terminal Lease Agreement.” It provides, in part:

“WHEREAS, [plaintiff] submitted a response to OSL RFP 91-07 and a video lottery game(s) manufactured by the [plaintiff] in accordance with the [defendant’s] specifications for [defendant’s] approval; and
“WHEREAS, [defendant] has determined that the acceptance of [plaintiff’s] proposal and the entering into of this Agreement is consistent with the obligations of [defendant] to award contracts to the responsible vendor submitting the lowest and best proposal which maximizes the benefits to [defendant] in relation to cost in the areas of security, competence, experience, timely performance, and maximization of net revenues to benefit the public purposes for which the Oregon State Lottery was established; and
“WHEREAS, [defendant] and [plaintiff] now desire to enter into this Contract in order to allow expeditious and effective implementation of on-line video lottery games by March 30, 1992 (hereinafter referred to as the ‘start-up date’).
“NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the terms and conditions contained herein, [defendant] and [plaintiff] agree as follows:
“3.0 TERM OF AGREEMENT
“3.1 This Agreement shall commence on the date it is fully executed by the parties, and it shall continue for five consecutive one-year periods from the start-up date, with an option to terminate at the end of each such year. Notwithstanding the date of execution, this Agreement shall not become effective until the performance bond required in paragraph 4.4 has been posted by the [plaintiff].
[127]*127“3.2 If, at the time of execution of this Agreement by the parties, the security investigation conducted by the [defendant] has not been completed, the following conditions apply to this Agreement:
“a. This Agreement is not binding upon the parties until the security investigation demonstrates the absence of prohibited criminal activity;
“b. [Plaintiff] shall comply with the implementation schedule and assume all risk that it will not pass the security check with regard to criminal activity;
“c. If [plaintiff] fails to pass the security investigation, [plaintiff] shall remove its terminals at no cost to [defendant] and receive no compensation from [defendant] for its prior compliance with the implementation schedule.
“d. If [plaintiff] passes the security investigation, this Agreement shall become binding upon the parties and shall be given retroactive effect.
“8.1 If the guaranteed initial order of terminals or any portion thereof is not delivered by February 14, 1992, [plaintiff] shall, at [defendant’s] option, either pay for [or] assist in the delivery and installation of the terminals to retailer locations designated by [defendant]. Terminals comprising the guaranteed initial order that are not delivered by February 14,1992, must be delivered and installed by March 13,1992. If such terminals are not delivered and installed by March 13, 1992, [plaintiff] shall pay to [defendant], as fixed and agreed liquidated damages, for each calendar day’s delay, beginning on the next day, but not for more than 60 days, $50 per terminal per day.
“27.1 Termination by [defendant] for Cause or Other Reasons
“[Defendant] reserves the right to terminate this Agreement or any individual games or terminals effective upon delivery of written notice to [plaintiff] pursuant to paragraph 28 upon the occurrence of any of the following:
“c. If [defendant] determines satisfactory performance of the Agreement is substantially endangered or can reasonably anticipate such an occurrence of default.
[128]*128“e. If [plaintiff] jeopardizes the integrity, security, honesty, or fairness of the Lottery.
“Any such termination of this contract shall be without prejudice to any obligations or liabilities of either party already accrued prior to such termination.”

On February 11, 1992, defendant sent plaintiff a letter, which said, in part:

“This is written notice that [defendant] is hereby terminating its conditional contract with [plaintiff], effective immediately, pursuant to Paragraph 27.1(e) of the Agreement. For the reasons described below, [defendant] has concluded that continuation of the contract jeopardizes the integrity, security, honesty or fairness of the Lottery.
“We note first that the contract was conditional upon the completion of a security investigation. Par. 3.2. Although that investigation has not been completed, [defendant] has determined that even if [plaintiff] could satisfy paragraph 3.2 of the Agreement (no prohibited criminal activity), [defendant] has sufficient grounds for termination under Paragraph 27.1(e). Under these circumstances, there is no reason to continue a security investigation as a condition precedent to the contract. Solely for purposes of the termination, [defendant] deems the conditional contract binding.
“The security investigation has established that the failure of [plaintiff] to provide adequate security at [plaintiffs] plant is a threat to the honesty, security and integrity of the Lottery.”

Plaintiff then brought this action in circuit court alleging that the February 3 document was an enforceable agreement, and that defendant’s termination of the agreement before it had completed the security investigation breached the agreement in violation of defendant’s implied duty of good faith and fair dealing. Plaintiff also alleged that defendant breached the agreement by terminating the agreement without cause, by unilaterally imposing additional terms regarding the security of plaintiffs facilities, and by applying a different standard to plaintiff than it did to the other companies awarded similar contracts by defendant. It made claims for breach of contract, declaratory judgment and injunction.

[129]*129Before trial, defendant moved for summary judgment, arguing that its letter terminating the agreement was an administrative “order in other than a contested case,” and that, because plaintiff had failed to file a timely petition for review under the Administrative Procedures Act, the circuit court did not have subject matter jurisdiction. ORS 183.310-(5)(a); ORS 183.484. Plaintiff countered that the APA was not implicated, because its claim was for breach of contract based on defendant’s conduct in terminating the contract.

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Premier Technology v. OR. STATE LOTTERY
901 P.2d 883 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
901 P.2d 883, 136 Or. App. 124, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 1162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/premier-technology-v-or-state-lottery-orctapp-1995.