Scott v. Jackson County

260 P.3d 744, 244 Or. App. 484, 2011 Ore. App. LEXIS 1064
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 27, 2011
Docket091455E2; A144157
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 260 P.3d 744 (Scott v. Jackson County) 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
Scott v. Jackson County, 260 P.3d 744, 244 Or. App. 484, 2011 Ore. App. LEXIS 1064 (Or. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

*486 WOLLHEIM, J.

Plaintiff conducted a rabbit breeding operation on property located in Jackson County. In 2001, plaintiff pleaded no contest to animal abuse, and, in conjunction with the criminal proceedings, the county seized her rabbits. The county housed, treated, and fed the rabbits before declaring them abandoned, at which point the county gave them away. In 2003, plaintiff filed an action against the county in federal court, alleging civil rights violations and common-law tort claims. After the Ninth Circuit affirmed summary judgment as to some of plaintiffs claims, she filed a complaint in state court based on the same factual allegations. The trial court granted the county’s motion for summary judgment based on issue preclusion, and plaintiff now appeals that judgment. We reverse and remand.

This much is undisputed. In May 2001, animal control officers investigated a complaint about the condition of plaintiffs rabbits. The officers discovered and seized four dead rabbits, and plaintiff was charged with animal neglect. In August 2001, county officials executed a search warrant on plaintiffs property and seized approximately 300 rabbits; they left some 300 additional rabbits on the property. Plaintiff subsequently pleaded no contest to one count of animal neglect, and she was sentenced to probation. The sentence, however, also prohibited plaintiff from possessing animals and ordered that she forfeit her remaining rabbits.

The county seized the remaining rabbits immediately after plaintiffs sentence was pronounced. Two weeks later, the sentencing judge reconsidered the conditions of her order. The judge deleted the forfeiture provision but left in place the condition that plaintiff not possess any animals. Plaintiff thereafter sought the return of the rabbits that were in the county’s custody, but the county refused to return them (ostensibly because plaintiff still could not herself possess them). Instead, the county cared for and treated the rabbits, declared them abandoned under county law, and gave away those that had survived.

On July 22, 2003, plaintiff filed an action in federal court, the specifics of which will be discussed later. In short, *487 plaintiff alleged that the county had unlawfully entered her property, unlawfully seized her rabbits and other property, and had then killed, lost, failed to properly treat and care for, or given away the seized rabbits. Her claims ranged from civil rights violations (taking of property; denial of substantive due process; illegal search and seizure) to state common-law claims of trespass to land, trespass to chattels, and conversion. The district court granted the county’s motion for summary judgment on all claims.

Plaintiff appealed that judgment. The Ninth Circuit affirmed with respect to plaintiffs federal claims but reversed in part the district court’s ruling regarding the state law tort claims. Scott v. Jackson County, 297 Fed Appx 623, 2008 WL 4706301 (9th Cir 2008). The case was remanded and, on remand, plaintiff moved to dismiss her complaint, asking the court to decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over her remaining state law tort claims. The court granted the motion and dismissed those common-law claims without prejudice.

Plaintiff then filed this action in Jackson County Circuit Court in April 2009. Her complaint, the first 101 paragraphs of which are taken verbatim from her federal complaint, realleged her tort claims: trespass to land, trespass to chattels, and conversion. At the same time, plaintiff moved for a change of venue to Klamath County, on the ground that she could not get a fair trial in J ackson County due to the coverage that her case had received in the press.

Four days after the complaint and change of venue motion were filed, plaintiffs attorney of record, G. Jefferson Campbell, Jr., began serving a 60-day suspension from the practice of law. 1 During that suspension period, plaintiff filed a reply to the county’s response to the motion to change venue. The reply was signed by William S. Dames, as an attorney for G. Jefferson Campbell, Jr., P.C.

With the venue motion still pending, the county filed a motion for summary judgment. In that motion, the county argued that all three of plaintiffs claims were barred by issue *488 or claim preclusion, because the same claims and underlying facts had been previously litigated in plaintiffs federal case. In support of the motion, the county, through a declaration from its counsel, offered copies of the district court opinion granting summary judgment and the Ninth Circuit’s memorandum disposition. The county’s counsel further averred that he had reviewed plaintiffs complaints in both federal and state court and that “[h]er federal complaint contained 105 paragraphs of preliminary factual allegations,” all but four of which were included in her state complaint as a “verbatim repetition of the federal allegations.”

The following day, the trial judge assigned to the case, Judge Arnold, denied plaintiffs venue motion. In his order, Judge Arnold stated that “[n]one of [plaintiff s] reasons constitutes justification for granting the motion.” He then went on to explain that he had not considered plaintiffs reply brief on the motion because he believed that, notwithstanding Dames’s signature on the brief, Campbell had actually written it during his suspension and was thereby engaged in the unauthorized practice of law. Judge Arnold simultaneously sent a letter to the Oregon State Bar detailing his suspicion that Campbell was engaged in the unauthorized practice of law. (The Bar later investigated the accusation and found insufficient evidence that Campbell — as opposed to his paralegal — had drafted the brief for Dames’s review.)

Two months after the venue motion was denied, on the morning of July 13, 2009 — the day scheduled for a hearing before Judge Arnold on the county’s summary judgment motion — -plaintiff filed a motion to disqualify the judge and to have the case reassigned to another judge. 2 Later that day, Judge Arnold commenced the summary judgment hearing by stating, “A motion was filed today to disqualify me. That motion is denied.” The parties then argued their respective positions on summary judgment; nothing more was said of the motion to disqualify. The court ultimately granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment, explaining:

*489 “It is for this Court to determine whether or not issues remain in this case to be decided after the 9th Circuit’s order.
“Defendant’s motion for summary judgment analyzes on a claim by claim basis how the opinion of the 9th Circuit, in affirming parts of the District Court’s opinion has decided the issues presented in plaintiffs 56 page, 120 paragraph complaint.
“In attempting to argue against the motion for summary judgment, plaintiff does not point to any of her 120 paragraphs of allegations which have not been decided. Rather, she paints with a broad brush that something remains. This Court has reviewed the entire complaint for undecided issues and has found none.

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Bluebook (online)
260 P.3d 744, 244 Or. App. 484, 2011 Ore. App. LEXIS 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-jackson-county-orctapp-2011.