Shipp v. County of Multnomah

891 P.2d 1345, 133 Or. App. 583, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 518
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 22, 1995
Docket9212-08289; CA A82275
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 891 P.2d 1345 (Shipp v. County of Multnomah) 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
Shipp v. County of Multnomah, 891 P.2d 1345, 133 Or. App. 583, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 518 (Or. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

*585 BUTTLER, S. J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment dismissing his petition for writ of review on the merits. We affirm the dismissal, because the circuit court lacked jurisdiction of the cause. Plaintiff inherited from his father eight tax lots in the Columbia Gorge in Multnomah County. The real property taxes on all of the lots were delinquent, resulting in their being foreclosed by defendant on November 3, 1988. The foreclosures are not in issue in this proceeding; it is the events following foreclosure of Lots 7 and 8 that give rise to the dispute.

In addition to the statutory two-year right of redemption, ORS 312.120, 1 defendant’s Ordinance No. 560, 2 after finding that its interest and that of its residents is best served when taxpayers are restored to their property and the delinquent taxes paid, extended that right another 90 days from the day on which it gives written notice sent by certified mail to the former owners advising them that they have 90 days within which to repurchase their foreclosed property, either on contract, if certain criteria are met, or by paying the repurchase price in cash if those criteria are not met.

Two of plaintiffs lots qualified for his repurchase on contract. He repurchased them and they are not involved in this proceeding. With respect to the two lots involved here, (Lots 7 and 8), defendant mailed a notice to plaintiff by regular, not certified, mail, and gave him 60, not 90, days within which to repurchase them. He contends that he never received those notices and that, in any event, the notices were deficient in that they did not comply with the ordinance.

Plaintiff did not repurchase either of the lots, claiming that it was not until he heard from other sources that the lots were about to be sold by defendant to others that he wrote to defendant, through his attorney, requesting that he be *586 permitted to repurchase the lots. Defendant denied the request, stating that the “90 day period provided by Ordinance 560 expired long ago.” Plaintiff appealed the denial to defendant’s Board of County Commissioners. 3

Following a hearing at which plaintiff appeared with counsel, a majority of the Commissioners found that the written notices did not comply with the ordinance because they were not sent by certified mail, but that plaintiff had received actual notice of his rights, either through a man it found to be his agent, or by verbal notice from one of defendant’s employees in its Tax Title Office. It ordered that the properties not be repurchased by plaintiff and that they “be disposed of in accordance with the law.” The Commissioners did not address whether the fact that the written notices allowed plaintiff only 60 days, rather than the required 90 days, within which to repurchase the lots was fatal to its findings and conclusion. Neither did it find that either of the verbal notices that it found to have been given by its employee to plaintiff of his right to repurchase the lots included notice that the rights must be exercised within 90 days of the notices. Plaintiff did not raise those questions in the hearing before the Commission. 4

Within 20 days after the Commission’s order, plaintiff filed a complaint for a declaratory judgment 5 in the Multnomah County circuit court alleging, in essence, that defendant failed to follow its ordinance relating to notice; that he never received the notices relating to Lots 7 and 8; that defendant’s employee misinformed him that those lots were not in jeopardy; that he was denied the opportunity to repurchase those lots; and that he appealed to the Commission, which held a hearing, after which it entered its order denying him the right to repurchase the lots, although he was *587 able and willing to repurchase them for cash. The relief that he sought was not a review of the record before the Commission; rather, he sought a judgment declaring that defendant did not follow the procedures required by its ordinance concerning notice and that defendant be required to allow him to repurchase the lots for cash within 30 days of the judgment. Some of his allegations presented issues of fact which, in a declaratory judgment action, are “tried and determined in the same manner as issues of fact are tried and determined in other actions at law or suits in equity in the court in which the proceeding is pending.” ORS 28.090. He did not request the court to issue an order requiring defendant to produce and file with the court a certified copy of the record of the proceedings before the Commission so that it could be reviewed by the court. In short, the complaint had none of the earmarks of a petition for writ of review; rather, he was seeking a trial de novo.

The complaint was served on defendant, unlike a petition for writ of review, which is filed and presented to the court. ORS 34.030. 6 Defendant’s counsel requested an extension of time within which to file a responsive pleading. After 60 days had passed from the date of the Commission’s order, defendant moved to dismiss the proceeding for want of jurisdiction, because plaintiff had failed to file a petition for writ of review within 60 days of the order. The trial court denied the motion to dismiss, and granted plaintiffs motion to amend his pleading to make it one for a petition for writ of review. Apparently, it allowed the amended pleading to relate back to the date of filing of the original complaint. ORCP 23 C. 7 In his *588 second amended complaint, plaintiff re-alleged his complaint for declaratory judgment, and joined with it a petition for writ of review in which he incorporated all of his allegations in his complaint for declaratory judgment and added others that are directly related to the bases for a writ of review. ORS 34.040. 8

At the time of trial, the circuit court held that plaintiffs sole remedy was by writ of review, and dismissed plaintiffs complaint for declaratory judgment. The court found that the Commission’s order was supported by the evidence and that the Commission’s conclusion that plaintiff received actual notice cured any substantive defects in the notice. Plaintiff does not assign error to the dismissal of his complaint for declaratory judgment; he appeals only the court’s denial and dismissal of his writ of review following trial.

Because defendant contends that the trial court erred in denying its motion to dismiss plaintiffs complaint for want of jurisdiction, we consider that question first.

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Bluebook (online)
891 P.2d 1345, 133 Or. App. 583, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shipp-v-county-of-multnomah-orctapp-1995.