Smo v. Swall
This text of 865 P.2d 436 (Smo v. Swall) 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.
Opinion
Petitioner Smo brought this proceeding for supplemental relief under ORS 28.080 to recover costs for maintenance of a footbridge located on respondent’s1 property and over which petitioner has an access easement to her own property pursuant to an agreement between the parties’ predecessors. In Smo v. Black, 93 Or App 234, 761 P2d 1339 (1988), we affirmed the portions of the trial court’s underlying declaratory judgment holding that the agreement was valid, that it created a perpetual easement and that “maintenance” costs for the footbridge were to be allocated between respondent and petitioner, with petitioner paying one-third and respondent paying two-thirds of the costs.
Petitioner undertook certain repairs on the bridge and, when respondent refused to pay her share of the costs, initiated this proceeding. The trial court denied relief, concluding that the repairs went beyond “maintenance,” as contemplated by the agreement, and amounted to “rebuilding” or “reconstruction.” The court reasoned that, although the work actually undertaken “would be deemed maintenance,” that work was not sufficient to make the bridge safe unless all of the other “major components” of the bridge were replaced or reconstructed. It concluded that “the cumulative effect will be a drawn out, albeit intentional, rebuilding of the entire structure, part by part, which is not the ordinary meaning of the term maintenance.”
On de novo review, we reverse. We conclude that the work for which petitioner seeks payment was “maintenance” and is subject to the cost allocation provision of the agreement. Because that conclusion dictates whether petitioner is entitled to the supplementary relief that she seeks, we do not address the parties’ arguments concerning whether a total “rebuilding” would come within the cost allocation provision. Nevertheless, we note our agreement with the trial court’s “hope [that] the parties will abandon their dispute over the bridge and take a less litigious approach to resolving their [112]*112disagreement.” See Smo v. Black, 95 Or App 588, 770 P2d 925 (1989).
Reversed and remanded for entry of order of supplemental relief not inconsistent with this opinion.
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865 P.2d 436, 125 Or. App. 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smo-v-swall-orctapp-1994.