State ex rel Adult & Family Services Division v. Buethe
This text of 753 P.2d 429 (State ex rel Adult & Family Services Division v. Buethe) 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
In this filiation proceeding, the trial court entered a judgment establishing paternity and ordering appellant to make support payments for the child. Appellant appeals, and we affirm.
In May, 1986, the parties reported in open court that they had reached an agreement to settle the case. The state’s attorney recited the terms of the settlement agreement, and appellant’s counsel, after adding two amendments to which the state’s attorney acceded, agreed with the terms set forth. After hearing the terms of the agreement, the trial court asked appellant if he approved it and he answered affirmatively.1 The trial court then approved the agreement as recited in open court. After an attempt by appellant in December, 1986, to set aside the agreement, the trial court entered the judgment establishing paternity and incorporating the terms orally agreed to in May.2
[519]*519Appellant, relying on ORS 109.155(1), contends that the trial court erred in entering the judgment in the absence of a written admission of paternity by him. ORS 109.155(1) provides:
“The court or the jury, in a private hearing, shall first determine the issue of paternity. If the [appellant] admits the paternity, such admission shall be reduced to writing, verified by the [appellant] and filed with the court. If the paternity is denied, corroborating evidence, in addition to the testimony of the parent or expectant parent, shall be required.”
That section, when read in isolation, appears to support appellant’s contention that a written admission of paternity is required. However, ORS 109.155(2) provides, in pertinent part, that “[t]he court may approve any settlement agreement reached between the parties and incorporate the same into any decree rendered * * (Emphasis supplied.) That is precisely what the trial court did here.
ORS 109.155(1) does not require a “verified” written admission of paternity to be filed with the court when, under ORS 109.155(2), a negotiated settlement agreement has been stipulated to in open court. Here, appellant, with the advice of counsel, stipulated to the settlement after a thorough discussion of the specifics. Incorporation of the agreement into the judgment establishing paternity and ordering the agreed support payments for the child comports with ORS 109.155(2). The trial court did not err in entering the judgment on the basis of the stipulated settlement agreement. The judgment based on that agreement, being in the nature of a contract and approved by the court, can be set aside only on grounds adequate to justify rescission a contract. State ex rel Adult & Family Ser. v. Hansen, 54 Or App 47, 50, 634 P2d 256 (1981); see Murray v. Johnson, 86 Or App 295, 297, 738 P2d 1005 (1987). The facts of this case provide no such grounds.3
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
753 P.2d 429, 90 Or. App. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-adult-family-services-division-v-buethe-orctapp-1988.