State ex rel. Department of Transportation v. Kesterson

47 P.3d 546, 182 Or. App. 105, 2002 Ore. App. LEXIS 865
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 5, 2002
Docket96-2040; A111903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 P.3d 546 (State ex rel. Department of Transportation v. Kesterson) 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
State ex rel. Department of Transportation v. Kesterson, 47 P.3d 546, 182 Or. App. 105, 2002 Ore. App. LEXIS 865 (Or. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

EDMONDS, P. J.

Plaintiff, the Oregon Department of Transportation, appeals from a supplemental judgment awarding defendant attorney fees and costs in this condemnation action.1 It argues that the amount of the jury’s verdict was the same as the amount of the highest offer that the state made at least 30 days before the commencement of the trial and that defendant is therefore not entitled to fees and costs. We agree and reverse the supplemental judgment.

In early 1996, plaintiff decided to acquire approximately 20 acres that defendant owned along Highway 101 in Tillamook County as part of a project to improve the highway in an area prone to slides. On April 11, 1996, it sent defendant a letter informing him of its intent and offering to purchase the property for $410,000. On May 8, it filed this action to take the property by condemnation, alleging that the just compensation for the taking was $410,000. In his answer, defendant alleged that just compensation was $950,000. He also alleged counterclaims against plaintiff. On April 24, 1997, plaintiff filed an amended complaint that added a number of tort claims against defendant, but it continued to allege the same amount of just compensation as had the original complaint. On May 17, it filed a second amended complaint that reduced the alleged just compensation to $156,500; at trial, it amended the amount again, this time to $0.

Defendant did not accept the April 11 offer made by plaintiff, although he asserts that he later attempted to accept the offer, provided that the settlement included a dismissal of all other claims between the parties. The jury found that just compensation for defendant’s property was $410,000 and rejected plaintiff’s tort claims. The judgment dismissed both plaintiffs tort claims and defendant’s counterclaims with prejudice. Defendant then sought an award of attorney fees, expenses, and costs under ORS 35.346(7) on the ground that the judgment was greater than the amount of any offer that defendant had made at least 30 days before trial. The trial court agreed and entered the supplemental [108]*108judgment from which plaintiff appeals. It apparently concluded, among other things, that the statute requires that, in order to avoid an award of attorney fees, expenses, and costs, the condemning authority’s offer must be available to the defendant at the time of trial.

The issue on appeal involves the meaning and effect of current ORS 35.346(7), which for our purposes is in substance the same as ORS 35.346(2) (1995), the statute that was in effect when plaintiff filed this action.2 That statute provides:

“If a trial is held or arbitration conducted for the fixing of the amount of compensation to be awarded to the defendant owner or party having an interest in the property being condemned, the court or arbitrator shall award said defendant costs and disbursements including reasonable attorney fees and reasonable expenses as defined in ORS 35.335(2) in the following cases and no other:
“(a) If the amount of just compensation assessed by the verdict in the trial exceeds the highest written offer in settlement submitted by condemner to those defendants appearing in the action at least 30 days prior to commencement of said trial; or
“(b) If the court finds that the first written offer made by condemner to defendant in settlement prior to filing of the action did not constitute a good faith offer of an amount reasonably believed by condemner to be just compensation”

In addition, ORS 35.346(1) provides:

“At least 20 days prior to the filing of any action for condemnation of property or any interest therein the condemner shall make a written offer to the owner or party having an interest to purchase the property or interest, and to pay just compensation therefore and for any compensa-ble damages to remaining property.”

[109]*109The trial court expressly found that plaintiff acted in good faith when it made the April 11 offer. Thus, the only basis for an award of attorney fees, expenses, and costs to defendant under ORS 35.346(7) is subsection (a), which requires that the jury’s award be greater than the plaintiff’s highest written offer made at least 30 days before trial. Because the jury’s award of $410,000 was identical to plaintiffs April 11 offer, defendant is entitled to attorney fees, expenses, and costs only if the April 11 offer does not qualify as an offer made “at least 30 days prior to commencement of said trial” to which the statute refers.

Plaintiffs offer appears to satisfy the literal meaning of the statute: it was made more than 30 days before the trial, and the jury’s verdict did not exceed it. However, both defendant and the trial court suggest reasons for concluding that it nevertheless did not satisfy the statutory requirements. Defendant argued, and the trial court agreed, that the pre-filing offer that ORS 35.346(1) requires cannot qualify as the pretrial offer under ORS 35.346(7)(a). In reaching that conclusion, the trial court noted that ORS 35.346(1) refers to an offer “[a]t least 20 days prior to the filing of any action”; while ORS 35.346(7) refers to the “highest written offer” submitted “at least 30 days prior to the commencement of said trial,” ORS 35.346(7)(a), and to “the first written offer * * * prior to the filing of the action[.]” ORS 35.346(7)(b). It apparently assumed that the same offer could not serve to comply with both statutes. The court also found that plaintiff withdrew the prefiling offer after defendant rejected it when it amended its complaint to reduce the alleged just compensation to $156,500. Because the trial court believed that ORS 35.346(2) requires the offer to be available at the time of trial, and not just be made at least 30 days before trial, it held that plaintiffs April 11 offer did not comply with statute. It followed, according to the court, that, because the verdict exceeded the highest offer available to defendant “at the time of trial,” defendant was entitled to attorney fees.

In addition to supporting the trial court’s reasoning, defendant argues that the statute expressly requires two offers.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Department of Transportation v. Pilothouse 60, LLC
185 P.3d 487 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 P.3d 546, 182 Or. App. 105, 2002 Ore. App. LEXIS 865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-department-of-transportation-v-kesterson-orctapp-2002.