Varde v. Run! Day Camp For Dogs, LLC

482 P.3d 795, 309 Or. App. 387
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 18, 2021
DocketA168924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 482 P.3d 795 (Varde v. Run! Day Camp For Dogs, LLC) 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
Varde v. Run! Day Camp For Dogs, LLC, 482 P.3d 795, 309 Or. App. 387 (Or. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Argued and submitted February 25, 2020, appeal dismissed February 18, 2021

James VARDE, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. RUN! DAY CAMP FOR DOGS, LLC, an Oregon limited liability company; and Erica Ochs, Defendants-Respondents. Columbia County Circuit Court 16CV35059; A168924 482 P3d 795

In this civil case, the parties executed an agreement after a judicial settle- ment conference that required, in part, plaintiff to make monthly payments to defendants. The settlement agreement further provided that, if plaintiff failed to timely pay, defendants would be entitled to file and execute a stipulated general judgment and money award that was attached to the agreement as an exhibit. Plaintiff failed to make timely payments, and the trial court—at defendants’ request and over plaintiff’s objection—entered the stipulated general judgment as contemplated by the settlement agreement. Plaintiff appeals from that stipu- lated judgment and argues that the court erred in failing to hold a hearing before setting aside the general judgment of dismissal and entering the stipulated judg- ment. Held: The Court of Appeals does not have appellate jurisdiction over the stipulated judgment. Generally, a party may not appeal from a stipulated judg- ment unless the party specifically reserves the right to appeal in the judgment or meets an exception to the general rule. Because plaintiff did not reserve a right to appeal in the stipulated judgment or meet one of the exceptions to the general rule, the court does not have appellate jurisdiction. Appeal dismissed.

Cathleen B. Callahan, Judge. George W. Kelly argued the cause and filed the brief for appellant. John D. Ostrander, and Elliot, Ostrander & Preston, P. C., filed the brief for respondents. Before Lagesen, Presiding Judge, and Powers, Judge, and Kamins, Judge. POWERS, J. Appeal dismissed. 388 Varde v. Run! Day Camp For Dogs, LLC

POWERS, J. In this appeal, which arises out of a dispute about whether plaintiff was underpaid or overpaid for work per- formed, the threshold question is whether we have appellate jurisdiction. In the underlying proceeding, the parties exe- cuted an agreement after a judicial settlement conference that required, in part, plaintiff to make monthly payments to defendants.1 The settlement agreement further provided that, if plaintiff failed to timely pay, defendants would be entitled to file and execute a stipulated general judgment and money award that was attached to the agreement as an exhibit. Plaintiff failed to make timely payments, and the trial court—at defendants’ request and over plaintiff’s objection—entered the stipulated general judgment as contemplated by the settlement agreement. Plaintiff now appeals from that stipulated judgment, which awarded $80,000 in damages to defendants, assigning error to the court’s entry of the stipulated judgment, failure to hold a hearing before doing so, and decision to set aside a judgment of dismissal before it entered the stipulated judgment. As explained below, however, we do not have appellate jurisdic- tion over the stipulated judgment, and we dismiss this case without reaching the merits of plaintiff’s arguments. The relevant facts are mainly procedural and are undisputed. Plaintiff filed a claim for unpaid wages after performing repair work. Defendants answered by deny- ing plaintiff’s claims and asserting several counterclaims including fraud and breach of contract. Ultimately, the par- ties settled their dispute after a judicial settlement confer- ence and entered into a settlement and release agreement that included a provision where plaintiff would pay defen- dants $15,000 plus interest at a rate of $300 per month to be made on the first of each month. The settlement agreement further provided that, “[i]n the event of failure to timely pay the Settlement Amount, [plaintiff] shall be in default, and [defendants] shall be entitled to file and execute on the Stipulated General Judgment & Money Award.” Both par- ties signed the agreement, and the trial court entered a gen- eral judgment of dismissal.

1 Defendants are Erica Ochs and her business, Run! Day Camp for Dogs, LLC. We refer to them collectively as “defendants” in this opinion. Cite as 309 Or App 387 (2021) 389

A few months later, defendants moved to set aside the judgment of dismissal alleging that plaintiff failed to make timely payments. Plaintiff, who was representing him- self at the time, responded by filing a motion to “have a hear- ing” so that the court could hear his objection to the motion to set aside the default and to entering the general judg- ment. Although he admitted that he “was unable to make a payment on time,” plaintiff asked the court for a hearing so that he could “provide many more details to support [his] position.” Importantly, none of his articulated objections challenged the terms of the settlement agreement. Without a hearing, the court granted defendants’ motion and signed an order setting aside the general judgment of dismissal. The court then entered the stipulated general judgment, and plaintiff initiated this appeal by filing a notice of appeal from that stipulated general judgment.2 On appeal, the parties advance various arguments regarding whether the trial court erred in failing to hold a hearing before it set aside the general judgment of dis- missal and before entering the stipulated general judgment. According to plaintiff, a hearing on the motion to set aside “was required because the parties had made opposing fac- tual claims and, unless the court took evidence, there was no way for it to determine which claim to believe.” Plaintiff further argues that this case “must be remanded so that the court can take evidence, establish whether plaintiff in fact was late on his payments and, assuming that he was late, determine whether the lateness was waived.” (Emphasis omitted.) Defendant remonstrates that “[t]he record, includ- ing Plaintiff’s admissions, shows that Plaintiff was late on his required monthly payment, and there is no legal excuse for Plaintiff’s breach.” 2 Plaintiff attached only the stipulated general judgment to the notice of appeal and did not attach the order setting aside the earlier general judgment, which was separately appealable. See ORS 19.205(3) (“An order that is made in the action after a general judgment is entered and that affects a substantial right, including an order granting a new trial, may be appealed in the same man- ner as provided in this chapter for judgments.”); Bhattacharyya v. City of Tigard, 212 Or App 529, 535, 159 P3d 320 (2007) (holding that an order setting aside a default judgment is appealable as an order affecting a substantial right under ORS 19.205(3)). Plaintiff’s argument on appeal instead assumes that the order setting aside the initial general judgment of dismissal is appealable as part of the appeal from the stipulated general judgment. Given our disposition, we need not address whether that assumption is correct. 390 Varde v. Run! Day Camp For Dogs, LLC

Although not raised by the parties, we first consider whether we have jurisdiction over an appeal from a stip- ulated general judgment. See Concienne v. Asante, 299 Or App 490, 497, 450 P3d 533 (2019), rev den, 366 Or 135 (2020) (explaining that “we have an independent obligation to con- sider jurisdictional issues * * * even where the parties have failed to fully explore the issue” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). In this case, both parties assert with- out further explanation that we have jurisdiction under ORS 19.205.3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
482 P.3d 795, 309 Or. App. 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/varde-v-run-day-camp-for-dogs-llc-orctapp-2021.