s. dennis miller, et al., clackamas county circuit plaintiffs,...

52
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON S. DENNIS MILLER, et al., ) Clackamas County Circuit ) Plaintiffs, ) Court No.: CV031 10235 ) and ) ) LINDA LORD; GLORIA D. MARSH; ) ALGER MARSH; RAGNARHOKANSON; ) CAA130522 MARILYN HOKANSON; CLARON REED; ) LEE REED; and DIANE WELLS, ) ) P lainti ffs-Appe llants, ) ) v. JAMES RIGGLE; LAURA RIGGLE, aka ) Laura Rambo; WADE BELKNAP; SHEILA ) BELKNAP; DONALD ISAACSON; DIANE MCKNIGHT; JAMES MCKNIGHT; CITY OF OREGON CITY; ) OREGON CITY EVANGELICAL ) CHURCH, ) ) Defendants-Respondents, ) ) and ) ) EDGAR BRUBAKER, III; and MICHELLE ) BRUBAKER; ELLEN BIRKLAND, et al., ) ) Defendants. ) RESPONDENTS' BRIEF AND SUPPLEMENTAL EXCERPT OF RECORD Appeal from the Order Denying Motion For Mistrial and ORCP 71B(l)(d) Motion entered November 15,2005, in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clackamas, HON. DOUGLAS V. VAN DYK, Circuit Court Judge (Counsel listed on Inside of Cover) 3/09

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Page 1: S. DENNIS MILLER, et al., Clackamas County Circuit Plaintiffs, …digitallawlibrary.oregon.gov/Content/Oregon Court of... · 2010. 5. 6. · IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE

STATE OF OREGON

S. DENNIS MILLER, et al., ) Clackamas County Circuit )

Plaintiffs, ) Court No.: CV031 10235 )

and ) )

LINDA LORD; GLORIA D. MARSH; ) ALGER MARSH; RAGNARHOKANSON; ) CAA130522 MARILYN HOKANSON; CLARON REED; ) LEE REED; and DIANE WELLS, )

) P lainti ffs-Appe llants, )

) v. ~

JAMES RIGGLE; LAURA RIGGLE, aka ) Laura Rambo; WADE BELKNAP; SHEILA ) BELKNAP; DONALD ISAACSON; ~ DIANE MCKNIGHT; JAMES MCKNIGHT; CITY OF OREGON CITY; ) OREGON CITY EVANGELICAL ) CHURCH, )

) Defendants-Respondents, )

) and )

) EDGAR BRUBAKER, III; and MICHELLE ) BRUBAKER; ELLEN BIRKLAND, et al., )

) Defendants. )

RESPONDENTS' BRIEF AND SUPPLEMENTAL EXCERPT OF RECORD

Appeal from the Order Denying Motion For Mistrial and ORCP 71B(l)(d) Motion entered November 15,2005, in the

Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clackamas, HON. DOUGLAS V. VAN DYK, Circuit Court Judge

(Counsel listed on Inside of Cover) 3/09

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Ridgway K. Foley, Jr., OSB # 630242 Greene & Markley, P .C. 1515 SW 5th Avenue, Suite 600 Portland, OR 97201 Telephone: (503) 295-2668

Michael D. Walsh, Esq., OSB # 733177 John e. Hutchison, Esq., OSB # 680795 Hutchison & Walsh, P.e. P.O. Box 648 West Linn, OR 97068 Telephone: (503) 656-1694

Attorneys for Defendants-Respondents James Riggle, Laura Riggle, Wade Belknap, Sheila Belknap and Donald Isaacson as Trustee of the Isaacson Trust

Charles F. Hudson, Esq., OSB # 830494 Lane Powell, P.C. 601 SW 2nd Ave., Ste 2100 Portland, OR 97204 Telephone: (503) 778-2178

Attorney for Defendant-Respondent Oregon City Evangelical Church

Jeffrey L. Kleinman, Esq., OSB # 734726 1207 S W 6th Avenue Portland, OR 97204 Telephone: (503) 248-0808

Attorney for Defendant-Respondent City of Oregon City

8136\p Resp Brief cover.doclhe

Glenda P. Durham, Esq., OSB # 802120 P.O. Box 1228 Welches, OR 97067 Telephone: (503) 622-5621

Attorney for Plaintiffs-Appellants (except Linda Lord)

Linda Lord Holmes Lane

Oregon City, OR 97045 Telephone: (

pro se Plaintiff-Appellant

Bryan R. Welch, Esq., OSB # 034900 Jon S. Henricksen, Esq., OSB # 731351 Jon S. Henricksen, P.C. 725 Portland Avenue Gladstone, OR 97027 Telephone: (503) 655-7555

Attorney for Defendants-Respondents Diane McKnight, James McKnight

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

STATEMENT OF THE CASE .................................................................................. 1

1. Effective Date Of Entry Of Judgments, Timeliness Of Notice Of AppeaL .............. 1 2. Basis Of, And Limitations On, Appellate Jurisdiction .............................................. 1

A. The Court Of Appeals Has Limited This Appeal ......................................... 1

B. Identification of the Multiple Judgments and Notices of Appeal ................. 1

C. Plaintiffs' Failure To Appeal Timely Limits Appellate Jurisdiction ............. 3

3. Summary Of The Arguments .................................................................................... 4

A. Lord And Durham Appellants' First Assignments Of Error ....................... .4

B. Lord And Durham Appellants' Second Assignments Of Error And Durham Appellants' Third Assignment of Error .................................. 5

C. Lord Third Assignment Of Error. .................................................................. 5

D. Lord And Durham Appellants' Fourth Assignments OfError. ..................... 6

RESPONDENTS' COMBINED JURISDICTIONAL ANSWER TO APPELLANT LORD'S FIRST AND THIRD ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR AND DURHAM APPELLANTS' FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR ................. 7

Appellants' Claims Were Not Preserved And Presented Timely Because They Were Not Raised By The Motion For Mistrial Or The ORCP 71B Motion ........... 7

A. Appellants' Motion For Mistrial Presented And Preserved No Error Because It was Untimely .................................................................. 7

B. Appellants' 7IB Motion Only Asserted Issues Not Raised On Appeal ........... 8

RESPONDENTS' COMBINED ANSWER TO LORD AND DURHAM APPELLANTS' FIRST ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR ......................................... 11

The Court Of Appeals Lacks Appellate Jurisdiction To Hear And Decide These Assignments Of Error ..................................................................................... 11

A. Standard On Review ....................................................................................... 11

B. Lord Presents No Justiciable Controversy Concerning This Issue ................ 11

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C. Since Gregory And Julie Washburn Are Not Appellants, The Durham Appellants' Assignment Must Read Solely Upon The Status And Record Relating To Alger And Gloria Marsh ............................................................. 12

D. Appellants Failed To Preserve Any Assignment Of Error Challenging Lack Of Circuit Court Personal Jurisdiction Over Alger And Gloria Marsh ................................................................................. 13

E. The Circuit Court Had Personal Jurisdiction Over The Marshes And Washburns ...................................................................................................... 13

F. No Circuit Court Action Or Order Violated Due Process .............................. 16

RESPONDENTS' COMBINED ANSWER TO LORD AND DURHAM APPELLANTS' SECOND ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR AND DURHAM APPELLANTS' THIRD ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR ........................ 24

To The Extent The Court Of Appeals Has Appellate Jurisdiction To Hear And Decide These Assignments Of Error The Circuit Court Had Subject Matter Jurisdiction ............................................................................... 24

A. The Circuit Court Had Subject Matter Jurisdiction To Enter Its Judgment .................................................................................... 24

B. Does The Court Of Appeals Lack Appellate Jurisdiction? ............................ 25

C. The Curious Contract Claim ............................... '" ......................................... 27

RESPONDENTS' COMBINED ANSWER TO APPELLANT LORD'S THIRD ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR ....................................................................... 27

Appellants Failed To Preserve Any Error ............................................................... 27

The Circuit Court Did Not Err When It Granted Respondents' Motion In Limine ........................................................................................................ 27

1. The 'rrial Court Ruling .................................................................................... 27

2. Appellants Failed To Preserve These Claimed Errors .................................... 28

RESPONDENTS' COMBINED ANSWER TO LORD AND DURHAM APPELLANTS' FOURTH ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR ................................... 34

Appellants' Assignments Of Error Challenging The Supplemental Judgment Of The Circuit Court Are Moot ................................................................................ 34

Appellants Lack A Justiciable Controversy Or Standing ....................................... 34

11

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III

Appellants Assert No Meritorious Error ................................................................... 34

Argument ..................................................................................................................... 34

1. Interest Of Respondents Other Than City Of Oregon City ............................. 34

2. Appellants' "General Judgment" Argument ................................................... 35

3. The Racially Restrictive Covenant Issue Does Not Help Appellants ............. 35

4. Appellants Have No Justiciable Claim ............................................................ 36

A. These Appellants Lack Standing ................................................................ 37

B. Assignments Of Error Concerning The Attorney Fee Issue Are Moot ...... 38

CONCLUSION ........................................................................................................... 40

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IV

INDEX OF AUTHORITIES

CASES

Abrahamson v. Northwestern P. & P. Co., 141 Or 339, 15P2d472, 17P2d 1117(1933) .................................................. 37

Ahlstrom v. Lyon, 129 Or 629, 131 P2d219 (1942) ....................................................................... 14

American Fed Teachers v. Oregon Taxpayers United, 208 Or App 350, 145 P3d 1111 (2006), affirmed, 345 Or 1, 189 P3d 9 (2008) ................................................................................... 12, 13, 38

Benchmark Properties v. Hipolito, 161 Or App 598, 984 P2d 927 (1999) ............................................................... 30

Bornhoft v. Aubry, 178 Or App 625, 37 P3d 1049, rev den, 334 Or 260,47 P3d 486 (2002) ......... 28

Brumnett v. PSRB, 315 Or 402, 848 P2d 1194 (1993) ................................................................ 12, 38

Christensen v. Cober, 206 Or App 719, 138 P3d 918 (2006) ................................................................ 10

Clark v. Dagg, 38 Or App 71,588 P2d 1298 (1979) ................................................................. 38

Daniel v. Naylor, 192 Or App 1,84 P3d 819 (2004) .................................................................... 25

Dawson v. Payless for Drugs, 248 Or 334,433 P2d 1019 (1967) ........................................................................ 8

Dougan v. SAIF, 339 Or 1, 115 P3d 242 (2005) .............................................................................. 3

Duncan Lumber Co. v. Wil/apa Lumber Co., 93 Or 386,182 P 172, 183 P 476 (1919) ........................................................... 14

Gortmaker v. Seaton, 252 Or 440,450 P2d 547 (1969) ....................................................................... 38

Haley v. Haley, 215 Or App 36, 168 P3d 305 (2007) ............................................................ 11, 25

Hamel v. Johnson, 330 Or 180, 998 P2d 661 (2000) ....................................................................... 39

Kessel v. Leavitt, 204 W Va 95,511 SE 2d 720 (1998) ................................................................. 12

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v

Just v. City of Lebanon, 193 Or App 121, 88 P3d 307 (2004) ................................................................ 38

Just v. City of Lebanon, 193 Or App 132,88 P3d 312 (2004), rev dismissed, 342 Or 117, 149 P3d 139 (2006) ...................................................................................... 12, 38

Land Associates, Inc. v. Becker, 294 Or 308, 656 P2d 927 (1982) ....................................................................... 16

Landsing Property Corp. v. Anglea, 89 OrApp 381, 749P2d 588 (1988) ................................................................. 17

Larabee v. Mell, Extr'x, 193 Or 543, 239 P2d 597 (1952) ....................................................................... 38

Lovinger v. Lane County, 342 Or 254,149 P3d 1213 (2006) ...................................................................... 10

Ludgate v. Somerville, 121 Or 643,256 P 1043 (1927) ......................................................................... 32

Lunski v. Lindemann, 270 Or 316,527 P2d 254 (1974) ......................................................................... 8

Magar v. City of Portland, 179 Or App 104, 39 P3d 234 (2002) ............................................................ 11, 25

Marineau v. A. P. Green Refractories Co., 201 Or App 590, 120 P3d 916 (2005), rev den, Lovinger v. Lane County, 342 Or 254,149 P3d 1213 (2006) ...................................................................... 10

Mathews v. Hutchcraft, 221 Or App 479,190 P3d 474 (2008) .................................................................. 3

McCall v. Kulongoski, 339 Or 186, 118 P3d 256 (2005) .......................................................................... 3

McDonald v. World Wide Dodge, Inc., 243 Or 218,412 P2d 371 (1966), overruled in part on other grounds by

Dawson v. Paylessfor Drugs, 248 Or 334,433 P2d 1019 (1967) ....................... 8

McIntire v. Forbes, 322 Or 426,909 P2d 846 (1996) ................................................................. 12, 38

Multnomah Co. v. Reed, et al 203 Or 21,278 P2d 135 (1954) ......................................................................... 38

M utzig v. Hope, 176 Or 368, 158P2d 110(1945) ...................................................................... 14

Nicklin v. Hobin, 13 Or 406 (1886) ............................................................................................... 10

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VI

Ragnone v. Portland School District No. IJ, 289 Or 339, 613 P2d 1052 (1980), rev 'd after remand on other grounds, 291 Or617,633P2d 1287(1981) ..................................................................... 37

SAIF v. Shipley, 326 Or 557, 955 P2d 244 (1998) ........................................................................ 25

Shelley v. Kraemer, 334 US 1,68 S Ct 836,92 L Ed 1161 (1948) ................................................... 36

Shields v. Campbell, 277 Or 71, 559 P2d 1275 (1977) ....................................................................... 28

State v. A dams, 315 Or 359,847 P2d 397 (1993) .......................................................................... 4

State v. Affeld, 307 Or 125, 764 P2d 220 (1988) ....................................................................... 29

State v. Barnes, 208 Or App 640,145 P3d 261 (2006) ............................................................... 29

State v. Bowen, 340 Or 487, 135 P3d 272 (2006) .................................................................. 29-30

State v. Busby, 315 Or 292,844 P2d 897 (1993) ................................................................. 30, 31

State v. Hilton, 187 Or App 666, 69 P3d 779 (2003), rev den, 336 Or 377, 84 P3d 1081 (2004) ....................................................................................... 8, 13

State v. Hughes, 192 Or App 8, 83 P3d 951 (2004) ............................................................... 29, 30

State v. Luke, 104 Or App 541, 802 P2d 672 (1990) ............................................................... 31

State v. Wilson, 323 Or 498,918 P2d 826 (1996), cert den, 519 US 1065, 117 S Ct 704, 136 LE2d 625 (1997) .................................................................. 28

State v. Olmstead, 310 Or 455, 800 P2d 277 (1990) ....................................................................... 29

State v. Phillips, 3]4 Or 460,840 P2d 666 (1992) ....................................................................... 30

State v. Smith, 319 Or 37,872 P2d 966 (1994) ......................................................................... 30

State v. Snyder, 337 Or 410,97 P3d 1181 (2004) ...................................................................... .3-4

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Vll

State v. Williams, 322 Or 620,912 P2d 364, cert den, 519 US 854, 117 S Ct 149, 136 L Ed 2d 95 (1996) .................................................................................... 8, 13

State v. Wyatt, 331 Or 335,15 P3d 22 (2000) ........................................................................... 31

State ex rei Juv. Dept. v. Holland, 290 Or 765, 625 P2d 1318 (1981) ..................................................................... 39

State ex rei Methodist Old People's Home v. Crawford, 159 Or 377,80 P2d 873 (1938) ......................................................................... 14

State ex rei Mix v. Newland, 277 Or 191, 560 P2d255 (1977) ............................................................... 9-10, 15

Stirton v. Trump, 202 Or App 252, 121 P3d 714 (2005) ............................................................ 7,25

Utsey v. Coos County, 176 Or App 524, 32 P3d 933 (2001) rev dismissed 335 Or 217, 65P3d 1109(2003) ................................................................... 11-12, 13,38,39

Waddill v. Anchor Hocking, Inc., 330 Or 376, 8 P3d 200 (2000), adh 'd to on recons, 331 Or 595, 18 P3d 1096 (2001) ........................................................................................ 7,25

Yancy v. Shatzer, 337 Or 345,97 P3d 1161 (2004) ....................................................................... 38

CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS

Oregon Constitution, Article VII (Amended) Section 1 ............................................... 38

STATUTES AND RULES

ORAP 5.45 ................................................................................................................... 10 ORAP 5.45(4)(a)(iii) .................................................................................................... 29 ORCP21A ................................................................................................................... 14 ORCP 21A(2) .............................................................................................................. 14 ORCP64F(I) ................................................................................................................. 7 ORCP 71B(I) ............................................................................................................... 26 ORS 18.242 .............................................................................................................. 6,40 ORS 19.420(1) ......................................................................................................... 6, 39 ORS20.105 .................................................................................................................... 6 ORS 40.065 .................................................................................................................. 40 ORS 40.070(2) ............................................................................................................. 40 ORS 40.450 .................................................................................................................. 34 ORS 40.455 .................................................................................................................. 34 ORS 93.740 .................................................................................................................. 16

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V111

INDEX OF SUPPLEMENTAL EXCERPT OF RECORD

SUPPLEMENTAL EXCERPT OF RECORD

Plaintiffs' Fifth Motion For Joinder (4/8/2005) (CCCC OJIN 274) ...................... SER-J

Fifth Order For Joinder Of Additional Parties (5/04/2005) (CCCC OJIN 298) .............................................................................. SER-4

Letter From Glenda Durham (6/14/2005) .............................................................. SER-5

Motion To Dismiss (6/16/2005) ............................................................................. SER-6

Eighth Order For Joinder Of Additional Parties (6/22/2005) (CCCC OJIN 369) ............................................................................ SER-13

Order (7/2212005) (CCCC OJIN 384) .................................................................. SER-14

Order Dismissing Appeal As To Second Amended General Judgment, Dismissing Appeal As To Bruce Vincent, And Allowing Appeal To Proceed As To November 15,2005 Order (3/0112006) (App. OJIN 22) ............. SER-18

Full Satisfaction Of Judgment (9/15/2008) (CCCC OJIN 538) ........................... SER-21

Order Determining That Appeal Is Not Moot (12/16/2008) (App. OJIN 120) ............................................................................. SER-23

* All of the Certificates of Service have been deleted from the Excerpt of Record documents

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STATEMENT OF THE CASE

1. Effective Date Of Entry Of Judgments, Timeliness Of Notice Of Appeal 2. Basis Of, And Limitations On, Appellate Jurisdiction

A. The Court Of Appeals Has Limited This Appeal All Plaintiffs 1

failed to appeal timely from the General Judgment, or from the operative Amended

General Judgment, or from the Second Amended General Judgment. For that reason,

this Court already has strictly limited all Plaintiffs' appeals to grounds raised below in

their Motion for Mistrial (Mistrial Motion) and their ORCP 71B(I)(d) Motion (71B

Motion).

The Second Amended Notice of Appeal identified only the following Circuit

Court plaintiffs, in addition to Appellant Lord, as parties to this appeal: Ragnar and

Marilyn Hokanson, Agnes and Linda Kennett, Gloria and Alger Marsh, Claron and

Lee Reed, and Diane Wells.2 The second, operative, Durham Appellants' Brief

caption eliminates Agnes and Linda Kennett as Appellants.

B. Identification of the Multiple judgments and Notices of Appeal

The Circuit Court entered its General Judgment on July 27,2005 (OHN 381).3

1 Attorney Glenda Durham represented all Plaintiffs in Circuit Court and she filed all notices of appeal. Plaintiff-Appellant Linda Lord chose to file a separate Appellant's Brief pro se. Attorney Durham filed a separate Appellants' Brief for some Plaintiffs below. Respondents refer, when necessary to differentiate, to "Lord" and to "Durham Appellants." Appellants may be included in the term "Plaintiffs" at times when discussing Circuit Court proceedings.

2 The Third Amended Notice of Appeal, challenging the Supplemental Judgment, does not include Agnes or Linda Kennett. Therefore, they have no interest in Durham Appellants' Fourth Assignment of Error.

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Plaintiffs chose not to appeal from this General Judgment. The Circuit Court entered

its Amended General Judgment on August 15, 2005 (OlIN 390). Plaintiffs chose not

to appeal from this Amended General Judgment, even though it is the operative

judgment for appeal.

On October 24,2005, the Circuit Court entered a Second Amended General

Judgment specifically to correct two clerical mistakes in the Amended General

Judgment (OJIN 416). The Second Amended Judgment differs from the Amended

General Judgment only in these two respects: it makes clerical changes to the caption

and to wording on page four, and all rulings are identical (compare OlIN 390 and

OlIN 416). Therefore, according to ORS 18.107(2), the Amended General Judgment

remains the operative judgment for commencement of an appeal.

On November 9,2005, Plaintiffs filed their Mistrial Motion (OlIN 418) and

their 71B Motion (OlIN 419). The parties did not argue these motions and the Circuit

Court denied them on November 15,2005 and November 17,2005 (OlIN 421, OlIN

422).

On November 28,2005, all Plaintiffs, including Lord, by attorney Durham,

filed their initial Notice of Appeal, purporting to appeal from the Second Amended

General Judgment and from the Orders denying their Mistrial and 71B Motions

(OJIN 423). Hence, Appellants' initial Notice of Appeal was filed 99 days after entry

of the operative final and appealable judgment. Seventy days earlier, Judge Van Dyk

3 Circuit Court record citations follow the original OJIN format, numbering entries chronologically from the commencement of the case. Appellate OlIN citations, abbreviated (App. OlIN) follow the same format.

2

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had cautioncd Appellants' lawyer on the record that she might have already missed

the deadline for timely filing a notice of appeal (9119/05 Tr 5-6).

C. Plaintiffs' Failure To Appeal Timely Limits Appellate Jurisdiction.

Plaintiffs failed to perfect their appeal timely from the Second Amended General

Judgment as commanded by ORS 19.240, 19.250, and 19.255, and thcy never

attempted to appeal from the operative Amended General Judgment (OnN 390).

Plaintiffs moved the Court of Appeals for a summary determination of appealability

(App. OnN 2) and Respondents moved to dismiss Plaintiffs' appeal (App OnN 18;

OJIN 440). On March 1,2006, the Chief Judge of the Oregon Court of Appeals

dismissed Plaintiffs' appeal from the Second Amended General Judgment as

untimely, and allowed their appeal to continue only from the Orders denying the

Mistrial and 71B Motions (App. OJIN 22). The Chief Judge adhered to his ruling (on

Respondents' subsequent Motion to Dismiss) by Order entered October 31, 2007

(App. OJIN 69). This ruling establishes the law of the case.

Consequently, this Court lacks appellate jurisdiction to consider Plaintiffs'

appeal from the Second Amended General Judgment. Mathews v. Hutchcraft, 221

Or App 479,190 P3d 474 (2008); McCall v. Kuiongski, 339 Or 186, 195-96, 118 P3d

256 (2005) (Court of Appeals lacks jurisdiction to consider a case not appealed as

required by the appellate statutes); Dougan v. SAIF, 339 Or 1,6, ] 15 P3d 242 (2005)

(Oregon recognizes no common law right to appeal; the right to appeal is solely

statutory and subject to all statutory limitations); State v. Snyder, 337 Or 410,416,97

3

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P3d 1181 (2004) (same rule); State v. Adams, 315 Or 359, 364,847 P2d 397 (1993)

(same rule).

3. Summary Of The Arguments

A. Lord And Durham Appellants' First Assignments Of Error.

Personal jurisdiction claims are personal to the parties affected. Lord has no standing

to raise this assignment of error, and since Gregory and Julie Washburn did not

appeal, the Durham Appellants must rest their personal jurisdictional arguments on

the status of Appellants Alger and Gloria Marsh. None of the Appellants preserved

any personal jurisdiction assignment of error since none of them appealed timely from

the applicable Amended General Judgment. Their ORCP 71 B and Mistrial Motions

did not present and preserve any personal jurisdiction claims.

Moreover, since the Marshes and the Wash burns made general appearances in

the Circuit Court, that court possessed personal jurisdiction over them. None of these

parties specially appeared. They did not claim that the trial court lacked jurisdiction

over them at the time of their appearance; rather they expressly argued that the court

did not have personal jurisdiction over them at an earlier time when it ruled on a

partial summary judgment motion. Moreover, they sought relief consistent with the

existence of general jurisdiction.

In addition, the trial court accorded the Marsh and Washburn parties due

process including a fair opportunity to present their case under all of the

circumstances. Instead of doing so, these couples joined with a long-time passive

plaintiff and filed a separate action in Clackamas County raising substantially similar

4

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Issues. No law supports Appellants' contention that the Marsh and Washburn parties

thereby deprived the Circuit Court of personal and subject matter jurisdiction in the

present case by choosing to file another lawsuit and deciding not to participate in this

case after they made a general appearance through their lawyer. Any other rule would

destroy the ability of trial courts to render final judgments.

B. Lord And Durham Appellants' Second Assignments Of Error And

Durham Appellants' Third Assignment Of Error. These assignments all fail by

reason of an erroneous minor premise: since the Circuit Court had personal

jurisdiction over all identified parties, it necessarily had subject matter jurisdiction to

hear and decide this case. It is too late to raise any claim of error relating to the

Circuit Court decision concerning any putative "contract" claim; since the trial court

had personal and subject matter jurisdiction, any erroneous judgment is not "void" but

merely "voidable" and hence not within the reach of any 71B Motion.

C. Lord Third Assignment Of Error. Appellants failed to preserve their

challenges to the Respondents' motions in limine in the Circuit Court because they

made no offer of proof identifying their witnesses and summarizing or detailing their

proposed testimony. Thus, this Court has no basis upon which to determine (1)

whether the trial court erred in excluding any evidence and, if so, (2) whether such

hypothetical error affected any substantial right. Further, following Appellants' vague

description of the type of testimony they sought to offer, the Circuit Court told

Appellants that any such testimony appeared to be irrelevant and inadmissible

5

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hearsay. The Circuit Judge directly asked Appellants' trial lawyer for any countering

argument, explanation, or authority and she provided none.

D. Lord And Durham Appellants' Fourth Assignments Of Error. The

Supplemental Judgment awarded Respondent City attorney fees under ORS 20.105,

and awarded all Respondents prevailing party costs (OnN 464). Only the City has a

direct interest in the attorney fee award. On October 6, 2008, the City filed, and the

County entered, a Full Satisfaction of the attorney fee judgment (SER 21). Neither

Lord nor any of the Durham Appellants paid any money satisfYing this award. The

statutory time within which any paying party could claim contribution or

reimbursement from Lord or the Durham Appellants has passed. ORS 18.242; see

also, ORS 19.420(1). Thus, no justiciable case or controversy exists because (1) none

of the Appellants have the requisite standing to maintain these assignments of error

and (2) any controversy about this claimed error is moot.

All Respondents have a direct interest in these assignments to the extent that

Lord and the Durham Appellants claim to be prevailing parties and that the trial court

thus erred in awarding customary prevailing party fees to all Respondents. Appellants

contend that they prevailed by removing a racially-restrictive covenant. No one ever

asserted that this covenant played any role in this case. Racially-restrictive covenants

have been legally null and void for sixty years, and neither the court nor the

Respondents could change that fact.

6

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RESPONDENTS' COMBINED JURISDICTIONAL ANSWER TO APPELLANT LORD'S FIRST AND THIRD ASSIGMENTS OF ERROR

AND DURHAM APPELLANTS' FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR

Appellants' Claims Were Not Preserved And Presented Timely Because They Were Not Raised By The Motion For Mistrial Or The ORCP 71B Motion

Introductory Statement: The Lord and Durham Appellants' Fourth

Assignments of Error timely challenge the Supplemental Judgment. Lord's Second

Assignment of Error and the Durham Appellants' Seeond and Third Assignments of

Error eannot be waived by lack oftimely filing because they purport to contend that

the Circuit Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. Waddill v. Anchor Hocking,

Inc., 330 Or 376,384, 8 P3d 200 (2000) adh 'd to on recons, 331 Or 595, 18 P3d 1096

(2001); Stirton v. Trump, 202 Or App 252, 255,121 P3d 714 (2005). The law of the

case precludes all other assignments of error because they were not presented or

preserved by the Mistrial and ORCP 7lB Motions.

A. Appellants' Motion For Mistrial Presented And Preserved No Error Because It Was Untimely.

Plaintiffs filed their written Motion for Mistrial on November 9, 2005 (OnN

418). This motion expressly and laboriously challenged several events and rulings

that long antedated the motion and that were decided by the Amended General

Judgment (ld.) entered on August 15, 2005. Hence, Plaintiffs gambled on the

outcome, lost their wager, and then attempted to bootstrap post-judgment appellate

assignments by their untimely motion.4

4 If Appellants' lawyer really meant to file a Motion for a New Trial, and mislabeled her Motion for Mistrial, she was far too late. ORCP 64F(l).

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Plaintiffs waived their mistrial motion. The Supreme Court set forth the

governing rule in the death penalty case of State v. Williams, 322 Or 620, 631, 912

P2d 364, cert den, 519 US 854, 117 S Ct 149, 136 L Ed 2d 95 (1996):

"To preserve error, a motion for a mistrial must be timely. It is timely if it is made when the allegedly objectionable statement was made. * * *. Defendant's motion here was not timely and, thus, that claim of error was not preserved for review. We decline to consider defendant's argument."

This Court quoted this controlling principle with approval and declined to consider a

slightly delayed mistrial motion in the felony appeal of State v. Hilton, 187 Or App

666,676-77, 69 P3d 779 (2003), rev den, 336 Or 377, 84 P3d 1081 (2004). If this

strict norm applies in serious criminal cases, where no effective alternative recourse

for the complaining party exists, it clearly also controls simple civil litigation like this

where an injured client enjoys an effective, available alternate remedy. In any event,

Oregon has always recognized that the grant or denial of a timely mistrial motion rests

in the sound discretion of the trial court. E.g., Lunski v. Lindemann, 270 Or 316,

320-21,527 P2d 254 (1974); McDonald v. World Wide Dodge, Inc., 243 Or 218,

221,412 P2d 371 (1966), overruled in part on other grounds by Dawson v. Payless

for Drugs, 248 Or 334,433 P2d 1019 (1967). Judge Van Dyk presided over this

extended litigation and clearly understood that all arguments advanced by the mistrial

motion had been heard and decided long ago.

B. Appellants' 71B Motion Only Asserted Issues Not Raised On Appeal.

Plaintiffs expressly limited their 71 B Motion to a single ground:

"Plaintiffs move the court to set aside the general judgments entered in this case on July 27, August 15, and October 24,

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2005 under ORCP 71B(l)( d) in that the judgments are void because they fail to address all claims in the plaintiffs' Second Amended Complaint and they therefore are not an [sic] appealable judgments. * * *." (OHN 419, para. J)

Plaintiffs are simply wrong. The General Judgment recited that "The court

therefore found in favor of defendants and against plaintiffs," "* * * ADJUDGED that

plaintiffs shall recover nothing by their complaint * * * ," entered a declaration

concerning the partition or subdivision of lots, and "ADJUDGED" Defendants to be

the prevailing parties and entitled costs and disbursements (OHN 381, page 4). The

Amended General Judgment contains substantially similar language (OJIN 390, pages

4-5), as does the Second Amended General Judgment (OJIN 416, pages 4-5). Hence,

the trial court ruled against Plaintiffs on all issues and no statute, rule, or case requires

a different statement of its general adjudication.

To repeat: Plaintiffs decided not to appeal from the General Judgment or the

Amended General Judgment, and they failed to comply with the jurisdictional rules in

their aborted attempt to appeal from the Second Amended General Judgment. Both

opening appellants' briefs rest on the premise that this Court possesses jurisdiction to

hear and determine issues necessarily concluded by those three earlier judgments

under a 71B Motion claiming one or more of them to be "void." To the contrary,

none of the judgments are defective; none of the assigned appellate issues were

presented in the 71B Motion; and even if one could surmise that a general judgment

ought to contain different words and phrases, any such defect does not render any

judgment "void," but at the most "voidable" because the trial court had jurisdiction to

enter those judgments, even if incorrectly stated. State ex rei Mix v. Newland, 277

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Or 191,199,560 P2d 255 (1977) (where trial court has jurisdiction both concerning

the subject matter and over the parties, any judgment in excess of proper authority is

not void, but merely voidable); see also, Nicklin v. Hobin, 13 Or 406, 409-10 (1886)

where Justice Lord enunciated the controlling principle that survives to this day:

"* * * . The question whether a judgment is right or wrong is a very different one from whether it is valid or void. Although it is the aim of courts to decide rightly, yet the power to decide necessarily carries with it the power to decide wrong as well as right. And where a court has jurisdiction, the judgment or determination is binding and obligatory until reversed, without reference to the question whether it is right or wrong."

ORAP 5.45 compels appellants to raise issues in the trial court before this

Court will consider them on appeal. See, e.g., Marineau v. A. P. Green Refractories

Co., 201 Or App 590,596-97,120 P3d 916 (2005), rev den, Lovinger v. Lane

County, 342 Or 254, 149 P3d 1213 (2006). Preservation of error rules rest on two

sound principles: the requirement that a party present its argument at the first

adjudicative level enhances judicial economy; that rule also promotes fairness both to

the trial court and to the opposing parties. See, e.g., Christensen v. Cober, 206 Or

App 719, 726, 138 P3d 918 (2006). As to the voluminous "errors" assigned by

Plaintiffs beyond the contention that the judgments failed to rule on all claims and

issues, this Court should adhere to its decision in Marineau, 201 Or App at 597, and

hold:

"* * *. Because that issue [decided by the Court] is the only issue raised in the trial court regarding its authority to dismiss plaintiffs complaint, we reject plaintiffs other contentions made on appeal for lack of preservation."

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RESPONDENTS' COMBINED ANSWER TO LORD AND DURHAM APPELLANTS'

FIRST ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

The Court Of Appeals Lacks Appellate Jurisdiction To Hear And Decide These Assignments Of Error

The Circuit Court Had Requisite Personal Jurisdiction Over All Parties

A. Standard On Review

The Court of Appeals reviews jurisdictional and due process assignments for

errors oflaw. Haley v. Haley, 215 Or App 36, 38, 168 P3d 305 (2007). This standard

governs issues concerning both personal and subject matter jurisdiction. Magar v.

City of Portland, 179 Or App 104, 106, 39 P3d 234 (2002).

B. Lord Presents No Justiciable Controversy Concerning This Issue

Lord's First Assignment of Error charges that the Circuit Court lacked personal

jurisdiction over Alger Marsh, Gloria Marsh, Gregory Washburn, and Julie Washburn

(Lord AB 5, 10-25). Lord commenced this action and submitted herself to the

jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County; hence

the Circuit Court had jurisdiction over her person. On appeal, Lord appears pro se.

She does not, and cannot, represent Appellants Alger and Gloria Marsh, who are

represented by attorney Glenda Durham. She cannot represent Gregory and Julie

Washburn who are not parties to this appeal. Lord may only represent Lord inasmuch

as she is not an attorney licensed by the State of Oregon.

Oregon judicial jurisdiction extends only to actual cases and controversies, that

is, persons coming to an Oregon court must have a right to obtain an adjudication of

the issue presented. Utsey v. Coos County, 176 Or App 524, 539-41, 32 P3d 933

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(2001), rev dismissed, 335 Or 217,65 P3d 1109 (2003). Sometimes phrased in the

shorthand as "standing," Oregon requires a party to establish that a judicial decision

will have some practical effect upon her individual rights. E.g., McIntire v. Forbes,

322 Or 426, 433,909 P2d 846 (1996); Brumnett v. PSRB, 315 Or 402, 405-06, 848

P2d 1194 (1993). Appellant Lord, as the person invoking the jurisdiction of the

Oregon courts, must demonstrate that the decision will have a personal effect upon

her. Justv. Cityo/Lebanon, 193 Or App 132, 147,88 P3d 312 (2004), rev

dismissed, 342 Or 117, 149 P3d 139 (2006). Further, as an appellant she must

demonstrate "standing" on this particular appeal inasmuch as the fundamental concept

of justiciability applies at all decisional levels. American Fed. Teachers v. Oregon

Taxpayers United, 208 Or App 350, 377, 145 P3d 1111 (2006), affirmed, 345 Or 1,

189 P3d 9 (2008). Here, Lord lacks any semblance of standing since only Mr. and

Mrs. Marsh, among all Appellants before this Court, could assert the claim presented

in Lord's First Assignment of Error.

C. Since Gregory And Julie Washburn Are Not Appellants, The Durham Appellants' Assignment Must Rest Solely Upon The Status And Record Relating To Alger And Gloria Marsh

Personal jurisdictional questions are personal to the parties allegedly affected.

In Kessel v. Leavitt, 204 W Va 95, 118, 511 SE 2d 720 (1998), the West Virginia

Supreme Court set forth the universal rule in its holding:

"[W]e hold that an appellant/defendant may not assign as error a circuit court's affirmative assertion of personal jurisdiction over a coappellant/codefendant when the coappellant/codefendant either has not challenged the assertion of personal jurisdiction over him/her or has otherwise, by hislher acts and/or omissions, waived hislher

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right to challenge the personal jurisdiction ruling. Accordingly, we find that the remaining defendants are not proper parties to challenge the circuit court's exercise of personal jurisdiction over the defendant."

Since Gregory and Julie Washburn chose not to appeal, their status and any claim

they might possess is irrelevant to the claims of any of the remaining Appellants and

to the resolution of their appeal. Utsey, 176 Or App at 539-41; American Fed.

Teachers, 208 Or App at 377.

D. Appellants Failed To Preserve Any Assignment Of Error Challenging Lack Of Circuit Court Personal Jurisdiction Over Alger And Gloria Marsh

First, Appellants Alger and Gloria Marsh should have raised any alleged error

concerning lack of personal jurisdiction by a timely appeal from the General

Judgment, the Amended General Judgment, or the Second Amended General

Judgment. They failed to timely and properly appeal from any of these judgments.

Second, neither the Motion for Mistrial nor the 71B Motion presented and

preserved any challenge to personal jurisdiction over the Marsh Appellants.

Appellants made no timely motion for mistrial. State v. Williams, 322 Or at 631;

State v. Hilton, 187 Or App at 676-77. Their 71B Motion limited their argument to a

faulty contention that the trial court judgment had failed to rule on all issues. They

come to this Court too late to make their claim.

E. The Circuit Court Had Personal Jurisdiction Over The Marshes And Washburns

Mr. and Mrs. Marsh and Mr. and Mrs. Washburn waived any claim of lack of

personal jurisdiction by generally appearing in the Circuit Court proceeding. A

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general appearance confers personal jurisdiction upon the court over the appearing

party. Mutzig v. Hope, 176 Or 368,389,393-94, 158 P2d 110 (1945); Duncan

Lumber Co. v. Willapa Lumber Co., 93 Or 386,404,182 P 172,183 P 476 (1919). A

party generally appears when he requests affirmative relief from the Circuit Court.

Ahlstrom v. Lyon, 129 Or 629,633, 131 P2d 219 (1942) (motion seeking vacation of

a default constitutes a general appearance). Under traditional code pleading rules,

parties claiming lack of personal jurisdiction challenged the authority of the court by

specially appearing for the sole purpose of moving to quash service of the summons

and complaint. E.g., State ex rei Methodist Old People's Home v. Crawford, 159 Or

377,390,80 P2d 873 (1938). The modern Oregon code enables a party to assert lack

of personal jurisdiction by a motion to dismiss under ORCP 21A(2).

ORCP 21 A contains two additional mandates. First, "* * *. A motion to

dismiss making any of these defenses [including (2)] shall be made before pleading if

a further pleading is permitted. * * *." Second, "* * *. The grounds upon which any

of the enumerated defenses [including (2)] are based shall be stated specifically and

with particularity in the responsive pleading or motion. * * *."

The Marsh Appellants and Washburn Plaintiffs made a specific and explicit

statement of their contention that amounted to a general appearance. Their Motion To

Dismiss, filed June 16,2005 by their attorney Paula B. Hammond, asserted the

following basis for their motion in the third section:

"Neither the Marshes nor the Washburns were under the personal jurisdiction of the court at the time the court made its decision to grant the Defendant City's Motion for Partial

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Summary Judgment and to eliminate related issues/rom the trial. * * *." [Emphasis Supplied] (SER 6)

The Marsh and Washburn Plaintiffs reiterated their position in the concluding

paragraph of their Motion to Dismiss:

"Alger and Gloria Marsh and Gregory and Julie Washburn were not joined to the case or under the personal jurisdiction of the court when the decision was made on the constitutional issues in Case No.: CV031l0235 [this case now on appeal], They are not bound by that decision, and have raised the identical issues in their action for declaratory judgment filed June 16th

. * * *." (SER 6)

This Court will observe that Appellants Marsh and Plaintiffs Washburn

specifically do not contend that the Circuit Court lacked personal jurisdiction over

them following service of summons and complaint in the present case. They claim

something quite different, that the Circuit Court lacked jurisdiction over them at an

earlier time, when they were not residents of the affected subdivision and were not

named and served parties in this case.5 As demonstrated hereafter, the trial court

committed no reversible error with regard to these Appellants and Plaintiffs. Even

had Judge Van Dyk erred, such a hypothetical ruling would not render his judgment

"void" but rather merely "voidable" because the Circuit Court enjoyed personal

jurisdiction over these parties. State ex rei Mix v. Newland, 277 Or at 199.

Furthermore, the Marsh Appellants and Washburn Plaintiffs also engaged the

general jurisdiction of the Circuit Court when their lawyer filed their Motion To

5 The Durham Appellants also argued in support of the Marsh contention, and also claimed that the Marsh and Washburn parties were not under the personal jurisdiction of the court when it decided the City's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (OliN 296, page 2).

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Postpone Trial on June 21, 2005 (OJIN 363) and when they argued for postponement

on June 21, 2005 (6/21-22/05 Tr. pp 5-8). Again, they did not contest the existence of

personal jurisdiction over them at that time. Rather, they argued for a postponement

for three reasons: (1) the unavailability by reason of failing health oflong-time

passive plaintiff Lorrein Behrend; (2) the advisability of awaiting the outcome of their

emergency motion to the Court of Appeals in the other case they had filed; and (3) the

short notice they had received because of a flaw in their title reports (Jd.).

F. No Circuit Court Action Or Order Violated Due Process

Appellants' redundant attacks complain that the Circuit Court failed to accord

the Marsh and Washburn litigants fair play, adequate notice, and a sufficient time

within which to state their case. Their briefs are long on rhetoric but short on facts,

and the record tells a very different tale. This tactic compels Respondents to address

the factual record at length, in order to prevent any misunderstanding of the events

that transpired.

At the outset, Appellants forget that on May 4, 2005, on their Motion, the

Circuit Court issued its Fifth Order For Joinder Of Additional Parties, specifically

including Gloria and Alger Marsh (OJIN 298). Further, they overlook the lis pendens

notice their lawyer filed on August 10,2004, long before the Marsh and Washburn

parties purchased their properties. ORS 93.740. The Oregon Supreme Court

succinctly summarized the controlling feature of the lis pendens doctrine (a concept

dating far back in the common law) in Land Associates, Inc. v. Becker, 294 Or 308,

313-14,656 P2d 927 (1982):

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"* * *. This lis pendens doctrine states that the filing of a suit concerning real property is notice to people who obtain an interest in the property after the commencement of the suit that they will be bound by the outcome of the suit."

See also, Landsing Property Corp. v. Anglea, 89 Or App 381, 384, 749 P2d 588

(1988) (where a lis pendens notice is filed and recorded, subsequent purchasers "take

it subject to the litigation"). Appellants' counsel told the Circuit Court that Gregory

and Julie Washburn purchased their residence on June 6,2005, and that Alger and

Gloria Marsh also moved into the subdivision after some trial court rulings took place

(6/13/05 Tr. 30-32). On inquiry by the trial judge, Appellants assured the Court that

the lis pendens had been recorded correctly on all affected properties (Id., 32).

Further, when the Court discovered that Appellants had not successfully served

the Marsh and Washburn parties as directed (Id., 30-31), Judge Van Dyk erected

safeguards to protect their interests. He mandated alternative service to be

accomplished by County officials with a limited time to respond, and Lord told the

Court, "* * * we're more than willing to cooperate in that. * * *." (Jd., 34). Judge

Van Dyk then asked Appellants' lawyer, "* * *. Do you agree with me, Ms. Durham,

that we can adopt an alternative service method here with regard to Marshes and

Washburns? * * *." Ms. Durham replied that "I don't have a problem on service on

that. * * *" but expressed worry about a truncated opportunity of these couples to

respond (Id., 35). The trial court admonished that any such concern should be raised

by these particular parties, not by Appellants, and that given continuing purchases and

sales of properties within this large subdivision, the problem could arise repeatedly

and prevent any final resolution (Id.).

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After listening to an extended argument by most of the represented parties,

Judge Van Dyk ordered alternate service on the Marsh and Washburn couples,

explaining:

"THE COURT: All right. Well, what I'm - what I'm going to do, I'm going to direct that the second amended complaint be filed [sic] on the Washburns and the Marshes. We're going to have that service be by posting on the properties tomorrow. I'm going to prepare an order directing that a response be filed by Friday or a default may be taken against them, okay? That's what I'm going to do with regard to the Washburns and the Marshes * * *."

"But that's how I intend to deal with the problem that we have with regard to Marsh and Washburn. We're going to have their properties posted with the direction that they respond by Friday. In part because they have - you know, they bought their properties knowing that there was this litigation pending. It's clear that they're aware that this litigation will affect the deed restrictions, and so there's no -been no denial of due process in that respect. * * *." (ld., 49-50).6

The Marsh and Washburn parties generally appeared and moved to dismiss this

pending action following their joinder and alternate service (SER 6). During that

argument, the Court repeated his analysis and further explained his ruling. He

expressed concern about finality when a case involving ,,* * * a very large

subdivision, and a relatively frequent turnover in title" becomes "very old and ripe"

(6120/05 Tr 10). Following this general observation about case management, the trial

judge addressed the specific issue of the recent joinder ofMr. and Mrs. Marsh and

Mr. and Mrs. Washburn:

6 The Court subsequently reiterated his general ruling and assured Plaintiffs that the Court would see to the service of process on the Marsh and Washburn parties (6/l3/05 Tr 69-71).

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"Well, the fact of the matter is, these folks have been joined. The Washburns and the Marshes have been joined. Where do you get the process that protects latecoming title takers to properties in a subdivision that's involved in litigation over the CCRs? I think you get that from the lis pendens, they have had notice - or constructive notice of this lawsuit, the right to intervene or otherwise participate, since well before they actually purchased their properties, and that is what the law would contemplate to try to close the circle and allow finality in a lawsuit like this." (ld., 10-11).

Judge Van Dyk restated that lis pendens puts all purchasers on notice and permits the

assumption that any interested purchaser would investigate the status and effect of the

pending action before completing any proposed transaction (Id., 13). In these

circumstances, the court also must consider the right of long-participating parties in a

very old case to receive a final determination which would enable them to enter

transactions held in abeyance (ld.). The Circuit Court made it patent that, contrary to

claims by Appellants' lawyer, "* * *. This court has never said that these parties

who were recently joined in this action are not able to raise any issues to the attention

of this court. * * *."(ld., 18).

In response to Appellants' concern that perhaps the Marsh and Washburn

parties had not received accurate notice from the lis pendens filing, Respondents

pointed out that none of them had submitted an affidavit or any evidence explaining to

the trial court what they had learned concerning the pending proceeding and when

they obtained such knowledge (Id., 20). Indeed, these arguments were advanced not

by the Marsh and Washburn parties (represented by Ms. Hammond) but on behalf of

other Plaintiffs represented by Ms. Durham. Putting aside the question of standing,

Respondents' counsel observed some deficiencies afflicting Plaintiffs' argument:

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MR. WALSH: * * * * *. Another point is, Judge, you don't have an affidavit, you don't have the Washburns, and you don't know what they know or didn't know. Now, it very well may be that when the Washburns went and bought this property and talked to their realtor they were informed of the lis pendens. It may show up in the earnest money agreement, it may show up in a preliminary title report preliminary to this one, it may be showing up in other title reports; you don't have that information. The Washburns should be here to give that to you. All you have is a motion by somebody that apparently doesn't represent the Washburns, with a copy of a preliminary title report. You have nothing else. You don't have enough information to grant a motion like this." (ld., 20; see also, 21-22).

Thereafter, the trial court heard from some of the Respondents concerning

particular issues and reasons why any further postponement would be damaging and

unfair (ld., 24-26). In the absence of any evidence of lack of notice, and given the

general appearance made by the Washburn and Marsh parties (ld., 22), the Circuit

Court certainly possessed the discretion to presume that they had received adequate lis

pendens notice before they closed their transactions.

During the June 20,2005 pretrial hearing the lower court observed that the

Marsh Appellants and Washburn Plaintiffs had been duly served, had filed a motion

to dismiss, and had joined long-time passive Plaintiff Lorrein Behrend in commencing

a separate lawsuit involving substantially similar issues (Id., 19).

Appellants' lawyer persisted, urging that "* * * we just absolutely have to give

these people [which counsel did not represent at the time J their constitutional right to

procedural due process" (ld., 27), prompting Judge Van Dyk to set the record straight:

"THE COURT: Well * * * they have their constitutional rights. They have notice, and they have the opportunity to be

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heard. They got notice as of Tuesday last week. In fact, they evidently knew about the suit at least a couple of days in advance of that based on the correspondence that I received from your office. So they've had notice for a week, and they've chosen not to appear. They've decided that they're not going to participate in this proceeding, and instead, file a separate lawsuit. So they've had notice, they have had the opportunity to be heard." (Jd., 27-28).

The Circuit Court, following additional and repetitive argument from counsel

representing the other Plaintiffs, reiterated some of the harm that further delay would

cause other parties to the action (Jd., 28-29). Judge Van Dyk also reminded Ms.

Durham of the inaccuracy of her broad-based complaints:

"And, further, this court hasn't deprived anybody who has joined late of their opportunity to make the motion for summary judgment. This court's only prevented these plaintiffs [like Mrs. Behrend] who have been involved for a long period of time from being able to submit a motion for summary judgment late. That's the procedural posture of this case." (Jd., 29-30)

The court then ruled:

"THE COURT: All right. The motion to dismiss that was filed by the other plaintiffs in this case is denied. These are the parties that are represented by Ms. Durham. The trial is going to proceed tomorrow. The opportunity has been made available to these other folks to participate, and they've elected not to do it. They're not here to represent why a setover should be allowed. This court considers there to be a unanimity of interest. This Court has made adequate provision for these parties to be heard. There's really an importance placed on the need to reach a final resolution of this matter for all of the parties that are affected, and the court, as I've stated repeatedly, is in a difficult position to address matters of notice and the opportunity to be adequately heard, given the * * * potential for lot sales." (ld., 30-31).

* * * * *

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"* * *. But here, in fact, these parties were joined by service last Tuesday, and, as I've said, * * * they have appeared through attorney Hammond. They made a tactical decision to at least represent to the court that * * * they don't plan to actually participate in this case, and, instead, file another lawsuit. Well, that's their choice, but I'm not going to require all of the parties that are affected by this case to await a final outcome of a trial any longer, given the competing consideration here. So we will proceed tomorrow." (Jd., 31-32).

On the day of trial, the Circuit Judge again addressed the fairness and due

process issues and balanced the competing interests of the parties when he explained

his decision to deny the motion for postponement filed by Alger and Gloria Marsh

and Gregory and Julia Washburn.7 His statement based on the extensive record

demonstrates a wise decision clearly within standard trial court discretion:

"THE COURT: I'm prepared to rule. * * *. All right, I'm going to deny the motion to postpone the trial. The court recognizes a couple of things in that respect.

In the first place, we have so many individuals who are effected [sic] by the outcome of this. * * * it's a case that's been pending for 19 months. We have the risk that at any point in time that properties can be sold and the parties change. We suffered that experience here in this case. We attempted to get the Washburns joined in late May. Ms. Durham's office made that effort unsuccessfully. By the way, there is an order dated late May, I think it's May 29 th

or so, directing that they be brought into the case.

In any event, eventually service was effected on them on June 14th and they retained Ms. Hammond to represent their interests. The court recognizes that there is an identity of interests between the Washburns, the Marshes and the other plaintiffs in the case.

7 Judge Van Dyk separately considered and ruled upon the motion to postpone filed on behalf of Mrs. Behrend (6/21-22/05 Tr., pp. 8-11).

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The Washburns and the Marshes retained Ms. Hammond who's been involved in this case for a length of time and is already knowledgeable about the issues and has been involved to some extent in the preparations for this case and I believe also has been working with the attorney for the plaintiffs, Ms. Durham, so to that extent, she's been apprised of what the legal issues are here. So under the circumstances where the law seems to suggest that this court could proceed even without the Washburns given that there is an identity of interests and given the fact that in fact we have effected service on the Washburns, the Marshes * * *, and they do have competent counsel here prepared to represent their interests and there is an identity of interests in this case, for those reasons I'm not going to postpone the trial. The same circumstances I indicated can arise again and so it's just a circumstance that we can't avoid given the state ofthe law and the type of case that this is." (6/21-22/05 Tr. pp. 6-8)8

Both Lord and the Durham Appellants contend that when the Marshes, the

Washburns, and Mrs. Behrend filed their second case, Behrend et al v. Riggle et aI,

Clackamas County No. CV 05060459, presenting substantially similar issues, the trial

court somehow lost jurisdiction to continue, hear, and decide the instant case (Lord

AB 19; Durham AB 13-14, 19). No statute or judicial decision supports this strange

notion. All plaintiffs and defendants generally appeared in the present case, thereby

providing the Circuit Court with personal jurisdiction over all parties. It would be

singular to allow an appearing party to declare himself a non-participant and thereby

destroy the power of a court of general jurisdiction to render a binding decision. If

such an odd notion became the law, finality would disappear since any disgruntled

litigant could avoid final judgment by dismissing himself from the case.

8 Ms. Hammond had been "a consulting attorney" for Plaintiffs for a long time and she had acknowledged to Judge Van Dyk during an earlier hearing that she was fully familiar with the case and its fundamental issues (6/13/05 Tr. 10-11).

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RESPONDENTS' COMBINED ANSWER TO LORD AND DURHAM APPELLANTS' SECOND ASSIGNMENTS OF

ERROR AND DURHAM APPELLANTS' THIRD ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR

To The Extent The Court Of Appeals Has Appellate Jurisdiction To Hear And Decide These Assignments Of Error

The Circuit Court Had Subject Matter Jurisdiction

A. The Circuit Court Had Subject Matter Jurisdiction To Enter Its Judgment

Syllogistically, Appellants' argue "subject matter jurisdiction" thus:

Major Premise: The Circuit Court must achieve personal jurisdiction over all affected parties in order to have subject matter jurisdiction to enter a judgment

Minor Premise: The Court did not have personal jurisdiction over Alger and Gloria Marsh and Gregory and Julie Washburn

Conclusion: Therefore, the Circuit Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction so its judgment is void and subject to attack at any time

Review of Respondents' answer to the first assignments of error advanced by

Lord and the Durham Appellants (RB 11-23) demonstrates beyond cavil the fatal flaw

afflicting the minor premise of Appellants' essential syllogism. The Marsh

Appellants and the Washburn Plaintiffs generally appeared in Circuit Court, providing

the trial court jurisdiction over their persons and the subject matter of this suit. Any

alleged "errors" by the lower court thus would not render the judgment "void" but

merely "voidable." In fact, as the foregoing Answer to the First Assignments of Error

shows, Judge Van Dyk afforded the Marsh and Washburn parties all procedural

process due, and they chose not to participate in this case and to file another action in

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Clackamas County. This conduct does not in any fashion deprive the Circuit Court of

jurisdiction over their persons or concerning the subject matter before it.

B. Does The Court Of Appeals Lack Appellate Jurisdiction?

Appellants' erroneous minor premise should fully dispose of the Lord and

Durham Appellants' second assignments of error, and of the latter's third assignment

of error. Failing this disposition, the Court of Appeals must face a more thorny legal

issue concerning its appellate jurisdiction.

This Court reviews subject matter jurisdictional claims for legal error. Haley,

215 Or App at 38; Magar, 179 Or App at 106. Neither Appellants' Motion for

Mistrial nor their 71 B Motion raised these subject matter jurisdiction as claims, and

this Court has held their attempted appeal from the Second Amended General

Judgment to be untimely. They never appealed from the operative Amended General

Judgment to this day.

Thus, these assignments present an issue on the penumbra of permissible

appellate jurisdiction, an issue Respondents believe to be unique. The parties agree

(see Durham AB 29) that lack of subject matter jurisdiction may be raised for the first

time upon appeal because it presents an issue that cannot be waived. Waddill, 330 Or

at 384, citing with approval, SAIF v. Shipley, 326 Or 557,561, n L 955 P2d 244

(1998). This Court has held expressly and recently that lack of preservation of error

below does not prevent a party from urging a claim that the trial court lacked subject

matter jurisdiction for the first time on appeal. See, e.g., Stirton, 202 Or App at 255;

Danielv. Naylor, 192 Or App 1,3-4,84 P3d 819 (2004).

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Here, however, Appellants never attempted to appeal from the operative

Amended General Judgment which was entered on August 15,2005 (OHN 390).

They filed their initial Notice of Appeal 99 days after entry of that operative final

judgment (App OJIN 1). An appellate court must possess appellate jurisdiction in

order to decide a subject matter jurisdictional challenge. How late is too late for

subject matter jurisdictional challenges? One could suppose, for example, that a party

could not come before this Court five years after issuance of an Appellate Judgment

and claim for the first time that the Circuit Court did not enjoy subject matter

ju\isdiction when it entered the underlying judgment; even common law motions to

recall a mandate must have possessed some time restraints in order to assure the

finality so necessary to an Anglo-American juridical system.

All reported cases reviewed by Respondents rest upon a timely notice of appeal

from an operative final judgment. Here, this Court already has limited Appellants to

the issues set forth in their Mistrial and 71 B Motions. Those motions purported to

raise limited issues and did not mention, let alone challenge, any lack of subject

matter jurisdiction as now asserted. Certainly, the Mistrial Motion was untimely

under all decided cases when Appellants filed it in Circuit Court. Hence, Appellants

call upon this Court to decide whether their 71B Motion sufficiently saved a different

claim oflack of subject matter jurisdiction, compounded by Appellants' failure to

appeal at any time from the operative final judgment. See ORCP 71B(1) which

expressly omits the one-year limitation on claims of that "* * * the judgment is void

* * *." Respondents urge, without direct authority, that this new claim comes too

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late, and that the public interest in the final resolution of controversy overcomes any

contrary public policy. To repeat: the Court will avoid this seminal issue if it rules

that the Circuit Court obtained personal jurisdiction over all affected parties.

C. The Curious Contract Claim

Lord (Lord AB 25-28) and the Durham Appellants (Durham AB 32-37) argue

that the trial court erred in denying them a trial by jury on a purported claim for

breach of contract. Respondents fail to comprehend how this contention turns into a

lack of subject matter jurisdiction. If a trial court errs for any reason by entering a

judgment against a plaintiff over which it enjoys personal jurisdiction, such an error

does not render the resulting judgment void but merely voidable and subject to

correction on a timely appeal. Of course, Appellants failed to file a timely appeal

here, and their 7IB Motion does not resurrect this odd claim.

RESPONDENTS' COMBINED ANSWER TO APPELLANT LORD'S THIRD ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR

Appellants Failed To Preserve Any Error

The Circuit Court Did Not Err When It Granted Respondents' Motions In Limine

1. The Trial Court Ruling

Appellant Lord urges that Circuit Court rulings on three similar motions in

limine prevented her from proving her case (Lord AB 28-39). Any purported error

was not presented and preserved at Circuit Court.

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The Circuit Court granted Respondents' motions in limine and limited the

issues at trial to a determination of the original intent of the drafters of the CC&Rs

with regard to future development (e.g., ER 19-21). The court order expressly

excluded any evidence of the sUbjective belief of current landowners in the

subdivision about the meaning of the CC&Rs, and any landowner comments about

the "livability" or effect of "re-subdivision" upon the neighborhood (ER 20). It also

excluded evidence concerning any purported act or omission of the City or regarding

any issue already concluded and excluded by the trial court summary judgment order

(ER 19).

2. Appellants Failed To Preserve These Claimed Errors

Parties owe the trial court and counsel "* * * the obligation of a sound, clear

and articulate motion, objection or exception, so as to permit the trial judge a chance

to consider the legal contention." Shields v. Campbell, 277 Or 71,77,559 P2d 1275

(1977), cited with approval in BornhoJt v. Aubry, 178 Or App 625, 631, 37 P3d 1049,

rev den, 334 Or 260,47 P3d 486 (2002). A failure to argue a particular contention at

trial precludes appellate consideration of that claim. BornhoJt, 178 Or App at 631,

citing with approval, State v. Wilson, 323 Or 498, 512, 918 P2d 826 (1996), cert den,

519 US 1065, 117 S Ct 704,136 LE2d 625 (1997).

In the context of a challenge to the grant of a motion in limine, an appellant not

only must present her argument in a "sound, clear and articulate" fashion but also

must make an acceptable offer of proof concerning the evidence excluded. BornhoJt,

178 Or App at 630 (lack of proper preservation precluded necessity of court

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evaluation of adequacy of offer of proof). ORAP 5.45(4)(a)(iii) codifies this

requirement:

"(iii) If an assignment of error challenges an evidentiary ruling, the assignment of error shall quote or summarize the evidence that appellant believes was erroneously admitted or excluded. If an assignment of error challenges the exclusion of evidence, appellant also shall identify in the record where the trial court excluded the evidence and wltere tlte offer of proofwas made; * * *." [Emphasis Supplied]

Thus, even assuming that an evidentiary error has been otherwise presented and

preserved, this Court will not review it in the absence of an offer of proof. State v.

Hugltes, 192 Or App 8,16,83 P3d 951 (2004) (civil commitment proceedings); State

v. Olmstead, 310 Or 455,459, 800 P2d 277 (1990) (stating, in dicta, that an offer of

proof is required to preserve error where exclusion arises from the functional

equivalent of a motion in limine).

State v. Affeld, 307 Or 125, 128, 764 P2d 220 (1988) explains that the purpose

of this rule is "* * * to assure that appellate courts are able to determine whether it

was error to exclude the evidence and whether any error was likely to have affected

the result of the case." See also, State v. Barnes, 208 Or App 640, 646-47, 145 P3d

261 (2006) (citing Affeld and stating that the rule ensures an adequate record on

review); State v. Olmstead, 310 Or at 461 (recognizing, as an additional purpose of an

offer of proof, the preservation of the opportunity for the trial court to make a

reasoned decision).

Failure to make an adequate offer of proof precludes any appellate

consideration of an alleged error even in a death penalty murder case. See, State v.

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Bowen, 340 Or 487,501, 135 P3d 272 (2006), cert den, 549 US 1214, 127 S Ct 1258,

167 L Ed 2d 89 (2007) (absent an adequate offer of proof, the Supreme Court is ,,* *

* unable to determine whether the trial court erred * * * and, if so, whether that

alleged error affected the result in this case." Affirmed death penalty in aggravated

murder case); State v. Smith, 319 Or 37, 44, 872 P2d 966 (1994) (absence of offer of

proof precludes court from evaluating whether exclusion of proffered testimony was

proper. Affirmed death penalty in aggravated murder case); State v. Busby, 315 Or

292,298-300, 844 P2d 897 (1993) (failure to specifY proposed trial testimony on the

record deprives appellate court of any basis for evaluating importance of the evidence

excluded and the possible prejudice resulting from the ruling). Clearly if this rule

governs serious criminal cases where the failure to preserve error produces

irremediable results, it also should control the present civil case where parties harmed

by lack of proper presentation possess an alternate remedy.

Generally, an offer of proof may be made by question-and-answer or by

summary of the proposed proof by counsel adequate to permit appellate determination

of whether the ruling constituted reversible error. State v. Phillips, 314 Or 460,466,

840 P2d 666 (1992); State v. Hughes, 192 Or App at 17; Benchmark Properties v.

Hipolito, 161 Or App 598, 605, 984 P2d 927 (1999) (counsel generally may make an

acceptable offer of proof by summary). Without a record of the content of the

anticipated testimony, this Court cannot evaluate whether the lower court erred in

excluding the evidence. (ld.)

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Essentially, an offer of proof sufficient to preserve appellate error must enable

the trial court to identify the alleged error and to correct it if warranted. State v.

Wyatt, 331 Or 335, 343, 15 P3d 22 (2000). A proper offer of proof occurs when

counsel states to the trial court, on the record, what a specific witness would say under

oath and what she expects to prove by this testimony. State v. Luke, 104 Or App 541,

544, 802 P2d 672 (1990). Assigned trial error related to evidentiary rulings ordinarily

is subject to a harmless error analysis, and such an analysis cannot be performed with

nothing on the record regarding the effect of any claimed error. State v. Busby, 315

Or at 301-02.

Appellants made no formal or informal offer of proof during the hearing on

Respondents' motions in limine on June 20,2005. The Court will search that 55-page

transcript in vain, looking for any semblance of counsel summary or question-and-

answer sufficient to enable an appellate court to evaluate any purported exclusionary

error and any real affect on the outcome of the trial. Indeed, after Respondents

withdrew some affirmative defenses, the trial judge informed Appellants of his

understanding that any evidence concerning the beliefs of current landowners about

the meaning of the CC&Rs would be irrelevant:

"Now, Ms. Durham, do you understand that their position is that they're withdrawing those defenses, and the court can then limit the testimony to just the matter of what the meaning of the CC&Rs is? There would be no basis, that rm aware of, for you to submit evidence of what transpired after the CC&Rs were adopted if those defenses are out of the case. But if that's mistaken, now's the time to disabuse the court of that notion." (6/20/05 Tr. 36-37) [emphasis supplied]

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Counsel never "disabused" the trial court of his understanding. 9 She conceded that

Appellants had no witness possessing "firsthand" knowledge of the meaning of the

CC&Rs (ld., p. 37). Instead of responding to the court's question, she told the trial

judge that "* * * we are in the process of interviewing a former judge of the Supreme

Court who lived in the subdivision and was aware of some of these things * * *" (ld.).

However, when the Court asked the identity of the "former judge," eounsel refused,

saying, "* * * we're not ready to release that name * * *." (ld.).

The Circuit Court revisited the issue and afforded Appellants another

opportunity to describe the evidence they intended to produce (ld., pp. 41-42). The

following colloquy ensued:

"THE COURT: Okay. So you've got the CC&Rs, you've got the deeds. What other evidence do you have?

MS. DURHAM: I have the evidence of people who were beneficiaries and residents of those original covenants.

THE COURT: All right. But that's the evidence they seek to exclude because that's not going to be relevant to what was intended by the original CC&Rs." (ld., p. 42)

Counsel made no attempt to identify any witness (with one exception) and to

summarize the testimony of that person, nor did she explain how such purported

evidence could be relevant.

9 Instead of directly responding to the trial court, Appellants offered as legal support for their position that they had pled a viable breach of contract claim (Jd., 39-41). Counsel and Ms. Lord relied on Ludgate v. Somerville, 121 Or 643,649-53,256 P 1043 (1927) (Jd.). This case is clearly inapposite and does not establish any contract claim. In any event, it does not cure the lack of adequate preservation of error and lack of any offer of proof.

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The most one can glean from the record related to the motions in limine (ld,

37-48) is that counsel wished to introduce evidence of what some landowners

believed the covenants governing the subdivision meant when they acquired their

properties (Id, 40), although she conceded that all individuals with "firsthand

knowledge" were deceased, and that only one individual had "secondhand

knowledge" (ld, 37). Appellants failed to specifY the content of such testimony or

"knowledge" and, with one exception, failed to identifY any proposed witness (ld, 37-

48).

The exceptional instance concerned Mrs. Behrend. Appellants' lawyer told the

Circuit Court:

"This case does not just come down to, you know, what does Mrs. Behrend remember that her father told her. We can establish what the people that were here believe these covenants were. But there's been really egregious breach of them in certain cases, and it's part and parcel of this case, it's the enforcement part." (ld, 40)

* * * * * "MS. DURHAM: Mrs. Behrend. Assume we bring Mrs. Behrend in here on a stretcher, and she says, "My father built houses with these people. Everybody understood and I clearly recall." (ld, 44)

Judge Van Dyk observed that any such statement would constitute hearsay and Ms.

Durham failed to elaborate on her proposed proof, satisfied with the vague comment

that some unspecified hearsay exception might apply (ld.). She failed to express and

establish any applicable hearsay exception. The record contains nothing more,

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certainly not an explicit summary of Mrs. Behrend's proposed testimony. 10 Hence,

even if Appellants had specified the identity of their proposed witnesses and the

explicit content of their testimony, the acknowledged "secondhand" nature of such

evidence clearly constituted inadmissible hearsay, ORS 40.450, ORS 40.455, and

Appellants identified and argued no exception to the rule.

RESPONDENTS' COMBINED ANSWER TO LORD AND DURHAM APPELLANTS' FOURTH ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

Appellants' Assignments Of Error Challenging The Supplemental Judgment Of The Circuit Court Are Moot

Appellants Lack A Justiciable Controversy Or Standing

Appellants Assert No Meritorious Error

Argument

1. Interest Of Respondents Other Than City Of Oregon City

To the extent Appellants argue that the Circuit Court erred in awarding the

City Attorney Fees in the Supplemental Judgment, the Respondents other than the

City possess a mere academic interest. However, both Lord (Lord AB 39-40, 44-45)

and the Durham Appellants (Durham AB 42, 47-48) seem also to contend that the

trial court erred in awarding standard prevailing party Circuit Court costs and

disbursements.

10 From the context of the colloquy, it appears unlikely that Mrs. Behrend's health would permit her to appear in court, although ifher testimony had been relevant, Appellants could have perpetuated it by deposition.

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2. Appellants' "General Judgment" Argument

Both Lord (Lord AB 40, 44-45) and the Durham Appellants (Durham AB 42,

47-48) repeat their claim that the Circuit Judge erred in entering a general judgment in

improper form, that is, that he failed to rule on each claim and contention

individually. Respondents reiterate their stated position that the General Judgment

(OlIN 381, p. 4), the Amended General Judgment (OlIN 390, pp. 4-5), and the

Second Amended General Judgment (OlIN 416, pp. 4-5) fully disposed of all claims

and contentions and met all recognized standards for the composition of an Oregon

"judgment." Of course, and in addition, Respondents reiterate their stated position that

Chief Judge Brewer has strictly limited this appeal, and that neither Appellants'

Motion for Mistrial nor their 71B Motion raise, present, and preserve this issue

adequately.

3. The Racially Restrictive Covenant Issue Does Not Help Appellants

Both Lord (Lord AB 41-43) and the Durham Appellants (Durham AB 45-47)

urge that the Circuit Court erred in awarding Respondents prevailing party costs

because the Appellants secured removal of a racially restrictive covenant. Their

reliance on this feature is misplaced for two separate reasons.

First, Respondents' sole opposition to Appellants' pleading related to formal

issues and did not go to the merits. Early in the proceedings, Judge Van Dyk inquired

of Appellants' counsel, "Why is that [pleading concerning the racially restrictive

covenant] even in this case?" (11115/04 Tr 5), and "Why are we even talking about

that? (Jd., 6). The trial court observed at that point that, "Everybody knows that's not

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enforceable" (Id.), and "1 doubt that there's anybody in this room that would have the

slightest inclination to enforce such a provision." (Id.). Appellants persisted in

arguing the point during a later hearing, prompting City counsel to explain

Respondents' position that their motions were directed to the rather inartful pleading

by an inexperienced lawyer:

"* * *. * * * we did move against that paragraph just because it states law. Not because the restriction should survive, but because there were a lot of recitations of law, rather than fact, in the complaint, and that was one of the ones we moved against. * * * ." (1110105 Tr 52)

Again, Judge Van Dyk assured Plaintiffs that no one opposed removal of the

covenant, even if it had been a legal nullity for decades. "* * * no one's opposing it

[removal of the covenant] * * *." (Jd., 54). When Appellants' lawyer continued to

argue the issue, the Circuit Court with no dissent by any Respondent - agreed to

incorporate removal of the void covenant in an order (Jd., 58_59).11

Second, the Supreme Court of the United States effectively removed that

covenant sixty years ago in Shelley v. Kraemer, 334 US 1,68 S Ct 836, 92 L Ed 1161

(1948). Since the Supreme Court establishes the law of the land, no action by

Appellants or any State or inferior court was necessary to effect this change.

4. Appellants Have No Justiciable Claim

With regard to Appellants' claim of error in the award of attorney fees to the

City, this Court should hold that none of these Appellants present a justiciable case or

11 One Respondent's attorney noted for the court that Federal law required all title reports and policies to facilitate transfers regardless of race, religion, creed, or other protected interest regardless of any contrary language in the CC&Rs (1110105 Tr 59).

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controversy subject to judicial review, for two independent reasons: these Appellants

lack standing, and their assigned errors are moot.

The Supplemental Judgment awarded attorney fees to the City of Oregon City

against Plaintiffs below (OHN 464). On October 6,2008, the Circuit Court entered a

Full Satisfaction Of Judgment (SER 21) executed by the City. None of the payments

made to the City to satisfY the attorney fee segment of the Supplemental Judgment

were made by any Appellant before this Court. On December 16, 2008, the City filed

a Notice Of Potential Mootness with this Court (SER 23). On December 16,2008,

Appellate Commissioner Nass determined that the Supplemental Judgment

assignments of error were not moot. The City did not argue, and the Commissioner

did not consider, any lack of standing contention.

A. These Appellants Lack Standing

Neither Lord nor any of the Durham Appellants contributed to the payments

that satisfied the Supplemental Judgment (OHN 464). Therefore, none of the

Appellants before this Court have suffered any detriment to be redressed on this

appeaL Justiciability represents the shorthand description of the legal axiom that

"Before a court may grant relief to a litigant, there must be some identifiable source of

power to enter upon an inquiry of the merits of the claim. * * *." Ragnone v.

Portland School District No. IJ, 289 Or 339, 341, 613 P2d 1052 (1980)12, citing with

approval, Abrahamson v. Northwestern P. & P. Co., 141 Or 339,343,15 P2d 472,

17 P2d 1117 (1933). The "standing" aspect of justiciability requires that any litigant

12 Reversed after remand on other grounds, 291 Or 617,633 P2d 1287 (1981)

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asserting a claim must establish that a judicial decision will have some practical effect

upon his or her rights. E.g., Mcintire, 322 Or at 433; Brumnett, 315 Or at 405-06. 13

One who invokes the jurisdiction of the appellate court must establish the existence of

that necessary practical effect. Just v. City of Lebanon, 193 Or App at 147; Just v.

City of Lebanon, 193 Or App 121, 124, n 2, 88 P3d 307 (2004). All Appellants lack

standing to raise their respective Fourth Assignments of Error since any decision

could have no practical effect upon their rights. Utsey, 176 Or App at 539-41;

American Fed. Teachers, 208 Or App at 377.

B. Assignments Of Error Concerning The Attorney Fee Issue Are Moot

With all due respect to the Commissioner, this Court cannot, and does not,

decide matters that fail the constitutional case or eontroversy requirement. The

judicial power vested in Oregon courts by Article VII (Amended), Sec. 1, does not

include the power to decide moot questions. Yancy v. Shatzer, 337 Or 345, 363, 97

P3d 1161 (2004). The exercise of judicial jurisdiction under the Oregon Constitution

depends upon the existence ofa case or controversy. ld., 337 Or at 347,349,351,

362-63; see, Gortmaker v. Seaton, 252 Or 440,442,450 P2d 547 (1969). When an

issue becomes moot, any semblance of a case or controversy disappears. Full

satisfaetion of a judgment here erases any necessary judicial precondition. As Judge

13 Earlier Oregon cases phrased the essential component as requiring a litigant to "have a substantial interest in the subject matter," Multnomah Co. v. Reed, et ai, 203 Or 21,23, 278 P2d 135 (1954), or to be "aggrieved" by the putative error, Larabee v. Mell, Extr'x, 193 Or 543, 545-56, 239 P2d 597 (1952). Justice (then Judge) Gillette held that these two tests were identical and interchangeable. Clark v. Dagg, 38 Or App 71, 77,588 P2d 1298 (1979). The "practical effect" test appears to comprise the modern statement of the rule without changing its essence.

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Landau wrote in Utsey, 176 Or App at 541, "* * *. By definition, the mootness

doctrine reaffirms the basic principle of justiciability that, at all times, the court's

decision must have a practical effect on the rights ofthe parties. * * * ." [italics in

original]; Confirm, Hamel v. Johnson, 330 Or 180, 184,998 P2d 661 (2000).

ORS 19.420(1) describes the scope of the relief this Court may award:

"19.420 Action by appellate court on appeal; review of order granting new trial or judgment notwithstanding verdict; reversal upon loss or destruction of reporter's notes or audio records. (1) Upon an appeal, the court to which the appeal is made may affirm, reverse or modify the judgment or part thereof appealed from as to any or all of the parties joining in the appeal, and may include in such decision any or all of the parties not joining in the appeal, except a codefendant of the appel/ant against whom a several judgment might have been given in the court below; and may, if necessary and proper, order a new trial." [Emphasis Supplied]

Under ORS 19.420(1), the plaintiffs below who paid the attorney fee segment of the

Supplemental Judgment were "co-defendants" (in the essential sense of the word)

against whom a several judgment might have been given below, and against whom a

several judgment in fact was given. Since these parties did not join in this appeal, the

express language of the statute limits this Court's power to modify the Supplemental

Judgment against them. Hence, payment in full by non-appealing parties reduces any

decision on the Fourth Assignments of Error into the resolution of an abstract

question without any practical effect. See, State ex rei Juv. Dept. v. Holland, 290 Or

765, 767, 625 P2d 1318 (1981). Mootness flows from this lack of any practical

effect.

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Appellants contended before the Commissioner that the judgment debtors who

paid the Supplemental Judgment might seek contribution from them. No such

contribution claim has been commenced. ORS 18.242 requires one seeking

contribution in this context to file a notice of payment and a claim for contribution

with the Clerk of the Circuit Court within 30 days of any such payment. ORS 18.242

also requires the Clerk to make a marginal entry note of such a notice of payment and

claim to contribution. This Court should take judicial notice of the Clerk and

Judgment records of Clackamas County. ORS 40.065, 40.070(2). No notice of

payment and claim has been filed, and thirty days has long since passed. Therefore,

Lord and the Durham Appellants will not suffer any such practical effect upon their

rights and property.

CONCLUSION

The Court of Appeals should affirm all judgments of the Circuit Court and

award Respondents their costs and disbursements on appeal.

Respectfully submitted this 2nd day of March, 2009.

G:\c1ients\8136\P Respondents Brief and SEKdoc/he

Michael D. Walsh, OSB No. 733177 Hutchison & Walsh, P.C. Telephone: (503) 656-1694

Ridgway K. Foley, Jr., OSB No. 630242 Greene & Markley, P.C. Telephone: (503) 295-2668

Attorneys for Defendants-Respondents James Riggle, Laura Riggle, Wade Belknap, Sheila Belknap and Donald Isaacson as Trustee of the Isaacson Trust

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CERTIFICATE OF FILING AND SERVICE

I hereby certifY that I fi1ed the foregoing Respondents' Brief And Supplemental Excerpt of Record by mailing the original and 20 copies by first-class mail to:

State Court Administrator Appellate Courts Records Section 1163 State Street Salem, OR 97301-2563

on the date set forth below, by placing it in a sealed package with postage paid, addressed to the address set forth above and deposited in the U.S. Post Office at Portland, Oregon.

I further certifY that I served two copies of the foregoing Respondents' Brief And Supplemental Excerpt of Record upon the following:

Glenda P. Durham, Esq. P.O. Box 1228 Welches, OR 97067 Telephone: (503) 622-5621

Attorney for Plaintiffs-Appellants (except Linda Lord)

Linda Lord Holmes Lane

Oregon City, OR 97045 Telephone: (

pro se Plaintiff-Appellant

Michael D. Walsh, Esq. John C. Hutchison, Esq. Hutchison & Walsh, P.C P.O. Box 648 West Linn, OR 97068 Telephone: (503) 656-1694

Attorney for Defendants-Respondents J ames Riggle, Laura Riggle, Wade Belknap, Sheila Belknap and Donald Isaacson as Trustee of the Isaacson Trust

Bryan R. Welch, Esq. Jon S. Henricksen, Esq. Jon S. Henricksen, P.C. 725 Portland Avenue Gladstone, OR 97027 Telephone: (503) 655-7555

Attorney for Defendants-Respondents Diane McKnight, James McKnight

Jeffrey L. Kleinman, Esq. 1207 SW 6th Avenue Portland, OR 97204 Telephone: (503) 248-0808

Attorney for Defendant-Respondent City of Oregon City

Charles F. Hudson, Esq. Lane Powell, P.C. 601 SW 2nd Ave., Ste 2100 Portland, OR 97204 Telephone: (503) 778-2178

Attorney for Defendant-Respondent Oregon City Evangelical Church

Page 1 - CERTIFICATE OF FILING AND SERVICE

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on the date set forth below, by mailing to them a true and correct copy thereof, certified by me as such, placed in sealed, first-class, postage prepaid envelope, addressed to them at the last known addresses set forth above, and deposited with the United States Postal Service at Portland, Oregon.

DATED this 2nd day of March, 2009.

GREENE & MARKLEY, P.C.

By _ osg }C D63lj} RidgwayK. Foley, Jr., OSB No. 630242 Greene & Markley, P.C. 1515 SW 5th Avenue, Suite 600 Portland, OR 97201 Telephone: (503) 295-2668

Of Attorneys for Defendants-Respondents James Riggle, Laura Riggle, Wade Belknap, Sheila Belknap and Donald Isaacson as Trustee of the Isaacson Trust

A TRUE COPY OF THE ORIGINAL ------------------------------

Page 2 - CERTIFICATE OF FILING AND SERVICE

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