Black v. Metro ( 2024 )


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  • No. 756              October 23, 2024                    633
    This is a nonprecedential memorandum opinion
    pursuant to ORAP 10.30 and may not be cited
    except as provided in ORAP 10.30(1).
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE
    STATE OF OREGON
    Darrin BLACK,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    METRO,
    a political subdivision of the State of Oregon,
    Respondent-Respondent.
    Clackamas County Circuit Court
    22CV44138; A181559
    Michael C. Wetzel, Judge.
    Argued and submitted July 2, 2024.
    Darrin Black argued and filed the briefs pro se.
    Roger A. Alfred argued the cause and filed the brief for
    respondent.
    Before Ortega, Presiding Judge, Powers, Judge, and
    Hellman, Judge.
    HELLMAN, J.
    Affirmed.
    634                                                        Black v. Metro
    HELLMAN, J.
    Plaintiff appeals a general judgment of dismissal
    entered after the trial court concluded that his claims for
    declaratory relief were barred by claim preclusion.1 Plaintiff
    raises one assignment of error and makes several argu-
    ments in support of that assignment. We affirm.
    “We review the trial court’s conclusions with respect
    to preclusion for errors of law. The doctrines of claim preclu-
    sion, issue preclusion, and law of the case have the shared
    purposes of preventing harassment by successive proceed-
    ings, preventing inconsistent adjudications, and promoting
    economy of resources in the adjudicative process.” OEA v.
    Oregon Taxpayers United, 
    253 Or App 288
    , 299-300, 291 P3d
    202 (2012) (citations omitted).
    This case is before us for a second time. Plaintiff
    and defendant, a metropolitan service district, began lit-
    igating this case more than 15 years ago. Bleeg v. Metro,
    
    229 Or App 210
    , 213, 211 P3d 302 (2009), rev den 
    349 Or 56
     (2010), cert den, 
    563 US 1033
     (2011). Because defendant’s
    regulations affected plaintiff’s property, plaintiff and other
    affected property owners “filed written demands for just
    compensation with [defendant].” Id. at 213-14. “After [defen-
    dant] denied those claims for just compensation, plaintiffs
    filed actions in circuit court pursuant to ORS 197.352(6).”
    Id. at 214. Former ORS 197.352 (2005), amended by Or
    Laws 2007, ch 424, § 4, renumbered as ORS 195.305 (2007),
    amended by Or Laws 2013, ch 279, § 1, was the codification
    of Ballot Measure 37 (2004). Id. at 213 n 1. Ballot Measure
    37 “provided, generally, that public entities that enacted or
    enforced land use regulations that adversely affected the
    fair market value of a claimant’s property either had to pay
    just compensation or waive the offending regulations.” Id.
    “[T]he trial court entered a general judgment that
    awarded plaintiffs just compensation in the amount of
    $14,818,158.” Id. at 214. Measure 49 (2007) took effect the
    next day. Id. That measure “extinguish[ed] and replace[d] the
    1
    In his 2022 and 2023 filings, appellant identified himself as “Plaintiff/
    Petitioner” and respondent as “Defendant/Respondent.” For purposes of this
    nonprecedential memorandum opinion, we address appellant as “plaintiff” and
    respondent as “defendant.”
    Nonprecedential Memo Op: 
    335 Or App 633
     (2024)             635
    benefits and procedures that Measure 37 [had] granted to
    landowners.” 
    Id.
     at 213 n 1 (internal quotation marks omit-
    ted). The following day, “the trial court entered corrected gen-
    eral judgments that added a money award to the judgment
    for each plaintiff.” Id. at 214. Defendant appealed. Id.
    We concluded that the cases were not justiciable,
    vacated the judgments, and remanded for entry of judg-
    ments dismissing the claims. Id. at 217-18. We explained:
    “[T]he dispute involving plaintiffs’ Measure 37 claims for
    just compensation was ongoing as of the time that Measure
    49 became effective—indeed that ongoing dispute about
    plaintiffs’ Measure 37 claims for just compensation is the
    subject of this appeal. Thus, Measure 49 supersedes those
    Measure 37 claims and deprives the trial court’s judgments
    in this case of continuing viability.”
    Id. at 217.
    In 2022, plaintiff filed a petition seeking “declar-
    atory judgment and relief, and reinstatement, ratifica-
    tion and confirmation of the money judgment previously
    entered by the court.” Plaintiff asserted four claims. First,
    plaintiff alleged that “the trial court should * * * reaffirm
    the basis and merits of the court’s findings and judgments
    previously issued by the trial court in spite of the Court of
    Appeals’ mandate that the trial court issue a judgment dis-
    missing [plaintiff’s] claims” because we had “never reached
    a determination of the issues raised on appeal by [defen-
    dant].” Second, plaintiff alleged that our decision to vacate
    the judgments “without reviewing the merits of [plaintiff’s]
    claim and the assignments of errors presented on appeal”
    violated his rights under the state and federal constitutions.
    Third, plaintiff alleged that we violated his constitutional
    rights when we determined that Measure 49 extinguished
    his Measure 37 claims. According to plaintiff, his Measure
    37 claim “merged into the trial court’s judgments” so defen-
    dant’s appeal “did not involve a pending Measure 37 claim.”
    Finally, plaintiff alleged that “the trial court’s general judg-
    ment and corrected money award issued in this case was
    justiciable and not rendered moot.”
    Defendant filed a motion to dismiss and argued,
    among other things, that claim preclusion barred plaintiff’s
    636                                             Black v. Metro
    claims. Relying on Lincoln Loan Co. v. City of Portland, 
    340 Or 613
    , 136 P3d 1 (2006), the trial court concluded that the
    doctrine of claim preclusion applied, granted defendant’s
    motion, and entered a general judgment of dismissal with
    prejudice. Plaintiff appealed.
    Because they are dispositive, we begin with plain-
    tiff’s arguments that his claims are not barred by claim pre-
    clusion and that the trial court erred in relying on Lincoln
    Loan. “To bring a declaratory judgment action, a plaintiff
    must allege that its ‘rights, status or other legal relations are
    affected’ by, inter alia, a constitutional provision or statute.”
    
    Id. at 619
     (quoting ORS 28.020). As relevant here, “[u]nder
    the doctrine of claim preclusion, no party to that action
    * * * may subsequently litigate a claim that is encompassed
    within that adjudication.” OEA, 
    253 Or App at 300
    . A “[c]laim
    includes all rights or remedies between the parties with
    respect to all or any part of a transaction, or series of con-
    nected transactions, out of which the action arose.” 
    Id.
     (inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted). Thus, “[c]laim preclusion does
    not require that an issue of law or fact be actually litigated
    nor that the determination of an issue be essential to the
    final or end result of the proceeding.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation
    marks omitted and emphasis added).
    We conclude that the trial court did not err. The
    only claims that plaintiff asserts arise from our decision
    that vacated the 2007 judgments. Cf. Lincoln Loan, 
    340 Or at 619
    . (“[T]he only claim that plaintiff asserts in its
    complaint in this action arises from the Court of Appeals’
    reversal of the 1995 judgment and the subsequent entry of
    a final judgment in defendant’s favor.”). Further, plaintiff
    “seeks to restore the effect” of the 2007 judgments by raising
    constitutional challenges that he could have raised before
    us or the Supreme Court in the prior case. 
    Id.
     Therefore,
    the trial court did not err when it concluded that, like in
    Lincoln Loan, claim preclusion barred plaintiff’s claims. See
    
    id. at 620
     (concluding that claim preclusion applied when
    the plaintiff raised claims that “could have been raised and
    litigated in the prior case.”).
    Affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A181559

Judges: Hellman

Filed Date: 10/23/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2024