Title 147 · ORS Chapter 147

147.537, 147.539 and 147.542. ����� (b) A defendant who seeks to appeal an order issued under ORS 147.515, 147.520 or 147.530 must do so in the manner provided for appeals in ORS chapter 138. The pro

Citation: ORS 147.537

Section: 147.537

147.537, 147.539 and 147.542.

����� (b) A defendant who seeks to appeal an order issued under ORS 147.515, 147.520 or 147.530 must do so in the manner provided for appeals in ORS chapter 138. The provisions of this section and ORS 147.537, 147.539 and 147.542 do not apply to an appeal under ORS chapter 138.

����� (c) Nothing in ORS 147.500 to 147.550 affects the ability of a defendant to petition for a writ of mandamus.

����� (2) Jurisdiction for appellate review of an order issued under ORS 147.515, 147.520 or 147.530 is vested originally and exclusively in the Supreme Court.

����� (3) Subject to ORS 147.542, the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court is limited to the order for which appellate review is sought and the trial court retains jurisdiction over all other matters in the criminal proceeding.

����� (4) Appellate review of an order issued under ORS 147.515, 147.520 or 147.530 shall be as provided in:

����� (a) ORS 147.537 if the order was issued under ORS 147.520 or 147.530 in a criminal proceeding in which a defendant is charged with a felony or a person Class A misdemeanor, as that term is defined by rule of the Oregon Criminal Justice Commission, and the order arises from a motion or claim alleging a violation that occurred prior to the pronouncement in open court of the sentence or disposition after a plea, admission or trial in the criminal proceeding.

����� (b) ORS 147.539 in all appeals arising under ORS 147.500 to 147.550 except those described in paragraph (a) of this subsection.

����� (5) The victim, the state or any person against whom relief was ordered has standing to seek appellate review of an order unless, after notice and a reasonable opportunity to be heard on the claim or motion that resulted in the order or a related claim or motion, the person or party seeking appellate review did none of the following:

����� (a) Inform the court of a claim.

����� (b) File a response under ORS 147.517 (4).

����� (c) File a motion under ORS 147.522.

����� (d) Participate in a hearing under ORS 147.530.

����� (6) Pursuant to ORS 180.060, the Attorney General shall appear for the state in all appeals under this section and ORS 147.537, 147.539 and 147.542. [2009 c.178 �13; 2013 c.224 �3]

����� Note: See note under 147.500.

����� 147.537 Appellate review as matter of right; notice of interlocutory appeal; service; response. (1) Appellate review of an order described in ORS 147.535 (4)(a) must be initiated by filing a notice of interlocutory appeal with the Supreme Court substantially in the form prescribed by rule of the Supreme Court. Review of the order is a matter of right.

����� (2) The person or party filing the notice of interlocutory appeal shall be identified as the appellant and the defendant shall be identified as the respondent. Any other person described in subsection (6)(a) to (f) of this section who is a party to the appeal shall be identified as a respondent.

����� (3) The notice of interlocutory appeal must contain:

����� (a) A designation of those portions of the trial court record, including oral proceedings, to be included in the record on appeal; and

����� (b) A statement of why the notice is timely.

����� (4) The appellant shall include with the notice of interlocutory appeal the following materials:

����� (a) A copy of the order for which appellate review is sought, which must be attached to the notice.

����� (b) Excerpts of the record necessary to determine the question presented and the relief sought. An excerpt of record must include a copy of the form described in ORS 147.515 (2)(a), if the form was completed and provided to the trial court.

����� (c) A memorandum of law containing:

����� (A) A concise but complete statement of facts material to a determination of the question presented and the relief sought; and

����� (B) Supporting arguments and citations of authority.

����� (5) The Supreme Court may:

����� (a) Direct a party to the appeal to supplement the record with a copy of additional parts of the record or a transcript of the parts of the oral proceedings in the trial court necessary to determine the question presented and the relief sought; or

����� (b) Direct the trial court administrator to forward all or part of the trial court record.

����� (6) The appellant shall serve a copy of the notice of interlocutory appeal and the accompanying materials described in subsection (4) of this section on the following other persons:

����� (a) The victim who asserted the claim that resulted in the order being appealed and any victim who asserted a related claim;

����� (b) Any person who filed a response under ORS 147.517 (4) to the claim that resulted in the order being appealed or a related claim;

����� (c) Any person who filed the motion that resulted in the order being appealed or a related motion under ORS 147.522;

����� (d) Any person against whom relief was sought in the hearing that resulted in the order being appealed or a related hearing under ORS 147.530;

����� (e) The prosecuting attorney;

����� (f) The Attorney General;

����� (g) The defendant; and

����� (h) The Oregon Public Defense Commission, if the defendant is represented by appointed counsel.

����� (7) The appellant shall serve a copy of the notice of interlocutory appeal on:

����� (a) The trial court administrator; and

����� (b) The trial court transcript coordinator, if the notice of interlocutory appeal contains a designation of the oral proceedings before the trial court as part of the record on appeal.

����� (8)(a) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, the appellant shall serve and file the notice of interlocutory appeal and, if applicable, the accompanying materials described in subsection (4) of this section within seven days after the date the trial court entered the order being appealed.

����� (b) An appellant who seeks to appeal an order issued under ORS 147.530 and who was not provided with a copy of the order as required by ORS 147.530 (6) may serve and file the notice of interlocutory appeal and, if applicable, the accompanying materials described in subsection (4) of this section within seven days after the date of receiving a copy of the order.

����� (c) The appellant shall serve the prosecuting attorney and the Attorney General so that the copy of the notice of interlocutory appeal and accompanying materials are received on the same day the notice is filed with the Supreme Court.

����� (d) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this subsection, the appellant shall serve all persons described in subsections (6) and (7) of this section so that the copy of the notice of interlocutory appeal and, if applicable, accompanying materials are received no later than one judicial day after the notice is filed.

����� (9) Within three days after receipt of a notice of interlocutory appeal that contains a designation of record under subsection (3) of this section, the trial court administrator shall forward to the Supreme Court an audio record of the designated oral proceedings.

����� (10) If the Supreme Court directs a party to provide a transcript of oral proceedings under subsection (5) of this section, the party shall provide the transcript to the Supreme Court within seven days after the date of the Supreme Court�s order.

����� (11)(a) The following requirements are jurisdictional and may not be waived or extended:

����� (A) The timely filing of the original notice of interlocutory appeal and accompanying materials described in subsection (4) of this section with the Supreme Court; and

����� (B) The service of the notice of interlocutory appeal within the time limits described in subsection (8) of this section on all persons identified in subsection (6) of this section.

����� (b) Failure to timely serve a true and complete copy of the accompanying materials described in subsection (4) of this section is not jurisdictional, provided that the appellant made a good faith effort to do so and substantially complied with those requirements.

����� (c) Notwithstanding paragraph (b) of this subsection, the Supreme Court may dismiss the appeal as to any respondent if the appellant, after receipt of a notice of noncompliance, does not promptly cure a deficiency in the materials or if the failure to timely serve a true and complete copy of the accompanying materials substantially prejudices the respondent�s ability to respond to the appeal.

����� (12) A respondent may file a response, which must be filed within seven days after the date the notice of interlocutory appeal is filed with the Supreme Court.

����� (13)(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this subsection, the appellant may not file a reply.

����� (b) If the Supreme Court determines that the case is unusually complex, due to the number of persons involved or the existence of novel questions of law, and the court would benefit from additional briefing, the court may extend the briefing schedule described in this section and allow the appellant to file a reply.

����� (14) The appellant or respondent may request oral argument. The Supreme Court may grant or deny a request for oral argument or order oral argument on its own motion.

����� (15) At any time after submission of the appellant�s memorandum of law, the Supreme Court, on its own motion or on the motion of the respondent, may summarily affirm the trial court�s order, with or without the submission of a response or oral argument, if the Supreme Court determines that the appeal does not present a substantial question of law. A motion for summary affirmance has no effect on the timelines described in this section.

����� (16)(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this subsection, the Supreme Court shall issue its decision on appeal under this section within 21 days after the date the notice of interlocutory appeal is filed.

����� (b) The Supreme Court may issue a final decision beyond the 21-day period if the court determines that the ends of justice served by issuing a final decision at a later date outweigh the best interests of the victim, the prosecuting attorney, the defendant, any person against whom relief was ordered and the public.

����� (c) In making the determination under paragraph (b) of this subsection, the Supreme Court shall consider:

����� (A) Whether the case is unusually complex, due to the number of persons involved or the existence of novel questions of law, and whether 21 days is an unreasonable amount of time for the court to issue a decision; and

����� (B) Whether the failure to extend the 21-day period would be likely to result in a miscarriage of justice.

����� (17) Appellate review under this section is confined to the record. The Supreme Court may not substitute its judgment for that of the trial court as to any issue of fact and shall review challenges to a factual finding for evidence in the record to support the finding. The Supreme Court shall review for errors of law and, when the law delegates discretion to the trial court, determine whether the trial court�s exercise of discretion was outside the range of discretion delegated to the trial court.

����� (18) The Supreme Court may affirm, modify, reverse or remand the trial court�s order. The court may reverse or remand the order only if it finds that the order is unlawful in substance or procedure and that the substantial rights of the appellant were prejudiced as a result.

����� (19) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a notice of interlocutory appeal and the response described in subsection (12) of this section are filed under this section when those documents are physically received by the Supreme Court or, if the documents are filed electronically, as provided by rule of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.

����� (20) In addition to any other method authorized by law, service under this section may be accomplished by electronic mail or facsimile transmission, in a manner consistent with any applicable rules of appellate procedure. [2009 c.178 �14; 2011 c.659 �4; 2013 c.224 �4; 2023 c.281 �34]

����� Note: See note under 147.500.

����� 147.539 Discretionary review. Appellate review of an order described in ORS 147.535 (4)(b) shall be as provided in ORS 147.537, except that:

����� (1) The Supreme Court�s jurisdiction is discretionary. The court may by rule prescribe the criteria the court will use to decide whether to grant review. The initiating document is a petition for review, but the petition must be accompanied by the same materials described in ORS 147.537 (4), and the person seeking review shall be identified as the petitioner.

����� (2) The respondent may elect not to file a response until after the Supreme Court has decided to accept review, in which case the response must be filed within seven days after the Supreme Court issues an order granting review.

����� (3) ORS 147.537 (15) does not apply to review under this section. The Supreme Court may dismiss a review improvidently granted.

����� (4)(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this subsection, the Supreme Court shall issue its decision on appeal under this section within 21 days after the date the court issued the order granting review.

����� (b) The Supreme Court may issue a final decision beyond the 21-day period if the court determines that the ends of justice served by issuing a final decision at a later date outweigh the best interests of the victim, the prosecuting attorney, the defendant, any person against whom relief was ordered and the public. [2009 c.178 �15]

����� Note: See note under 147.500.

����� 147.542 Stay pending appeal. (1) The trial court shall stay for a period of 21 days all matters that directly impact, or are directly impacted by, the order on appeal:

����� (a) Upon receipt of a notice of interlocutory appeal under ORS 147.537; or

����� (b) Upon the issuance of an order granting review under ORS 147.539.

����� (2) The Supreme Court may extend or reduce the length of or vacate the stay on its own motion or on the motion of a victim, prosecuting attorney, defendant or any person against whom relief was ordered.

����� (3) In making the determination described in subsection (2) of this section, in addition to other factors the Supreme Court considers important, the court shall consider:

����� (a) The likelihood that the appellant will prevail on appeal in light of the support in fact and law for the appeal;

����� (b) Whether the appeal is taken in good faith and not for the purpose of delay;

����� (c) The nature of the harm to the victim, the prosecuting attorney, the defendant, any person against whom relief was ordered and the public that will likely result from the grant or denial of a stay;

����� (d) The rights guaranteed to the victim, the prosecuting attorney, the defendant and any person against whom relief was ordered under the Oregon Constitution or the United States Constitution and under Oregon statutory and decisional law; and

����� (e) Whether the defendant is in custody and, if so, whether the defendant has expressly consented to a continuance of the trial under ORS 136.290. [2009 c.178 �16]

����� Note: See note under 147.500.

����� 147.545 Attorney General certification; intervention. (1)(a) Prior to the Attorney General�s first appearance in an appellate court proceeding in which the State of Oregon is a party and to which Article I, section 42 or 43, of the Oregon Constitution, applies, the Attorney General shall determine whether the Department of Justice has taken all reasonably practicable steps to fulfill the rights granted by Article I, sections 42 and 43, of the Oregon Constitution, to the victim of the crime in the appellate courts.

����� (b) Unless otherwise provided by rule or order of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, the Attorney General shall, in the cases described in paragraph (a) of this subsection, certify the results of that determination to the court simultaneously with the Attorney General�s first appearance.

����� (2) The Attorney General may intervene at any time on behalf of the State of Oregon in any trial court proceeding arising under ORS 147.500 to 147.550. [2009 c.178 �17; 2013 c.224 �5]

����� Note: See note under 147.500.

����� 147.550 Establishment of requirements and procedures by Chief Justice by rule or order. (1) The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court may, by rule or order, establish requirements and procedures necessary to comply with the provisions of ORS 147.500 to 147.550.

����� (2) The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court shall prescribe the forms described in ORS 147.510 (4) and 147.515 (2)(a). The form described in ORS 147.515 (2)(a) must allow a victim to designate an alternate mailing address or to substitute a person to receive notice or service on behalf of the victim for the purposes of ORS