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HEJAZI v. STATE (2021)

Court of Appeals of Oregon.2021-12-22No. A176160

Authorities cited

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Opinion

Plaintiff, who is incarcerated, sought to file an action against the State of Oregon and Oregon Secretary of State. He requested a waiver of fees to file the action and a waiver of sheriffs service fees because he was indigent. The trial court approved the waiver of filing fees but, without explanation, denied his request to waive sheriffs service fees. Plaintiff appealed the order denying his sheriffs service fee-waiver request. See, e.g., Hejazi v. Gifford, 314 Or. App. 534, 535, 499 P.3d 151 (2021) (denial of fee waiver for indigent plaintiff is appealable).

Despite never being served a summons, the Attorney General made a voluntary appearance as representative for the state and the Secretary of State, thereby waiving respondents’ right to service. De Foe v. De Foe, 88 Or. 549, 552, 169 P. 128 (1917) (the district attorneys “voluntary personal appearance at the trial * * * [is] equivalent to the service of [a] summons”); N. W. National Ins. Co. v. Averill, 149 Or. 672, 682, 42 P.2d 747 (1935) (“[S]ervice of a summons * * * is waived by a voluntary appearance.”). This, as plaintiff himself acknowledged in a letter to the trial court, caused his request for waiver of service fees to become moot. It also has the same effect on this appeal, because any decision as to whether the trial courts denial of the waiver was wrong or right would have no effect on plaintiffs rights.

Appeal dismissed.

PER CURIAM