Petitioner, who was issued a 90-day drug-free zone (DFZ) exclusion notice under the provisions of former Portland City Code (PCC) chapter 14.100, appealed that exclusion to the City of Portland’s Code Hearings Office. 1 The hearings officer affirmed the exclusion, and petitioner filed a petition for a writ of review and a complaint for declaratory relief with the circuit court. The circuit court reversed the hearings officer, declaring PCC chapter 14.100 unconstitutional. Respondent City of Portland now appeals. 2 For the following reasons, we remand with instructions to vacate the judgment.
Initially the circuit сourt granted respondent’s motion to dismiss, agreeing that the issue was moot due to petitioner’s failure to seek and obtain a stay of the exclusion order pending appeal. On reconsideration, however, the circuit court held an evidentiary hearing on petitioner’s claim that the еxclusion notation on his Portland Police Data System (PPDS) record had a continuing effect on his ability to qualify for government-subsidized housing. After that hearing, the circuit court ruled that the case was not moot and that PCC chapter 14.100 violated petitioner’s constitutional rights. On appeal, respondent rаises three assignments of error. Because respondent’s first argument — that the expiration of the 90-day exclusion rendered the case moot — is dis-positive, we do not address respondent’s remaining arguments.
At the evidentiary hearing, petitioner presented evidence concerning the application process for Housing Authority of Portland (HAP) and his anticipated individual needs. To obtain assistance from HAP, an applicant must meet federally mandated income restrictions and, in the case of a single male, either have a verifiable disability or be over the age of 62. In addition, HAP requires an applicant to produce, among other things, a copy of his current PPDS record. HAP
looks at all crimes within the past 10 years, as well as DFZ exclusions, and then applies
Despite his lengthy PPDS record, petitioner had previously applied for and received housing assistance from various organizations. Petitioner testified that he had previously lived in buildings owned and operated by Central City Concern and that he had previously applied for and received assistance from HAP. Petitioner also testified that he was disabled and that, despite the fact that he currently resides with his father who has Alzheimer’s disease, he will probably need to apply for assistance from HAP within the next nine years.
Respondent argues on appeal that the case is moot because the DFZ exclusion has expired and any collateral effects that the exclusion notation might have are too speculative. As the Oregon Supreme Court recently reaffirmed, mootness is one of the “constellation of related issues” encompassed within the broader question of justiciability.
Yancy v. Shatzer,
Thus, the preliminary question that this court must answer to determine whether petitioner’s case is moot is, “What precisely does it mean to say that a decision must have ‘a practical effect’ on the rights of the parties?”
Utsey,
Barcik
involved a challenge to a high school’s censorship of student publications in which various students alleged violations of their state and federal сonstitutional rights and sought
declaratory,
injunctive, and monetary relief.
Barcik,
The Supreme Court concluded that, although most of the claims were moot, those of one plaintiff — Barcik—were not. The court noted that “Barcik’s academic record
“Because of the references to discipline presently in Barcik’s aсademic record, there exists a controversy between the parties on which judgment effectively may operate. By ordering [the] defendants to remove all references to Barcik’s discipline associated with this matter from his academic record, the court would not be enjoining an act that already had been completed.”
Id. at 192. The court concluded that a live, justiciable controversy existed with respect to Barcik’s disciplinary record and that Barcik was “entitled to consideration of his state law claims on the merits, to the extent that those claims relate to his disciplinary record.” Id. Significantly, the court did not identify what, if any, immediate or practical implications that the disciplinary record would have on Barcik. Rather, the court appears to have regarded the mere existence of the disciplinary record, coupled with an adequate rеmedy (expungement), as having a practical effect on Barcik. See, e.g., id 3 If Barcik is so understood, the decision would seem to suggest that the mere presence of the DFZ exclusion notation on petitioner’s PPDS record would be sufficient to defeat a mootness claim, regardless of any immediate or practical implications it might have.
That aspect of
Barcik,
however, is at least implicitly in tension with the court’s more recent decision in
Yancy,
which is nearly factually and procedurally identical to this case. In
Yancy,
police detained the petitioner for jaywalking and, after searching him, discovered less than an оunce of marijuana. Police issued him “a citation that excluded him from two Portland city parks for a period of 30 days.”
Yancy,
On review, the Supreme Court affirmed, concluding, without explicit discussion, that the petitioner’s claim was moot.
See id.
at 347-49. Instead, the court’s analysis focused exclusively on whether the constitutional grant of judicial power encompassed the authоrity to consider moot cases that are “capable of repetition, yet evading review.” Id. at 362-63;
see also id.
at 363 n 1 (Balmer, J., specially concurring) (describing the issue before the court as “whether the judicial power extends to deciding a case that becomes moot after it has been filed in thе trial court”).
4
The court reaffirmed its holding in
Barcik
and other recent decisions that the “judicial power under the Oregon Constitution does not extend to moot cases” that are likely to recur but evade review.
Id.
at 363. The court also reaffirmed its holding in
Brumnett
that a case, to remain justiciable, must be one in which the court’s decision will have some “ ‘practical effect on
Both
Barcik
and
Yancy
present factually similar situations: Plaintiff Barcik received a disciplinary mark on his academic record, something that would have remained in the absence of judicial intervention. Similarly, the petitioner in
Yancy
received a notice of exclusion that, despite its expiration, remаins a blemish on his police record and that, as indicated by the present case, could
potentially
have future consequences. In reconciling those two cases, it may be that the rationale behind the court’s decision in
Barcik
was not express. That is, the court may have been aware or otherwisе
was satisfied that Barcik’s disciplinary record, despite his graduation, would have some immediate consequence to him, such as impairing his ability to apply for college admission. In all events, and in the wake of both
Barcik
and
Brumnett,
this court has adhered to Brumnett’s requirement of a practical and present effect on a party’s rights for a case to remain justiciable.
See, e.g., Keeney v. University of Oregon,
Thus, putting aside the exclusion notation’s mere existence on petitioner’s record and the fact that our decision might alter that notation,
5
we must still determine whether our resolution of petitioner’s claims would “have some practical effect on the rights of the parties to the controversy.”
Brumnett,
The evidence presented by petitioner in this case demonstrated that, at best, he “anticipate [s] needing to apply to places, either the [HAP] or similar places” at some point within the next nine years and that the DFZ exclusion nоtation
might
have some effect on his eligibility for such assistance.
6
The “mere possibility’ that petitioner might at some future date apply for assistance and that his DFZ exclusion may or may not affect his eligibility is speculative at best and “not sufficient to make dismissal inappropriate.”
Brumnett,
Notes
All references to PCC chapter 14.100 are to the version that was in effect at the time petitioner received the DFZ exclusion notice. That portion of the PCC has since been amended and renumbered.
Nominally, the hearings officer is also named as a respondent in this appeal.
With respect to Barcik’s claim for prospective relief, the court reached the opposite conclusion:
“The existence of that justiciable controversy does not extend, however, to Barcik’s claims for prospective relief. Like the other Senior plaintiffs, Barcik cannot be affected by a declaration that future enforcement of the regulations is unconstitutional. Neither can he be affected by a declaration rеstraining the [school] district from enforcing those regulations in the future, because he will not be subject to those regulations in the future.”
Barcik,
In
Frederick v. City of Portland,
Although it is not clear that petitioner explicitly requested that the DFZ exclusion notation be removed from his PPDS record, based on the arguments presented, both before the circuit court as well as this court, we understand the рroper remedy to be something akin to a removal or a subsequent notation explaining the ultimate outcome of the case. Regardless, as discussed below, we need not determine the appropriate remedy, because we ultimately conclude that the case is, in fact, moot.
In its opinion, the circuit court determined that petitioner had lived in public housing in the past and “anticipates he will apply for assistance from the [HAP] in the near future.” The only evidence in the record to support that conclusion was petitioner’s own testimony that he anticipated needing to apply for housing assistance sometime in the next nine years.
