Plaintiff seeks reconsideration of our opinion in Dial Temporary Help Service v. DLF Int’l Seeds, 252 Or App 376,
Here, defendant moved for summary judgment on plaintiff’s contract claim, arguing, among other things, (1) that the contractual provision on which plaintiff’s claim relied was unambiguous and did not provide a basis for the claim and (2) that, if the provision was ambiguous, it was subject to construction in defendant’s favor because plaintiff had drafted the contract. In response, plaintiff argued only that the disputed language unambiguously supported its construction of the contract. It did not submit any relevant extrinsic evidence bearing on the intended meaning of the provision. See Dial, 252 Or App at 381 (concluding that plaintiff’s proffered evidence was insufficient to create a triable factual issue on the intended meaning of the provision).
The cases on which plaintiff relies for reconsideration do not require a different result. Although we have said, rather imprecisely, that “dispute [s] over the meaning of a contract may be disposed of by way of summary judgment only if [the contract’s] terms are unambiguous,” Brown,
Significantly, following our statement in Madson, we noted:
“An exception to that general rule exists when there is no relevant extrinsic evidence to resolve the ambiguity. See Yogman[ v. Parrott], 325 Or [358,] 363-66[,937 P2d 1019 (1997)] (interpreting ambiguous contract term on summary judgment when the parties agreed that there was no relevant extrinsic evidence). In such circumstances, the court can, on summary judgment, determine the contract’s meaning by applying appropriate maxims of construction. Id. at 364. Here, however, we decline to apply the exception. In their summary judgment submissions, the parties each proffered some extrinsic evidence relating to the disputed issue and, unlike in Yogman, they did not agree that there was no other extrinsic evidence that was relevant to the meaning of the contract.”
Madson,
Further, that discussion recognizes at least two circumstances in which the “general rule” does not apply. The first, which plaintiff aknowledges, is found in Yogman. There, the plaintiff prevailed on summary judgment on the ground that, as a matter of law, the defendant’s conduct had violated the terms of the parties’ contract. We reversed, concluding that, as a matter of law, the defendant’s conduct had not violated the terms of the contract. See Yogman v. Parrott,
Second, the general rule does not apply when, as here, the party that bore the burden of presenting evidence to establish the existence of a genuine issue of material fact has failed to do so. Thus, in Madson, we noted that, “[i]n their summary judgment submissions, the parties each proffered some extrinsic evidence relating to the disputed issue.”
Reconsideration allowed; former opinion adhered to.
