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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Judge
rules against plaintiffs in lawsuit Two
homeowners in Eagle Air Estates have lost all claims they made against the
developer of the subdivision and the homeowners association.
Plaintiffs Michael and Janet
Morgan and Cydnie Harp went to court against Vernon and Sandra Goodsell
and Eagle Air Estates Homeowners Association in April. They claimed they
could lose access to the Sisters Airport runway if the Clemens family
stops operating the runway.
Cliff Clemens, 97, owns the
airport. If Clemens or subsequent owners decide to close the airport,
portions of the land "revert" to previous owners of the land (or others
to whom the original owners sold their "reversionary interest").
Eagle Air Estates developer
Goodsell, who works on airplanes in his shop, has for years had a "reversionary
interest" that would return ownership of one-third of the airport runway
to him if the airport was no longer in operation.
Morgan and Harp argued in
court that Goodsell would benefit from the airport closing.
"This speculation is erroneous
for a number of reasons," Judge Alta Brady wrote in an opinion issued
Thursday, July 31. "First, defendants Goodsell have a personal interest
in the continued existence of the Sisters Airport.
"Secondly, absolutely nothing
has happened to change the use of the land as an airport. No homeowner
has been denied access to the airport," Judge Brady wrote.
Brady denied all of the plaintiffs'
associated claims for relief in the lawsuit, including arguments that
Goodsell, as the subdivision developer, should have disclosed his reversionary
interest and turned over his reversionary interest to the homeowners association.
Brady further rejected claims
that the homeowners association had conducted "illegal" board meetings.
Vern Goodsell said that he
and other homeowners he has spoken with "are greatly relieved that the
court system has ruled in our favor."
He said, "We hope that the
court's findings will put a stop to this nonsense, the frivolous lawsuits."
Mike and Jan Morgan indicated
that the plaintiffs plan to appeal.
"We bought our property in
Eagle Air Estates because it was a residential airpark and that was our
lifestyle choice for retirement. We filed this lawsuit to protect that
lifestyle choice, our property values and our rights as members of our
homeowners association," he said in a statement to The Nugget.
"We have reviewed the ruling
and believe the Court has erred in applying Oregon Law and has misinterpreted
the facts established at trial. We are prepared to move forward and will
appeal this ruling to the appellate court," Morgan wrote.
Goodsell said he was not surprised
that the lingering dispute appears to poised to continue.
"It's his will to inflict
as much pain as he can on us in here and that's exactly what he's doing,"
Goodsell said.
Goodsell acknowledged that
he and his wife have put their Eagle Air Estates home on the market. He
said the decision to sell was "not totally because of this (dispute)"
but he did not wish to elaborate.
He said he and his wife plan
to stay in the area and he plans to continue working on airplanes.
The Sisters Airport remains
in operation. Goodsell said he has nothing to do with the airport's future.
"I have no control over the
airport at this point," he said. "I hope it continues forever." |
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