Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1986

Wimmer v. Motor Vehicles Division

Wimmer v. Motor Vehicles Division
Court of Appeals of Oregon · Decided December 31, 1986 · Buttler, Warren, Rossman
730 P.2d 1297; 83 Or. App. 268; 1986 Ore. App. LEXIS 4399 (Pacific Reporter, Second Series)

Wimmer v. Motor Vehicles Division

Opinion

*269 PER CURIAM

Motor Vehicles Division (MVD) appeals from the circuit court judgment on remand from this court, Wimmer v. MVD, 75 Or App 287, 706 P2d 182, rev den 300 Or 367 (1985), which reinstates MVD’s order of suspension, suspending petitioner’s driving privileges for one year, as required by ORS 482.545(1). 1 MVD argues that the trial court, which had previously vacated the suspension order, erred on remand by reinstating it in its original form instead of ordering petitioner’s driving privileges suspended for an additional 320 days. Due to the lapse in time, the net effect of the vacation and reinstatement is that petitioner’s driving privileges were suspended for only 45 days. 2

The mandate in Wimmer v. MVD, supra, provided: “Reversed and remanded with instructions to reinstate the Division’s order of suspension.” Although we should have phrased our mandate differently, the statute is clear: petitioner’s driving privileges must be suspended for a total of one full year. See Wolfgang v. Thiele Co., 141 Or 280, 17 P2d 313 (1932).

Reversed and remanded with instructions to enter order of suspension for one year from the date of entry of order, less 45 days.

1

Petitioner’s driving privileges were suspended because he had refused to submit to a breath test on request by a police officer after being arrested for driving under the influence of intoxicants.

2

MVD’s suspension order, in its original form, suspended petitioner’s driving privileges from September 4,1984, to September 4,1985.

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