Or. Rev. Stat. § 174.060
Effect of amendment of statute adopted by reference
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174.060 Effect of amendment of statute adopted by reference. When one statute refers to another, either by general or by specific reference or designation, the reference shall extend to and include, in addition to the statute to which reference was made, amendments thereto and statutes enacted expressly in lieu thereof unless a contrary intent is expressed specifically or unless the amendment to, or statute enacted in lieu of, the statute referred to is substantially different in the nature of its essential provisions from what the statute to which reference was made was when the statute making the reference was enacted.
Notes of Decisions
Cited in 10
cases (3 in the last 5 years), 1959–2023 · leading case: State v. Charlesworth
State v. Charlesworth (1997)
“That readily can be done here if ORS 174.060 does not prevent us from construing ORS 166.”
Harris v. Board of Parole (1980)
“However, ORS 174.060 provides: "When one statute refers to another, either by general or by specific reference or designation, the reference shall extend to and include, in addition to the statute to which reference was made, amendments thereto and statutes enacted expressly in…”
State v. Hutchinson (2000)
“*270 The legislature specifically has provided for these and similar circumstances by enacting ORS 174.060, which provides: “When one statute refers to another, either by general or by specific reference or designation, the reference shall extend to and include, in addition to…”
Bellshaw v. Farmers Ins. Co. (2023)
“Our interpretation is consistent with ORS 174.060, which states: “When one statute refers to another, either by gen- eral or by specific reference or designation, the reference shall extend to and include, in addition to the statute to which reference was made, amendments…”
State v. Robinson (1959)
“If the act is invalid as to aliens, and we make no intimation to that effect, its validity as to ex-convicts can be readily sustained under ORS 174.060, previously quoted. The defendant, as we have mentioned, argues that the act in question infringes upon Art I, § 27,…”
Conrad v. Motor Vehicles Division (1977)
“In such a situation, "When one statute refers to another, either by general * * * reference or designation, the reference shall extend to and include * * * statutes enacted expressly in lieu thereof * * ORS 174.”
State v. Flower (1994)
“560 under ORS 174.060, 2 and, therefore, under Miller , OAR 253-12-020 applies to his cases.”
Bellshaw v. Farmers Ins. Co. (2023)
“Our interpretation is consistent with ORS 174.060, which states: “When one statute refers to another, either by gen- eral or by specific reference or designation, the reference shall extend to and include, in addition to the statute to which reference was made, amendments…”
Lauer v. Grant County Assessor (2021)
“See also ORS 174.060 (when one statute refers to another, references include any amendments unless a contrary intent is express by the legislature).”
State v. Branstetter (1979)
“In such a situation, " 'When one statute refers to another, either by general * * * reference or designation, the reference shall extend to and include * * * statutes enacted expressly in lieu thereof * * ORS 174.060.” Conrad v. Motor Vehicles Div.”
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