Or. Rev. Stat. § 419C.440

When court has duties and authority of guardian

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      419C.440 When court has duties and authority of guardian. Unless guardianship is granted as provided in ORS 419C.555, the court as an incident of its jurisdiction over the adjudicated youth has the duties and authority of the guardian as provided in ORS 419C.558. [1993 c.33 §227; 2003 c.396 §106; 2021 c.489 §68]

Notes of Decisions
Cited in 6 cases (2 in the last 5 years), 1997–2025 · leading case: State v. B. Y.
State v. B. Y. (2023) or “See ORS 419C.440 - 419C.510 (setting out the types of dispositions and under what circumstances a court may impose them).”
State v. S.-Q. K. (In re S.-Q. K.) (2018) orctapp “Because a juvenile court often will have the same dispositional options available to it at a probation violation proceeding as it would have in a proceeding to adjudicate a youth within its jurisdiction in the first instance, see ORS 419C.440 - 419C.507, the history suggests to…”
State v. Trice (1997) orctapp “The available dispositions for a child found to be within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court for committing an act that, if committed by an adult, would be a crime, include wardship of the court, diversion, probation, restitution, detention, fines, and community service or…”
STATE EX REL. JUV. DEPT. v. Nicholls (2004) orctapp “See generally ORS 419C.440 to 419C.507 (describing juvenile court's dispositional authority).”
State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. Nicholls (2004) orctapp “See generally ORS 419C.440 to 419C.507 (describing juvenile court’s dispositional authority).”
State v. C. L. B. (2025) orctapp “ORS 419C.440 - 419C.510 (setting out the types of dispositions and under what circumstances a court may impose them).”
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