Or. Admin. Code § 137-045-0015 - Legal Sufficiency Approval
(1) Legal sufficiency review and approval
pursuant to this rule does not affect any other applicable review or approval
requirement, except that legal sufficiency approval of a Public Contract that
is an Interstate Agreement or an International Agreement satisfies requirements
for Attorney General review under ORS 190.430 and ORS 190.490, as
applicable.
(2) The Attorney
General provides legal sufficiency approval of a Public Contract solely for the
benefit of Agencies, to determine compliance with this rule. Approval of a
Public Contract for legal sufficiency is based upon the individual
determination by the Assistant Attorney General reviewing the Public Contract
and does not preclude the State of Oregon from later asserting any legally
available claim or defense arising from or relating to the Public
Contract.
(3) Approval of a Public
Contract for legal sufficiency must be noted in written form by the Assistant
Attorney General reviewing the Public Contract and must either be affixed
directly to the Public Contract or set forth in a separate writing that
identifies the Public Contract with particularity.
(4) An Assistant Attorney General may approve
Public Contracts as a group if they are substantially in the same form, are
substantially for the same purpose and have the same expiration date or
anticipated period of performance if the Assistant Attorney General identifies
the manner in which individual contracts within the group may vary.
(5) Sections (5) and (6) are adopted to
provide guidance to Agencies regarding criteria used for, and factors excluded
from, the Attorney General's legal sufficiency approval of Public Contracts.
Except as provided in section (6) and (7) of this rule, approval for legal
sufficiency means that the reviewing Assistant Attorney General finds that:
(a) The Public Contract has been reduced to
written form;
(b) The subject
matter, promised performance and consideration of the Public Contract are
within the Agency's statutory authority;
(c) The Public Contract, on its face,
contains all the essential elements of a legally binding contract, such as a
description of consideration (money, performance, or forbearance) when
consideration is required;
(d) The
Public Contract, on its face, complies with federal and State of Oregon
statutes and administrative rules regulating the Public Contract, and all
provisions required by Oregon law to be incorporated have been
included;
(e) The Public Contract
includes or requires, as required by Oregon law, execution of any
certification;
(f) The Public
Contract, on its face, does not violate any federal constitutional provision,
or any State of Oregon constitutional limitation or prohibition, such as by
creating unlawful "debt" under section 7, Article XI, of the Oregon
Constitution, or impermissibly binding a future State of Oregon Legislative
Assembly to fund the Public Contract;
(g) The Statement of Work or comparable
provisions and business or commercial terms are sufficiently clear and definite
under the circumstances to be enforceable; and
(h) The Public Contract allows the Agency, if
appropriate, to terminate the Public Contract, declare defaults, and pursue its
rights and remedies.
(6)
Approval for legal sufficiency does not include:
(a) Consideration of facts or circumstances
that are not apparent on the face of the Public Contract, unless the Assistant
Attorney General reviewing the Public Contract has actual knowledge of those
facts or circumstances;
(b) A
determination that the individual signing the Public Contract on behalf of the
Agency possesses lawful authority to do so;
(c) A determination that the technical
provisions used in the Public Contract that are particular to a profession,
trade or industry reflect the Agency's intentions, are appropriate to further
the Agency's stated objectives or are sufficiently clear and definite to be
enforceable;
(d) A determination
that the Public Contract is a good business deal for the Agency, weighing
relative risks and benefits, although the Assistant Attorney General reviewing
the Public Contract may provide advice regarding significant risks and issues
in any particular transaction. The Agency is responsible for risk assessment
and the decision whether to proceed with a Public Contract despite exposure to
risks;
(e) A determination that any
particular remedy, whether or not expressly set forth in the Public Contract,
will be available to the Agency. The requesting Agency may request the
Assistant Attorney General reviewing the Public Contract to address the
availability of specific remedies;
(f) A determination that the Public Contract
complies with Grant conditions or federal funding requirements or contains
terms or assurances required under a Grant or federal funding program other
than those set forth in statute or administrative rule. The requesting Agency
may request the Assistant Attorney General reviewing the Public Contract to
address the compliance with Grant conditions, federal funding requirements, or
required assurances applicable to the federal funding program;
(g) A stylistic or grammatical review,
including spelling, punctuation and the like, unless such errors create
ambiguity or otherwise are substantive. The Assistant Attorney General
reviewing the Public Contract may address matters of this nature as time
allows; however, these matters are primarily the responsibility of the Agency
submitting a Public Contract for review; or
(h) A determination that, except for setting
off amounts owed under the Public Contract, the Agency will have
court-enforceable damages, specific performance, or setoff remedies under a
Public Contract with another sovereign in the event the sovereign fails to
comply with the contract's terms unless the Assistant Attorney General
determines in a separate writing that any such remedies are available to the
Agency.
(7) Approval of
a Public Contract for legal sufficiency under these Division 045 rules is not a
waiver by the Attorney General of the State of Oregon's immunity under the
Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution from suit in United States
federal courts or consent to the jurisdiction of such federal courts. No such
waiver is effective unless given in writing by the Attorney General in the
specific instance in which the waiver is sought to be enforced.
(8) An Assistant Attorney General may, at the
time of or before approval of a Public Contract under these rules, provide to
the Agency entering into the Public Contract written advice or reference to
previously provided advice that describes particular legal or significant
business risks presented by the Public Contract.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 291.045(7)
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 291.045 & 291.047
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