Oregon Code § 180.760·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Civil
action for violation; remedies; penalty.
(1) The Attorney General may bring a civil action in
the name of the State of Oregon against a person who violates ORS 180.755. The
Attorney General may bring the action in the Circuit Court for Marion County or
in a circuit court in any county in which part of the conduct that constituted
the violation took place.
(2) Repayment of
or intent to repay any amounts obtained by a person as a result of a violation
of ORS 180.755 is not a defense in an action under this section.
(3) The fact that
a public agency has not paid any amounts to a person as a result of a violation
of ORS 180.755 or has not suffered any injury by reason of a violation of ORS
180.755, is not a defense in an action under this section.
(4)(a) A court
shall award to the state all damages arising from a violation of ORS 180.755.
(b) In addition
to damages awarded under paragraph (a) of this subsection, the court shall
award to the state a penalty equal to the greater of:
(A) An amount not
less than $10,000 and not greater than $50,000 for each violation; or
(B) An amount
equal to twice the amount of damages incurred for each violation.
(c) The court may
mitigate an award of a penalty under paragraph (b) of this subsection based on
any fine or penalty assessed against the defendant for substantially the same
acts or omissions in a judgment under the federal False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. 3729,
et seq., as in effect on January 1, 2010, or under the federal Civil Monetary
Penalty Law, 42 U.S.C. 1320a-7a, as in effect on January 1, 2010, that is no
longer subject to appeal.
(5) If a court
finds that an act or omission of an individual on behalf of a corporation or
other legal entity constitutes a violation of ORS 180.755, the court may find
that both the individual and the legal entity violated ORS 180.755 and impose a
separate penalty under subsection (4) of this section against both the
individual and the legal entity.
(6)
Notwithstanding subsections (4) and (5) of this section, if the state prevails
in an action under this section, the court may not award a penalty under
subsection (4) of this section if:
(a) The defendant
provided the Attorney General with all information known to the defendant about
the violation within 30 days after the defendant first acquired the
information;
(b) The defendant
fully cooperated with the Attorney General in the investigation of the
violation; and
(c) At the time
the defendant provided the Attorney General with information about the
violation, an investigation, court proceeding or administrative action related
to the violation had not been commenced.
(7) For the
purpose of determining the amount of damages under this section:
(a) The value of
property, services or benefits obtained by a person who makes a claim may be
established based on the market value of property, services or benefits at the
time and place of receipt or delivery of the property, services or benefits.
(b) If the market
value of property, services or benefits at the time and place of receipt or
delivery of the property, services or benefits cannot be reasonably
ascertained, the value of the property, services or benefits may be established
based on the replacement cost of the property, services or benefits.
(c) If a written
instrument has no readily ascertainable market value, the value of the
instrument may be established based on the value determined as provided in ORS
164.115 (2).
(d) The Attorney
General may establish damages using statistical or sampling methodology, or any
other system that reasonably estimates damages incurred, without separately
proving the damages incurred from each violation of ORS 180.755.
(8) The court may
award reasonable attorney fees and costs of investigation, preparation and
litigation to the state if the state prevails in an action under this section.
The court may award reasonable attorney fees and costs of investigation,
preparation and litigation to a defendant who prevails in an action under this
section if the court determines that the Attorney General had no objectively
reasonable basis for bringing the action or no reasonable basis for appealing
an adverse decision of the trial court. [2009 c.292 §3; 2023 c.104 §1]
Note:
See note under 180.750.
Plain English Explanation
This Oregon statute addresses Civil
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Key Points
01Part of Oregon statutory law
02Referenced as Oregon Code § 180.760
03Subject to legislative amendments
04Consult a licensed attorney for application to specific cases
Frequently Asked Questions
This section of Oregon law addresses Civil
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