Oregon Code § 31.266·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Discussion communications; admissibility; disclosure.
(1) As used in this section, discussion
communication means:
(a) All
communications, written and oral, that are made in the course of a discussion
under ORS 31.264; and
(b) All
memoranda, work products, documents and other materials that are prepared for
or submitted in the course of or in connection with a discussion under ORS
31.264.
(2) Discussion
communications and offers of compensation made under ORS 31.264:
(a) Do not
constitute an admission of liability.
(b) Are
confidential and may not be disclosed.
(c) Except as
provided in subsection (3) of this section, are not admissible as evidence in
any subsequent adjudicatory proceeding and may not be disclosed by the parties
in any subsequent adjudicatory proceeding.
(3)(a) A party
may move the court or other decision maker to admit as evidence in a subsequent
adjudicatory proceeding a discussion communication that contradicts a statement
made during the subsequent adjudicatory proceeding. The court or other decision
maker shall allow a discussion communication that contradicts a statement made
at a subsequent adjudicatory proceeding into evidence only if the discussion
communication is material to the claims presented in the subsequent
adjudicatory proceeding.
(b) A party may
not move to admit expressions of regret or apology that are inadmissible under
ORS 677.082.
(4)
Communications, memoranda, work products, documents and other materials,
otherwise subject to discovery, that were not prepared specifically for use in
a discussion under ORS 31.264, are not confidential.
(5) Any
communication, memorandum, work product or document that, before its use in a
discussion under ORS 31.264, was a public record as defined in ORS 192.311
remains subject to disclosure to the extent provided by ORS 192.311 to 192.478.
(6) The
limitations on admissibility and disclosure in subsequent adjudicatory
proceedings imposed by this section apply to any subsequent judicial
proceeding, administrative proceeding or arbitration proceeding. The
limitations on disclosure imposed by this section include disclosure during any
discovery conducted as part of a subsequent adjudicatory proceeding, and a
person that is prohibited from disclosing information under the provisions of
this section may not be compelled to reveal confidential communications or
agreements in any discovery conducted as part of a subsequent adjudicatory
proceeding. [2013 c.5 §4]