An agreed case is a procedure that can be used in rare situations in which the parties to a lawsuit agree on the facts and disagree on the relevant law as applied to the facts. In such a case the parties stipulate to the facts, file a narrative statement of the agreed facts, and submit the case to the court for a ruling.
If a case submitted on an agreed statement of facts is appealed, the narrative statement of facts stipulated to by the parties is filed with the appellate court (often the court of appeals) rather than the trial court record (a transcript of the trial that includes witness testimony and documents admitted in evidence).
In Oregon, an agreed case is a legal procedure where all parties involved in a lawsuit concur on the factual aspects of the case but hold differing views on the legal implications of those facts. This process allows the parties to bypass the traditional trial process by submitting a joint narrative statement of the agreed facts directly to the court. The court is then tasked with making a ruling based on the legal issues presented. Should the decision of the court be appealed, the agreed statement of facts is sent to the appellate court, typically the Oregon Court of Appeals, in lieu of the trial court record. This method streamlines the appeal process by focusing solely on the legal issues since the facts are not in dispute.