Bart G. BRANDRUP and Jessica D. Brandrup, husband and wife, Plaintiffs, v. RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A.; Bank of America, N.A., successor by merger with BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP; The Bank of New York Mellon, fka The Bank of New York, as Trustee for The Certificate Holders Cwalt, Inc., Alternative Loan Trust 2006-2CB, Mortgage Pass-through Certificates; and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., Defendants. United States District Court 311CV1390HZ Russell R. POWELL and Diane L. Powell, husband and wife, Plaintiffs, v. RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A.; Bank of America, N.A., successor by merger with BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP; The Bank of New York Mellon, fka The Bank of New York, as Trustee for The Certificate Holders Cwalt, Inc., Alternative Loan Trust 2007-OH3, Mortgage Pass-through Certificates, Series 2007-OH3; and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., Defendants. United States District Court 311CV1399HZ Deanira MAYO and Reynalda Paez Plancarte, Plaintiffs, v. RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A.; Bank of America, N.A., successor by merger with BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP; Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for The Certificate Holders of the Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I, Inc., Trust 2005-HE2, Mortgage Pass-through Certificates, Series 2005-HE2; and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., Defendants. United States District Court 311CV1533SI Omid MIRARABSHAHI, Plaintiff, v. RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A.; Bank of America, N.A., successor by merger with BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP; The Bank of New York Mellon, fka The Bank of New York, as Trustee for The Certificate Holders of CWMBS, INC., CHL Mortgage Pass-Through Trust 2007-4, Mortgage Pass-through Certificates, Series 2007-4; and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., Defendants. United States District Court 312CV0010HA (SC S060281)
S060281
Supreme Court of Oregon
June 6, 2013
353 Or 668, 303 P3d 301
Gregory A. Chaimov, Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, Portland argued the cause for defendant Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. With him on the brief were Kevin H. Kono, Frederick B. Burnside, and P. Andrew McStay, Jr., Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, Portland.
Thomas M. Hefferon, Goodwin Proctor LLP, Washington DC, argued the cause for defendants ReconTrust Company, N.A.; Bank of America, N.A.; The Bank of New York Mellon; and Deutsche Bank National Trust Company. With him on the brief were Steven A. Ellis, Washington DC, and Thomas W. Sondag, Pilar C. French, and Peter D. Hawkes, Lane Powell PC, Portland.
Rolf C. Moan, Assistant Attorney General, Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Anna M. Joyce, Solicitor General, filed a brief on behalf of amicus curiae State of Oregon.
Sara Kobak, W. Michael Gillette, and Jordan Silk, Schwabe, Williamson & Wyatt, PC, Portland, filed a brief on behalf of amicus curiae Oregon Land Title Association.
Thomas W. Brown, Thomas M. Christ, and Robert E. Sabido, Cosgrave Vergeer Kester LLP, Portland, filed a brief on behalf of amici curiae Mortgate Bankers Association, Oregon Bankers Association, and Independent Community Banks of Oregon.
BREWER, J.
Kistler, J., concurred in part and dissented in part, and filed an opinion in which Balmer, C. J., joined.
BREWER, J.
These cases come before this court on four certified questions of law from the United States District Court for the District of Oregon. See Brandrup v. ReconTrust Co., 352 Or 320, 287 P3d 423 (2012) (accepting certified questions);
As will be explained more fully below, the OTDA provides an alternative to the traditional judicial foreclosure process that is available only when the home loan is secured by a trust deed, and, even then, only when certain conditions are satisfied. One condition for foreclosing under the OTDA is that “any assignments” of the trust deed by the trust deed “beneficiary” be recorded in the real property records of the county where the encumbered property is situated.
Certified Question No. 1: May an entity, such as MERS, that is neither a lender nor successor to a lender, be a “beneficiary” as that term is used in the Oregon Trust Deed Act?
Certified Question No. 2: May MERS be designated as beneficiary under the Oregon Trust Deed Act where the trust deed provides that MERS “holds only legal title to the interests granted by Borrower in this Security Instrument, but, if necessary to comply with law or custom, MERS (as nominee for Lender and Lender‘s successors and assigns) has the right: to exercise any or all of those interests“?
Certified Question No. 3: Does the transfer of a promissory note from the lender to a successor result in an automatic assignment of the securing trust deed that must be recorded prior to the commencement of nonjudicial foreclosure proceedings under
ORS 86.735(1) ?Certified Question No 4: Does the Oregon Trust Deed Act allow MERS to retain and transfer legal title to a trust deed as nominee for the lender, after the note secured by the trust deed is transferred from the lender to a successor or series of successors?
We accepted the district court‘s certification and allowed the parties in the federal cases to present their views. We answer those questions—in two instances as reframed—as follows:
- “No.” For purposes of
ORS 86.735(1) , the “beneficiary” is the lender to whom the obligation that the trust deed secures is owed or the lender‘ssuccessor in interest. Thus, an entity like MERS, which is not a lender, may not be a trust deed‘s “beneficiary,” unless it is a lender‘s successor in interest. -
We reframe the second question as follows:
Is MERS eligible to serve as beneficiary under the Oregon Trust Deed Act where the trust deed provides that MERS “holds only legal title to the interests granted by Borrower in this Security Instrument, but, if necessary to comply with law or custom, MERS (as nominee for Lender and Lender‘s successors and assigns) has the right: to exercise any or all of those interests“?
Answer: “No.” A “beneficiary” for purposes of the OTDA is the person to whom the obligation that the trust deed secures is owed. At the time of origination, that person is the lender. The trust deeds in these cases designate the lender as the beneficiary, when they provide: “This Security Instrument secures to Lender: (i) the repayment of the loan, and all renewals, extensions and modifications of the note; and (ii) the performance of borrower‘s covenants and agreements under this security instrument and the note.” Because the provision that MERS “holds only legal title to the interests granted by Borrower in this Security Instrument, but, if necessary to comply with law or custom, MERS *** has the right to exercise any or all of those interests,” does not convey to MERS the beneficial right to repayment, the inclusion of that provision does not alter the trust deed‘s designation of the lender as the “beneficiary” or make MERS eligible to serve in that capacity.
- “No.”
ORS 86.735(1) does not require recordation of “assignments” of a trust deed by operation of law that result from the transfer of the secured obligation. -
We answer the question, as reframed below, in two parts:
(4)(a) “Does the Oregon Trust Deed Act allow MERS to hold and transfer legal title to a trust deed as nominee for the lender, after the note secured by
the trust deed is transferred from the lender to a successor or series of successors?” Answer: “No.” For purposes of the OTDA, the only pertinent interests in the trust deed are the beneficial interest of the beneficiary and the legal interest of the trustee. MERS holds neither of those interests in these cases, and, therefore, it cannot hold or transfer legal title to the trust deed. For purposes of our answer to the first part of the fourth certified question, it is immaterial whether the note secured by the trust deed has previously been “transferred from the lender to a successor or series of successors.”
(4)(b) “Does MERS nevertheless have authority as an agent for the original lender and its successors in interest to act on their behalves with respect to the transfer of the beneficial interest in the trust deed or the nonjudicial foreclosure process?”
Answer: The power to transfer the beneficial interest in a trust deed or to foreclose it follows the beneficial interest in the trust deed. The beneficiary or its successor in interest holds those rights. MERS‘s authority, if any, to perform any act in the foreclosure process therefore must derive from the original beneficiary and its successors in interest. We are unable to determine the existence, scope, or extent of any such authority on the record before us.
As a preface to our explanation of those answers, we set out the following legal and factual background.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Mortgages, Trust Deeds, and the Oregon Trust Deed Act
When a person borrows money to purchase a home, in Oregon as elsewhere, the loan usually is memorialized in a promissory note that contains the borrower‘s written, unconditional promise to pay certain sums at a specified time or times. Generally, the borrower and lender also enter into a separately-memorialized security agreement—a mortgage or, more commonly in Oregon, a trust deed. See generally Grant Nelson and Dale Whitman, Real Estate Finance Law §§ 2.1, 5.27, 5.28 (5th ed 2007); Joseph L. Dunne, Enforcing the Oregon Trust Deed Act, 49 Willamette L Rev 77, 81-85
The OTDA, Or Laws 1959, ch 625, codified at
A trustee may conduct a nonjudicial foreclosure sale only when certain conditions are satisfied. See
In addition to those conditions, the OTDA prescribes notice requirements that protect trust deed grantors from unauthorized nonjudicial foreclosures and sales of property. Among other things, a trustee is required to provide to the grantor and other interested parties at least 120 days’ advance notice of the trustee‘s sale.
Of course, only a small portion of the property transactions involving trust deeds end in foreclosure. If the borrower repays the loan secured by the trust deed in full, the trustee must “reconvey the estate of real property described in the trust deed” (that is, release the lien on the property) to the borrower,
B. Assignment and Recording of Trust Deeds
Mortgages or trust deeds may be transferred in a variety of ways. By statute, mortgages may be “assigned by an instrument in writing,” and such written assignments may be recorded in the pertinent real property records.
Although the recordation of a mortgage or trust deed assignment generally is not required to make the transfer legally effective between the parties, it is necessary and desirable for protecting an assignee‘s interest under the security instrument against a purchaser in good faith for valuable consideration. See Willamette Col. & Credit Serv. v. Gray, 157 Or 77, 83, 70 P2d 39 (1937) (assignee of mortgage was not obliged to take and record written assignment to acquire title as between immediate parties but was required to do so to maintain lien against innocent purchaser); see also
C. The MERS Corporation
MERS is a creature of the real estate finance industry. In the mid-1990‘s, large players in the industry, including the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac), decided to create a database that would electronically track ownership in secured real estate loans as they were bought and sold in a secondary market, generally in packages now known as mortgage-backed securities. R. K. Arnold, Yes, There is Life on MERS, 11 Prob & Prop 33, 33-34 (1997). They created MERSCorp Holdings,
But there is another significant aspect of MERS; that entity serves as the designated mortgagee or beneficiary, as the nominee of the lender, for all mortgages and trust deeds registered in the MERS System. Id. Christopher L. Peterson, Foreclosure, Subprime Lending, and the Mortgage Electronic Registration System, 78 U Cincinnati L Rev 1359, 1361-62 (2009). MERS, however, does not make, service, or invest in loans. Id. at 1371.
D. The Trust Deeds and Plaintiffs’ Challenges
The certified questions that are before this court arise out of four separate actions challenging a trustee‘s attempt to nonjudicially foreclose a trust deed securing residential property. In each case, homeowners (collectively, “plaintiffs“) financed the purchase of a residence in Oregon with a loan from a lender that is a member of MERS. In each case, the homeowners signed (1) a promissory note pledging to repay the money borrowed, plus interest, according to a prescribed schedule and by a specified date, and (2) a “Deed of Trust,” granting to a named trustee the property they had purchased with the loan, “in trust, with power of sale,” to secure the payment of the promissory note and other related promises.
Except for the names and property descriptions, the trust deeds in the four cases are identical. In a “definition” section, each trust deed identifies the “Borrower,” “Lender” and “Trustee” by name, and then sets out the following definition of “MERS“:
“‘MERS’ is Mortgage Electronic Registration System, Inc. MERS is a separate corporation that is acting solely as a nominee for Lender and Lender‘s successors and assigns. MERS is the beneficiary under this Security Instrument.”
“The beneficiary of this Security Instrument is MERS (solely as nominee for Lender and Lender‘s successors and assigns) and the successors and assigns of MERS. This Security Instrument secures to Lender: (i) the repayment of the Loan, and all renewals, extensions and modifications of the Note, and (ii) the performance of Borrower‘s covenants and agreements under this Security Instrument and the Note. For this purpose, Borrower irrevocably grants and conveys to Trustee, in trust, with power of sale, the following described property ***, [t]ogether with all the improvements now or hereafter erected on the property, and all easements, appurtenances, and fixtures now or hereafter a part of the property. All replacements and additions shall also be covered by this Security Instrument. All of the foregoing is referred to in this Security Instrument as the Property. Borrower understands and agrees that MERS holds only legal title to the interests granted by Borrower in this Security Instrument, but, if necessary to comply with law or custom, MERS (as nominee for Lender and Lender‘s successors and assigns) has the right: to exercise any or all of those interests, including, but not limited to, the right to foreclose and sell the Property, and to take any action required of Lender including, but not limited to, releasing and canceling this Security Instrument.
(Emphases added.)
Those provisions appear to turn the traditional three-party trust deed arrangement—debtor/grantor, trustee, and lender/beneficiary—into a four-party arrangement, with the functional role of the beneficiary being split between two entities. Although the benefit of the trust deed is reserved to the “Lender” (because the trust deed “secures to the Lender” the obligations of repayment and performance of other covenants), MERS purports to be the beneficiary “as nominee for Lender and Lender‘s successors and assigns.”
Plaintiffs in all four cases signed the promissory notes and trust deeds as described, and, after a period of years, allegedly defaulted on their loans. Following each default, MERS executed a written assignment of the trust deed to the reputed ultimate successor in interest of the original lender and recorded that assignment in the pertinent
In all four cases, plaintiffs brought an action in state court against ReconTrust, MERS, and the reputed ultimate successor in interest of their original lender, seeking to enjoin the nonjudicial foreclosure proceeding on a number of grounds, including that (1) a condition for nonjudicial foreclosure had not been satisfied—specifically, the requirement in
II. FIRST CERTIFIED QUESTION
“May an entity, such as MERS, that is neither a lender nor successor to a lender, be a ‘beneficiary’ as that term is used in the Oregon Trust Deed Act?”
This question is one of statutory construction, which we approach using the methodology described in State v. Gaines, 346 Or 160, 206 P3d 1042 (2009). We focus first on the text, context, and any legislative history brought to our attention by the parties that we find useful, and proceed to general maxims of statutory construction if the legislature‘s
“As used in
ORS 86.705 to86.795 [that is, the Oregon Trust Deed Act]:*****
“(2) ‘Beneficiary’ means a person named or otherwise designated in a trust deed as the person for whose benefit a trust deed is given, or the person‘s successor in interest, and who is not the trustee unless the beneficiary is qualified to be a trustee under
ORS 86.790(1)(d) .”3
There is no dispute about the meaning of the last clause. Rather, the parties square off over the meaning of the requirements that the person (1) be “named or otherwise designated in [the] trust deed,” (2) “as the person for whose benefit the trust deed is given.” Taking the latter phrase first, the “benefit” of a trust deed is the security it provides with respect to an obligation owed by the grantor to the beneficiary. That is made clear in many of the surrounding statutes. For example, as noted, the term “trust deed” is defined as “a deed executed in conformity with
That analysis, however, speaks only to the second half of the wording of the definition. Plaintiffs suggest that the initial phrase “the person named or otherwise designated as” means that the trust deed must identify (name or otherwise designate) the person who meets the definition of “beneficiary” as that term is used in the statute. Defendants contend, to the contrary, that the legislature used that phrase to signify that the parties to the trust deed could agree to “name” or “designate” whomever they chose to serve “as” beneficiary—and that, for purposes of
We do not agree that plaintiffs’ reading removes the phrase “named or otherwise designated as” from the statute. As noted above, plaintiffs read the statutory definition as providing that, in addition to being the person “for whose benefit the trust deed is given,” the beneficiary must be “named or otherwise designated” as such in the trust deed. That reading uses all of the words of the statute. Indeed, we find plaintiffs’ reading of the definition to be more compelling, on a purely textual level, than defendants‘. If defendant‘s reading were correct, then anyone—even a person with no connection to or interest in the transaction at all—could be designated in the agreement. If the legislature had intended “beneficiary” to have the circular meaning that defendants suggest—that “beneficiary” means whomever the trust deed names as the “beneficiary“—it would have had no reason to include any description of the beneficiary‘s functional role in the trust arrangement. The fact that the statute does include such a description (“the person for whose benefit the trust deed is given“) strongly suggests that the legislature
As discussed, in a typical residential trust deed transaction, the obligation secured by the trust deed is memorialized in a promissory note that contains a borrower‘s promise to repay a home loan to a lender. At inception, the lender is the person who is entitled to repayment of the note and, thus, functionally is “the person for whose benefit the trust deed is given.” That person‘s “successor in interest,” whom
Defendants contend that another provision of the OTDA,
“Prior to the issuance and recording of a release [of the lien upon performance of the obligation secured by the trust deed], the title insurance company or insurance producer shall give notice of the intention to record a release of trust deed to the beneficiary of record and, if different, the party to whom the full satisfaction was made.”
(Emphasis added.)
Defendants assert that the emphasized text shows that the legislature understood that the “beneficiary” need not be the lender or the lender‘s successor in interest. We do not agree that the statutory text necessarily—or even probably—bears such a construction. It is equally, if not more plausible, to conclude that the phrase “if different, the party to whom the full satisfaction was made,” was meant instead to acknowledge the circumstance where a lender‘s successor
Defendants next contend that the statutory meaning of “beneficiary” must be interpreted in the context of common law principles of agency, freedom of contract, and commercial law. Defendants point to case law showing that Oregon recognizes that an agent, even one without a pecuniary interest, may engage in land transactions and hold title on behalf of a principal. See, e.g., Halleck v. Halleck et al., 216 Or 23, 38, 337 P2d 330 (1959) (“‘Conveyances of lands *** may be made by deed, signed by the person *** or by his lawful agent‘“) (quoting former
We disagree. The resolution of this question does not hinge on the parties’ intent; rather, it depends on legislative intent. That is, the OTDA authorizes nonjudicial foreclosure only when certain statutory requirements are met. In these circumstances, the meaning of “beneficiary,” as used in
The OTDA contemplates a unitary beneficiary status, so that the person with the right to repayment of the underlying obligation also controls the foreclosure process. The interaction of a number of statutory provisions demonstrates the point. For example,
That functional unity has longstanding roots in the common law itself. A fundamental principle in mortgage law holds that a foreclosing party must have the power to enforce the underlying note. See United States Nat. Bank v. Holton, 99 Or 419, 429, 195 P 823 (1921) (“It has always been the law of this state that the assignment of the note carries the mortgage ***. The assignment of a mortgage independent of the debt which it is given to secure, is an unmeaning ceremony.“). That concern underlies the standard doctrine in judicial foreclosure proceedings that the foreclosing party must provide proof that it has the power to enforce the note. See generally Alan M. White, Losing the Paper—Mortgage Assignments, Note Transfers and Consumer Protection, 24 Loy Consumer L Rev 468, 476-77 (2012) (collecting cases).
Neither can the statutory meaning of “beneficiary” yield to an obligee‘s decision to use another party as its agent or nominee. Although the cases and statutes cited by defendants show that a lawful agent can have broad authority to act on a trust deed beneficiary‘s behalf in regard to
In sum, our answer to the first question certified by the district court is as follows: For purposes of
III. SECOND CERTIFIED QUESTION
“Is MERS eligible to serve as beneficiary under the Oregon Trust Deed Act where the trust deed provides that MERS ‘holds only legal title to the interests granted by Borrower in this Security Instrument, but, if necessary to comply with law or custom, MERS (as nominee for Lender and Lender‘s successors and assigns) has the right: to exercise any or all of those interests‘?”
This question goes to defendants’ theory that, under the OTDA, MERS is eligible to serve as “beneficiary” of a trust deed in a role as the obligee‘s agent or nominee. The theory behind the question is: If
Defendants argue, first, that by defining MERS as the beneficiary “acting solely as a nominee for Lender and Lender‘s successors and assigns,” the trust deeds in these cases clearly convey an intention that MERS act as the lender‘s or its successors’ agent. Defendants also contend that MERS‘s agreement with its members explicitly provides that MERS will serve as the members’ common agent—allowing MERS to act as agent or nominee for the initial lender and any successors in interest who are members of MERS.8 Finally, defendants point to wording in the trust
“Borrower understands and agrees that MERS holds only legal title to the interests granted by Borrower in this Security Instrument, but, if necessary to comply with law or custom, MERS (as nominee for Lender and Lender‘s successors and assigns) has the right: to exercise any or all of those interests, including, but not limited to, the right to foreclose and sell the Property, and to take any action required of Lender including, but not limited to, releasing and canceling this Security Instrument.”
Defendants argue that if MERS, as the obligee‘s nominee, must have some or all of the obligee‘s rights to qualify as the trust deed beneficiary for purposes of
It is unspoken, but evident, that the necessity to which the above provision refers is the necessity of having MERS be recognized as the trust deed beneficiary for purposes of any requirement that must be satisfied before the trust deed may be nonjudicially foreclosed. That the provision imbues the word “necessary” with an unnatural meaning, with the result that the provision is circular, does not render the provision unenforceable, as plaintiffs seem to suggest. We accept the provision in the way it apparently was intended: It is triggered by any apparent deficiency in MERS‘s authority to serve as beneficiary, and, according to defendants’ theory, results in the delegation to MERS of any of the obligee‘s rights or interests that MERS might be required to have for that purpose.
The problem with defendants’ theory, however, is that, while asserting MERS‘s authority to exercise all of the obligee‘s rights and interests, the provision fails to speak to the one interest that an entity must have to qualify as a beneficiary under
And it is clear that the “law or custom” provision does not have that legal effect. The provision first states that MERS holds “only legal title to the interests granted by Borrower in this Security Instrument.” When the provision thereafter states that MERS has the right “to exercise any or all of those interests,” if necessary to comply with law or custom, it refers to the interests “granted by the borrower in this security instrument.” But the interests that are granted by the grantor in a trust deed are different from the right to repayment under a related promissory note. As discussed above, 353 Or at 676, the grantor conveys two interests by signing a trust deed: to the trustee, a legal interest in the subject real property, which may be foreclosed upon the obligor‘s default on the underlying obligation; and to the beneficiary, the beneficial counterpart to that legal interest. In each of the four trust deeds that are at issue, the first (legal) interest is conveyed in the following sentence in the “Transfer of Rights in the Property” provision: “Borrower irrevocably grants and conveys to Trustee, in trust, with power of sale, the following described property.” That the lender obtains the benefit of the legal interest that is granted to the trustee is conveyed in the preceding sentence:
“This Security Instrument secures to Lender: (i) the repayment of the Loan, and all renewals, extensions and modifications of the Note, and (ii) the performance of Borrower‘s covenants and agreements under this Security Instrument and the Note.”
Thus, the interests and rights that were “granted by the borrower under this security instrument” were only (1) a legal interest in the property that the trust deed burdens, in the form of a lien; and (2) an equitable or beneficial interest in that lien.
In contrast, in these cases, the interest in the secured obligation that a party must have to qualify as the trust deed‘s “beneficiary“—the obligation that the trust deed secures—is the right to repayment of the obligation.
To conclude: A “beneficiary” for purposes of the OTDA is the person to whom the obligation that the trust deed secures is owed. At the time of origination, that person is the lender. The trust deeds in these cases designate the lender as the beneficiary, when they provide: “This Security Instrument secures to Lender: (i) the repayment of the loan, and all renewals, extensions and modifications of the note; and (ii) the performance of borrower‘s covenants and agreements under this security instrument and the note.” Because the provision that MERS “holds only legal title to the interests granted by Borrower in this Security Instrument, but, if necessary to comply with law or custom, MERS *** has the right to exercise any or all of those interests,” does not convey to MERS the beneficial right to repayment of the secured obligation, the inclusion of that provision does not alter the trust deed‘s designation of the lender as the “beneficiary” or make MERS eligible to serve in that capacity.
IV. THIRD CERTIFIED QUESTION
“Does the transfer of a promissory note from the lender to a successor result in an automatic assignment of the securing trust deed that must be recorded prior to the
commencement of nonjudicial foreclosure proceedings under ORS 86.735(1) ?”
As we already have mentioned, 353 Or at 678-79, Oregon law provides that the transfer of a promissory note that is secured by a mortgage automatically effects, by operation of law, an assignment of the mortgage. Because a trust deed is a species of mortgage and is “subject to all laws relating to mortgages on real property,”
The text is not conclusive. Although the term “assignment” may carry a connotation of a written transfer of the trust deed itself, it appears to be broad enough to encompass any manner of transfer of the trust deed, such as by operation of law. The first definition of the word “assign” that appears in Webster‘s Third New Int‘l Dictionary 132 (unabridged ed 2002) reflects the narrow connotation: “to transfer to another in writing.” However, other definitions that appear in Webster‘s, and those that appear in Black‘s Law Dictionary, do not refer to a writing. In any event, the notion that a security interest may be transferred by operation of law has a long and unchallenged history in this
The use of the expansive modifier “any” (“any assignments“) is similarly inconclusive. Although it might convey a specific legislative intent that any manner of assignments, including those that occur by operation of law, be included in the recordation requirement, it also might simply refer to every “assignment” within the intended (possibly narrower) meaning of that term.
The parties also debate the import of statutes related to
“(1) Whenever a promissory note secured by mortgage on real property is transferred by indorsement without a formal assignment of the mortgage, and the mortgage is recorded, the mortgage, upon payment of the promissory note, may be discharged of record by the owner and holder of the promissory note making and filing with the appropriate recording officer a certificate *** proving the satisfaction of the mortgage, *** that the owner and holder is the owner and holder of the note, *** and that the note has been fully paid and proving that fact to the satisfaction of the recording officer.”
What does seem significant is that the recording requirement in
Those mortgage statutes,
“Mortgages may be assigned by an instrument in writing, executed and acknowledged with the same formality as required in deeds and mortgages of real property, and recorded in the records of mortgages of the county where the land is situated.”
The second statute, former
“Every assignment of mortgage shall be recorded at full length, and a reference shall be made to the book and page containing such assignment upon the margin of record of the mortgage.”
This court discussed the combined effect of those two statutes, at considerable length, in Barringer. In that case, Mr. and Mrs. Barringer loaned money to Hayden, evidenced by a note and secured by a mortgage, the latter of which was recorded. The Barringers divorced, and Mrs. Barringer received the note and mortgage as part of their divorce settlement. Later, Mr. Barringer executed an “assignment” of the mortgage to Loder, but Barringer refused to sign an affidavit verifying his claim that he had lost the note and mortgage. Regardless, Loder recorded the assignment, convinced Hayden to pay him the full amount due under the loan, and then recorded a notice canceling the mortgage (which was actually held by Mrs. Barringer). Mrs. Barringer later sued Loder to foreclose on the mortgage. Barringer, 47 Or at 224-26. Loder observed that Mr. Barringer‘s name appeared in the record, and he argued, based on the two statutes quoted above, that he was entitled to rely solely on the record. In
This court held, instead, that the first statute‘s use of the permissive word “may,” with reference to an assignment by an instrument in writing, “recognize[ed] the right *** to assign by indorsement of the note.” Id. at 229. The court then added:
“When it comes to the manner of recording the assignment, the word ‘shall’ is used. Why use the word ‘may’ in one section and ‘shall’ in the succeeding one? The relationship indicates an intendment that there should be a distinction in their application in practice. *** Assignments in the method designated then could be made before the statute as well as by assignment of the note, and the act simply prescribes that this may still be done by that method, but that such assignments shall be recorded in the manner pointed out.”
Id. at 229-30 (emphasis added). Thus, even though former
The legislature may have intended to impose a different recording regime in the nonjudicial foreclosure context—to require, in that context alone, that a recordable instrument be executed and recorded to document every transfer of a trust deed by indorsement of the associated promissory note, so that a borrower faced with nonjudicial foreclosure could determine whether the person giving notice of foreclosure possessed the beneficial interest in the trust deed at issue and had the right to foreclose. However, the legislature did not clearly express that intent. When the legislature enacted the OTDA and required that “any assignments of the trust deed” be recorded, the nearly identical statute stating that “[e]very assignment of mortgage shall be recorded” required recordation only of formal, written assignments. Barringer, 47 Or at 230; former
To the contrary, the OTDA is laced with provisions that indicate that the grantor is entitled to know the identity of the beneficiary. As discussed above,
For that same reason, the fourth certified question, relating to MERS‘s authority to act as an agent for a lender or a lender‘s successor in interest, is important. Although we have concluded that the lender or its successors need not
V. FOURTH CERTIFIED QUESTION
“Does the Oregon Trust Deed Act allow MERS to retain and transfer legal title to a trust deed as nominee for the lender, after the note secured by the trust deed is transferred from the lender to a successor or series of successors?”
Plaintiffs assert:
“The OTDA does not allow MERS to retain or transfer legal title to a trust deed after the promissory note is transferred from the original lender to a successor. This is because MERS has no legal title to the interests conveyed under a trust deed and because once its principal has no legal interests under a trust deed, it may not act on behalf of that principal to do for itself what its principal could not do. Even if it had some claim of legal title to the trust deed document, that would make MERS nothing more than a document custodian, not a beneficiary with rights to assign.
“In addition, even if the trust deeds could somehow be construed to convey legal title to MERS, such a conveyance would be expressly forbidden under the OTDA. As the only interest granted by the Borrower in the security instrument is a lien on the land as security for the repayment on the obligation and that legal title is conveyed to the trustee who holds it in trust for the beneficiary, there is simply no interest for MERS to hold.”
Plaintiffs also assert that MERS‘s powers as an agent are derived from and limited to those of its principal. Thus, plaintiffs argue, MERS has no power or authority to act as
Defendants reply, first, that “legal and equitable rights to property can be separated and held by different parties.” It follows, they assert, that the OTDA allows MERS to hold legal title to a trust deed as nominee for the lender, after the note secured by the trust deed is transferred from the lender to a successor or series of successors. Alternatively, defendants argue that MERS has authority as an agent of the original lender and its successors to execute any assignments required or convenient to facilitate the nonjudicial foreclosure process.
Because of the way in which the parties have presented their arguments with respect to the fourth certified question, it is useful to reframe it in two parts. The first part of the question is:
“Does the Oregon Trust Deed Act allow MERS to hold and transfer legal title to a trust deed as nominee for the lender, after the note secured by the trust deed is transferred from the lender to a successor or series of successors?”
The second part of the question is:
“If the answer to the first part of the question is ‘no,’ does MERS nevertheless have authority as an agent for the original lender and its successors in interest to act on their behalves with respect to the nonjudicial foreclosure process?”
For the reasons now explained, the answer to the first part of the question is “no.” As discussed, a beneficiary‘s interest under a trust deed is analogous to a mortgagee‘s interest under a mortgage.
“When a trust is created, the legal title is vested in the trustee ***. ‘A trust implies two estates,—one legal, and the other equitable; it also implies that the legal title is held by one person, the trustee, while another person, the cestui que trust [the beneficiary], has the beneficial interest.‘”
Morse et al. v. Paulson et al., 182 Or 111, 117, 186 P2d 394 (1947) (quoting Allen v. Hendrick, 104 Or 202, 223, 206 P 733 (1922)) (emphasis added).
Relying on this court‘s decision in Klamath Irrigation District v. United States, 348 Or 15, 227 P3d 1145 (2010), defendants remonstrate that “legal and equitable rights to property can be separated and held by different parties.” In Klamath Irrigation District, several irrigation districts and agricultural landowners brought consolidated suits against the United States, claiming that temporary reductions of irrigation water by a federal agency had breached contracts for the supply of irrigation water from the Klamath River Basin reclamation project, had breached an interstate compact, and had violated the Fifth Amendment by the uncompensated taking of property. In answering certified questions from a federal appeals court, we held that Oregon law recognized distinct legal and equitable interests in the right to use water from the Klamath River Basin that belonged to
Defendants’ reliance on Klamath is unavailing for two reasons. First, in Klamath, this court reiterated the principle that, in determining whether an equitable property right exists, “a court of equity will look beyond the form of the proceeding and if possible consider the substance of the right.” Id. at 44. As discussed above, any analysis of the substance of the transaction or the actual roles of the parties articulated in the trust deed compels the conclusion that MERS owns neither legal nor equitable title to the lien of the trust deed. Second, although defendants assert that “Oregon law explicitly recognizes that each of the foregoing property interests is capable of further division between holders of legal and equitable title,” neither Klamath nor any other authority that defendants have identified so holds. Certainly, an equitable interest may be fractionally divided among a number of owners (as this court recognized to be the case among the members of a water district in Klamath), but that is not the circumstance with MERS.
Rather, defendants’ point seems to be that, even though MERS does not have the right to receive repayment of the notes in these cases, it can nevertheless hold legal title to the trust deeds, including the legal right to foreclose them. That proposition is not correct for two reasons. First, as discussed in detail in our answer to the first and second certified questions, the beneficiary of a trust deed under the OTDA is the lender or the lender‘s successor in interest as respects the right to repayment. And it is the same beneficiary that has the other statutory rights and obligations that the OTDA confers and imposes, including the power to control the foreclosure decision and process through the right to appoint a successor trustee. Second, as explained in our answer to the first certified question, the policy choice that the OTDA reflects (that the “beneficiary” must be the person entitled to repayment of the secured obligation) is rooted in the common-law principle that a foreclosing party must have the power to enforce the underlying note. See Holton, 99 Or at 429. Accordingly, we conclude that the OTDA does not allow MERS to hold or transfer legal title to a trust deed
That conclusion brings us to defendants’ and MERS‘s alternative argument that MERS has authority as an agent of the original beneficiary and any successor beneficiaries of the subject trust deeds to take any steps that are required or convenient to carry out the nonjudicial foreclosure process. The accuracy of that assertion depends on whether MERS qualifies as an agent of those entities for purposes of Oregon law. See Restatement (Third) of Agency § 1.02 (2006) (“Whether a relationship is characterized as agency in an agreement between parties or in the context of industry or popular usage is not controlling.“). This court has defined agency in the following terms: “[T]o be an ‘agent‘—using the well-defined legal meaning of that term—two requirements must be met: (1) the individual must be subject to another‘s control; and (2) the individual must ‘act on behalf of’ the other person.” Vaughn v. First Transit, Inc., 346 Or 128, 136, 206 P3d 181 (2009).
Plaintiffs assert that, even if MERS is an agent of the beneficiaries in these cases, MERS‘s interests in the trust deeds cannot extend beyond those of the beneficiaries for whom it purports to act, because its powers as an agent cannot exceed those held by its principals. Thus, when the interest of its principal is conveyed, plaintiffs argue, MERS‘s authority to act for that principal is simultaneously terminated. According to plaintiffs, nothing in Oregon law “supports the idea of freestanding agency on which MERS relies.” Moreover, plaintiffs note that at least two other courts recently have agreed with their arguments. For example, the Arkansas Supreme Court has held, under virtually identical statutory language:
“MERS was at best the agent of the lender. The only recorded document provides notice that [Lender] is the lender and, therefore, MERS‘s principal. MERS asserts [Lender] is not its principal. Yet no other lender recorded
its interest as an assignee of [Lender]. Permitting an agent such as MERS purports to be to step in and act without a recorded lender directing its action would wreak havoc on notice in this state.”
Mortgage Electronic Registration System, Inc., v. Southwest Homes of Arkansas, 2009 Ark 152, 301 SW3d 1, 8 (2009).14 The Supreme Court of Washington recently reached a similar conclusion:
“MERS attempts to sidestep this portion of traditional agency law by pointing to the language in the deeds of trust that describe MERS ‘as acting solely as a nominee for Lender and Lender‘s successors and assigns.’ *** But MERS offers no authority for the implicit proposition that the lender‘s nomination of MERS as a nominee rises to an agency relationship with successive noteholders.”
Bain v. Metropolitan Mortg. Group, Inc., 175 Wash 2d 83, 107, 285 P3d 34, 45-46 (2012).
Here, plaintiffs allege that their original lenders sold and terminated their respective interests in the trust deeds and underlying promissory notes shortly after the origination of plaintiffs’ loans. More to the point, they allege that those original lenders transferred their interests in their promissory notes and trust deeds (followed by multiple subsequent transfers as well) long before MERS executed or recorded an assignment of the trust deeds to the purported ultimate successors in interest of the original lenders. In each of the cases, the plaintiffs assert “that the promissory note was sold and the trust deed was assigned from the originating lender of each respective loan through a series of subsequent intervening purchasers until it was purportedly conveyed to the current party on whose behalf each of the nonjudicial foreclosures was being conducted.” In particular, plaintiffs assert that “their loans were sold first to a separate entity known as a Sponsor, which subsequently sold the promissory note and assigned the trust deed to an entity known as a Depositor, which subsequently sold the promissory
As an initial matter, it is worth noting that, in each case, it is MERS itself, not MERS as “nominee” for the actual beneficiary, that executed a written assignment of the trust deed to the reputed ultimate successor of the original lender and recorded that assignment in the pertinent real property records. Because MERS does not qualify as the beneficiary, an assignment in such capacity is invalid. See
In Oregon, agency is “[t]he relationship which results from the manifestation of consent by one person to another that the other shall act on behalf and subject to his control, and consent by the other so to act.” Hampton Tree Farms, Inc. v. Jewett, 320 Or 599, 617, 892 P2d 683, 694 (1995) (quoting Ruddy v. Ore. Auto. Credit Corp., 179 Or 688, 702, 174 P2d 603, 609 (1946)) (internal quotations omitted). The principal-agent relationship is defined by, among other things, the ongoing ability of the principal to maintain control over the agent by giving the agent instructions. See Vaughn, 346 Or at 136 (quoting Restatement (Third) of Agency § 1.01 comment f (2006)).
Defendants assert that, even where multiple trust deed transfers have occurred, MERS has ongoing authority to act for its past and present principals under the MERS system. MERS explains that,
Similarly, amicus Oregon Land Title Association asserts:
“Finally, as to the answer on the fourth certified question, MERS has authority to retain and transfer legal title to a trust deed after a transfer of the underlying promissory note as long as the lender‘s successors and assigns also are members of MERS. In such circumstances, the lender‘s successors and assigns have given MERS the requisite authority to act on their behalf. Thus, as long as MERS remains constant as a nominee holding legal title to the trust deed for the lender and any successors or assigns, MERS has authority to transfer legal title to the trust deed.”
According to defendants and MERS, courts examining the issue recognize that MERS‘s role as nominee or agent carries forward to subsequent obligees—indeed, defendants assert, that was one of the very purposes for the creation of MERS.16 Those propositions notwithstanding, the difficulty is that, on the record before us, it is unclear whether such a broad common agency relationship exists in these cases among MERS and the original lenders and their successors
The answers to the two parts of the fourth certified question thus may be stated in the following terms:
(4)(a) “Does the Oregon Trust Deed Act allow MERS to hold and transfer legal title to a trust deed as nominee for the lender, after the note secured by the trust deed is transferred from the lender to a successor or series of successors?”
Answer: “No.” For purposes of the OTDA, the only pertinent interests in the trust deed are the beneficial interest of the beneficiary and the legal interest of the trustee. MERS holds neither of those interests in these cases, and therefore, it cannot hold or transfer legal title to the trust deed. For purposes of our answer to the first part of the fourth certified question, it is immaterial whether the note secured by the trust deed has previously been “transferred from the lender to a successor or series of successors.”
(4)(b) “Does MERS nevertheless have authority as an agent for the original lender and its successors in interest to act on their behalves with respect to the nonjudicial foreclosure process?”
Answer: The power to transfer the beneficial interest in a trust deed or to foreclose it follows the beneficial interest in the trust deed. The beneficiary or its successor in interest
Certified questions answered.
KISTLER, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.
The United States District Court for the District of Oregon has certified four state law questions to this court. In answering the first two questions, the majority concludes that only the lender and its successors can be designated as the beneficiary on a trust deed. In answering the last two questions, the majority concludes that not every assignment of the lender‘s interest in the trust deed must be recorded and that Mortgage Electronic Recording Systems, Inc. (MERS) can serve as the agent for both the lender and its successors if the record shows that those entities agreed to that arrangement. I agree with the majority‘s answers to the last two questions but would answer the first two questions differently. In my view, nothing in state law precludes the parties to a trust deed from designating MERS as the beneficiary as long as MERS is serving as the agent for the lender and its successors.1
Bart and Jessica Brandrup executed a trust deed on their property to secure a debt evidenced by a note that they gave their lender, America‘s Wholesale Lender. In their trust deed, the Brandrups designated MERS “acting solely as a nominee for Lender and Lender‘s successors and assigns” as the “beneficiary under this Security Instrument.” The issue that the first two certified questions pose is whether state law required the Brandrups to designate America‘s Wholesale Lender as the beneficiary rather than MERS acting as the nominee or agent for the lender and its successors.2
It is one thing, however, to say that the statutory definition identifies the lender and its successors as the persons who ordinarily will be the beneficiaries of the trust deed. It is quite another to find in that definition a legislative intent to preclude the parties to a trust deed from designating the agent of the lender and its successors as the beneficiary. We should be hesitant to find in that run-of-the-mill definition a limitation on the parties’ customary authority to structure their transactions as they see fit, unless the text, context, or history of that definition requires it. In my view, the statutory definition of beneficiary serves a more modest role than the one the majority assigns it. Certainly, nothing in the text of the definition expressly forecloses the parties from designating the lender‘s agent as the beneficiary in the trust deed. Nor does the legislative history lend any support for the majority‘s conclusion. Rather, the legislative history shows only that, in authorizing the use of trust deeds, the legislature sought to provide a more cost-effective means of foreclosing liens on real property and, in doing so, to expand the pool of capital available for small homeowners. See Minutes, House Committee on Judiciary, SB 117, Apr 16, 1959, at 1. It is difficult to derive from that history any
To be sure, the context provides a limitation on the persons whom the parties may designate as the beneficiary. As noted, a trust deed, like a mortgage, serves as security for the underlying obligation—in this case, a promissory note. Ordinarily, the mortgage follows the note. See Restatement (Third) of Property: Mortgages § 5.4(a) (1997) (“A transfer of an obligation secured by a mortgage also transfers the mortgage unless the parties to the transfer agree otherwise.“). Moreover, “[a] mortgage may be enforced only by, or in behalf of, a person who is entitled to enforce the obligation the mortgage secures.” Id. § 5.4(c). Put differently, “in general a mortgage is unenforceable if it is held by one who has no right to enforce the secured obligation.” Id. § 5.4 comment e. One exception to that general rule occurs when the person who holds the mortgage does so as the “trustee or agent” of the person who has the right to enforce the obligation secured by the mortgage. Id. In that circumstance, the trustee or agent may enforce the mortgage on behalf of the lender and its successors.
On the one hand, that context suggests that the authority to name or otherwise designate the beneficiary does not extend to naming a person whose designation would render the trust deed unenforceable and thus defeat its purpose. See id. (noting that “in general a mortgage is unenforceable if it is held by one who has no right to enforce the secured obligation“). On the other hand, that context suggests that the class of persons statutorily authorized to be “named or otherwise designated in [the] trust deed” as the beneficiary is not limited to the lender and its successors, as the majority concludes. Rather, it extends to persons (agents and trustees) who also may enforce the mortgage on behalf of the lender and its successors. Accordingly, I would hold that the statutory definition of beneficiary is broad enough to permit the parties to a trust deed to designate MERS as the beneficiary as long as MERS is the nominee or agent of the lender and its successors in interest.4
Ultimately, the difference between my answer and the majority‘s answer may be more semantic than substantive. After all, in answering the fourth question, the majority recognizes that, in theory, MERS can serve as the agent for the lender and its successors. The problem, as the majority correctly observes, with applying that theory in this case is that the record does not disclose whether the lender‘s successors in interest also have authorized MERS to act as their agent. As I understand the majority‘s answers, they effectively lead to the same conclusion that I would reach. However, because I would answer the first two certified questions differently from the majority, I dissent in part and concur in part in its answers.
Balmer, C. J., joins in this opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.
Notes
“As used in
“(1) ‘Beneficiary’ means the person named or otherwise designated in a trust deed as the person for whose benefit a trust deed is given, or the person‘s successor in interest, and who shall not be the trustee unless the beneficiary is qualified to be a trustee under
