CHAFFIN, Respondent, v. SOLOMON, Appellant.
Supreme Court of Oregon
Argued January 6, affirmed February 11, 1970
465 P. 2d 217
M. C. Logan, Springfield, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Moore & Wurtz, Springfield.
TONGUE, J.
This is a suit to quiet plaintiff‘s title to real property. Defendant filed both a general denial and a cross-complaint to remove a cloud on defendant‘s title to the same property. The trial court entered a decree quieting title in plaintiff, from which defendant appeals.
Defendant contends that as a judgment creditor of plaintiff‘s grantor he obtained and docketed his judgment before plaintiff recorded her deed, with the result that under
Execution of Deeds and Docketing of Judgment
On October 16, 1965, plaintiff purchased three lots in Lane County from A. E. Barnum for the sum of $11,500 under a land sale contract, which was never recorded. On the same date, but without the knowledge of plaintiff, Barnum assigned his vendor‘s interest to Donna Timber, Inc., followed by deeds, which were recorded on November 12, 1965.
In February, 1966, defendant filed an action as a creditor of Donna Timber, Inc.
On August 3, 1966, plaintiff paid off the contract balance and approximately three weeks later received warranty deeds from Donna Timber, Inc., as grantor. For some unexplained reason the deeds were not recorded at that time.
On December 9, 1966, defendant obtained a judgment against Donna Timber, Inc., and docketed that judgment in Lane County on December 12, 1966.
On January 23, 1967 (following the issuance of a writ of execution) a notice of sheriff‘s sale of the lots was issued. Shortly thereafter, on January 31, 1967, upon receiving notice of the sheriff‘s sale plaintiff recorded her deeds.
On February 24, 1967, the three lots were sold to defendant at a sheriff‘s sale for $500 each, over objections by plaintiff, and certificates of sale were issued to defendant. On February 24, 1968, plaintiff‘s redemption period expired and sheriff‘s deeds were then delivered to defendant and recorded by him on February 29, 1968. Meanwhile, on October 23, 1967, plaintiff filed this suit.
Possession, Use and Improvement of Property and Other Evidence of Constructive Notice
The three lots, Lots 19, 20 and 24, are located on the shore of Collard Lake, near Florence, Oregon, with three other lots lying between Lots 19 and 20 and Lot 24.
During the summer and fall of 1966 plaintiff‘s family and friends and church groups used the property “practically every week in the summertime” for picnics, swimming and boating. They also visited the property “from time to time” during the winter.
During the summer a considerable amount of clearing work was done. This work included the clearing of the lake frontage of Lot 24, so as to provide a picnic and beach area. In addition, a possible cabin site and a forty foot strip was cleared along the shoreline of Lots 19 and 20. Trails were also cleared and cedar trees were cut for shakes on those lots.
Plaintiff was assisted by friends and by a church group in this clearing work. Plaintiff‘s son, who lived nearby, also testified that he “went over there and cleared and burnt for week after week“. He also cut wood on all three lots, some of which he removed for use at his own home, with the remainder left for use at picnics.
The previously existing boat dock was repaired, improved, and extended by the installation of a new floating dock and brush was also cleared in that area.
In addition, a previously existing sleeping shelter was relocated and rebuilt and some shrubbery was transplanted in the cleared area. The previously existing U-shaped roadway from the public road to the shelter was also improved.
There was also uncontradicted evidence that a “For Sale” sign was posted on Lots 19 and 20, with the name “Chaffin” and with the plaintiff‘s telephone number. That sign was visible for some distance along the public road and was in existence during the summer of 1966 and continuing to the time of trial in 1968.
Finally, on November 9, 1966, plaintiff‘s husband (since deceased) paid the 1966-67 real property taxes on the three lots.
Decision by Trial Court
After considering the foregoing facts, the trial court entered a decree quieting title in plaintiff, holding that “this case is controlled by the rule of law set forth in Thompson v. Hendricks, 118 Or 39, 245 P 724 (1926). The trial judge did not state, however, whether his decision was based (1) upon the interpretation of the judgment lien and recording statutes by this court in Thompson, or (2) upon the existence of facts sufficient to put defendant on constructive notice of plaintiff‘s claim of ownership, as recognized in Thompson to constitute a separate and independent basis for the decision in that case.
The Judgment Lien and Recording Statutes
“From the time of docketing an original or renewed judgment or the transcript thereof, as provided in
ORS 18.320 , such judgment shall be a lien upon all the real property of the defendant within the county or counties where the same is docketed, or which he may afterwards acquire therein, during the time prescribed inORS 18.360 .”
“Priority of lien over unrecorded conveyance. A conveyance of real property, or any portion thereof, or interest therein, shall be void as against the lien of a judgment, unless such conveyance be recorded at the time of docketing such judgment, or the transcript thereof, as the case may be.”
Both of these statutes were originally adopted in 1862.
In Meier v. Kelly, 22 Or 136, 29 P 265 (1892), a case involving the application of the judgment lien statute to an equitable interest in real property (no actual deed having been executed, as in this case), this court held that the conveyance of an equitable interest which is not capable of being recorded is not subject to the terms of Hill‘s Code § 271 (now
Later, in Thompson v. Hendricks, 118 Or 39, 245 P 724 (1926), a case involving the application of the judgment liens statute to an unrecorded deed, as in this case, the court held, in effect, that when the grantee under such a deed had gone into possession of the property, the judgment creditor of his grantor was put on such notice as to prevent the lien of his
The foregoing interpretation of what is now
On the other hand, it may be contended, as stated in Thompson v. Hendricks, supra (at p 47) that:
“By merely docketing his judgment, a judgment
creditor parts with nothing, and does not become entitled to have the property of an innocent purchaser for value applied in satisfaction of a debt he does not owe. When properly construed, we think the statute did not so intend.”
In this case it is contended by defendant that this court should now overrule what defendant refers to as dictum in Thompson v. Hendricks and that the court should now adopt and approve the rule as previously stated, (also by dictum) in Meier v. Kelly. Since, however, it is our view that the decision of the lower court must be affirmed on other grounds, any further statement on this subject at this time would only add further dictum on this subject.
Requirements for Constructive Notice
It has long been established in Oregon that since the purpose of the legislature was to give a judgment lien creditor the same standing as the purchaser of property, it follows that when a creditor who resorts to such proceedings is informed of an outstanding equity, or of facts sufficient to put him on inquiry by which he could ascertain the existence of such an equity, the lien he secures by the docketing of his judgment will be subject to it. Riddle v. Miller, 19 Or 468, 469-70, 23 P 807 (1890); Rayburn v. Davisson, 22 Or 242, 245, 29 P 738 (1892); Matsuda v. Noble et al, 184 Or 686, 703, 200 P2d 962 (1948). See also Thompson v. Hendricks, supra, at 41-3.
Thus, appellant very properly concedes that “the application of
Appellant contends, however, that the “casual use and the alleged improvements the plaintiffs made upon the three lots at Collard Lake” are not sufficient for this purpose, citing adverse possession cases involving somewhat similar facts. Appellant also contends that there are no previous Oregon judgment lien cases in which similar facts have been held sufficient to constitute constructive notice.
Obviously, the reason for the stringency of the requirements in adverse possession cases is that in such cases one who has no deed and has paid no consideration may nevertheless acquire title upon satisfying such requirements. But even in such cases it is now recognized that the nature and extent of the exercise of exclusive possession may depend somewhat upon the nature of the property involved, such as rough, brushy and uninhabited lands, at least when other factors are also present. See Knecht v. Spake, 218 Or 601, 611-12, 346 P2d 98 (1959); Springer v. Durrette, 217 Or 196, 200-01, 342 P2d 132 (1959).
Thus, while it may be true that there are no previous Oregon judgment lien cases involving substantially similar facts, we hold that the facts of this case, when taken as a whole, including not only the facts relating to the nature and extent of the possession and
It follows that defendant‘s judgment lien was subject to plaintiff‘s claim and that the decree of the lower court, under which title was quieted in plaintiff, must be affirmed.
O‘CONNELL, J., specially concurring.
Thompson v. Hendricks, 118 Or 39, 245 P 724 (1926) was wrong in interpreting
