American Bankers Insurance v. State

92 P.3d 117, 337 Or. 151, 2004 Ore. LEXIS 366
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 2004
DocketCC 0006-05848; CA A115183, SC S50816
StatusPublished

This text of 92 P.3d 117 (American Bankers Insurance v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Bankers Insurance v. State, 92 P.3d 117, 337 Or. 151, 2004 Ore. LEXIS 366 (Or. 2004).

Opinion

*154 BALMER, J.

In this interpleader action, we are asked to decide who is entitled to assert a claim against a bond posted by a licensed mortgage broker. Robert and Sandra Graf loaned funds to Karl and Linda Keener through an agreement with a mortgage broker, Mortgage One, Inc., Oregon law required Mortgage One to obtain a bond, which American Bankers Insurance Company, Inc. supplied. After the Keeners defaulted on the loan, the Grafs alleged that Mortgage One had made misrepresentations in connection with the loan transaction and sought to recover on the bond. Other individuals and businesses with claims against Mortgage One also sought to recover on the bond. American Bankers filed an interpleader action and deposited the amount of the bond with the trial court so that the court could determine the validity of the competing claims to the funds. Ultimately, the trial court determined that the Grafs could not recover against the bond because they did not belong to the class of parties that the legislature intended to protect through the bonding requirement. The Court of Appeals agreed. American Bankers Ins. Co. v. State of Oregon, 188 Or App 606, 72 P3d 666 (2003). We allowed review and now reverse.

The facts relevant to the issue on review are not disputed. Mortgage One was licensed to do business as a mortgage broker in Oregon. The Grafs contend that one of Mortgage One’s agents negotiated with the Grafs for a $100,000 loan to a third party, the Keeners. To secure the Keeners’ promise to repay the loan, the Keeners provided the Grafs with deeds of trust on residential properties. The Keeners later defaulted on the loan, and the Grafs maintain that as a consequence they have suffered a loss of approximately $200,000.

Mortgage One and American Bankers had entered into an agreement by which American Bankers provided Mortgage One with a bond in the amount of $50,000, as ORS 59.850 requires. As noted, after American Bankers received multiple claims against the bond, American Bankers initiated the present interpleader action and deposited the amount of the bond with the trial court. The total amount of the claims exceeded the amount of the bond.

*155 The Grafs filed a claim for the entire bond, alleging that Mortgage One’s agent had induced them to loan their funds through misrepresentations. Executive Reporting Services, Inc., and Precision Appraisals, which had provided credit information and real estate appraisals, respectively, to Mortgage One and had not been paid for their services, also filed claims against the bond. 1 The Grafs, who also had cross-claimed to prevent other parties from recovering any of the bond proceeds, moved for summary judgment, contending that they were the only proper claimants to the bond. Executive Reporting and Precision Appraisals also moved for summary judgment in their favor, and they opposed the Grafs’ motion for summary judgment. The trial court concluded that Executive Reporting and Precision Appraisals— but not the Grafs — were proper claimants to the bond.

The Grafs appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed in part and reversed in part. The court analyzed the text and context of the Oregon Mortgage Lender Law, ORS 59.840 to 59.980. In particular, the court examined ORS 59.925(2), which provides that an action may be brought against a mortgage broker by “any person who suffers any ascertainable loss of money or property, real or personal, in a * * * mortgage broker transaction * * The court concluded that the text and context of ORS 59.925(2) did not provide a definitive answer to the question of which persons or parties are entitled to bring an action under that statute, American Bankers, 188 Or App at 611-13, and therefore turned to the legislative history of ORS 59.925 and of the bonding requirement contained in ORS 59.850. Based on that history, the court determined that the legislature intended the bonding requirement to protect consumers — ordinarily, borrowers— who had paid mortgage brokers in advance for such services as appraisals and credit reports that the brokers then had failed to provide. Id. at 615. As a result, the Court of Appeals concluded that, as private lenders, the Grafs were not within the class of claimants who validly could claim against the bond. Id. The Court of Appeals also concluded that Executive *156 Reporting and Precision Appraisals were simply unpaid creditors of the mortgage broker. It followed, the court held, that, like the Grafs, Executive Reporting and Precision Appraisals were not within the group of persons that the legislature had intended to protect by imposing the bonding requirement and, therefore, they also could not claim successfully against the bond. Id. The Court of Appeals affirmed the part of the trial court judgment that denied the Grafs’ motion for summary judgment and reversed the part of the judgment that granted the summary judgment motions of Executive Reporting and Precision Appraisals.

Only the Grafs sought review in this court. We allowed review to determine who is entitled to make a claim against a mortgage broker’s bond. As we will explain below, that inquiry requires us first to determine who, in general, may bring an action against an Oregon licensed mortgage broker under the Oregon Mortgage Lender Law.

To answer those questions, we must interpret the statutes that govern the liability of mortgage brokers and that require mortgage brokers to obtain a bond. We begin our statutory inquiry with the principles set out in PGE v. Bureau of Labor and Industries, 317 Or 606, 610-12, 859 P2d 1143 (1993). Pursuant to that methodology, we first examine the text and context of the statute, giving words of common usage “their plain, natural, and ordinary meaning.” Id. at 611. If the legislative intent is clear irom the text and context of the statute, then further analysis is unnecessary. Id.

We begin with the text of ORS 59.925. ORS 59.925(6) provides that “[a]ny person having a right of action against a mortgage banker or mortgage broker shall under this section have a right of action under the bond or irrevocable letter of credit provided in ORS 59.850.” ORS 59.850

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Related

American Bankers Insurance Ex Rel. Mortgage One, Inc. v. State
72 P.3d 666 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2003)
Portland General Electric Co. v. Bureau of Labor & Industries
859 P.2d 1143 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 P.3d 117, 337 Or. 151, 2004 Ore. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-bankers-insurance-v-state-or-2004.