American Property Management Corp. Ex Rel. Robinson v. Nikaia

215 P.3d 906, 230 Or. App. 321, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1116
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 12, 2009
Docket07F003618; A135561
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 215 P.3d 906 (American Property Management Corp. Ex Rel. Robinson v. Nikaia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Property Management Corp. Ex Rel. Robinson v. Nikaia, 215 P.3d 906, 230 Or. App. 321, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1116 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*323 ARMSTRONG, J.

In this forcible entry and detainer (FED) action, defendant appeals a general judgment awarding plaintiff restitution and a supplemental judgment awarding plaintiff costs and attorney fees. The sole issue on appeal is whether plaintiff, through its rental agreement, complied with the mail and attachment (or so-called nail and mail) service and notice requirements in ORS 90.155(l)(c). We conclude that plaintiffs rental agreement did not comply with the statutory requirements. Accordingly, we vacate the judgments and remand.

The relevant facts are not in dispute. Defendant, a tenant in a residential property located in Portland, entered into a rental agreement with plaintiff. Defendant failed to pay his February 2007 rent by the seventh of the month, as required by the rental agreement. On February 8, plaintiff issued a 72-hour notice to defendant to terminate the rental agreement for failure to pay rent and served it on defendant by mailing a copy of the notice to defendant at his residence and by posting a second copy on defendant’s front door. Defendant’s rent remained unpaid, and plaintiff initiated this FED action against defendant. After trial, the court entered a general judgment against defendant awarding plaintiff restitution of the premises, and a supplemental judgment awarding plaintiff its attorney fees and costs.

On appeal, defendant argues that plaintiffs rental agreement failed to provide defendant with a “meaningful” reciprocal right to use nail and mail service, as required by ORS 90.155(l)(c). He asserts that, because of that deficiency, plaintiff did not have a right to use nail and mail service, and, as such, the trial court erred in entering judgment in plaintiffs favor.

ORS 90.155(1) sets forth the requirements for service of a written notice, when such notice is required between landlords and tenants. In addition to personal service and service by mail, the statute provides:

“(c) If a written rental agreement so provides, [service or delivery of written notice shall be executed by] both first class mail and attachment to a designated location. In order *324 for a written rental agreement to provide for mail and attachment service of written notices from the landlord to the tenant, the agreement must also provide for such service of written notices from the tenant to the landlord.”

ORS 90.155(l)(c). In other words, the statute requires reciprocal mail and attachment, so that, if a landlord can notify a tenant by mail and attachment service, then a tenant can serve a landlord in the same manner. Guardian Management, LLC v. Zamiello, 194 Or App 524, 528, 95 P3d 1139 (2004). The primary benefit of that service is that the date of the notice itself is the date on which it is served, ORS 90.160(2), whereas service by first class mail without attachment requires the party serving the notice to extend the recipient’s period of compliance by three days, ORS 90.155(2).

Further, that statute prescribes the manner in which the mail and attachment service must occur:

“(A) For written notices from the landlord to the tenant, the first class mail notice copy shall be addressed to the tenant at the premises and the second notice copy shall be attached in a secure manner to the main entrance to that portion of the premises of which the tenant has possession; and
“(B) For written notices from the tenant to the landlord, the first class mail notice copy shall be addressed to the landlord at an address as designated in the written rental agreement and the second notice copy shall be attached in a secure manner to the landlord’s designated location, which shall be described with particularity in the written rental agreement, reasonably located in relation to the tenant and available at all hours.”

ORS 90.155(l)(c).

The rental agreement between the parties here has a notice provision in paragraph 21 that states:

“Notice: In accordance with [ORS] 90.155, written notices served by both the Owner/Agent/Lessor and Resident are effective on the date in which they are mailed by first class mail addressed to the Resident or Owner/ Agent/Lessor at the street address of the premises and attached in a secure manner to the main entrance of *325 the Resident’s premises or the Owner/Agent/Lessor’s place ofbusiness.”

(Emphasis in original.) Plaintiff is identified as the “Owner/ Agent/Lessor” on the front of the agreement.

Defendant argues that paragraph 21 is too confusing to provide meaningful reciprocal nail and mail service rights to a tenant in defendant’s position. He argues that plaintiff fails to identify a “designated location” for either first class mail or attachment or, for that matter, the designated location for service based on which party is sending the notice, and that the paragraph is so poorly worded that it would permit the illogical result that tenants mail notice to themselves at their own addresses and post notice on their own front doors. In response, plaintiff argues that paragraph 21 complies with ORS 90.155 because it adequately designates the addresses for tenant to mail and to attach notice. It further asserts that, to the extent that either method of notice is likely to fail to provide meaningful notice to it, it has a right to waive its rights to statutory notice.

Although the parties focus on the portion of the statute requiring that the location for posting be “described with particularity,” ORS 90.155 sets forth separate requirements for the copy of notice to be mailed and to be attached at a given location. Thus, we begin by looking at ORS 90.155’s first requirement, that the copy of notice that the tenant mails to the landlord be “addressed to the landlord at an address as designated in the written rental agreement,” and assessing whether the rental agreement here complies with that portion of the statute.

To determine whether plaintiffs rental agreement complies with ORS 90.155(l)(c)(B), we ascertain the legislature’s intent by first considering the statutory text in its context, along with legislative history. State v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 P.3d 906, 230 Or. App. 321, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-property-management-corp-ex-rel-robinson-v-nikaia-orctapp-2009.