Evergreen Pacific, Inc. v. Cedar Brook Way, LLC

284 P.3d 509, 251 Or. App. 194, 2012 WL 2833805, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 886
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 11, 2012
DocketC095937CV; C094583CV; C094731CV; C095428CV; C095856CV; C096831CV; A146478
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 284 P.3d 509 (Evergreen Pacific, Inc. v. Cedar Brook Way, LLC) 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
Evergreen Pacific, Inc. v. Cedar Brook Way, LLC, 284 P.3d 509, 251 Or. App. 194, 2012 WL 2833805, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 886 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

HADLOCK, J.

At issue in this case is whether a contractor forfeits the right to a construction lien if it accepts a trust deed to secure a debt owed by a property owner that otherwise would be secured by a construction lien. The trial court concluded that a contractor does not forfeit the right to a lien by accepting a trust deed if other parties with an interest in the property had notice that the contractor might claim a construction lien in addition to the trust deed. Accordingly, it ruled that the construction lien that plaintiff claimed in this case was valid, entered a judgment foreclosing the lien, and ruled that the lien was superior in priority to the interests of defendant, a bank that held a debt secured by another trust deed on the same property. We conclude that, as a matter of law, plaintiff forfeited its right to a construction lien when it accepted a trust deed. We therefore reverse.

Before we state the facts, a brief overview of the pertinent construction-lien statutes is helpful. ORS 87.010(1) provides that “[a]ny person performing labor upon, transporting or furnishing any material to be used in, or renting equipment used in the construction of any improvement shall have a lien upon the improvement” for the services or material furnished at the instance of the property owner. To perfect the lien, the person furnishing the services or material must file a lien claim with the county recording officer within 75 days after the person stops work or the construction is completed. ORS 87.035. Although the lien claim need not be filed until after the person’s work is completed, the lien, once perfected, has priority over “all prior liens, mortgages or other encumbrances” on the property. ORS 87.025(2). Accordingly, even when a construction lien is perfected after another encumbrance was recorded, the construction lien has superior rights in the event of a foreclosure.1 In other words, although a construction lien remains inchoate until a claim is filed, as [200]*200a practical matter, it effectively encumbers the property as soon as the contractor begins work.

Because unrecorded construction liens become enforceable once they are perfected, someone who buys property or gives credit secured by an interest in property necessarily takes a risk that the property may already be subject to an unknown, but nevertheless potentially superior, encumbrance. For that reason, unrecorded liens historically were referred to as “secret liens” and are generally disfavored by the law. See, e.g., Jones v. Gates, 24 Or 411, 415, 33 P 989 (1893) (“The tendency of modern legislation and decisions is strongly opposed to the creation or enforcement of secret liens.”). However, construction liens — which are expressly given priority by statute — stand as an exception to that general view, and have throughout Oregon’s history. See General Laws of Oregon, Civ Code, ch XXVII, title I, §§ 2, 7, pp 763-65 (Deady 1845-1864) (providing that construction liens “shall have precedence over all other liens, after the commencement of the building,” even though construction-lien claims may be filed “at any time within three months after the completion of’ the construction).2

With that background in mind, we turn to the material facts of this case, which are not in dispute. A property owner, Cedar Brook Way, LLC, wanted to develop several parcels of land. To finance construction on two of the parcels, it obtained a $4.49 million line of credit from defendant, a bank, with funds to be disbursed over the course of the construction project. To secure repayment of the debt, Cedar Brook gave defendant a trust deed for the two parcels, which was recorded in August 2007.

[201]*201Cedar Brook hired plaintiff to pave parking lots and do other work on the property. Plaintiff substantially completed its work in February 2009. Because of a dispute over the quality of some of the work, Cedar Brook did not pay plaintiff. Plaintiff filed a construction-lien claim against the property, asserting that it was owed $192,252.01. Defendant did not want the property to be subject to a lien that would have priority over its trust deed, so, when it learned of plaintiff’s lien claim, it told Cedar Brook that it would not fund any further construction work until Cedar Brook “got rid of’ the lien.

Cedar Brook sought to dispense with the lien by suing plaintiff for slander on title by wrongful lien, alleging that plaintiff’s work was defective and that plaintiff therefore had overstated the amount that Cedar Brook owed it, invalidating the lien claim. Soon thereafter, Cedar Brook and plaintiff entered into a settlement agreement. Plaintiff agreed to repair some of its work, to perform some new work, and to release its lien claim. Cedar Brook, in turn, agreed to pay the entire $192,252.01 claimed for the previous work, plus an additional $10,008.90 for the new work. The settlement required Cedar Brook to pay plaintiff $80,000 immediately and to pay the remainder in lump sums after plaintiff finished the new work and the repairs. Cedar Brook also agreed to secure its obligation to make the latter payments by granting plaintiff a trust deed for the property — the same two parcels underlying the trust deed that Cedar Brook had earlier granted defendant. The written settlement agreement states that nothing in its terms was “a release or waiver of [plaintiff’s] right to record a lien against the property, in accordance with ORS 87.001 et seq, for all amounts due in the event of a default of the payment terms of this agreement.”

Pursuant to the settlement, Cedar Brook dismissed its action against plaintiff, paid the initial $80,000, and gave plaintiff the trust deed; for its part, plaintiff filed a release stating that it “fully waive[d], release[d] and discharge[d]” the previously filed lien claim. Defendant resumed disbursing funds to Cedar Brook after it received a copy of the release and learned that plaintiff had received a trust deed. Defendant also received a copy of the settlement agreement.

[202]*202Plaintiff began to perform the work contemplated in the settlement agreement. It completed all of the new work and some of the repairs. Cedar Brook failed to make the payment due upon completion of the new work and ultimately refused to allow plaintiff access to the property to finish the repairs. In July 2009, plaintiff filed a new construction-lien claim against the property. The following month, it commenced this action, claiming breach of contract and seeking foreclosure of the lien. In its complaint, plaintiff named as defendants both Cedar Brook and defendant, alleging, in addition to its claim against Cedar Brook, that its lien is superior in priority to the interest that defendant has in the property through its own trust deed.

Around the same time, Cedar Brook also defaulted on its debt to defendant, so defendant commenced an action to foreclose its trust deed. The two cases were consolidated for trial.3 Cedar Brook failed to appear for trial, and the court issued an order of default against it.

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284 P.3d 509, 251 Or. App. 194, 2012 WL 2833805, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evergreen-pacific-inc-v-cedar-brook-way-llc-orctapp-2012.