Kerr v. Miller

977 P.2d 438, 159 Or. App. 613, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 513
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 14, 1999
Docket9404-02447; CA A92500
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 977 P.2d 438 (Kerr v. Miller) 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
Kerr v. Miller, 977 P.2d 438, 159 Or. App. 613, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 513 (Or. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

*615 LINDER, J.

This case involves actions for foreclosure and unjust enrichment, with counterclaims for a declaration of redemption rights and an accounting. Defendants appeal, raising nine assignments of error. Plaintiff cross-appeals, raising two assignments of error. The central issues on appeal relate to the parties’ foreclosure, redemption, and restitution rights. With respect to those equitable claims, we review the facts de novo. ORS 19.125. Our review otherwise is for errors of law and abuse of discretion. We affirm on appeal and cross-appeal.

The north Portland property at issue consists of two lots, Lot 3 and Lot 4, with a small house on each. In December 1986, Kerr sold the property to Glenn Miller. Kerr and Miller discussed and drafted contracts for sale but ultimately accomplished the sale by trust deeds. Miller initially signed promissory notes for each lot. Kerr and Miller later executed two trust deeds, one for each lot (Miller trust deeds), with Miller agreeing to pay Kerr a total of approximately $8,600, plus interest, due on December 29, 1996. As part of their agreement, Miller also assumed the payments on and obligations of a trust deed, on which Equitable Savings and Loan Association was the beneficiary (Equitable trust deed).

Miller fell behind on his payments on the Equitable trust deed in 1988 but then made up the deficiency. He again fell behind in 1991, at which point Equitable initiated a foreclosure action. Nonetheless, Miller for a second time managed to bring the accounts current, and Equitable halted the foreclosure action. In 1992, Miller for a third time stopped making payments on the Equitable trust deed. Several months after that default, Kerr learned that Equitable was nearing foreclosure. To protect his interest in the property, Kerr paid the outstanding debt on the Equitable trust deed, which totaled over $10,000. He then took steps to foreclose his interest and to restore his title. Working through his attorney, Kerr declared Miller in default and put Miller on notice that he would exercise the forfeiture remedy in the contract unless Miller reimbursed him. After receiving Kerr’s notice of default, Miller, either personally or via his attorney, *616 contacted Kerr’s attorney. Miller explained that he could not pay the amount owed and that he was prepared to forfeit his interest and let Kerr take the property back. Miller then provided Kerr’s attorney with information on the tenants occupying the houses, because he considered the property to belong to Kerr and thought Kerr should be the one to deal with the property and the tenants. On March 10,1993, Kerr recorded a declaration of forfeiture of the land sale contracts, mistakenly believing that his sale to Miller had been secured by land sale contracts and could be foreclosed in that manner.

After the recordation, Kerr took possession of the property and determined that the rental houses on the lots had deteriorated severely. 1 He decided to repair and improve the houses on the lots and sell each of them. To facilitate repairs, he had the tenants vacate the properties. In June 1993, Kerr arranged for Carl Miller, a personal friend and construction manager (no relation of Glenn Miller), to begin work on the houses. Kerr also agreed to sell Lot 3 to Carl Miller’s daughter at a reduced price in exchange for his labor in repairing the units. Work began on Lot 4. After completing improvements and repairs on Lot 4, Kerr put that house on the market and received several offers immediately. He accepted a bid for $57,000, which was $2,000 over the listed price. On September 16,1993, Kerr conducted a preliminary title search in preparation for the sale. The title search revealed that Miller still held title to the property. Because the property was secured by trust deeds, rather than contracts for sale as he mistakenly thought, Kerr’s declaration of forfeiture the previous March had been ineffective. Kerr needed to foreclose the Miller trust deeds through judicial or nonjudicial foreclosure to remove the cloud on the title. Consequently, he could not sell Lot 4 until that was done.

*617 Meanwhile, Kerr had also begun repairs and improvements on Lot 3. Based on their dealings, Kerr believed that Miller would not assert his interest in the two lots. Relying on that belief, Kerr continued to make improvements on Lot 3 and prepared to foreclose on the trust deeds by nonjudicial sale. Most of the improvements to Lot 3 were completed by November 1, 1993, when the notice of foreclosure sale was advertised. Foreclosure sales were scheduled for February 23,1994, (Lot 4) and for March 10,1994, (Lot 3).

After publication of the notice of foreclosure sale, Glenn Miller advised Kerr that he was filing for bankruptcy. Miller offered to deed the property to Kerr in lieu of foreclosure, but Kerr declined because, by then, tax liens had been placed on the property and Kerr did not want to assume Miller’s tax liabilities. After Miller filed for bankruptcy on January 27,1994, an automatic stay prohibited any transfers of interest. Miller cooperated with Kerr in petitioning the bankruptcy court for relief from the automatic stay so that Kerr could go forward with foreclosure. The bankruptcy court granted that relief on February 22, 1994. However, because of the complications caused by the bankruptcy stay, the foreclosure sales were canceled and later rescheduled to March 28,1994.

Patricia and Roy Streeter (the Streeters) became interested in the property at about that time. The Streeters purchase and repair distressed properties to sell for a profit. Patricia Streeter read the November 1, 1993, notice of foreclosure and drove by the homes to view them. 2 Streeter is a real estate agent and closely watches foreclosure notices in an effort to find investment opportunities. She remembered the property from 1991, when she had driven past the houses following Equitable’s earlier foreclosure notice. She realized the houses were in considerably better condition than they had been two years before. About two weeks prior to the scheduled February 23 sale, she contacted Kerr’s attorney and inquired about the total debt owed on the property and the amount necessary to cure the default. Kerr’s attorney *618 was unable to give her the total sum due, explaining that substantial repairs had been made and that he had not received a final total for the repair costs.

Streeter next checked the county records for the amounts owing on the Equitable trust deed and discovered that Glenn Miller was in bankruptcy. Believing that the sale was imminent, Streeter went to Miller’s home at 8:00 p.m. on February 22, the night before the sale originally was to take place for Lot 4. Miller was not home, but Streeter left a note explaining that she knew the property was about to be foreclosed and that she wanted to buy his interest. In offering to buy Miller’s interest, Streeter hoped to acquire Miller’s status, including the ability to cure the default and prevent the sale. The note asked Miller to call her. Miller did, at 11:30 p.m. that same night.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
977 P.2d 438, 159 Or. App. 613, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerr-v-miller-orctapp-1999.