Klein v. Bisnaire

346 Or. App. 862
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 4, 2026
DocketA183228
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 346 Or. App. 862 (Klein v. Bisnaire) 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
Klein v. Bisnaire, 346 Or. App. 862 (Or. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

862 February 4, 2026 No. 69

This is a nonprecedential memorandum opinion pursuant to ORAP 10.30 and may not be cited except as provided in ORAP 10.30(1).

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON

Kelli KLEIN, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Helene BISNAIRE, Richard Ziff, and all others, Defendants-Appellants. Josephine County Circuit Court 23LT21245; A183228 (Control) Richard W. ZIFF and Helene M. Bisnaire, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Kelli KLEIN, Defendant-Respondent. Josephine County Circuit Court 23CV52063; A183376

Pat Wolke, Judge. Argued and submitted December 5, 2025. Richard W. Ziff argued the cause and filed the brief, pro se. Michael Stout argued the cause for respondent. Also on the brief was Stout Law LLC. Before Tookey, Presiding Judge, Kamins, Judge, and Jacquot, Judge. JACQUOT, J. Affirmed. Nonprecedential Memo Op: 346 Or App 862 (2026) 863

JACQUOT, J. This consolidated appeal arises from disputes regarding land occupancy and ownership of a property in Josephine County. Because the parties were each plain- tiff in one action and defendant in another, we refer to the appellants as “occupants,” the respondent as “buyer,” and the prior owners of the property—who provided testimony— as “the sellers.” The property has two homes on it as well as a barn; occupants live in one home and buyer lives in the other.1 Occupants also operate a business, and buyer was employed by the business. The parties initiated separate actions against one another in the same month; occupants filed a complaint against buyer seeking relief for quantum meruit, quiet title, partition of the property and specific performance of a real estate agreement; buyer initiated a forcible entry and detainer (FED) action against occupants. The cases were consolidated, and buyer prevailed. For the reasons provided below, we affirm. OCCUPANTS’ POSITION Occupants, who have lived on the property for more than 12 years, alleged that they “had a lease option contract with the first right of refusal” with the sellers. They alleged that their agreement with the sellers included that any enhancements and improvements made by occupants to the property over the years that they lived on the land “would pro- vide credit towards the purchase price of the property * * *.” When the sellers were ready to sell the property, occupants did not have the financial capacity to purchase the property outright and “an agreement was made with the [buyer] to help her purchase the property.” Occupants alleged that the agreement involved occupants helping buyer with the down payment; buyer paid $384,000 for the down payment; buyer and occupants would each “pay one-half of the mortgage, property taxes, and insurance monthly as well as one-half of that down payment over a period of time—minus $50,000.00, for a total of $142,000.00.” From those allegations, we under- stand occupants’ argument to be that once their contribu- tions totaled $142,000, they would have a one-half undivided 1 The appellant-occupants appear pro se on appeal; they were represented by counsel for the trial court proceedings. 864 Klein v. Bisnaire

interest in the property and a tenancy in common agreement with buyer, and both parties would continue to pay one-half of the monthly mortgage. Occupants also alleged that buyer agreed to deed (through a quitclaim deed) a portion of the ownership rights to occupants each year. Occupants alleged they complied fully with those terms and at the time of filing their complaint, had paid their portion of the mortgage each month for a total of $41,210.16 and had also made two $10,000 payments directly to buyer. Occupants also alleged that they were entitled to one-third of rental income for a barn on the property. They argue that through a combination of the payments they have made, the barn rental income they are owed, their assistance with closing costs, and their investment in repairs to the prop- erty, they have paid $77,782.16 towards their portion of the down payment and owe $64,217.84. They also claim that they have made improvements to the property throughout their occupancy that have unjustly enriched buyer—occu- pants argue that buyer benefited from a $100,000 property sale price discount. Occupants alleged they are entitled to specific per- formance of their agreement and should be granted a one- half interest in the property once their remaining balance is paid. In the alternative, occupants sought partition of the property through a refereed private sale. On appeal, occupants argue that “[t]he trial court erred by failing to properly value and consider [their] finan- cial contributions and improvements to the land which granted [occupants] an ownership interest in the land.” Occupants further argue that fairness and justice necessi- tate an outcome in their favor. Occupants also argue that if buyer maintains sole ownership of the property, occupants need to be repaid for mortgage payments and compensated for their investments in the property and their loss of the benefit of the bargain. BUYER’S POSITION Buyer purchased the property by signing a pur- chase agreement with the sellers. Buyer paid $1.1 million for the property, consistent with the full appraisal value. Nonprecedential Memo Op: 346 Or App 862 (2026) 865

Buyer alleged that the sellers did not agree to give buyer a credit or price drop due to alleged work done by occupants on the property. The deed listed only buyer as the owner. The deed of trust to secure the mortgage listed only buyer. Buyer alleged that occupants did not pay any closing costs at the time buyer purchased the property. Buyer and occu- pants discussed various possibilities of occupants buying into ownership of the property, but neither a tenancy in common nor sale agreement was ever finalized. Buyer eventually issued a 90-day termination notice because she “needed to move into the house” that occupants were and are living in because of a medical condition and space needed for her family. Buyer brought an action for pos- session and prevailed. On appeal, buyer argues that the trial court’s fac- tual finding that a landlord-tenant relationship existed between buyer and occupants is supported by evidence in the record. She also argues that the trial court’s legal con- clusion that there was no agreement for joint ownership is correct, because there cannot be such an oral agreement for an interest in real property. Buyer argues that occupants “cannot even meet the initial threshold” to establish an exception to the statute of frauds and did not do so at trial or on appeal. THE TRIAL COURT’S RULING AND REASONING After a one-day trial, the trial court determined that buyer’s allegation that she needed occupants to move out because of her health condition and needs for her family had not been rebutted. The trial court also found that “there [was] no meeting of the minds whatsoever as to the terms of the case, so the contract cannot be specifically enforced.” The court determined that the monthly payments made by occupants could easily be referred to as fair rental pay- ments in the context of a landlord-tenant agreement and thus could not be used to establish partial performance of a sale contract. The court determined that of the two $10,000 payments, one payment can be referred to as wages paid to buyer for the work she performed for occupants’ business and the other was returned by buyer to occupants. 866 Klein v. Bisnaire

The trial court determined that no unjust enrich- ment accrued to buyer due to property improvements— because any such improvements happened while the prop- erty was owned by the sellers and buyer paid the full purchase price. The trial court ordered eviction of occu- pants. Occupants sought a stay, which was granted pending this appeal.

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Related

Klein v. Bisnaire
346 Or. App. 862 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2026)

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346 Or. App. 862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klein-v-bisnaire-orctapp-2026.