Kunzman v. Thorsen

740 P.2d 754, 303 Or. 600
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1987
DocketTC 84-12-23; CA A37661; SC S33741
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 740 P.2d 754 (Kunzman v. Thorsen) 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
Kunzman v. Thorsen, 740 P.2d 754, 303 Or. 600 (Or. 1987).

Opinion

*602 CAMPBELL, J.

Plaintiffs, vendors on a land sale contract, brought this action for specific performance of the contract against the vendee’s assignees. The trial court granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and the Court of Appeals affirmed. Kunzman v. Thorsen, 83 Or App 392, 732 P2d 49 (1987). We accepted review of this case to consider the circumstances under which the assignees of a vendee’s interest in a land sale contract will be held to have assumed the vendee’s contract obligations.

The Court of Appeals’ summary of the facts reads:

“In 1977, plaintiffs sold property to David McNabb. Later in the same year, McNabb assigned ‘all of [his] right, title and interest’ in the property to defendants, with the approval of plaintiffs. After that date, all dealings on the contract were between plaintiffs and defendants; McNabb was no longer involved.
“After the assignment, defendants took possession of the property and exercised exclusive control over it. They alone made payments to plaintiffs under the land sale contract. They mortgaged the land to finance a barn that they had built on it. They rented out pasture, ran cattle on the property, allowed others to run cattle on it and listed it for sale. Pursuant to the terms of the contract, they paid for and received lot releases for certain parcels, which they then sold. In 1979, defendants’ attorney threatened plaintiffs with legal action if they did not release deeds to certain parcels in accordance with the contract’s lot release provisions.
“In 1984, defendants defaulted, paying neither the annual installment nor the property taxes, and plaintiffs accelerated the contract balance and commenced this action. Defendants contend that the trial court improperly granted summary judgment, because, as assignees of McNabb’s rights under the contract, they are not, as a matter of law, obligated on the contract because they did not assume the contract.”

83 Or App at 394.

The Court of Appeals, relying upon this court’s opinion in Hodges v. Semine, 211 Or 428, 316 P2d 312 (1957), concluded that defendants had impliedly assumed the vendee’s contractual duties by “claiming the benefits” of the contract. Defendants argue that their actions did not constitute a claim of contract benefits within the meaning of *603 Hodges. For the reasons set out below, we affirm.

It is well-settled in Oregon that “[e]ither party to a contract for the sale of land generally may have specific performance of the contract.” Wittick v. Miles, 274 Or 1, 6, 545 P2d 121 (1976). 1 A vendor’s rights against the assignee of a land sale contract derive from the vendor’s status as third party beneficiary to the contract of assignment between the vendee and the vendee’s assignee. No independent obligation arises between the vendor and the assignee as a result of the acceptance of contract benefits. The scope of the assignment defines the scope of relief available to the vendor. In essence, the vendor’s action is one for specific performance of the assignee’s agreement to assume the vendee’s duties. See 4 Corbin, Contracts 627, § 906 (1964 & Supp 1984).

The dispute in this case is over construction of the instrument of assignment. That instrument conveys to the assignees “all of the vendee’s right, title and interest in and to” the land sale contract “and to the real estate described therein.” The issue is whether this broad and inclusive language was intended by the parties to impose upon the assignees duties of performance under the original contract. As one treatise has stated:

“If the words of the assignment transaction clearly purport to do nothing but transfer to the assignee the assignor’s right against the third party, interpretation is simple. The same is true if the assignee’s words are clearly promissory. The difficulty exists in those cases in which the parties make no clear analysis and do not differentiate in terms between rights and duties; and the assignor purports to assign the ‘contract’ or all of his ‘right and title to the contract.’ If the contract is still bilateral in character, so that the assignor has a duty to perform as well as a right to a performance by the third party, interpretation must depend chiefly upon the context and the surrounding circumstances.”

Id. at 628-29, § 906.

In contracts for the sale of goods that ambiguity has *604 been resolved in favor of a presumption that the assignee has assumed the contract duties. ORS 72.2100(4) reads:

“An assignment of ‘the contract’ or of ‘all my rights under the contract’ or an assignment in similar general terms is an assignment of rights and unless the language or the circumstances (as in an assignment for security) indicate the contrary, it is a delegation of performance of the duties of the assignor and its acceptance by the assignee constitutes a promise by the assignee to perform those duties. This promise is enforceable by either the assignor or the other party to the original contract.”

The Restatement (Second) of Contracts (and its predecessor, the 1932 Restatement) adopted the same presumption as a general rule of contract construction. Restatement (Second) Contracts § 328 (1981); Restatement Contracts § 164 (1932). 2 The justification advanced for this rule is that it most probably conforms to the parties’ intent and to their understanding of the meaning of such broad language of assignment. 3 Williston, Contracts 109, § 418 A (3d ed 1960); Langel v. Betz, 250 NY 159, 162-63, 164 NE 890 (1928). However, the Restatement (Second) includes a caveat in which the American Law Institute reserves its opinion as to whether that presumption “applies to an assignment by a purchaser of his *605 rights under a contract for the sale of land.” Restatement (Second) Contracts § 328 (1981). The Institute explains this reticence in a comment:

“When the purchaser under a land contract assigns his rights, the assignment has commonly been treated like a sale of land ‘subject to’ a mortgage. In this view acceptance of the assignment does not amount to an assumption of the assignor’s duties unless the contract of assignment so provides either expressly or by implication. * * * Decisions refiising to infer an assumption of duties by the assignee have been influenced by doctrinal difficulties in the recognition of rights of assignees and beneficiaries. Those difficulties have now been overcome, and it is doubtful whether adherence to such decisions carries out the probable intent of the parties in the usual case. But since the shift in doctrine has not yet produced any definite changes in the body of decisions, the Institute expresses no opinion on the application of Subsection (2) to an assignment by a purchaser under a land contract.”

Restatement (Second) Contracts § 328,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
740 P.2d 754, 303 Or. 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kunzman-v-thorsen-or-1987.