Lincoln Loan Co. v. City of Portland

976 P.2d 60, 158 Or. App. 574, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 212
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 24, 1999
Docket9403-02151; CA A90943
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 976 P.2d 60 (Lincoln Loan Co. v. City of Portland) 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
Lincoln Loan Co. v. City of Portland, 976 P.2d 60, 158 Or. App. 574, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 212 (Or. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

*576 DE MUNIZ, P. J.

Defendant City of Portland (City) appeals from a judgment entered on a jury verdict awarding plaintiff Lincoln Loan Company (Lincoln) $2,750,000 on its civil rights claim under 42 USC section 1983. Lincoln cross-appeals the directed verdict in favor of defendants Kafoury, Sweet, and McKee (individual defendants). We reverse on the appeal and affirm on the cross-appeal.

We view the facts in the light most favorable to Lincoln, in whose favor the jury found. Brown v. J. C. Penney Co., 297 Or 695, 688 P2d 811 (1984). Portland City Charter section 2-105(a)(35) grants City the power to “regulate the condition, care, use and management of buildings and structures in the City” for the protection of lives and health. City has adopted a housing code that sets the legal minimum standards for the condition of all residential properties within its boundaries, including rentals and owner-occupied housing. Portland City Code 29.05.030 (PCC). In 1991, a citizen task force, the Citizens Advisory Committee on Quality Rental Housing (CAC), was formed, in part, to evaluate the basis of City’s complaints for code violations. The members were appointed by defendant Kafoury and included defendant Sweet, a City staff member. Kafoury directed CAC to find a new source to fund inspection programs necessary to correct pervasive, city-wide rental housing code violations. CAC determined that the existing enforcement system was inadequate and that many of the code violations were related to properties owned by a fairly small number of repeat offenders. CAC recommended that City should pursue the repeat offenders and that City should establish and publicize a list of 12 repeat offenders whose properties would be inspected to clean up numerous violations. The program was intended to target those landlords and their rental properties; contract sellers were not discussed. However, the PCC does not limit code inspections to rental properties, and “owners” of property include sellers and buyers of property under contract as well as landlords. 1 As a result of the recommendations, City revised its code to impose a $50 fee on properties when owners fail to complete repairs within 30 days after *577 the property is cited for code violations. Unpaid fees become hens on the property, with priority over other hens.

The housing code is enforced by City’s Bureau of Buildings. In late 1993, the Bureau implemented the proposed inspection program and assigned defendant McKee actively to inspect rental properties. McKee compiled a list of property owners, including them in the program if (1) the owner owned three or more properties; (2) there were two or more unresolved files with the Bureau; and (3) the owner showed a history of slow response to citations for code violations. The list came to be known as the “Dirty Dozen.” 2 There was evidence that McKee was given minimal or no guidance for defining and applying the criteria but that he visually screened an owner’s properties without issuing citations to verify current condition before undertaking inspections. In late 1993, City inspected the properties of four or five landlords that met the criteria. By December, 42 inspections had been completed and citations had been issued for several properties being sold on contract, as well as on rental properties.

In January 1994, Lincoln was included in the Dirty Dozen. It was the first large property owner selected for the list, and no other mortgagee or contract seller of numerous properties was in the Dirty Dozen. McKee was “not sure” whether he had decided to include Lincoln in the Dirty Dozen before he reviewed Lincoln’s 12 open files, eight of which were for nonrentals. Lincoln, run by Steve Benson and Melinda Wilde, 3 had a decades-long history of disputes with City. In recent years, Lincoln has focused on selling “fixer upper” properties in “as is” condition to persons of limited means or who could not qualify for conventional home mortgage financing. Lincoln provided financing using land sale contracts. At the time of trial, Lincoln had 20 to 30 rental houses, 111 houses being sold on contract, and 67 properties on which it held mortgages.

*578 Lincoln’s customary practice with potential contract purchasers is to ask them about their ability to make the repairs that the properties require and to encourage them to walk through properties to assure that the purchasers have the ability to make the repairs. After inspection and a sale is agreed on, Lincoln prepares a form contract and typically includes a note that the houses have “known deficiencies.” Some of the contracts do not warrant the structural soundness of the dwelling and others acknowledge violations of the PCC. Although buyers promise to make the needed repairs, they cannot always do so, and properties may be returned to Lincoln for resale, a process sometimes repeated several times on the same property. Lincoln failed to record land sale contracts about 60 percent of the time. In that instance, the buyer’s name will not appear on the computer records.

McKee’s visual inspection of the exteriors of the 12 Lincoln properties that were indicated as “open files” revealed violations in all cases. He then obtained a computer printout of houses owned by Lincoln and visually screened an additional 30 properties, “a lot” of which he determined were in need of repair. City then began to inspect all properties Lincoln owned, as defined by the PCC. A large number turned out to be properties that Lincoln was selling on contract rather than rentals. Benson told City that it was improper to inspect properties other than rentals and offered to document which Lincoln properties were rentals, contract sales or mortgages. City’s response was that it “didn’t care” and would inspect the properties if Lincoln had an interest in them. Sweet acknowledged that City extended the program from a landlord inspection to include inspection of contract properties because Lincoln was a “special case.” McKee admitted to Wilde that “there was something else behind the scenes that was going on” and that he knew that some of the buyers would get hurt. City inspected Lincoln’s properties for 15 months, longer than anyone else’s properties. About 51 of Lincoln’s more than 200 properties were issued citations for violations of the code and another 17 received nuisance violations for other code violations.

During the inspection, articles ran in The Oregonian and in the Business Journal, quoting from City sources and suggesting that Lincoln was defrauding its customers and *579 engaging in unlawful trade practices. City also reported Lincoln’s failure to record its contracts to the Attorney General, who subsequently investigated Lincoln. City also held a meeting that was attended by representatives of the Attorney General’s office, volunteer lawyers, and buyers. However, at the meeting, buyers turned on City representatives, expressing anger at the inspections and the refusal to allow them latitude to improve the homes that they had purchased from Lincoln.

It is undisputed that Lincoln’s properties were in need of repair and maintenance and clearly violated the code.

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Related

Meyer v. State
426 P.3d 89 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2018)
Lincoln Loan Co. v. City of Portland
136 P.3d 1 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
976 P.2d 60, 158 Or. App. 574, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lincoln-loan-co-v-city-of-portland-orctapp-1999.