Nelson v. Hughes

625 P.2d 643, 290 Or. 653, 1981 Ore. LEXIS 712
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1981
Docket78-200-E CA 15825 and SC 27125
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 625 P.2d 643 (Nelson v. Hughes) 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
Nelson v. Hughes, 625 P.2d 643, 290 Or. 653, 1981 Ore. LEXIS 712 (Or. 1981).

Opinion

*655 PETERSON, J.

This quiet title suit involves a dispute between contract purchasers whose land sale contract was prior in time, but unrecorded, and a subsequent purchaser — a grantee under a deed — whose deed, though subsequent in time, was recorded. The disposition of the case turns on the allocation of the burden of proof to establish that the subsequent purchaser was or was not a bona fide purchaser for value without notice of the prior purchaser’s claim. The Court of Appeals imposed the burden of proof upon the subsequent purchaser and reversed the lower corut. We affirm the Court of Appeals.

THE FACTS

The facts are without substantial dispute. In August, 1961, the defendants entered into a land sale contract with Robert and Betty Lou Dolands for the purchase of property in Josephine County. The land sale contract contained a metes and bounds description, was not acknowledged, and was not recorded at that time. A deed was placed in escrow.

The Dolands also owned adjoining land, which was subsequently platted and subdivided. In August, 1962, the Dolands deeded two of the subdivided lots to the plaintiff. 1 Plaintiff recorded the deed on August 29, 1962. On March 30, 1964, the land sale contract between the defendants and the Dolands was recorded in the Miscellaneous Records of Josephine County, Oregon. The defendants later paid off the land sale contract, and recorded the deed to their property on February 13, 1979.

Part of the land sold to the plaintiffs overlapped the property described in the defendants’ land sale contract. Plaintiff filed suit to quiet title, asserting her title through the recorded deed of August, 1962. Defendants answered and counterclaimed, seeking to quiet their title, alleging their interest under the 1961 land sale contract. Defendants did not allege that the plaintiff was not a bona fide purchaser for value and without notice. Plaintiff did *656 not allege her bona fide purchaser status in her complaint, her reply, or in her answer to defendants’ counterclaim.

The trial court entered a decree quieting plaintiffs title.

THE STATUTES

At the time of the sales to the parties, ORS 93.640(1) provided:

"Every conveyance affecting the title of real property within this state which is not recorded as provided by law is void as against any subsequent purchaser of the same real property or any portion thereof, in good faith and for a valuable consideration whose conveyance is first filed for record, and as against the heirs and assigns of such purchaser.”

In 1973, Oregon Laws 1973, ch 696,. § 19, amended ORS 93.640 to read in pertinent part:

"(1) Every conveyance, deed, land sale contract or other agreement or memorandum thereof affecting the title of real property within this state which is not recorded as provided by law is void as against any subsequent purchaser in good faith and for a valuable consideration of the same real property, or any portion thereof, whose conveyance, deed, land sale contract or other agreement or memorandum thereof is first filed for record, and as against the heirs and assigns of such subsequent purchaser. * * *”

THE PLAINTIFF’S CONTENTIONS

The plaintiff contends:

1. Recording statutes are liberally construed to accomplish their purposes. Applying such liberal interpretative policy, executory land sale contracts were recordable within those types of statute which deal with recording of "conveyances” of land.

2. Plaintiff was not obligated to anticipate defenses to her quiet title cause of suit. If defendants desired to claim that plaintiff was not a bona fide purchaser under such quiet title complaint, they should have affirmatively raised that defense.

3. The burden should fall on the one whose failure to invoke the protection of the recording acts caused the dispute.

*657 4. The evidence in the record, taken in conjunction with the statutory presumptions under ORS 41.360, made out a sufficient prima facie case of bona fide purchaser status for plaintiff.

DISCUSSION

As stated above, the disposition of this case turns on the allocation of the burden of proving that the subsequent purchaser was or was not a bona fide purchaser for value without notice of the prior purchaser’s claim. We will first examine the policies which operate in determining the allocation of the burden of proof and will then look at prior decisions of this court which relate to the issue at hand. Before doing so, however, it is appropriate to focus upon some aspects of this case as to which there can be no disagreement.

The original conveyance from the Dolands to the defendants transferred the disputed property to the defendants. The Dolands thereafter owned only a security title, the vendors’ interest under a land sale contract. There can be no disagreement that the defendants’ contract, though unrecorded, was valid as a conveyance of equitable title to them. Therefore, the subsequent conveyance by the Do-lands to the plaintiff at most conveyed the vendors security interest in the form of legal title, for the grantors had nothing left to convey.

In order for the plaintiff’s interest to be effective, she must be a purchaser "* * * in good faith and for a valuable consideration whose conveyance [was] first filed for record * * The plaintiff’s displacement of the defendants’ validly obtained interest arises only by virtue of the fact that the statute so provides. 2

Finally, there can be no dispute that if the defendants’ unacknowledged land sale contract was recordable, and had been recorded, no question as to title would exist. In that sense, the defendants’ "fault” in failing to record is a factor to weigh in allocating the burden of proof.

Policies involved in allocating the burden of proof

Allocation of the burden of proof has vexed courts and commentators for decades. There are no fixed rules in *658 allocating the burden of proof. One commentator, after discussing various factors which are involved, apparently despaired of concluding that any test was determinative and concluded his discussion by saying that

"* * * the allocation of the burden is to be determined by considerations of fairness, convenience and policy. Such considerations require the exercise of a sound judgment * * sji » 3

The factors which have been considered in allocating the burden of proof include the following:

1. Precedent; 4

2.

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Bluebook (online)
625 P.2d 643, 290 Or. 653, 1981 Ore. LEXIS 712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-hughes-or-1981.