Newman v. Randall

753 P.2d 435, 90 Or. App. 629
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 20, 1988
DocketA8603-01394; CA A44240
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 753 P.2d 435 (Newman v. Randall) 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
Newman v. Randall, 753 P.2d 435, 90 Or. App. 629 (Or. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

GRABER, J.

This is a declaratory judgment action to construe a land sale contract. The issue is the amount of a balloon payment that plaintiffs were to pay defendant as trustee of the Randall Company Profit Sharing Trust (defendant),1 on January 15, 1986. The trial court held that the payment was the approximately $20,000 plaintiffs tendered, rather than the approximately $139,000 defendant demanded. Defendant appeals, and we affirm.

In 1966, Randall built an apartment complex in southeast Portland. The predecessor of Far West Federal Bank provided the financing; Far West Federal Bank retains a mortgage on the property. In 1970, Randall sold the property for $185,000 to Homeland, Inc., by a land sale contract (the 1970 contract). Homeland’s vendee’s interest in the contract passed, by various assignments, to the Hardys, to whom it was assigned on June 1,1978. That same day the Hardys sold the property to plaintiffs for $239,500 by a new land sale contract (the 1978 contract). The 1978 contract called for down payments, followed by monthly payments that were slightly larger than the payments the Hardys continued to make to Randall under the 1970 contract. The 1978 contract then provided:

“On or before January 15, 1986, [plaintiffs] shall assume the balance then owing under the mortgages and contract described in paragraph 4 of this contract and pay [the Hardys] the difference between the balances owing by [the Hardys] under the mortgages and contract described in paragraph 4 and the balance owing to [the Hardys] under this contract.”

Paragraph 4 listed the mortgage to Far West Federal Bank, the vendor’s interest in the 1970 contract, and a mortgage of the vendor’s interest. The latter mortgage was satisfied before January 15,1986.

In 1981, by a series of assignments and deeds, Randall transferred the vendor’s interest in the 1970 contract to the defendant trust and quitclaimed to it his rights to the property. In 1983, the Hardys assigned their vendee’s interest in the 1970 contract and their vendor’s interest in the 1978 [632]*632contract to the trust. The Hardys also gave the trust a quitclaim deed to the property. Plaintiffs thereafter made their payments on the 1978 contract directly to the trust.

Defendant argues that, as a result of these actions, the trust owned all of the interests in the 1970 contract. Therefore, according to defendant, the 1970 contract disappeared, under the doctrine of merger, and there was no balance owing under it on January 15, 1986. That being so, defendant concludes, plaintiffs were required to pay the full balance of the 1978 contract on that date, less only the approximately $15,000 remaining on the Far West Federal Bank mortgage.

Plaintiffs assert that there was no merger, that the 1970 contract remained in effect, and that they could subtract the amount owed on it from the required balloon payment and assume the continuing monthly payments. Plaintiffs make several arguments in support of their position. We need to consider only one: that defendant does not in fact own all of the interests in the 1970 contract. If that is true, there can be no merger. See Phair v. Walker, 48 Or App 641, 644-45 n 3, 617 P2d 616, rev den 290 Or 271 (1980).

Plaintiffs argue:

“After the sale to Plaintiffs in 1978, Hardy’s interest in the 1970 Contract was nothing more than the right, as vendor of the 1978 Contract, to receive payments under the terms of the 1978 Contract, and to take certain actions in the event of default by Plaintiffs and the 1970 Contract. Plaintiffs’ interest was the equitable interest of a vendee of the 1978 Contract, and included the right to possession of the Subject Property and the right to fee title upon full performance under the 1978 Contract. Plaintiffs’ interests are derived from the 1970 Contract as well as the 1978 Contract, and Plaintiffs have an equitable interest in both. Defendant does not possess all of the vendor’s and vendee’s interests in the 1970 Contract.”

Although plaintiffs cite no authority in support of their position, it is correct. The possessor of a vendee’s interest under a land sale contract may do with it many of the things the owner of a fee may do. The interests the vendee may create are equitable rather than legal and attach to the contract, not to the land, but they are in many respects similar to liens or other interests in a fee. Thus, the vendee may mortgage the interest, [633]*633Sheehan v. McKinstry et al., 105 Or 473, 485-86, 210 P 167 (1922), or assign it, for security or otherwise. Sanders v. Ulrich, 250 Or 414, 443 P2d 231 (1968). Similarly, the holder of a vendee’s interest may enter into a new contract to sell the property. See ORS 93.935(1). The question here is the effect of such a new contract on the ownership of the vendee’s interest. It is, again, similar to the effect of a contract to sell the fee on the ownership of that fee.

A person holding legal title to land who sells it by land sale contract thereby vests the equitable title in the vendee. Grider v. Turnbow, 162 Or 622, 641-42, 94 P2d 285 (1939). The vendor retains the legal title as security and as a trustee for the vendee. Seguin et al v. Maloney-Chambers, 198 Or 272, 284-85, 253 P2d 252, 256 P2d 514 (1953). In the same fashion, a vendee who contracts to sell the vendee’s interest to a new purchaser thereafter holds the vendee’s interest in the original contract in trust for the purchaser under the new contract. 92 CJS, “Vendor and Purchaser,” § 314(c)(3). As a result, the new purchaser, or subvendee, has equitable ownership of the original vendee’s interest. It follows that the original vendee can no more divest the subvendee’s interest by assignment of the original vendee’s interest than the original vendor can divest the original vendee of its interest by assignment of the original vendor’s interest.

This conclusion would be inescapable but for cases which appear to hold that an assignment or mortgage of a vendee’s interest does not survive the conveyance of the vendee’s interest to the vendor. If those cases are followed literally, a contract purchaser of a vendee’s interest would lose all interest in the property upon the vendee’s reconveyance. All of the mortgage cases, and most of the assignment cases, may be distinguished. They involved what were really only security interests that created a lien on the original vendee’s equitable title, rather than transfers. See, e.g., Estate of Brewer v. Iota Delta Chapter, 298 Or 383, 692 P2d 597 (1984); State Hwy. Comm. v. Demarest, 263 Or 590, 608-611, 503 P2d 682 (1972); Sanders v. Ulrich, 250 Or 414, 443 P2d 231 (1968); Sheehan v. McKinstry et al, supra.

In Merchant Land Co. v. Barbour, 65 Or 235, 130 P 976, 132 P 710 (1913), however, the assignee received the assignment of half of the vendee’s interest as an outright [634]*634transfer. The Supreme Court, nevertheless, held that the assignment did not survive the vendee’s later quitclaim to the vendor. The equities in the case weighed against the assignee, and we would question the continuing force of the decision, were it not for Estate of Brewer v. Iota Delta Chapter, supra. There, the court relied on the reasoning of Merchant Land Co. v. Barbour, supra. Estate of Brewer

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Bluebook (online)
753 P.2d 435, 90 Or. App. 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-randall-orctapp-1988.