Niday v. GMAC Mortgage, LLC

284 P.3d 1157, 251 Or. App. 278, 2012 WL 2915520, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 893
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 18, 2012
DocketCV10020001; A147430
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 284 P.3d 1157 (Niday v. GMAC Mortgage, LLC) 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
Niday v. GMAC Mortgage, LLC, 284 P.3d 1157, 251 Or. App. 278, 2012 WL 2915520, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 893 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

NAKAMOTO, J.

This case, one of first impression in the Oregon appellate courts, involves the intersection between Oregon’s nonjudicial foreclosure laws and a creature of more modern vintage: Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., also known as MERS. Since 1959, the Oregon Trust Deed Act has authorized the use of trust deeds as security for home loans and allowed foreclosure of a defaulting homeowner’s interest by means of a privately conducted, advertised trustee’s sale of the home rather than pursuant to a court-ordered, judicial foreclosure — provided, however, that certain statutory requirements are met. One of those requirements is that “any assignments of the trust deed by the trustee or the beneficiary” must be “recorded in the mortgage records in the counties in which the property described in the deed is situated.” ORS 86.735(1).

MERS, meanwhile, was created by the mortgage industry in the early 1990s to make it easier to bundle and sell promissory notes and their related security interests on the secondary market. MERS is not itself a lender. Rather, lenders, loan servicers, investors, and other industry participants can become members of MERS. When a MERS member originates a home loan, MERS — as opposed to the lender — is named as the “beneficiary” of the trust deed that the home buyer provides as security for the home loan. MERS then allows members to transfer and track their beneficial interests in those promissory notes and associated trust deeds through a private, internal database rather than by publicly recording each assignment in county mortgage records.

The question before us — and one that homeowners and MERS are litigating throughout the country under similar state laws1 — is whether MERS and its members [281]*281can avail themselves of Oregon’s statutory, nonjudicial foreclosure process for trust deeds. Plaintiff is a homeowner who, like many other borrowers, executed a trust deed that named MERS as the “beneficiary.” After plaintiff defaulted on her loan repayment obligation, she received a notice of trustee’s sale that identified MERS as the “beneficiary” of the sale and that asserted a power of sale under the trust deed. Plaintiff then filed this declaratory judgment and injunctive relief action to stop the trustee’s sale, arguing that, notwithstanding the labels used in the trust deed, MERS is not the “beneficiary” of the trust deed for purposes of Oregon’s nonjudicial foreclosure laws.

The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of MERS and the other defendants (the loan servicer and the trustee), ruling that MERS was the designated “beneficiary” of the trust deed and that each statutory requirement for nonjudicial foreclosure had been met— including the requirement that any assignments of the trust deed must be recorded in the county mortgage records, ORS 86.735(1). Plaintiff now appeals, again arguing that the “Oregon legislature intended the ‘beneficiary’ to be the one for whose benefit the [deed of trust] is given, which is the party who lent the money,” rather than MERS. We agree and hold that the “beneficiary” of a trust deed under the Oregon Trust Deed Act is the person designated in that trust deed as the person to whom the underlying loan repayment obligation is owed. The trust deed in this case designates the lender, GreenPoint Mortgage Funding, Inc., as the party to whom the secured obligation is owed. And, because there is evidence that GreenPoint assigned its beneficial interest in the trust deed but did not record that assignment, the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of defendants.

I. BACKGROUND

Because the facts giving rise to this dispute are best understood in their broader context, we begin with [282]*282a brief overview of Oregon’s nonjudicial foreclosure laws, recording statutes, and the nature of MERS. We then focus on plaintiff’s trust deed, the facts surrounding the trustee’s notice of the sale of plaintiff’s home, and the trial court proceedings.

A. Real Estate Financing in Oregon

For the first hundred years of statehood, real estate loans in Oregon were typically secured by mortgages. See, e.g., Sellwood v. Gray & DeLashmutt, 11 Or 534, 5 P 196 (1884) (describing various principles of mortgage law). By statute, Oregon law provided (and still provides) that “[a] mortgage of real property is not a conveyance so as to enable the owner of the mortgage to recover possession of the property without a foreclosure and sale.” ORS 86.010. Rather, a mortgage creates a lien on the property that can be foreclosed, like other liens, only by way of judicial action, after a lawsuit has been filed. See ORS 88.010. And, as is the case with other liens, the judicial foreclosure process includes a statutory right to redemption. That is, once a court issues a decree of foreclosure in favor of the mortgagee, thereby ordering the mortgaged property to be sold, the mortgagor nonetheless retains the right to satisfy the debt and redeem the property for a period of time after the sale. ORS 88.080; ORS 88.100; ORS 23.410 - 23.600 (1957).

By the late 1950s, there was a movement afoot to streamline certain features of Oregon’s mortgage laws— particularly, judicial involvement and the statutory right to redemption by borrowers and junior lienholders. See Minutes, Senate Judiciary Committee, SB 172, Feb 19, 1957. In 1959, the legislature responded by enacting what is known as the Oregon Trust Deed Act (OTDA), ORS 86.705 to 86.795, as an alternative to the judicial foreclosure process.2 The OTDA authorizes the use of “[tjransfers in trust of an interest in real property” — i.e., transfers by trust deeds, “to secure the performance of an obligation of a grantor, or any other person named in the deed, to a beneficiary.” ORS 86.710; see also ORS 86.705(5) (defining a “trust deed” as a [283]*283deed executed in conformity with the OTDA that conveys “an interest in real property to a trustee in trust to secure the performance of an obligation owed by the grantor or other person named in the deed to a beneficiary”).3

Under the OTDA, a trust deed is “deemed to be a mortgage on real property” and is generally “subject to all laws relating to mortgages on real property” — except where particular differences are spelled out in the OTDA. ORS 86.715.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 P.3d 1157, 251 Or. App. 278, 2012 WL 2915520, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/niday-v-gmac-mortgage-llc-orctapp-2012.