Partlow v. Clark

653 P.2d 568, 60 Or. App. 237, 1982 Ore. App. LEXIS 3817
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 10, 1982
DocketNo. 16-81-06494, CA A23332
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 653 P.2d 568 (Partlow v. Clark) 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
Partlow v. Clark, 653 P.2d 568, 60 Or. App. 237, 1982 Ore. App. LEXIS 3817 (Or. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinions

BUTTLER, J.

Plaintiff brought this action for partition of real property and for damages to the property. As an affirmative defense, defendants alleged that they had purchased the property for value from its record owner and had no notice of plaintiffs interest. The trial court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment based on that defense, and plaintiff appeals from the ensuing judgment for defendants. We reverse and remand.

The material facts are not disputed. Plaintiffs marriage was dissolved by a Lane County circuit court decree entered on May 22, 1975. The dissolution decree awarded certain real property located in that county, of which her former husband was the record owner, to plaintiff and her former husband as tenants in common; it required the parties to execute all documents necessary to transfer title to the properties within 60 days, in default of which the decree stood as the equivalent thereof. The decree further provided that the property was to be sold and the net proceeds divided equally between them. The decree was docketed on May 22, 1975, but was not recorded in the deed records. The former husband did not execute the deed as required by the decree; after 60 days had transpired, title to an undivided one-half interest in the property passed to plaintiff by operation of law. Notwithstanding that fact, the deed records showed plaintiffs former husband as the record title holder, and in April, 1976, he sold the property to persons who later sold it to defendants, on August 8, 1978, who recorded their deed two days later.

Defendants contend that any interest in the property plaintiff acquired through the decree is void as to them, because the decree was not recorded and because defendants did not have actual knowledge of plaintiffs interest at the time they purchased the property and recorded their deed. In support of that contention, they rely on ORS 93.640(1), 93.680(1) and Temple v. Osburn, 55 Or 506, 106 P 16 (1910). ORS 93.640(1) provides in relevant part:

“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 [240]*240provided 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 * * *.”

ORS 93.680(1)(b) provides:

“(1) The following are entitled to be recorded in the record of deeds of the county in which the lands lie, in like manner and with like effect as conveyances of land duly acknowledged, proved or certified:
* * * *
“(b) Judgments of courts in this state requiring the execution of a conveyance of real estate within this state.”

It is clear enough that under ORS 93.680(1) (b) the decree could have been recorded in the deed records. The question is whether the transfer of title which took place under the self-executing decree was, by virtue of ORS 93.640(1), void as to defendants because it was not recorded in the deed records.

The situation is analogous to that presented in United Finance Company v. King, 285 Or 173, 590 P2d 228 (1979), where a dissolution decree entered in Multnomah County required the defendant to convey real property in Clackamas County to his former wife. That decree was not “filed” in Clackamas County until long after a judgment was entered in that county against defendant, who was the record owner of the Clackamas County real property. The issue was whether the judgment was a lien against that property under ORS 18.350(1),1 given the provisions of ORS 18.370:

“A conveyance of real property, or any portion thereof, or interest therein, shall be void as against the lien of a judgment, unless such conveyance be recorded at the time of docketing such judgment, or the transcript thereof, as the case may be.”

[241]*241The court held that the judgment was not a lien on that property, because defendant’s wife had become the owner of the property by virtue of the earlier decree, although the decree was not filed, docketed or recorded in any public record in Clackamas County.

The functions of ORS 18.370 and ORS 93.640(1) appear to be identical — to give constructive notice to subsequent third parties of the transferee’s interest in the property. In United Finance, the court reasoned that the property did not change ownership by virtue of a conveyance but, rather, by a decree. Therefore, ORS 18.370, by its terms, was not applicable.2 In so reasoning, the court avoided the necessity of explaining the statement it had made two years earlier in Wilson v. Willamette Industries, 280 Or 45, 569 P2d 609 (1977), that ORS 18.370 and 18.350 were conflicting and that ORS 18.350 controlled, because it was intended to limit the lien to the property of the defendant only, and not to give a lien on some other person’s property. 280 Or at 48.

Although that conclusion seems apparent enough, the same reasoning applied here leads to the conclusion that plaintiffs former husband could not convey to another real property that had been transferred previously to her by the decree. That reasoning begs the question: was the earlier transfer void as to judgment creditors, ORS 18.370, or as to bona fide purchasers, ORS 93.640(1), because there was nothing of record to give notice to third parties of the transferee’s interest? In Wilson, there was a conveyance (a deed), which was not recorded, and the court, relying on Thompson et al. v. Hendricks et al, 118 Or 39, 245 P 724 (1926), held that the plaintiff, a judgment creditor, had no lien on the property, because defendant no longer owned it. In Thompson,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

John Latta Associates, Inc. v. Vasilchenko
246 P.3d 72 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2010)
Partlow v. Clark
671 P.2d 103 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1983)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
653 P.2d 568, 60 Or. App. 237, 1982 Ore. App. LEXIS 3817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/partlow-v-clark-orctapp-1982.