Pimentel v. White

720 P.2d 758, 79 Or. App. 620
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 4, 1986
Docket82-1729C; CA A35310
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 720 P.2d 758 (Pimentel v. White) 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
Pimentel v. White, 720 P.2d 758, 79 Or. App. 620 (Or. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

BUTTLER, P. J.

Plaintiffs appeal from a trial court’s final order discharging from the record their judgment against defendants, who had filed a motion pursuant to ORS 18.420(1)1 after they had been discharged in bankruptcy from the debt represented by the judgment. Because we conclude that that statute is inapplicable to a judgment lien against the debtor’s homestead, we reverse and remand for further proceedings under ORS 23.280,2 if defendants wish to proceed.

[623]*623On May 27, 1983, plaintiffs obtained a judgment against defendants for $6,950, plus interest, attorney fees and costs. The judgment was docketed five days later in the county in which defendants’ home was located, effecting a lien on that property. ORS 18.350(1).3 On October 12, 1983, defendants filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy and listed the property, for which they claimed a homestead exemption of $20,000, ORS 23.240(1), as an asset, valued at $79,500, and encumbered by a mortgage and a land sale contract securing debts in the aggregate sum of $54,346.06.4 Plaintiffs’ judgment was listed as an unsecured debt; they received notice of the bankruptcy and attended a meeting of creditors but did not object to any of the values listed in the petition. On November 25, 1983, the residence was declared an exempt asset and, on January 31,1984, plaintiffs’ judgment debt was discharged in bankruptcy. On April 27, 1984, defendants sold the house for $84,000. The motion that precipitated this appeal was filed after the title report prepared incident to that sale disclosed plaintiffs’ judgment lien. Believing that the lien had been discharged in bankruptcy, defendants filed a motion under ORS 18.420(1) to discharge and satisfy the judgment of record in order to clear their title.

Plaintiffs contend that the lien was not discharged in bankruptcy and that, therefore, defendants’ remedy is under ORS 23.280, under which plaintiffs are entitled to the sale proceeds in excess of defendants’ homestead exemption to the extent of their leviable interest in the property. Defendants do [624]*624not contend that ORS 23.280 is inapplicable; they contend that, because plaintiffs’ debt was discharged in bankruptcy, ORS 18.420 affords them an alternative remedy.

To hold, as defendants would have us do, that a debtor who has been discharged in bankruptcy has the option of proceeding under ORS 18.420 or 23.280 with respect to a homestead that has survived the bankruptcy would destroy the purpose of ORS 23.280. It is true that ORS 18.420 does not state that its provisions do not apply to pre-bankruptcy judgment liens on homesteads. However, even before the enactment of ORS 23.280 in 1975, it was clear that a judgment lien against a homestead survived the discharge of the debt in bankruptcy. Everett v. Pape’ Bros., Inc., 269 Or 575, 525 P2d 996 (1974); Shepard & Morse Lbr. Co. v. Clawson, 259 Or 154, 486 P2d 542 (1971). That was so, because discharge in bankruptcy relieves the debtor of his personal liability for the judgment debt, but does not destroy the lien against the bankrupt’s property.5 Everett v. Pape’ Bros., Inc, supra.

In the normal course, as a practical matter, the only interest in real property that survives bankruptcy is the declared homestead of the debtor. Accordingly, if there is no homestead against which the judgment was a lien before bankruptcy, the debtor’s discharge has the effect of rendering a pre-bankruptcy judgment a lien against nothing. We believe that the function of ORS 18.420 is to permit a discharged debtor to clear such judgments from the records in order to avoid their clouding his title to real property acquired after his discharge. It is not intended to apply to homesteads.

[625]*625As we explained in State ex rel Nilsen v. Jones, 33 Or App 581, 585-86, 577 P2d 541 (1978):

“Prior to the 1975 amendments to the homestead laws, plaintiffs judgment was a lien against defendants’ real property, ORS 18.350(1), even though their equity therein did not exceed the homestead exemption — the lien remained in limbo and attached to any value of the property in excess of the exemption at the time of levy of execution, even though the property was then owned by a purchaser of the debtor or the debtor had been previously discharged in bankruptcy. However, the excess could not be reached until there was a judicial determination that there was an excess, and there was no statutory procedure to make such a determination except as an incident to the creditor’s voluntary levy of execution. ORS 23.270. The creditor could bide his time in hopes that the value of the property and the ‘leviable interest’ would increase.
“In 1975, the legislature addressed these problems by enacting ORS 23.280-23.300, under which these proceedings were initiated, and by adding subsection (4) to ORS 23.240. ORS 23.280 permits the debtor or his transferee to have a judicial determination of the leviable interest in the homestead at any time after signing an agreement to transfer the property, and provides for determining the value of the property at the time the proceedings are initiated. ORS 23.280(l)(b). The procedure might be characterized as an ‘inverse execution’ in that the creditor is forced to assert and enforce his judgment lien, or lose it with respect to that homestead property of the debtor. It has the salutary effect of permitting the transferee to take the property free of the judgment lien.” (Emphasis in original; footnotes omitted.)6

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
720 P.2d 758, 79 Or. App. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pimentel-v-white-orctapp-1986.