Vukanovich v. Kine

285 P.3d 733, 251 Or. App. 807, 2012 WL 3594632, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1029
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 22, 2012
Docket161011969; A146608
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 285 P.3d 733 (Vukanovich v. Kine) 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
Vukanovich v. Kine, 285 P.3d 733, 251 Or. App. 807, 2012 WL 3594632, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1029 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

HADLOCK, J.

This appeal involves a dispute over the validity of a “notice of pendency of an action” recorded under ORS 93.740, also called a “notice of lis pendens.” Plaintiff recorded the challenged notice of lis pendens after he sued defendants Kine and Stonecrest Properties, LLC, (Stonecrest) alleging that they had breached an agreement that called for Kine and plaintiff to invest in a limited liability company that would, in turn, purchase certain real property. As a remedy for the alleged breach, plaintiff claimed entitlement to damages or, as an alternative, specific performance of the agreement. On Stonecrest’s motion, the trial court struck plaintiff’s notice of lis pendens under ORS 205.460, which authorizes circuit courts to strike invalid claims of encumbrance. The present appeal requires us to consider, first, whether plaintiff’s notice of lis pendens constituted a claim of encumbrance against the property for purposes of ORS 205.460. As explained below, we agree with the trial court that the notice of lis pendens was a claim of encumbrance. Given that holding, we must address a second question: whether the notice of lis pendens was a valid claim of encumbrance. We agree with the trial court’s ruling on that point, too. Plaintiff’s notice of lis pendens was invalid because it was not based on litigation “in which the title to or any interest in or lien upon real property is involved, affected or brought in question,” as ORS 93.740 requires. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s limited judgment, which granted Stonecrest’s petition to strike and release the encumbrance created by the notice of lis pendens.

We describe only those facts that relate to the limited issue before us, as alleged in plaintiff’s complaint and supplemented by the record. On September 28,2009, plaintiff and defendant Kine signed a “Letter of Understanding” (the agreement) providing that the two were “working in conjunction to purchase property in Eugene, Oregon, known as Moon Mountain subdivision [(the property)] from Umpqua Bank.” That agreement further provided that Kine and plaintiff were “responsible for bringing in 50% of the dollars needed to purchase the property” and that “[p]rofits [would] be split 50% to [Kine’s] group and 50% to [plaintiff’s] group.” The agreement specified that a “new LLC” would be [810]*810formed “as the purchaser of the property.” It also included a confidentiality provision.

Although Umpqua Bank owned the property when Kine and plaintiff entered into the agreement, plaintiff had owned the property from 2007 through August 2009 and allegedly had invested substantial resources in developing it. Plaintiff alleges that he shared significant knowledge of the property with Kine after they entered the September 2009 agreement. In December 2009, plaintiff and Kine made an offer to purchase the property from Umpqua Bank, which was accepted with certain contingencies to which plaintiff agreed. In early January, however, Kine allegedly informed plaintiff that he no longer was interested in acquiring the property. Accordingly, plaintiff began to explore other ways to purchase it. Plaintiff submitted a new offer in March, but the bank’s realtor told plaintiff that somebody else had already submitted a competing purchase’ offer. Plaintiff later learned that Stonecrest had been formed in March 2010, with Kine as one of its members, and had purchased the property soon thereafter.

Three months later, plaintiff filed suit against defendants Stonecrest, Kine, and two of Stonecrest’s other members: Evans and Kingsley.1 Plaintiff filed his original complaint on June 1, 2010, and filed an amended complaint 10 days later. In support of his first claim, for breach of contract, plaintiff alleged that

“[djefendants Kine and Stonecrest Properties, as Kine’s alter ego, have breached the Agreement by, among other things, purchasing the Property without the knowledge or involvement of Plaintiff in violation of the express terms and overall spirit of the Agreement, and by failing to keep the detailed information that Plaintiff shared with Kine regarding the Property confidential as required by the Agreement.”

As a remedy on that claim, plaintiff alleged entitlement to either $2.5 million in damages or, alternatively, “specific performance of the Agreement or, if complete performance [811]*811is not possible or practical, partial performance of the Agreement and corresponding equitable compensation.” In his prayer for relief on the breach-of-contract claim, plaintiff again alleged that he was entitled to either $2.5 million in damages or “for specific performance of the Agreement whereby defendants would be required to perform their duties pursuant to the terms of the Agreement or, if complete performance is impossible or impractical, for partial performance of the Agreement and just and proper equitable compensation.”2 On the same day that he filed his original complaint, plaintiff recorded a document titled “Notice of Pendency of an Action” (as noted, also called a notice of lis pendens) in which he claimed:

“The object of the action is to compel defendants to convey a 50% interest in the real property to Plaintiff pursuant to the terms of their September 29, 2009 written agreement, for damages resulting from the defendants’ breach of the September 29, 2009 agreement, or some combination of these remedies.”

Stonecrest petitioned to strike and release any encumbrance created by that notice of lis pendens, arguing that the notice was an invalid claim of encumbrance under ORS 205.450. Relying on Doughty v. Birkholtz, 156 Or App 89, 964 P2d 1108 (1998), Stonecrest contended that plaintiff’s claim for specific performance amounted to only a claim for speculative future interest in the property — an interest that could not support a lis pendens notice because plaintiff did not hold a present interest at the time he recorded the notice: “If he happens to win the lawsuit currently under consideration, he may thereby obtain an interest. But that is a ‘speculative future’ interest.”

[812]*812Plaintiff responded that the notice of lis pendens was not, in fact, an encumbrance at all, but only a “notice of a claim filed in circuit court” that did “not create a lien, charge or liability attached to and binding property.” Even if a notice of lis pendens were an encumbrance, plaintiff argued, the notice in this case was valid because it was authorized by, and filed pursuant to, ORS 93.740. See ORS 205.450(8) (a “valid claim of encumbrance” includes an encumbrance that is authorized by statute). The trial court ruled in Stonecrest’s favor and issued a limited judgment striking the notice of lis pendens

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
285 P.3d 733, 251 Or. App. 807, 2012 WL 3594632, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vukanovich-v-kine-orctapp-2012.