Bank of New York Mellon v. Lash ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                      456
    181 of New York Mellon v. Lash
    Bank                                                                                                                303 8,
    April Or2020
    App
    On respondent’s petition for reconsideration filed February 5, and appellant’s
    response to the petition for reconsideration filed February 11; reconsideration
    allowed, former opinion (
    301 Or App 658
    , 457 P3d 345) withdrawn, affirmed
    April 8, 2020
    THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON,
    fks The Bank of New York
    on behalf of Certificateholders of the CWALT Inc.
    Alternative Loan Trust 2006-OA10,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    Anthony LASH,
    and all other occupants,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Washington County Circuit Court
    18LT07750; A168204
    463 P3d 614
    Plaintiff seeks reconsideration in Bank of New York Mellon v. Lash, 
    301 Or App 658
    , 457 P3d 345 (2020) (Lash I). Plaintiff purchased defendant’s prop-
    erty following a sheriff’s sale and brought a forcible entry and detainer (FED)
    action to evict defendant. Defendant moved to dismiss, arguing that plaintiff
    (1) failed to allege the elements necessary to maintain an FED action and
    (2) could not maintain an FED action in the first instance because the two parties
    were not in a landlord-tenant relationship. In Lash I, the Court of Appeals agreed
    with defendant’s second argument and reversed the judgment of eviction. In its
    petition, plaintiff, for the first time in this case, points out that ORS 105.115
    (1)(d) does not require a landlord-tenant relationship to maintain an FED action.
    Held: Reconsideration is appropriate and the former opinion in Lash I is with-
    drawn because ORS 105.115(1)(d) permits plaintiff’s FED action. Because plain-
    tiff could maintain its FED action, the court reached defendant’s alternative
    argument and held that plaintiff’s complaint was not deficient.
    Reconsideration allowed; former opinion withdrawn; affirmed.
    Janelle F. Wipper, Judge.
    Eric Marshack for petition.
    Caleb S. Leonard and Tyler Smith & Associates, P.C., for
    response.
    Before Powers, Presiding Judge, and Mooney, Judge, and
    Linder, Senior Judge.
    Cite as 
    303 Or App 456
     (2020)                    457
    MOONEY, J.
    Reconsideration allowed; former opinion withdrawn;
    affirmed.
    458                        Bank of New York Mellon v. Lash
    MOONEY, J.
    This forcible entry and detainer (FED) case is before
    us on plaintiff’s petition seeking reconsideration of our opin-
    ion in Bank of New York Mellon v. Lash, 
    301 Or App 658
    ,
    457 P3d 345 (2020), in which we reversed the trial court’s
    judgment of eviction. Although we generally do not consider
    arguments made for the first time on reconsideration, we
    will do so on the record before us to correct our mistake
    and to avoid confusion that would logically flow from that
    mistake. For the reasons stated below, we allow reconsider-
    ation, withdraw our former opinion, and affirm.
    In Bank of New York Mellon, plaintiff raised, and
    the parties briefed and argued, two issues: (1) whether the
    trial court should have dismissed the complaint for failure
    to plead an essential statutory element of “unlawfully hold-
    ing by force”; and (2) whether the trial court should have
    directed a verdict for defendant on the theory that the ele-
    ment of “unlawfully holding by force” requires a landlord-
    tenant relationship between the parties. In our opinion, we
    did not reach the first issue because we resolved the appeal on
    the second, agreeing that the statutory meaning of “unlaw-
    fully holding by force” refers only to circumstances where a
    landlord-tenant relationship exists and does not extend to a
    person who unlawfully continues to occupy premises follow-
    ing a sheriff’s sale. 
    Id. at 661
    .
    In petitioning for reconsideration, plaintiff argues
    that we did not consider ORS 105.115(1)(d) in reaching
    our decision and, because we did not, we incorrectly con-
    cluded that the legislature had not extended the use of
    FED actions to purchasers following judicial foreclosures.
    That paragraph, which was added to the statute in 2009,
    Or Laws 2009, ch 638, § 1, specifically provides that one
    cause of an unlawful holding by force occurs when “the
    person in possession of a premises remains in possession
    after the time when a purchaser of the premises is entitled
    to possession” pursuant to the statutes governing sheriff’s
    sales. In response, defendant does not appear to dispute the
    legal significance of the statute or that, under ORS 105.115
    (1)(d), a person who holds over unlawfully after a sheriff’s
    sale “unlawfully holds by force” within the meaning of that
    Cite as 
    303 Or App 456
     (2020)                              459
    provision. Defendant, however, urges that it is too late for
    plaintiff to rely on the statute for the first time in its peti-
    tion for reconsideration and that we should reject plaintiff’s
    argument as unpreserved.
    Defendant is correct that, in general, we do not
    consider arguments raised for the first time in support of
    a petition for reconsideration as a basis on which to allow
    reconsideration and modify our prior opinion. The reasons
    for that general rule are to “ ‘prevent a party from appeal-
    ing in a piecemeal manner,’ to ‘keep[ ] a party from shifting
    its position,’ and to ‘promote the finality of appellate courts’
    decisions and to conserve judicial time.’ ” Vasquez v. Double
    Press Mfg., Inc., 
    288 Or App 503
    , 509, 406 P3d 225 (2017)
    (quoting Kentner v. Gulf Ins. Co., 
    298 Or 69
    , 74, 
    689 P2d 955
    (1984) (brackets in Vasquez)). Here, the need for reconsider-
    ation was created, in part, by plaintiff’s failure to bring the
    2009 amendments to ORS 105.115 to the court’s attention.
    That would have been the most direct and obvious response
    to defendant’s argument that a landlord-tenant relationship
    is required for an FED action to lie. In fact, plaintiff affir-
    matively characterized this as “a case of first impression for
    the Court of Appeals” that was not resolved either by statute
    or case law. Defendant cited and relied only on cases decided
    under the pre-2009 statutory provisions. The parties thus
    framed the issues for this appeal without reference to the
    2009 amendments that added ORS 105.115(1)(d) to ORS
    chapter 105.
    Regardless of why the case was presented as it was
    on appeal, our focus on the issues as framed by the par-
    ties resulted in an incorrect statement of the law. Contrary
    to our opinion, for purposes of an FED action, a person
    unlawfully holds property by force “[w]hen the person in
    possession of a premises remains in possession after the
    time when a purchaser of the premises is entitled to pos-
    session[.]” Federal National Mortgage Association v. Bellamy,
    
    265 Or App 404
    , 410, 336 P3d 526 (2014) (citing ORS
    105.115(1)(d)). An FED action was, therefore, available to
    plaintiff as the post-foreclosure purchaser of the premises,
    despite the fact that the parties lacked a landlord-tenant
    relationship.
    460                           Bank of New York Mellon v. Lash
    Under these circumstances, we conclude that we
    should withdraw our prior opinion despite plaintiff’s failure
    to raise and rely on ORS 105.115(1)(d) until seeking reconsid-
    eration. The problem here, contrary to defendant’s position,
    is not a lack of preservation. Had we become aware of ORS
    105.115(1)(d) despite the parties’ failure to cite it, we would
    properly have considered it, and it would have led us to a
    different statutory conclusion. See generally Dept. of Human
    Services v. J. R. F., 
    351 Or 570
    , 579, 273 P3d 87 (2012) (court’s
    obligation to interpret statutes correctly includes obligation
    to consider all relevant statutes, even if parties do not cite
    and rely on those statutes). In this instance, we misstated
    the law and that misstatement is likely either to mislead or
    invite confusion for the bench and bar in an area of frequent
    litigation. We can readily correct that misstatement of law,
    and we should do so in this instance. We therefore allow
    reconsideration, withdraw our prior opinion, and, for the
    reasons we have discussed, we conclude that the trial court
    correctly denied defendant’s motion for directed verdict.
    Our rejection of defendant’s second assignment
    of error requires us to reach his first assignment of error,
    which challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion to dis-
    miss the complaint for failure to allege an essential element
    of his FED claim. Specifically, defendant argues that plain-
    tiff was required to plead that defendant entered the prem-
    ises with force or unlawfully held the premises with force,
    but, according to defendant, plaintiff failed to do so.
    ORS 105.110 authorizes the filing of an FED action
    as follows:
    “When a forcible entry is made upon any premises, or
    when an entry is made in a peaceable manner and posses-
    sion is held by force, the person entitled to the premises
    may maintain in the county where the property is situated
    an action to recover the possession of the premises in the
    circuit court or before any justice of the peace of the county.”
    An FED action is a statutory cause of action designed to
    allow quick resolution of a single issue between a landlord
    and tenant or, as is the case here, between a purchaser
    at a foreclosure sale and a person who maintains posses-
    sion following the sale: Who is entitled to possession of the
    Cite as 
    303 Or App 456
     (2020)                                  461
    property? See generally Aldrich v. Forbes, 
    237 Or 559
    , 
    391 P2d 748
     (1964). The elements that must be pleaded are set
    forth in ORS 105.123:
    “(1) A description of the premises with convenient
    certainty;
    “(2)   That the defendant is in possession of the premises;
    “(3) That, in the case of a dwelling unit to which ORS
    chapter 90 does not apply, the defendant entered upon the
    premises with force or unlawfully holds the premises with
    force; and
    “(4) That the plaintiff is entitled to the possession of
    the premises.”
    FED complaints must be in “substantially” the form set
    forth in ORS 105.124 (when the Residential Landlord
    Tenant Act (RLTA) applies) or in ORS 105.126 (when the
    RLTA does not apply). ORS 105.130(6) provides that, in non-
    RLTA cases, “the complaint must be in the form prescribed
    in ORS 105.126.”
    Here, it is undisputed that the RLTA does not apply
    to this FED case. Plaintiff therefore should have used a
    pleading substantially in the form of complaint set out in
    ORS 105.126. Plaintiff instead incorrectly used the form set
    out in ORS 105.124 for RLTA cases. As relevant here, the
    form for non-RLTA cases includes allegations that the defen-
    dant “entered upon the premises with force or is unlawfully
    holding the premises with force.” ORS 105.126. The form for
    RLTA cases does not contain that allegation. It does, how-
    ever, include an allegation that the plaintiff is entitled to
    possession of the premises and permits the plaintiff either
    to select among various specified reasons or to fill in a blank
    describing some “other” reason why the plaintiff is entitled
    to possession. In this case, plaintiff filled in that blank by
    alleging: “ORS 105, et. Se[q]. and ORS 88, et. Seq. as the
    defendants hold over the property following a sheriff’s sale.”
    Defendant argues that plaintiff’s use of the incor-
    rect complaint form required its dismissal because it omit-
    ted an essential element (holding the premises by force)
    and was, therefore, “facially ineffective.” In support of that
    argument, defendant argues that the FED statutes must be
    462                                 Bank of New York Mellon v. Lash
    interpreted to require strict compliance because the stat-
    utes are in derogation of the common law. But, that maxim
    is no longer followed in Oregon. Beaver v. Pelett, 
    299 Or 664
    ,
    668-69, 
    705 P2d 1149
     (1985) (holding that the maxim repre-
    sented judicial resistance to the legislature’s proper role and
    should be “put to rest”); accord Association of Unit Owners
    v. Dunning, 
    187 Or App 595
    , 609 n 3, 69 P3d 788 (2003)
    (explaining that the maxim is an anachronism reflecting
    a nineteenth century judicial hostility to the legislature’s
    expanding role in creating statutory actions as a matter of
    public policy). In addition, by their own terms, both ORS
    105.024 and ORS 105.026 require only that the complaint
    “be in substantially” the form specified in the statute. To be
    sure, depending on how the complaint form is filled out, use
    of the wrong form may result in a failure to state a claim.
    But it does not do so per se. The straightforward question is
    whether the complaint that plaintiff filed should have been
    dismissed because it failed to allege an essential element of
    plaintiff’s FED claim. Our standard of review is the same
    as for any ORCP 21 A(8) motion to dismiss: We accept the
    allegations in plaintiff’s complaint as true, together with all
    reasonable inferences. McAlpine v. Multnomah County, 
    131 Or App 136
    , 138, 
    883 P2d 869
     (1994), rev den, 
    320 Or 507
    (1995). Even vague allegations on an element of a claim for
    relief are sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss. 
    Id.
    Under that standard, plaintiff’s complaint was suf-
    ficient. The complaint alleged the elements that are not in
    dispute (description of the premises, defendant was in pos-
    session, and plaintiff is entitled to possession). To satisfy the
    element of entering or remaining unlawfully by force, plain-
    tiff specifically alleged that it was entitled to possession “as
    the defendants hold over the property following a sheriff’s
    sale.”1 Under ORS 105.115(1)(d), as we have discussed, a
    person who holds over following a sheriff’s sale is a cause
    of holding over by force. Plaintiff thus pleaded a specific
    circumstance that, as a matter of law, is a holding over by
    force rather than pleading more generally that defendant
    1
    We acknowledge that plaintiff cross-referenced ORS chapter 88 instead of
    ORS chapter 18. We do not regard that as fatal, especially given the descriptive
    language (defendant holds over on the property following a sheriff’s sale) set forth
    in the complaint.
    Cite as 
    303 Or App 456
     (2020)                             463
    was remaining unlawfully by force, which also would have
    sufficed. See ORS 105.026 (including general allegation in
    form of complaint); see also Lindsey v. Normet, 
    405 US 56
    , 64
    n 8, 
    92 S Ct 862
    , 
    31 L Ed 2d 36
     (1972) (summary allegation
    that the defendant unlawfully holds by force is not unconsti-
    tutionally vague under Oregon’s FED statutes because ORS
    105.115 adequately defines what such a holding entails).
    Because plaintiff’s complaint adequately alleged that defen-
    dant was unlawfully holding by force, defendant was not
    entitled to a dismissal for failure to state a claim. We there-
    fore affirm the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion to
    dismiss for failure to state a claim.
    Reconsideration allowed; former opinion withdrawn;
    affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A168204

Judges: Mooney

Filed Date: 4/8/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024