HASELTON, P.J.
Plaintiff, a former tenant of a residential rental property that was financed, at least in part, through the federal Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program, appeals.
Before turning to the particular circumstances of this dispute, it is not only useful, but essential, to describe the LIHTC program. The purpose of the LIHTC program is to encourage the development of low-income rental housing through the allocation of tax credits pursuant to section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC). Oti Kaga v. South Dakota Housing Dev. Authority, 188 F.Supp.2d 1148, 1152 (D.S.D.2002), affd, 342 F.3d 871 (8th Cir.2003). In general, the federal government allocates tax credits, and state housing agencies are responsible for distributing the credits and monitoring recipient projects for compliance with program requirements. Treas. Reg. § 1.42-1 T; Treas. Reg. § 1.42-5. The LIHTC program is regulated by, and state housing agencies report to, the Internal Revenue Service.
For our purposes, it is not necessary to describe the LIHTC program rental and occupancy restrictions in detail. Suffice it to say there are three salient features. First, the taxpayer agrees that a specified number of units in the project will be rented for a restricted amount of rent to tenants whose income is a certain percentage less than the median income of the geographical area in which the project is located. See IRC § 42(g). Second, federal law requires that the taxpayer and state housing agency enter into an "extended low-income housing commitment," which is to be "binding on all successors of the taxpayer," and recorded as a restrictive covenant pursuant to state law. IRC § 42(h)(6)(A), (B). Third, "individuals who meet the income limitation applicable to the building * * * (whether prospective, present, or former occupants of the building)" have the right to enforce the extended low-income housing commitment "in any State court."
Consistently with those requirements, in December 1990, Rose City Village Limited Partnership, the original owner of the project, entered into a Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Reservation and Extended Use Agreement (the extended use agreement) with the Department. The original owner agreed, among other things, that it would maintain 100 percent of the project as low-income housing for 30 years and that, as a condition precedent to the issuance of tax credits, it would record a "declaration of land use restrictive covenants."
In the Declaration of Land Use Restrictive Covenants for Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (the declaration), which was recorded in Multnomah County, the original owner acknowledged the obligations and restrictions imposed under the extended use agreement. Section 2(b) of the declaration provides:
Further, and of critical significance, section 8 of the declaration, which is captioned "Enforcement of Section 42 Occupancy Restrictions," provides, in part:
(Uppercase in original.)
The Department allocated more than $2 million of LIHTC tax credits to the project and monitored the project for conformity with LIHTC program requirements. The project experienced compliance problems over the years. In the course of trying to remediate those problems, the Department learned that, in 2002 or 2003, the original owner had transferred ownership of the project to Rose City Village Affordable Housing Limited Partnership (the middle owner). The manner in which the original owner transferred the project violated the terms of the declaration. The declaration requires, among other things, that the owner notify the Department prior to any transfer of ownership and that the owner obtain the agreement of any buyer "that such acquisition is subject to the requirements of" the declaration and IRC section 42. Those requirements were not satisfied.
The Department ultimately concluded that, although the middle owner had made substantial progress in some respects, the project could not be brought into full compliance with all of the requirements of the LIHTC program.
With that letter, the Department also submitted multiple IRS 8823 forms, entitled "Low-Income Housing Credit Agencies Report of Noncompliance or Building Disposition."
In 2005, the middle owner and the Department entered into a Settlement, Satisfaction and Partial Release Agreement (the release agreement). The release agreement recites that "the parties desire to resolve all outstanding issues between them by means of this Agreement" and provides, in part:
Shortly after it was executed, the release agreement was recorded in Multnomah County.
In 2006, the middle owner sold the project to the present owner, BRCP, for a very substantial profit. Later in that same year, and despite the three-year "safe harbor" provision of the release agreement, BRCP issued a 30-day, no-cause eviction notice to plaintiff, among other tenants. Plaintiff stated in her declaration that, by the time she vacated her apartment in response to the eviction notice, almost all of her neighbors had moved, and the project "was like a ghost town." BRCP does not operate the project in a manner that complies with the restrictions of the LIHTC program and declaration. For example, at the time of the summary judgment proceedings below, BRCP did not screen tenants for income eligibility or rent exclusively to tenants who qualified as "low-income" under section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code.
Plaintiff subsequently filed this action, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief to enforce the original owner's commitment to maintain the property as low-income housing for the remainder of the declaration's 30-year term. BRCP and the Department jointly moved for summary judgment, arguing that the release agreement is "valid and enforceable against plaintiff and other current and future tenants[.]" In so contending, defendants asserted, in part, that Chevron deference should be accorded to the Department's decision to execute the 2005 release agreement. Plaintiff opposed defendants' motion for summary judgment and filed a cross-motion, asserting that the release agreement did not, and could not, abrogate her right to obtain specific performance of the declaration.
The trial court granted defendants' motion for summary judgment and denied plaintiffs cross-motion. The court determined that the Department's decisions to "terminate" the project from participation in the LIHTC program and enter into the release agreement
Plaintiff appeals, assigning error to the allowance of defendants' motion for summary judgment and to the denial of her cross-motion for summary judgment.
Eden Gate, Inc. v. D & L Excavating & Trucking, Inc., 178 Or.App. 610, 622, 37 P.3d 233 (2002) (citations omitted). As amplified below, we conclude that deference under Chevron is not warranted and that the 2005 release agreement did not abrogate plaintiff's right to enforce the original use restrictions prescribed in the 1990 declaration. Accordingly, the trial court erred in granting defendants' motion for summary judgment and in denying plaintiffs cross-motion.
We begin with the trial court's basis for disposition—viz., deference in accordance with the principles set forth in Chevron.
However, deference is appropriate only where "Congress has not directly addressed the precise question at issue[.]" Chevron, 467 U.S. at 843, 104 S.Ct. 2778. "If the intent of Congress is clear, that is the end of the matter; for the court, as well as the agency, must give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress." Id. at 842-43, 104 S.Ct. 2778.
Here, invoking Chevron deference, the trial court noted that the Internal Revenue Code explicitly identifies two situations in which the extended-use period will terminate early (neither of which was applicable in the circumstances of this case).
As to that "remaining question," the court concluded that Congress had not directly addressed the subject and that the "actions" of the parties to the release agreement "were reasonable and will be entitled to deference."
The court's invocation of Chevron deference was erroneous because the Department is not an entity to which deference is warranted under Chevron. The Department is an agency established under state statute. See ORS 456.555(1). "A state agency's interpretation of federal statutes is not entitled to the deference afforded a federal agency's interpretation of its own statutes under Chevron * * *." Orthopaedic Hosp. v. Belshe, 103 F.3d 1491, 1495 (9th Cir.1997).
BRCP suggests, nevertheless, that deference to the Department is warranted under Chevron because the circumstances here are analogous to those in Friends of Columbia Gorge. We disagree.
In Friends of Columbia Gorge, the Oregon Supreme Court held that interpretations by the Columbia River Gorge Commission (Gorge Commission) of certain provisions of the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area Act, 16 USC § § 544-544p, were entitled to Chevron deference. In so holding, the court pointed to specific features of the federal authorizing legislation—including those requiring the Gorge Commission to develop, implement, and administer a management plan "in cooperation and consultation with the United States Secretary of Agriculture"—and emphasized that, as a matter of Congressional intent, "[t]he Act clearly contains gaps that the [Gorge] commission is charged with filling." 346 Or. at 369-70, 381-82, 213 P.3d 1164.
Here, in contrast, nothing in the authorizing legislation for the LIHTC program delegates to the Department or other state housing agencies the expansive type of "rulemaking" authority conferred on the Gorge Commission. To the contrary, section 42(n) of the Internal Revenue Code provides that "[t]he Secretary shall prescribe such regulations as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out the purposes of this section[.]"
BRCP contends, alternatively, that Chevron deference applies because an IRS employee's advice informed the Department's decision to remove the project from the LIHTC program. In particular, BRCP points to evidence that an IRS employee advised the Department in a phone conversation
In sum, the trial court erred in granting defendants' summary judgment motion based on its application of Chevron deference. That, however, is merely the beginning, not the end, of our inquiry. That is so because, as noted, plaintiff has also challenged the denial of her cross-motion for summary judgment, and defendants, individually and collectively, proffer alternative legal bases for affirming the trial court's dismissal of plaintiff's claims. None of the parties suggests that those cross-cutting contentions implicate disputed issues of material fact. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the 2005 release agreement did not abrogate plaintiff's entitlement to enforce the use restrictions prescribed in the 1990 declaration and that defendants' asserted defenses to the enforcement of those restrictions fail as a matter of law. Accordingly, the trial court erred in denying plaintiff's cross-motion for summary judgment.
We begin with the pertinent provisions of the declaration. In section 2(b) of the declaration, the original owner of the project and the Department agreed that the use restrictions set forth in the declaration would be "covenants running with the Project land," encumbering the project for the term of the declaration and binding all successors in title for the stated duration. See 246 Or.App. at 213-16, 266 P.3d at 95-96. Section 2(b) further provides that the "benefits" of the covenants and restrictions "shall inure to the Department and any past, present or prospective tenant of the Project." (Emphasis added.) Finally, under section 8(b) of the declaration, both the Department and "any individual who meets the income limitation applicable under section 42 (whether prospective, present or former occupant) shall be entitled * * * to enforce specific performance" of obligations owed under that document. (Emphasis omitted.) Thus, under the declaration, plaintiff is an intended third-party beneficiary of the use restrictions and, pursuant to section 8(b), she is independently entitled to enforce those use restrictions, even if the Department has waived its ability to do so.
BRCP contends, however, that the release agreement abrogated the use restriction, precluding plaintiff or any other intended beneficiary from enforcing those restrictions. That argument fails because, under Oregon law— which is expressly made applicable by both section 8(e) of the declaration and section 4 of the release agreement—a grantor and grantee cannot terminate a restrictive covenant without the consent of the intended beneficiary. Snashall et ux. v. Jewell et ux., 228 Or. 130, 137-38, 363 P.2d 566 (1961).
In Snashall, the parties lived in the same subdivision and received their deeds from common grantors. 228 Or. at 132, 363 P.2d 566. The defendants' deed contained a restrictive covenant prohibiting buildings over one story in height and also contained a covenant that building plans be approved by the common grantors. The defendants, in an attempt to defeat the restrictive covenant, transferred the property back to the original grantors, who then reconveyed the land to the defendants, with the deed of reconveyance effectively omitting the building restriction. Id. at 133, 363 P.2d 566. The plaintiffs subsequently, successfully brought an action for breach of contract, asserting that the defendants' home violated the restrictive covenants.
The defendants appealed, and the Supreme Court affirmed. In so holding, the court determined that
Id. at 137-38, 363 P.2d 566 (emphasis added). The Supreme Court concluded that, "by reason of either the theory of third party beneficiary or the theory of implied reciprocal servitude, [the] plaintiffs are entitled to enforce the restrictive covenant contained in [the] defendants' deed." Id. at 138, 363 P.2d 566. See also Menstell et al. v. Johnson et al., 125 Or. 150, 167, 262 P. 853 (1927), reh'g den., 125 Or. 150, 266 P. 891 (1928) (restrictive covenant may not be modified "without the consent or acquiescence of the [beneficiaries]").
Plaintiff contends (we believe correctly) that Snashall is dispositive. Notwithstanding plaintiff's invocation of Snashall, defendants do not directly address Snashall, Menstell, and the other related cases cited by plaintiff
BRCP further argues that, in all events, it is not bound by the use restrictions set forth in the declaration because the declaration did not succeed in creating covenants that run with the land at law.
Johnson v. Highway Division, 27 Or.App. 581, 584, 556 P.2d 724 (1976), rev. den., 277 Or. 99 (1977) (emphasis omitted). Specifically, BRCP argues that the first and fourth requirements are not satisfied.
BRCP's argument fails because the declaration itself expressly provides that all of the requirements under Oregon law for creation of a restrictive covenant running with the land are deemed satisfied. In section 2(b), the parties to the declaration agreed "that any and all requirements of the laws of the State of Oregon to be satisfied in order for the provisions of this Declaration to constitute deed restrictions and covenants running with the land shall be deemed to be satisfied in full[.]" BRCP does not cite, and
In all events, even if the requisites of the covenant running with the land were somehow not satisfied, BRCP would nevertheless be subject to enforcement of the use restrictions as an equitable servitude. That is so because the original owner and the Department agreed in section 2(b) of the declaration that, in the event that the declaration somehow failed to create covenants running with the land at law, an equitable servitude would be created "to insure that [the] restrictions run with the Project." In Ebbe v. Senior Estates Golf, 61 Or.App. 398, 404-05, 657 P.2d 696 (1983), we summarized the elements of an equitable servitude:
An equitable servitude creates a burden that will fall on subsequent holders of the property "`with the single qualification that a subsequent owner who acquires the legal estate for value and without notice takes it free from this burden.'" Hall v. Risley and Heikkila, 188 Or. 69, 99, 213 P.2d 818 (1950) (quoting John Norton Pomeroy, 4 Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence § 1295, 850 (5th ed.)). Either actual or constructive notice of the covenant is sufficient to bind a subsequent owner. Ebbe, 61 Or.App. at 405, 657 P.2d 696.
BRCP remonstrates that an equitable servitude is inapposite because it did not have actual or constructive notice of the use restrictions set forth in the declaration. The uncontroverted evidence is to the contrary— and, indeed, BRCP had both actual and constructive notice of the covenants. In particular, the individual in charge of due diligence for BRCP's acquisitions acknowledged that she had learned of the existence of the declaration and the covenants included therein before BRCP purchased the project. Thus, BRCP acquired the project with actual notice of the use restrictions. In addition, the recording of the declaration operated to give BRCP constructive notice of the use restrictions imposed by that document. ORS 93.643 (addressing constructive notice from recordation of interest in real property); see also Huff v. Duncan, 263 Or. 408, 411, 502 P.2d 584 (1972).
BRCP argues, however, that it should not be bound by the use restrictions imposed in the declaration because, in deciding to purchase the project, it reasonably relied on the intervening release agreement. BRCP maintains that the release agreement appeared to be a valid release of the declaration "on its face," rendering the explicit use restrictions of the recorded declaration of "no import." We disagree.
As a threshold matter, BRCP's "facial" characterization of the release agreement is insupportable. As noted, see 246 Or.App. at 219 n. 8, 266 P.3d at 98 n. 8, nothing in the release agreement expressly addresses the enforcement rights of qualified low-income tenants as third-party beneficiaries of the declaration's use restrictions. Regardless, a purchaser of real property has a duty to examine all documents in the property's chain of title and is "bound by the recitals in the conveyances necessary to his chain of title." Phair v. Walker, Coe, 277 Or. 141, 144, 559 P.2d 882 (1977); see also Jennings v. Lentz, 50 Or. 483, 490, 93 P. 327 (1908) (purchaser must use reasonable diligence in conducting search of documents in chain of title or "assume the risk" of taking property subject to competing interest). BRCP cites no authority in support of its argument that it was entitled to rely on only the release agreement simply because the release agreement was the most recently recorded document in the project's chain of title.
Finally, BRCP posits that the release agreement extinguished plaintiffs enforcement rights because the declaration provides that it can be amended "as may be necessary to comply with the [Internal Revenue Code], any and all applicable rules, regulations, policies, procedures, rulings or other official statements pertaining to the [LIHTC program]." Again, that contention is unavailing. Even assuming that the release agreement could somehow be deemed a mere "amendment" to the declaration, its content does not "comply" with the Internal Revenue Code or other applicable law. Rather, abrogation of the enforcement rights conferred on plaintiff is inconsistent with the proper application of IRC section 42 and applicable regulations and authoritative pronouncements pertaining to the LIHTC program.
Defendants concede that there is no express authority under federal law to extinguish the enforcement rights conferred on qualified tenants for noncompliance with LIHTC program requirements during the extended-use period.
The private enforcement rights conferred on qualified low-income tenants are an integral part of Congress's comprehensive design. As already noted, the LIHTC program is front-loaded. See 246 Or.App. at 212-13, 266 P.3d at 94-95. A project owner typically receives tax credits during the first 10 years of a project's life. Moreover, although a portion of the tax credits allocated
To effectuate continued enforcement, Congress conferred on qualified tenants enforcement rights for the duration of the 30-year extended-use period. IRC § 42(h)(6)(B)(ii). The private enforcement mechanism included in the tax code and restated in the declaration ensures full performance of the promises made by a recipient taxpayer after the tax credits are fully allocated and the recapture period has passed.
As noted, see 246 Or.App. at 220-22 n. 11, 266 P.3d at 98-99 n. 10, Congress explicitly described two situations in which the extended-use period terminates before the end of the 30-year extended-use period. One of those triggering events is an acquisition of the project by foreclosure or instrument in lieu of foreclosure, "unless the Secretary determines that such acquisition is part of an arrangement with the taxpayer a purpose of which is to terminate" the extended-use period. IRC § 42(h)(6)(E)(i)(I). We agree with amicus National Housing Law Project (NHLP) that,
We also agree with plaintiff and NHLP that, if failure to comply with program requirements were grounds for early release from the applicable use restrictions, it would create a perverse incentive to encourage noncompliance. An owner of a property subsidized with public funds would be encouraged to violate program requirements in order to secure early release from the LIHTC program. Once released from the obligation to maintain the property as low-income housing for the stated period, an owner would be free to charge market-rate rent or to sell the project for a profit, thereby profiting from a public subsidy without fulfilling the conditions of that subsidy.
In sum, permitting abrogation of LIHTC program-prescribed use restrictions—and, specifically, tenants' rights to enforce those restrictions—by way of "releases" between project owners and local housing agencies would subvert, and even invert, Congressional intent. Plaintiff is, thus, entitled to enforce the declaration's use restrictions, and the trial court erred in concluding otherwise.
Reversed and remanded.
"Subsection (b)" of the declaration referenced in the excerpt set forth immediately above, along with section 6(c) of the declaration, mirrors, in substance, IRC § 42(h)(6)(E), set out below. See 246 Or.App. at 220-22 n. 11, 266 P.3d at 98-99 n. 11.
OAR 813-090-0070 provides, in part: