ORTEGA, P.J.
This appeal involves a dispute over priority by two creditors of Klahowya Condominium, LLC, (Klahowya), the developer of a failed property development. The trial court concluded that trust deeds held by defendant Shorebank Pacific Corporation (Shorebank) had priority over an architect's lien filed by plaintiff SERA Architects, Inc. (SERA) and entered a limited judgment to that effect. The trial court's decision had two aspects: first, that Shorebank's trust deed had priority under the Construction Lien Law, ORS 87.005-87.060, and second, that, under the doctrine of equitable subrogation, Shorebank's trust deed was substituted to the first position of a prior mortgagee whose loan had been paid off from the proceeds of Shorebank's loan. SERA appeals the limited judgment, assigning error to the trial court's determination of priority. Shorebank cross-appeals the limited judgment, challenging trial court rulings related to the validity of SERA's lien. Shorebank also cross-appeals the supplemental judgment that awarded attorney fees to SERA from Klahowya, arguing that SERA was not entitled to the full amount of fees awarded because a large percentage of those fees were incurred in SERA's failed attempt to establish priority over Shorebank.
Ultimately, we conclude that SERA's lien had priority over Shorebank's trust deed under the Construction Lien Law and that the trial court erred by subrogating Shorebank's trust deed to first position. Accordingly, we reverse and remand the limited judgment on appeal. Given our resolution of SERA's appeal, we also affirm the supplemental judgment, which Shorebank cross-appeals.
The following facts are undisputed. In January 2006, Klahowya
In November 2006, Shorebank provided Klahowya with a line of credit, secured by a trust deed on the development property, in
Klahowya paid SERA for services rendered until sometime in early 2007, at which point it stopped making payments. SERA recorded a claim of lien on the property on June 29, 2007, asserting a lien for $375,598, plus interest.
In October 2007, SERA sued Klahowya and Shorebank for foreclosure of its construction lien, alleging that Klahowya owed it a balance of $375,598, together with fees and interest, for work performed under the contract.
Shorebank answered SERA's complaint and raised several affirmative defenses, including that Shorebank's trust deed had priority over SERA's lien by virtue of the Construction Lien Law and that, regardless, Shorebank was equitably subrogated to the first lien position of Triangle's trust deed to the extent that Shorebank's loan proceeds were used to pay off the Triangle loan. Shorebank also brought a counterclaim against Klahowya to foreclose Shorebank's trust deed.
After the parties engaged in extensive pretrial motion practice, the trial court conducted a bench trial on SERA's lien claims as to the amount due SERA by Klahowya and the priority issue between SERA and Shorebank. At the close of trial, the court ruled that Shorebank's trust deed on the development property had priority over SERA's lien. The court later entered a limited judgment in favor of SERA against Klahowya for the amount of the lien, but establishing the priority of Shorebank's trust deed over SERA's lien.
After trial, SERA petitioned for attorney fees from Klahowya pursuant to ORS 87.060 and its contract with Klahowya. Shorebank opposed the petition, contending that, to the extent that SERA sought attorney fees related to its "claim of foreclosure against Shorebank," such fees were improper because SERA did not prevail on that claim. Accordingly, Shorebank argued that $74,745 of the fees sought were unavailable because they pertained to SERA's unsuccessful litigation with Shorebank over priority. The trial court entered a supplemental judgment awarding SERA the full amount of fees it had sought.
SERA appeals from the limited judgment. Shorebank cross-appeals from the limited judgment and the supplemental judgment awarding attorney fees. We begin with Shorebank's cross-appeal of the limited judgment
Exhaustive detail of the proceedings and legal arguments that underlie Shorebank's cross-appeal would not benefit the bench, bar, or public, but we briefly describe the context for our decision to affirm the trial court's ruling that Shorebank challenges. Shorebank made a motion at the close of SERA's case that has been alternatively characterized as a motion for reconsideration of an earlier summary judgment order or a motion for directed verdict. Shorebank sought a ruling that SERA's lien-which the trial court had already ruled was valid in the context of earlier proceedings in which Shorebank chose not to participate-was untimely under ORS 87.035
We proceed to address SERA's appeal from the limited judgment, challenging the trial court's ruling that Shorebank's trust deed had priority over SERA's lien. At trial, SERA argued that, under the Construction Lien Law, its lien had priority over Shorebank's trust deed. Shorebank countered that the lien law supported Shorebank's claim of priority and, alternatively, that the doctrine of equitable subrogation placed Shorebank's trust deed in the same position as Triangle's trust deed, thus giving Shorebank priority.
The trial court concluded that Shorebank's trust deed on the development property would hold the same priority position as Triangle's trust deed by equitable subrogation — at least as to the amount of the Shorebank loan that was used to pay off the Triangle loan. Because there remained a question of priority of the additional Shorebank loans ($250,000 related to the modification of the trust deed on the development property and $250,000 related to the separate note secured by the trust deed on the Blossom Trail property), the court also analyzed the relevant statutes and determined that Shorebank's trust deeds, as to those additional amounts, had priority over SERA's lien. We conclude that the trial court was incorrect in both of those conclusions.
Although the trial court first addressed the issue of equitable subrogation and then analyzed the priority issue under the relevant statutes, we begin with the statutory issue because of its potential to dispose of the entire appeal. That is, if Shorebank's trust deed has priority under the Construction Lien Law, then all amounts secured by its trust deed would have priority over SERA's lien,
In preparation for our examination of the Construction Lien Law, we begin with a general common-law rule that operates in the background of the governing statutes — the "first in time is first in right" rule. See Director of Veterans' Affairs v. Vickery, 299 Or. 315, 318, 702 P.2d 1070 (1985) (recognizing that rule in the context of determining if a mortgage lien had priority over a city's nuisance abatement lien). Stated simply, that rule provides that an earlier lien is entitled to satisfaction before a subsequent lien. See Rankin v. Scott, 25 U.S. (12 Wheat) 177, 179, 6 L.Ed. 592 (1827) ("The principle is believed to be universal, that a prior lien gives a prior claim, which is entitled to prior satisfaction, out of the subject it binds, unless the lien be intrinsically defective, or be displaced by some act of the party holding it, which shall postpone him in a court of law or equity to a subsequent claimant.").
With that background in mind, we turn to the applicable statutes. ORS 87.010 sets forth a number of categories of construction-related liens, one of which is the architect's lien that is at issue in this case. Specifically, ORS 87.010(5) provides:
ORS 87.035 provides the process for perfecting a construction lien, which is done by timely filing a claim of lien with the county recording officer.
ORS 87.025 establishes specific rules that address priority of construction liens in various circumstances. The following provisions of that statute are relevant to our analysis:
SERA's argument at trial and on appeal is straightforward. SERA contends that ORS 87.010(5) authorizes its lien on the land and structures necessary for the use of the plans, drawings, or specifications it prepared. ORS 87.035(2) provides that the lien must be perfected by recording a claim of lien. ORS 87.025(7) states, in part, that "[t]he perfection of lien under ORS 87.035 relates to the date of commencement of the improvement as defined in ORS 87.005." SERA asserts that its lien relates back to the date that BooCo began work on the development property in July 2006 because "commencement of the improvement" is defined in ORS 87.005(1) as the "first actual preparation or construction upon the site * * * of such substantial character as to notify interested persons that preparation or construction upon the site has begun or is about to begin[,]" and ORS 87.005(9) provides that "`[p]reparation' means excavating, surveying, landscaping, demolishing or detaching existing structures or leveling, filling in or otherwise making land ready for construction." According to SERA, because BooCo's site preparation began in July 2006 — before Shorebank recorded its trust deed — SERA's lien has priority over Shorebank's trust deed.
Shorebank counters that, because its trust deed was recorded before SERA filed its claim of lien in June 2007, Shorebank's trust deed has priority under the first in time is first in right rule. That is, Shorebank's position is that priority of SERA's lien is requested for purposes of the first in time is first in right rule by the date that SERA filed its claim of lien, not the "commencement of the improvement." Shorebank also notes that although ORS 87.025(2) grants priority to certain liens over prior recorded interests, that statute is not applicable here because it operates to grant superpriority only when an improvement has been constructed. See Bratzel v. Stafford, 140 Or. 661, 664-65, 14 P.2d 454 (1932) (concluding that prodecessor statute to ORS 87.025 was intended to prioritize construction liens only over the improvement). Accordingly, Shorebank notes that although SERA had a lien upon the land, ORS 87.025(2) did not grant that lien any priority.
Shorebank also disputes SERA's assertion that ORS 87.025(7) grants all construction liens priority as to the date of the "commencement of the improvement." Shorebank maintains that the second sentence of ORS 87.025(7) "expressly states that it does not [a]ffect priorities." Accordingly, Shorebank argues that ORS 87.025(7), by its plain terms, does not change the priority rule in ORS 87.025(2) and that because ORS 87.025(2) only grants priority to liens perfected on an improvement, Shorebank has priority under the fist in time is first in right rule.
Properly framed, the parties' fundamental disagreement reduces to a dispute over the date that SERA's lien on the development property should be measured for purposes of the first in time is first in right rule. SERA asserts that its lien encumbered the development property before Shorebank's trust deed was recorded, while Shorebank argues that SERA's lien did not encumber the development property until the claim of lien was recorded — which was after Shorebank recorded its trust deed.
Initially, we agree with SERA that ORS 87.010(5) establishes that, once SERA prepared plans, drawings, or specifications intended for use in the construction of an improvement to Klahowya, SERA had "a lien upon the land and structures necessary for the use of the plans, drawings or specifications." That lien was then inchoate and was not enforceable until SERA perfected it by complying with ORS 87.035. Once it did so, however, ORS 87.025(7) provides that the lien "relates to the date of commencement of the improvement as defined in ORS 87.005." Therefore, the statute appears to contemplate that the lien attaches to the property at the "commencement of the improvement." Because it is undisputed that BooCo commenced the improvement in July 2006, SERA's lien would relate to that date for purposes of establishing priority unless the remainder of ORS 87.025(7) precludes that construction of the statutory scheme.
As noted, ORS 87.025(7) provides:
Added to the Construction Lien Law in 1987, Or. Laws 1987, ch. 662, § 3, as part of Senate Bill (SB) 356 (1987),
Accordingly, we must inquire as to the law of priorities in construction liens at the time that the legislature enacted ORS 87.025(7). At that time, the law was that a construction lien, if perfected by filing a claim of lien, related to and encumbered the property as of the beginning of construction or the delivery of materials. See Evergreen, 251 Or.App. at 199-200, 284 P.3d 509 (noting that, although a construction lien "remains inchoate until a claim is filed, as a practical matter, it effectively encumbers the property as soon as the contractor begins work").
In Hickey, 63 Or.App. at 786, 666 P.2d 294, which preceded SB 356 by four years, we concluded, under slightly different circumstances, that a construction lien perfected by filing a claim of lien related back to the beginning of the work. There, the defendant delivered materials to a construction site
Therefore, we conclude that SERA's lien was created under ORS 87.010(5) when SERA began work on the project and, when it perfected its lien under ORS 87.035, the lien related back to July 2006 when BooCo "commenc[ed] the improvement" as that term is defined in ORS 87.005. For purposes of measuring priority, the lien related back to July 2006, and Shorebank recorded its trust deeds subsequently. Accordingly, the trial court erred when it concluded that Shorebank's trust deed had priority over SERA's lien under the Construction Lien Law.
Having concluded that SERA's lien had priority over Shorebank's trust deed, we must resolve the question of whether that trust deed, at least as to the portion of the loan proceeds used to pay off the Triangle loan, can be equitably subrogated to the position of Triangle's trust deed. If so, then Shorebank would be in first lien position as compared to the SERA lien, because Triangle's trust deed was recorded several months before BooCo began preparation of the development property.
Shorebank raised equitable subrogation as an affirmative defense, and we review such defenses according to their character. See Burt, Vetterlein & Bushnell, P.C. v. Stein, 117 Or.App. 363, 369, 844 P.2d 239 (1992), rev. den., 316 Or. 527, 854 P.2d 939 (1993). Accordingly, our review of the facts is de novo.
The doctrine of equitable subrogation, in this context, has been described as follows:
Dimeo v. Gesik, 164 Or.App. 567, 571, 993 P.2d 183 (1999) (quoting Pearce v. Buell, 22 Or. 29, 33, 29 P. 78 (1892)) (brackets in original). Ultimately, the doctrine is intended to "prevent manifest injustice and hardship." Pearce, 22 Or. at 33, 29 P. 78.
On appeal, the parties focus their arguments on whether Shorebank was in fact
SERA contends that Shorebank failed to demonstrate that it was ignorant of SERA's intervening lien or that any ignorance was excusable. In support, SERA points to the following facts: (1) Shorebank attended, in the role of "banker," the April 2006 workshop hosted by SERA at which site preparation plans were discussed and a timeline for construction was assembled; (2) actual site preparation occurred between July 2006 and October 2006; (3) Shorebank and Klahowya's loan negotiations in October 2006 included discussions of SERA's work. In light of those facts, and the fact that Shorebank is a commercial lender, SERA asserts that Shorebank was, in fact, aware of SERA's lien on the property and equitable subrogation cannot apply.
Shorebank does not dispute those facts, but argues that equitable subrogation is proper because it reasonably believed that SERA had no lien when Shorebank recorded its trust deed in November 2006. Shorebank explains that SERA's claim of lien was not recorded until June 2007, and Shorebank specifically asked Klahowya whether it had paid SERA in full before completing the refinancing in November 2006. Shorebank asserts that SERA never informed it that Klahowya was not paying its bills. Shorebank reasons that, as a result, as of the date that it recorded its trust deed, it had no grounds to believe that SERA had a lien on the development property and that, therefore, its ignorance of SERA's lien was excusable. Also implicit in Shorebank's argument is that its understanding of the law — that Shorebank had priority because it recorded its trust deed before SERA filed a claim of lien — contributed to Shorebank's ignorance of SERA's lien.
As a general matter, actual ignorance of the intervening lien is required, Dimeo, 164 Or.App. at 571, 993 P.2d 183, but constructive knowledge of an intervening lien is not necessarily a bar to application of the doctrine. For example, in Rusher v. Bunker, 99 Or.App. 303, 309, 782 P.2d 170 (1989), we declined to adopt a per se rule that constructive notice from recording is incompatible with an equitable subrogation claim. See also Pearce, 22 Or. at 33, 29 P. 78 (concluding that relief was available even though the intervening lien was recorded). Nevertheless, we recognized in Rusher that a lender's failure to search the record may weigh against application of equitable subrogation. 99 Or.App. at 309, 782 P.2d 170. Furthermore, constructive notice of an intervening lien may be "excused" if the lender proceeded with the transaction based on misrepresentations, fraud, or misleading information provided by another. Pearce, 22 Or. at 30-31, 29 P. 78 (a lender released a former mortgage in favor of a new mortgage based on the mortgagor's misrepresentation that there were no other intervening encumbrances).
For example, in Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Craven, 164 Or. 274, 101 P.2d 237 (1940), the lender advanced money to pay off a prior encumbrance in ignorance of a recorded intervening lien. The Supreme Court ultimately granted equitable relief because the lender's ignorance was induced by a misrepresentation by the property owner that no junior liens existed, and the lender obtained an abstract of title from a title company that failed to reveal the junior lien. Id. at 283, 101 P.2d 237; see also Rusher, 99 Or.App. at 305-06, 309, 782 P.2d 170 (equitable subrogation was appropriate where the lender relied on misinformation from a title company that no intervening liens had been filed between the time of the preliminary title report and the lender's recording of its trust deed); cf. High v. Davis, 283 Or. 315, 333-34, 584 P.2d 725 (1978) (where the lender had notice of membership agreements creating hunting and fishing rights and proceeded without further investigation, the equities were not sufficient to subrogate the lender to the rights of prior lienors).
Shorebank's position requires us to accept that its ignorance of construction lien law is tantamount to ignorance of SERA's
Shorebank had actual notice of the facts that led to the creation of SERA's lien — that is, Shorebank was aware that Klahowya had contracted with SERA to perform architectural services for the project and that SERA was in fact providing those services. Shorebank was aware of the construction timeline that indicated that site preparation would begin in mid-2006, and BooCo began preparation according to that plan. In that sense, Shorebank had actual notice of SERA's lien. Moreover, this case is unlike any other in which equitable subrogation was used to prevent manifest injustice. Shorebank's "ignorance" in this case was not induced by misrepresentations or negligence of others, but rather was due to its misunderstanding of the law. We decline to extend the doctrine of equitable subrogation to the circumstances presented here.
Finally, we address Shorebank's cross-appeal of the supplemental judgment awarding SERA $120,144.56 in attorney fees against Klahowya under an attorney fees provision in their contract and ORS 87.060. Shorebank challenged SERA's attorney fees petition before the trial court on the basis that over $74,000 of the fees sought were related to SERA's attempts to secure priority over Shorebank's trust deeds. On cross-appeal, Shorebank reiterates that argument, contending that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding the full amount because SERA did not prevail in foreclosing its lien against Shorebank.
In light of our resolution of SERA's appeal, Shorebank's argument that SERA did not prevail in foreclosing its lien against Shorebank is no longer valid. Accordingly, we affirm the supplemental judgment awarding attorney fees to SERA.
On appeal, limited judgment reversed and remanded; on cross-appeal, affirmed; supplemental judgment affirmed on cross-appeal.