Oregon Code § 18.412·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Notice
of intent to discharge judgment lien against homestead.
(1) At any time after the date of
execution of an agreement to transfer the ownership of property in which a
homestead exemption exists pursuant to ORS 18.395, the homestead owner or the
owners transferee may give notice of intent to discharge the property from the
judgment lien to a judgment creditor. Each notice must bear the caption of the
action in which the judgment was recovered and must:
(a) Identify the
property and the judgment and state that the judgment debtor is about to
transfer, or has transferred, the property and that the transfer is intended to
discharge the property from any lien effect of the judgment;
(b) State the
fair market value of the property on the date of the notice or of any
applicable petition in bankruptcy, whichever is applicable, and list the
encumbrances against the property, including the nature and date of each
encumbrance, the name of the encumbrancer and the amount presently secured by
each encumbrance;
(c) State that
the property is claimed by the person giving the notice to be wholly exempt
from the lien of the judgment or, if the value of the property exceeds the sum
of the encumbrances specified as required under paragraph (b) of this
subsection that are senior to the judgment lien and the applicable amount of
the homestead exemption specified in ORS 18.395 (1)(a) or (b), that the amount
of the excess or the amount due on the judgment, whichever is less, will be
deposited with the court administrator for the court in which the judgment was
entered for the use of the judgment holder; and
(d) Advise the
holder of the judgment that the property may be discharged from any lien
arising from the judgment, without further notice to the judgment creditor,
unless prior to a specified date, which in no case may be earlier than 14 days
after the date of mailing of the notice, the judgment creditor files objections
and a request for a hearing on the matter as provided in ORS 18.415.
(2) Each notice
described by subsection (1) of this section must be sent by certified mail to
the judgment creditor, as shown by the court records, at the judgment creditors
present or last-known address according to the best knowledge of the person
sending the notice. A copy of each notice, together with proof of mailing, may
be filed with the court administrator for the court in which the judgment was
entered and must be filed by the court administrator with the records and files
of the action in which the judgment was recovered. [Formerly 23.280; 2005 c.456
§4; 2007 c.129 §9; 2009 c.612 §4; 2024 c.100 §6]
Plain English Explanation
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Key Points
01Part of Oregon statutory law
02Referenced as Oregon Code § 18.412
03Subject to legislative amendments
04Consult a licensed attorney for application to specific cases
Frequently Asked Questions
This section of Oregon law addresses Notice
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