Oregon Code § 93.915·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Notice
of default; contents; recordation; time of forfeiture; interim measures.
(1) In the event of a default
under a contract for conveyance of real property, a seller who wishes to
enforce a forfeiture remedy must give written notice of default by service
pursuant to ORCP 7 D(2) and 7 D(3), or by both first class and certified mail
with return receipt requested, to the last-known address of the following
persons or their legal representatives, if any:
(a) The
purchaser.
(b) An occupant
of the property.
(c) Any person
who has caused to be filed for record in the county clerks office of a county
in which any part or parcel of the real property is situated, a duly
acknowledged request for a copy of any notice of default served upon or mailed
to the purchaser. The request shall contain the name and address of the person
requesting copies of the notice and shall identify the contract by stating the
names of the parties to the contract, the date of recordation of the contract
and the book and page where the contract is recorded. The county clerk shall
immediately make a cross-reference of the request to the contract, either on
the margin of the page where the contract is recorded or in some other suitable
place. No request, statement or notation placed on the record pursuant to this
section shall affect title to the property or be deemed notice to any person
that any person so recording the request has any right, title, interest in,
lien or charge upon the property referred to in the contract.
(2) Notices
served by mail are effective when mailed.
(3) The notice
shall specify the nature of the default, the amount of the default if the
default is in the payment terms, the date after which the contract will be
forfeited if the purchaser does not cure the default and the name and address
of the seller or the attorney for the seller. The period specified in the
notice after which the contract will be forfeited may not be less than:
(a) Sixty days,
when the purchaser has reduced the unpaid balance to an amount greater than 75
percent of the purchase price;
(b) Ninety days,
when the purchaser has reduced the unpaid balance to an amount which is more
than 50 percent but less than 75 percent of the purchase price; or
(c) One hundred
twenty days, when the purchaser has reduced the unpaid balance to an amount
which is 50 percent or less of the purchase price.
(4) The seller
shall cause to be recorded in the real property records of each county in which
any part of the property is located a copy of the notice, together with an
affidavit of service or mailing of the notice of default, reciting the date the
notice was served or mailed and the name and address of each person to whom it
was given. From the date of recording, the notice and affidavit shall
constitute constructive notice to third persons of the pending forfeiture. If,
not later than one year after the time for cure stated in a recorded notice and
affidavit or any recorded extension thereof, no declaration of forfeiture based
upon the recorded notice and affidavit has been recorded and no extension of
time for cure executed by the seller has been recorded, the notice and
affidavit shall not be effective for any purpose nor shall it impart any
constructive or other notice to third persons acquiring an interest in the
purchasers interest in the contract or the property or any portion of either.
Any extension of time for cure executed by the seller shall be recorded in the
same manner as the original notice and affidavit.
(5) The statement
contained in the notice as to the time after which the contract will be
forfeited if the default is not cured shall conclusively be presumed to be
correct, and the notice adequate, unless one or more recipients of such notice
notifies the seller or the attorney for the seller, by registered or certified
mail, that such recipient claims the right to a longer period of time in which
to cure the default.
(6) Subject to
the procedural requirements of the Oregon Rules of Civil Procedure and the
Oregon Receivership Code, as applicable, an action may be instituted to appoint
a receiver or to obtain a temporary restraining order during forfeiture under a
land sale contract, except that a receiver shall not be appointed with respect
to a single-family residence which is occupied at the time the notice of
default is given, as the principal residence of the purchaser, the purchasers
spouse or the purchasers minor dependent children. [1985 c.718 §3; 1987 c.717 §1;
1991 c.12 §1; 2017 c.358 §49]
Plain English Explanation
This Oregon statute addresses Notice
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Key Points
01Part of Oregon statutory law
02Referenced as Oregon Code § 93.915
03Subject to legislative amendments
04Consult a licensed attorney for application to specific cases
Frequently Asked Questions
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