Title: Bronson v. Moonen
Citation: 528 P.2d 82
Docket Number: N/A
State: Oregon
Issuer: Oregon Supreme Court
Date: November 21, 1974

528 P.2d 82 (1974)
Benjamin B. BRONSON and June B. Bronson, Husband and Wife, Respondents,
v.
Francis E. MOONEN and Vera M. Moonen, Husband and Wife, Appellants.

Supreme Court of Oregon, In Banc.[*]
Argued and Submitted July 8, 1974.
Decided November 21, 1974.
*83 Charles M. Gudger, III, Eugene, argued the cause for appellants. With him on the briefs were Bick, Monte &amp; Joseph, Eugene.
J. Sidney Armstrong, of Nicholson &amp; Armstrong, Florence, argued the cause and filed a brief for respondents.
McALLISTER, Justice.
The Bronsons filed this suit praying for strict foreclosure of a contract of sale of a building lot to the defendants, the Moonens. The Moonens filed a cross-complaint praying for a rescission of the contract and restoration of the amounts paid thereunder. The trial court entered a decree providing that unless the defendants, within thirty days from the date of the decree, paid the balance due on the contract of $2,737.50 plus interest, attorney fees of $500 and costs, the contract and all interest of the defendants in the property would be strictly foreclosed. The defendants appeal, contending that the court erred in denying their right to rescind.
Although this appears to be a grudge battle, there is no dispute about the facts. The appellants' brief contains a statement of the controlling facts which is not challenged by respondents. The Bronsons owned Lot 3, Block 2, First Addition to Tsiltcoos Heights located about seven miles south of Florence in Lane County. The 100 x 150 foot lot was unimproved and the Bronsons had put a FOR SALE sign on the property including their telephone number.
The Moonens lived in Tsiltcoos Heights and their home was across the street from the Bronsons' vacant lot. The Moonens had purchased two other lots in Tsiltcoos Heights. We quote from Mrs. Moonen's testimony as follows:
In the spring of 1972 Mrs. Moonen called the number on the for sale sign and talked to Mrs. Bronson about buying the lot. Mrs. Bronson said the price of the lot was $4,000 and Mrs. Moonen said she would talk to her husband and let Mrs. Bronson know if they were interested. Sometime later the Moonens decided to buy the lot. Mrs. Moonen called Mrs. Bronson, and after some unsuccessful bargaining over the price Mrs. Moonen told Mrs. Bronson that the Moonens would buy the lot. The parties signed a contract on a Stevens-Ness Form #706 for the sum of $4,000, with $1,000 paid down and the balance payable in installments of not less than $50 per month plus interest. The contract was negotiated, signed and delivered by telephone and mailed through the office of the Bronsons' attorney and the parties met for the first time when this case was tried in the court below.
In November the Moonens were ready to start building a house on the lot which they had purchased from the Bronsons. Mrs. Moonen applied for a building permit and a permit to use an Individual Sewage Disposal System, which we will refer to as a septic tank. In response the Moonens first received a communication from the Lane County Health Department dated November 10, signed by Geo. Brasells, Sanitarian, containing the following notation, which in pertinent part read as follows:
*84 Later the Moonens received from the Lane County Department of Health and Sanitation a "Notice of Denial of Property for Individual Sewage Disposal Use" giving as the reason as follows:
On December 26th the Moonens' attorneys wrote to the Bronsons advising them of the denial of their request to use a septic tank and requested the Bronsons to "solve the problem". The Bronsons' attorney responded with a refusal to take any action and a demand for the payment of the purchase price as agreed in the contract. On January 19th the Moonens' attorneys replied by letter, in effect rescinding the contract, tendering a deed to the Bronsons and demanding a return of the amounts paid on the purchase price.
It appears that the only water supply for Tsiltcoos Heights about which there is any evidence was owned by the subdivider, named LaForge, who supplied water to homes built in his subdivision from a well. According to Mrs. Moonen there were about 200 lots in the subdivision and 50 homes had been built in that area generally known as Dunes City, but she did not testify as to the number of homes built in the First Addition to Tsiltcoos Heights or how many homes were being supplied with water by the LaForge water system.
The only alleged misrepresentation claimed by the Moonens was a statement which Mrs. Moonen testified was made by Mrs. Bronson during their first telephone conversation. Mrs. Moonen testified:
*85 The Moonens contend that the court erred in denying their right to rescind the contract because of the failure of the Bronsons to comply with an administrative rule in effect at the time of sale which was promulgated by the Health Division of the Department of Human Resources (OAR Ch. 333, # 41-022, filed April 21, 1972, HD 14, effective May 1, 1972). The pertinent portions of that rule read as follows:
It was stipulated that the above rule was in effect in Lane County when the contract of sale dated May 17, 1972 was executed, although both Mrs. Bronson and Mrs. Moonen testified they knew nothing about the rule when the parties entered into the contract of May 17, 1972. In any event, it is agreed that no effort was made by the Bronsons or the Moonens to comply with the rule.
We agree with the trial court that there is no merit in the defenses based on an innocent misrepresentation of a material fact and we do not reach the contention based on a mutual mistake of a material fact. We find, however, that the Moonens are entitled to rescind because of the Bronsons' failure to comply with the Administrative Rule quoted above. If the Bronsons had complied with the rule and asked for a feasibility study as required by section 3 of the rule they would have been informed that they could not install a septic tank because the Tsiltcoos Heights public water system was "not approved". It is obvious that if the Moonens had known that they could not install a septic tank they would not have bought the lot.
Administrative rules and regulations are to be regarded as legislative enactments having the same effect as if enacted by the legislature as part of the original statute. U.P.R.R. Co. v. Tax Commission, *86 240 Or. 628, 402 P.2d 519 (1965); Arnold v. Gardiner Hill Timber, Co., 199 Or. 517, 523, 263 P.2d 403 (1953); State ex rel. Kaser v. Leonard, 164 Or. 579, 606, 94 P.2d 1113, 102 P.2d 197, 129 A.L.R. 1125 (1940); 2 Am.Jur.2d 119, Administrative Law § 292. This principle applies with equal effect to the rules and regulations promulgated by the Health Division which existed at the time of this transaction. ORS 431.140(1) provides:
If the Administrative Rule, #41-022, has the force and effect of law, the only question is whether the plaintiffs complied with the requirements of the rule.
The Bronsons contend that they did not violate the rule because the Moonens' intended use of the property was the same as "the use to which the property" was being put at the time the contract was executed.
We find that the use to which the Moonens intended to put Lot 3 was different than the existing use which the Bronsons were making of the property when it was sold. The Bronsons were holding the property for sale, whereas the Moonens purchased the property with the intent to construct a house thereon and to sell the house and lot when the house was completed. The record does not indicate whether the Bronsons bought the property as a homesite for themselves or for investment for resale at a later date.
While there was conflicting evidence as to whether the Moonens indicated what their intended use of the property would be, the Bronsons, as sellers, were under an affirmative duty to obtain a written statement setting forth the Moonens' intended use. Upon receiving such a statement they would have discovered that the Moonens' intended use was for residential purposes and, as such, was other than the actual use to which the property was put at the time the written statement should have been procured. This being the case, the Bronsons, as sellers, were required under subsection (3) of the rule to propose to the local health officer in writing a method for providing the property with sewage disposal and domestic water. Upon receiving this proposal the local health officer, applying Health Division standards, would have considered the feasibility of the sellers' proposed method of sewage. His findings would then have been returned to the Bronsons, who, in turn, pursuant to subsection (2), were required to deliver a copy of the local health officer's findings to the Moonens. At that time the Moonens would have discovered the land's unsuitability for their intended purpose.
As a general rule an agreement made in violation of a statute is void, but the rule is not "inexorable and unbending". We quote from the leading case of Uhlmann v. Kin Daw, 97 Or. 681, 689, 193 P. 435, 437 (1920), as follows:
The holding in Uhlmann v. Kin Daw, supra, was summarized in Hunter v. Cunning, 176 Or. 250, 287, 154 P.2d 562, 157 P.2d 510, 511 (1945), as follows:
There is no need in this case to pause and determine whether the contract of sale is void or voidable.[1] It was at least voidable.
An illustration of the foregoing principle in the context of land sale contracts is Smith v. Bach, 183 Cal. 259, 191 P. 14 (1920). There the vendee sought to recover monies paid under a land sale contract claiming that the contract was invalid due to the vendor's violation of a statute making it unlawful to sell or offer for sale land by reference to an unrecorded map. The statute upon which the vendee relied prescribed the manner in which the contract was to be made and provided only that any violation of its provisions would be deemed a misdemeanor. The Supreme Court of California, in holding that the contract was void, stated:
As in Smith, the administrative rule in the instant case prohibited the transfer of any land except in a certain manner. It was promulgated for the protection of the public and the legislature had provided that a violation of such a rule would be deemed a misdemeanor (ORS 431.990). Although the Health Division did not specifically *88 state what consequences would attach to a violation of its rule, this question is answered by considering the language of the rule which expressly prohibits any person from effecting a transfer of any land within the State of Oregon without first complying with the Health Division's requirements.
The decree is reversed and the case is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion, including rescission of the contract and restoration of the parties to status quo.
[*]  DENECKE, J., did not participate in the decision of this case.
[1]  The following cases hold that a contract made in violation of a statute enacted "for the protection of the public" is void. Schramm v. Bank of California, 143 Or. 546, 574-575, 20 P.2d 1093, 23 P.2d 327 (1933); Pennicard v. Coe, 124 Or. 423, 434, 263 P. 920 (1928); In re Water Rights of Willow Creek, 119 Or. 155, 207, 236 P. 487, 763, 237 P. 682, 239 P. 123 (1925); Turney v. J.H. Tillman Co., 112 Or. 122, 128, 228 P. 933 (1924); Horseman v. Horseman, 43 Or. 83, 91-92, 72 P. 698 (1903); Annotation, Validity of contract in violation of statute imposing criminal sanction but not specifically declaring contract invalid, 55 ALR2d 481, 483-485 (1957); 17 C.J.S. Contracts §§ 201-202, pp. 1002, 1006-1007.