Plat

Plat Maps and Surveys

The plat for your community is an important governing document. The plat is an aerial depiction of the lot boundaries, roadways, common areas, and easements. The filing of the plat and declaration is what creates the community. The plat contains a metes-and-bounds description of the development and the dimensions of each lot and unit. Plat maps can contain very important information. For example, it may show easements, utility line locations, and maintenance obligations--all of which may or may not be found in the CC&Rs or Declaration.

For planned communities, the plat also identifies the common areas. Sometimes, common areas are referred to as "Tracts". Here's an example of a plat depicting a common area, owned by the association:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Condominium and planned community plats are slightly different in the type of information which must be contained in the plat. For condominiums, plats must show the elevations of the units. For example:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If you do not have a copy of the plat for your community, you can get a copy from your county recorder or survey department. Here are the links to locate and download plat maps:

Multnomah County

Washington County

Clackamas County

Deschutes County

Clark County (WA)

Recording Documents in Community Associations

Oregon and Washington are both “record notice” states. This means that owners are deemed to be on notice of any recorded documents—whether or not the owner actually received or reviewed the documents. The act of recording the document "constitutes notice".

Recording is important for other reasons, too.  For example, a lot in an Oregon planned community may not be sold or conveyed until the declaration or CC&Rs are recorded in the county records. (ORS 94.565). Similarly, a condominium in Washington is created only when the developer records the declaration or CC&Rs. (RCW 64.34.200)

Keep in mind, improperly recording a document may have legal consequences.  If a homeowner or condominium association mistakenly records a lien against a lot or unit, the Association could be liable for damages.  The claim against the Association is called "slander of title."  In most cases, recorded documents should be prepared and recorded by qualified legal counsel.

By statute, Declarations or CC&Rs must be recorded in the county records where the community is located. This is also true for plat maps, which depict the lot or unit boundaries, easements, streets, and other ownership interests within the subdivision or condominium. In many cases, the association’s bylaws must also be recorded. If an association amends any of the recorded documents, the amendment is not effective until recorded. Oregon law requires amendments to be recorded within one year from the time of owner approval.  If the amendment is not recorded in that time frame, the process must be repeated.    

Each county has recording requirements which specific font size, margins, and information to included on the first page of the documents.  In Oregon, the requirements for recorded documents are found in ORS 205.  The requirements include 8 point or larger fonts, 4" on the top margin of the first page, and letter or legal sized paper. The first page of the document must state the title of the document, names of the parties, any consideration (amount paid), and the name and address where the document should be returned.

The requirements for recording documents in Washington are found in RCW 36.18 and RCW 64.04.  The requirements include at least a 3" margin on the top of the first page, names of parties involved, an abbreviated legal description, and the tax parcel identification or account number.

County

First Page

Additional Pages

Clark County, WA

$73

$1

Multnomah, OR

$46 (deeds); $36 (liens)

$5

Washington County, OR

$41

$5

Clackamas, OR

$53 (deeds); $43 (liens)

$5

Deschutes County

$54 (deeds); $37 (liens)

$5

Here are some of the county recording requirements:

https://multco.us/recording/recording-requirements

http://www.clackamas.us/recording/standards.html

http://www.co.washington.or.us/AssessmentTaxation/Recording/requirements-for-standard-recording.cfm

http://www.co.marion.or.us/CO/records/Documents/firstpagerequirements3512.pdf

http://www.deschutes.org/clerk/page/first-page-requirements

https://www.clark.wa.gov/sites/all/files/auditor/documents/Document_Standardization_Guide.pdf

Reading and Understanding Title Reports

What is “Title”? The term “title” has been defined as that which is the foundation of ownership, of either real or personal property, and that which constitutes a just cause of exclusive possession. It has also been defined as ownership, equitable or legal.

Title Companies

Before a title insurer or its agent can insure a transaction, it must operate a title plant in the county where the real property is located or purchase title insurance from a company that does. ORS 731.438(1). All title services by a title insurer must be provided within Oregon, and the information used to produce the services “must be maintained and must be capable of reproduction within the state at all times.” ORS 731.438(2).

A title plant can be jointly owned and maintained in “any county with a population of 500,000 or more, or any county with a population of 200,000 or more that is contiguous to a county with a population of 500,000 or more.” ORS 731.438(4).

Preliminary Title Report vs. Title Commitment 

A PTR does not constitute title insurance. A PTR is also not a promise with respect to the state of the title of real property. It is simply an offer to issue title insurance in a particular form.

A title commitment is an agreement to issue a specified policy to a specified insured upon acquisition of the insurable interest, if accomplished within a limited time, and upon payment of the premium and charges.

Insurable Title

There is a difference between insurable title and marketable title. Title is insurable if the title company determines that, based on its examination of the public record, the company will deliver to the party to be insured a title insurance policy (i.e., a contract of indemnity) subject to the company’s usual printed exceptions and exclusions from coverage as well as subject to certain matters shown in the title report (e.g., a recorded easement).

Scope of Insurance

Title Vested

Any defect in or lien or encumbrance

Unmarketable Title

No Right of Access

Endorsements

Zoning - It provides assurance that the insured property is in a particular zoning designation and that certain specified uses are allowed in that designation. The endorsement does not insure, however, that any of the existing uses on the property are in compliance.

Access - The access endorsements provide additional assurances to the insured regarding access to the insured property, and can be used with owners’ and lenders’ policies. The endorsements specifically identify the physically opened street to which the insured property has access.

Environmental - The endorsements cover only loss sustained by reason of lack of priority of the lien of the insured mortgage over any environmental-protection lien recorded in the public records. The endorsements provide absolutely no protection to lenders regarding the numerous off-record issues raised by federal and state environmental laws.

Location of Improvements - the location-of-improvements endorsement assures that improvements having a specified street address or route or box number are located on the insured property.

Marketable Title

Marketable title is “title such as a prudent man, well advised as to the facts and their legal bearings, would be willing to accept.”

Abstract or Chain of Title

An abstract of title is also different from title insurance. An abstract is a summary of the chain of title to a particular parcel of property that shows how each owner acquired and disposed of the owner’s interest in the property. An abstract also discloses the nature and source of liens, encumbrances, and other matters appearing of public record in the chain of title.

Contents of a Title Report

Estate of Interest Covered

Fee Simple - The fee simple estate (also called “absolute estate” or “fee simple absolute”) is described as “full ownership.” A fee simple absolute is the most common estate in modern times; most people own their property in fee simple. The presumption is that a person conveys the fee estate unless the conveyance expressly states otherwise.  The fee simple absolute is considered the greatest estate because it is of unlimited duration. The estate ends only by the sale of the property or the death of the holder without heirs. It is freely alienable, devisable, and inheritable.

Current Owner of Estate or Interest

Shows the current owner of record and how title is vested, i.e. single man, window, husband and wife.

Parcel of Land Involved/Legal Description

Rectangular or Governmental System - Under the Rectangular System of survey, the surveyors first established a reference point from which a line ran due north and south. This north-south line was designated the principal meridian. The principal meridian for Oregon is the “Willamette Meridian.” After establishing the principal meridian, the surveyors located a point on the principal meridian from which they ran a line due east and west. This east-west line was designated the baseline. In Multnomah County, the baseline for Oregon runs east-west along Stark Street east of the Willamette River and Burnside Street west of the Willamette River.

Subdivision Plats - Subdivisions (but not partitions) are named on the plat. In either case, the locations and descriptions of all monuments found or set must be recorded on the plat, and the courses and distances of all boundary lines must be shown. ORS 92.050(5). Each lot or parcel must be numbered consecutively, and the lengths and courses of all boundaries of each lot or parcel must be shown. ORS 92.050(4). When the subdivision or partition plat is completed and approved, and all required fees are paid, the plat may be recorded in the county records of the county where the described land is situated. ORS 92.050(1).

Metes & Bounds - A metes and bounds description typically contains an introduction defining the general location of the property by reference to the governmental survey, the place of beginning, and the body that describes the various courses of the property boundary by distance and bearing.

Liens

A lien is a claim or charge on property as security for payment of a debt or the fulfillment of an obligation.

Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions

Covenants running with the land take different forms. When a single owner wishes to divide a parcel of land and create a scheme of contractual obligations binding on all future owners of the resulting parcels, the term declaration is an accurate description of what the owner does by recording a written statement of the covenants; hence the term declaration of covenants, conditions, and restrictions or CC&R declara­tion. Often, covenants are also included as a part of and literally on a recorded subdivision or partition plat.

Covenants and servitudes are important tools in private land use planning and regulation. Declarations of covenants, conditions, and restrictions (“CC&R declarations” or simply “CC&Rs”) for subdivisions often parallel public land use regulatory schemes and function as an overlay containing more restrictive requirements. In many instances, the CC&R declaration is coupled with an association, which is a quasi-municipal government for the project, providing services over and above the services provided by the local government.

Easements

An easement is a nonpossessory interest in the land of another that entitles the owner of the interest to a limited use or enjoyment of the other’s land and to protection from interference with this use. The inter­est, once created, may be irrevocable and generally is not subject to the will of the land owner.

Taxes

The first exception shown is a statement regarding the amount and status of the current year’s taxes (e.g., taxes now a lien, now due, or respective installment paid or unpaid).

Other Types of Title Insurance

Litigation Guarantee - The litigation guarantee is used by attorneys who are contemplating filing an action concerning the affected property, such as a quiet-title action, a partition action, or a suit to enforce an easement.

Foreclosure Guarantee - Judicial-foreclosure guarantees are issued to attorneys to indicate the status of the title and the parties to be named as defendants in a mortgage, trust deed, contract, or lien foreclosure suit. In addition to showing the status of title and the necessary defendants, a foreclosure guarantee shows all title exceptions that may or may not be pertinent to the contemplated foreclosure.

 

How Covenants Are Created

Covenants are promises made by the purchaser of property to do (or not do) something upon the land. The most common form of covenants are CC&Rs: covenants, conditions and restrictions.  Almost always in writing, covenants may attach to the property in several different ways: 1. Deed

When the purchaser of property takes title, it is usually done so through a written and recorded deed.  The deed itself may contain covenants preventing the purchaser from certain activities, like mining for minerals or creating a nuisance affecting adjacent land owners.

2. Declaration

A declaration refers to a "declaration of covenants, conditions and restrictions"--the full title of CC&Rs. The declaration subjects multiple lots or parcels in a subdivision or community to the same set of covenants prior to the developer or "declarant" conveying the first lot in the community.  Often, the declaration is incorporated or referenced in the deeds to individual purchasers.  In most states, the recording of the declaration is sufficient without having to incorporate or reference the declaration in each individual deed.

3. Plat

Similar to a declaration, a developer may place covenants on the recorded plat of the community. The plat is a graphical depiction of the lot lines, roads, and common property.  For condominiums, the plat will also show the elevation profile of the units and common elements.  Covenants contained in plats are typically noted in the narrative portion of the plat or referenced on the affected parcels.

WA State Supreme Court Case on Implications of Plat Dedications

On February 12, 2015, the Washington State Supreme Court issued a ruling on the implications for municipalities which accept plat dedications. In this case, the recorded plat dedicated certain ground water and storm water systems to the county. The county then accepted those dedications by signature on the plat. The homeowners association (and its members) filed suit after issues arose with a drainage pipe. The lawsuit sought to compel the municipality to take action to fix the drainage pipe. Read the case here: http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/895333.pdf

The Importance of the Plat Map

The significance of the plat map is often overlooked in community associations.  Put simply, the plat is a graphical depiction of lot boundaries, easements and other ownership interests.  Here's an example: Screen Shot 2014-12-15 at 6.26.18 PM

This is a plat map for a planned unit development subdivision. Condominium plats are slightly different, and include building elevations, unit boundaries, and common elements locations.

Notations on plats are important, too.  Examples of notations include: maintenance obligations, common area ownership, and utility company easements.  These notations are just as significant and important as provisions in your CC&Rs.

Now that you know how important your plat map is, you may be wondering how counties or municipalities keep track of who owns what and where property is located.  Plats contain very specific location information, starting with township, then range, and then section, like this:

Screen Shot 2014-12-15 at 6.26.40 PM

 

We can tell that the subdivision is located in the east 1/2 of Section 28, Township 1S, Range 1E, W.M. (Willamette Meridian).  This coordinate system is attributed to Thomas Jefferson, and was formalized in the Land Ordinance Act of 1785.  The Act called for the creation of townships 6 miles by 6 miles, with 36 square sections containing 640 acres.  Every township referenced a meridian, like the image above, which references the Willamette Meridian.

If you don't have a copy of your plat, many county recorder or survey offices provide the files online.  Here are links to access your plat map in the tri-county area:

Multnomah County: https://multco.us/surveyor/sail-survey-and-assessor-image-locator

Washington County: http://www.co.washington.or.us/AssessmentTaxation/GISCartography/maps-online.cfm

Clackamas County: http://www.clackamas.us/surveyor/