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Fircrest Properties LLC v. Simmons - Landlord-Tenant Eviction

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Filed March 11th, 2026
Detected March 12th, 2026
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Summary

The Oregon Court of Appeals reversed and remanded a forcible entry and detainer (FED) case involving Fircrest Properties LLC and Tyler Simmons. The court clarified that a landlord can terminate a month-to-month tenancy for all tenants if any one tenant has resided in the unit for one year or less, reversing a lower court's decision.

What changed

The Court of Appeals of Oregon reversed and remanded a landlord-tenant eviction case, Fircrest Properties LLC v. Simmons. The core issue was the interpretation of ORS 90.427(1)(a) regarding the termination of month-to-month tenancies within the "first year of occupancy." The appellate court ruled that if any tenant on a rental agreement has resided in the dwelling unit for one year or less, the landlord may terminate the tenancy for all listed tenants. This decision overturns the trial court's finding that the "first year of occupancy" applied individually to each tenant, which had previously favored the defendant tenant.

This ruling has significant implications for landlords in Oregon, clarifying their ability to terminate tenancies under specific circumstances. Landlords should review their current month-to-month agreements and termination notices to ensure compliance with this interpretation of ORS 90.427. The case was remanded, suggesting further proceedings may occur at the trial court level based on this appellate guidance. No specific compliance deadlines or penalties were mentioned in this opinion, but non-compliance with eviction procedures can lead to legal challenges and financial penalties for landlords.

What to do next

  1. Review Oregon ORS 90.427 and related case law regarding termination of month-to-month tenancies.
  2. Ensure rental agreements and termination notices accurately reflect the clarified interpretation of the "first year of occupancy" rule.
  3. Consult legal counsel for specific guidance on current or pending eviction proceedings in light of this ruling.

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March 11, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

Fircrest Properties, LLC v. Simmons

Court of Appeals of Oregon

Disposition

Reversed and remanded.

Combined Opinion

No. 180 March 11, 2026 637

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE
STATE OF OREGON

FIRCREST PROPERTIES, LLC,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Tyler SIMMONS,
Connor Erlandson-Sims and all other occupants,
Defendants-Respondents.
Clackamas County Circuit Court
24LT22490; A186152

Susie L. Norby, Judge pro tempore.
Submitted October 31, 2025.
Brian D. Cox and Cox & Associates, LLC, and Michael
Stout and Stout Law LLC, filed the brief for appellant.
No appearance for respondents.
Before Ortega, Presiding Judge, Joyce, Judge, and
Hellman, Judge.
HELLMAN, J.
Reversed and remanded.
638 Fircrest Properties, LLC v. Simmons

HELLMAN, J.
Landlord appeals a judgment in favor of tenant Tyler
Simmons and “all other occupants” issued after a forcible
entry and detainer (FED) trial. On appeal, landlord raises
two assignments of error. In the first assignment of error,
landlord argues that the trial court erred in determining that
the “first year of occupancy” referred to in ORS 90.427(1)(a)
applied to each tenant, individually, which led the trial
court to enter judgment in favor of Simmons because he had
resided in the apartment longer than one year.
The legal question thus presented is whether, within
the “first year of occupancy,” a landlord may terminate
a month-to-month tenancy as to all tenants, or only those
tenants who have “resided in the dwelling unit for one year
or less.” ORS 90.427(1)(a); ORS 90.427(3)(b). As we explain
below, under a correct interpretation of ORS 90.427(1)(a) and
ORS 90.427(3)(b), if any one of the tenants has “resided in
the dwelling unit for one year or less,” a landlord may termi-
nate a month-to-month tenancy as to all tenants listed on the
rental agreement that gave rise to the tenancy. Accordingly,
we reverse and remand. Our decision on landlord’s first
assignment of error eliminates the need to address its sec-
ond assignment of error, which asserted that the trial court
erred in granting a limited judgment of dismissal in favor
of “all other occupants” when they did not file an answer,
responsive pleadings, or otherwise appear in the case.
The relevant facts are few and undisputed. In
November 2022, Simmons rented, on a month-to-month
basis, an apartment owned and managed by landlord. Also
listed on the rental agreement was RS, a minor. On May 6,
2024, with landlord’s permission, Simmons added Connor
Erlandson-Sims to the rental agreement. On September 11,
2024, landlord mailed a notice of termination of tenancy
to Simmons, Erlandson-Sims, and “all other[ ]” tenants.
Simmons did not vacate the premises within the timeframe
set by landlord. On October 22, 2024, landlord filed a res-
idential eviction complaint against Simmons, Erlandson-
Sims, and “all other occupants.”
At trial, landlord took the position that the eviction
notice was permissible because ORS 90.427(3)(b) permits
Cite as 347 Or App 637 (2026) 639

termination of a month-to-month tenancy with a written
30-day notice “[a]t any time during the first year of occu-
pancy.” Landlord admitted that Simmons had resided in the
apartment for longer than a year. However, landlord pointed
to ORS 90.427(1)(a), which defines “first year of occupancy”
as “all periods in which any of the tenants has resided in
the dwelling unit for one year or less.” Because Erlandson-
Sims had been added to the rental agreement less than a
year prior, landlord asserted that the eviction was proper
because one among “any of the tenants” had lived in the
apartment for less than a year.
The trial court disagreed with landlord’s interpreta-
tion of the statute. The trial court indicated that “the ques-
tion of interpretation comes down to whether each tenant of
a property has a tenancy or whether a tenancy is always to
include all persons * * * in possession.” The trial court deter-
mined that under landlord’s interpretation, the statute had
an “implicit intention that the rights given to tenants who
have occupied more than a year will reset and be removed
upon the addition of a new tenant.” The trial court “[could
not] believe that was the intention of the legislature.” As a
result, the trial court granted judgment in favor of Simmons
and “all other occupants.”1 This appeal followed.
We review the trial court’s interpretation of a stat-
ute for legal error. Summit RWP, Inc. v. Hallin, 334 Or App
529, 538
, 557 P3d 1113 (2024).
The “paramount goal” in statutory interpretation is
to “discern[ ] the legislature’s intent.” State v. Gaines, 346
Or 160, 171
, 206 P3d 1042 (2009); see also ORS 174.020(1)
(a) (“In the construction of a statute, a court shall pursue
the intention of the legislature if possible.”). To accomplish
that goal, the Supreme Court established a framework
that starts with the text and context of the statute at issue
because “there is no more persuasive evidence of the intent
of the legislature than the words by which the legislature
undertook to give expression to its wishes.” Gaines, 346 Or
at 171
(internal quotation marks omitted).

1
The trial court also granted judgment against Erlandson-Sims; that deci-
sion is not before us.
640 Fircrest Properties, LLC v. Simmons

In Oregon, most residential landlord-tenant rela-
tionships are governed by rental agreements under ORS
chapter 90, the Oregon Residential Landlord and Tenant
Act. See ORS 90.115 (“[ORS chapter 90] applies to, regu-
lates and determines rights, obligations and remedies under
a rental agreement, wherever made, for a dwelling unit
located within this state.”). A rental agreement “means all
agreements, written or oral * * * embodying the terms and
conditions concerning the use and occupancy of a dwelling
unit and premises.” ORS 90.100(42). There are three types
of rental agreements: a week-to-week tenancy, month-to-
month tenancy, or fixed-term tenancy. Id. This case involves
a “month-to-month tenancy,” which is one that “automati-
cally renews and continues for successive monthly periods
on the same terms and conditions originally agreed to, or as
revised by the parties, until terminated by one or both of the
parties.” ORS 90.100(32).
This appeal requires us to interpret two statutes
that relate to the termination of a month-to-month tenancy:
ORS 90.427(3)(b) and ORS 90.427(1)(a). ORS 90.427(3)(b)
provides, “At any time during the first year of occupancy, the
landlord may terminate the tenancy by giving the tenant
notice in writing not less than 30 days prior to the date des-
ignated in the notice for the termination of the tenancy.”
ORS 90.427(1)(a) provides, “As used in this section[,] ‘[f]irst
year of occupancy’ includes all periods in which any of the
tenants has resided in the dwelling unit for one year or less.”
Again, to answer the legal question presented in
this appeal we must determine whether, within the “first
year of occupancy,” a landlord may terminate the month-to-
month tenancy as to all tenants, or only those tenants who
have “resided in the dwelling unit for one year or less.”
Under the Gaines framework, we start with the text
of the statutes. Our analysis depends on an interpretation of
the following terms and phrases:
• Tenant
• Tenancy
• First year of occupancy
Cite as 347 Or App 637 (2026) 641

• All periods
• Any of the tenants
As relevant here, a tenant is defined as “a person,
including a roomer, entitled under a rental agreement to
occupy a dwelling unit to the exclusion of others[.]” ORS
90.100(51)(a)(A). A tenant’s right to occupy a dwelling unit
arises under a rental agreement. ORS 90.100(42). To put
it another way, the rental agreement establishes “the ten-
ancy.” Therefore, even if there are multiple tenants listed
on one rental agreement, the rental agreement itself gives
rise to only one “tenancy.” Thus, the termination of “the ten-
ancy” under ORS 90.427(3)(b) terminates “the tenancy” as
to all persons listed on the rental agreement.
The only possible ambiguity in ORS 90.427(3)(b)
arises from the use of the phrase “giving the tenant notice,”
in reference to the termination of the tenancy. The use of
the singular “tenant” could be read to suggest a legislative
intent to consider termination proceedings against individ-
ual tenants. However, when we consider that phrase in con-
text of the statute and related statutes, we conclude that
proceeding against individual tenants was not the legis-
lative intent. See PGE v. Bureau of Labor and Industries,
317 Or 606, 611, 859 P2d 1143 (1993) (explaining that the
“context of the statutory provision at issue [ ] includes other
provisions of the same statute and other related statutes”).
First, there is no statutorily established way to
terminate a tenancy as to some, but not all, listed persons
when the termination proceeds under ORS 90.427(3)(b).
ORS 90.427(1)(a) sets the timing for such a proceeding and
explicitly recognizes that there can be more than one tenant
residing in a dwelling unit, yet ORS 90.427(3)(b) specifically
refers to “the tenancy” in its entirety as what a landlord
terminates, not an individual tenant’s tenancy.
Further, other provisions in ORS chapter 90 oper-
ate to terminate tenancies against one, but not all, of the
tenants, indicating that when the legislature intends to
consider tenants individually it does so explicitly through
releasing tenants from their rental agreements on a tenant-
by-tenant basis. See, e.g., ORS 90.445(1)(a) (establishing a
642 Fircrest Properties, LLC v. Simmons

process to terminate the rental agreement solely as to a
tenant who “perpetrates a criminal act of physical violence
related to domestic violence, sexual assault, bias crime
or stalking against a household member who is a tenant”
but prohibits termination as to the other tenants); ORS
90.453(2) (permitting the release from a rental agreement of
a tenant who “[i]s protected by a valid order of protection” or
“[h]as been the victim of domestic violence, sexual assault,
bias crime or stalking” and that tenant’s immediate fam-
ily members); ORS 90.456 (indicating that the tenancy con-
tinues for persons not released from the rental agreement
under ORS 90.453, ORS 90.459, or ORS 105.128).
Because ORS 90.427(3)(b) refers to “the tenancy”
and not the rental agreement, and because it does not explic-
itly allow release from the rental agreement for individual
tenants, termination under that statute applies to the ten-
ancy in its entirety, which affects all persons listed on the
rental agreement.2
Having concluded that ORS 90.427(3)(b) refers to
the termination in its entirety of the tenancy created by any
given rental agreement, and as to all persons listed on that
agreement, we now turn to the proper interpretation of the
phrase “first year of occupancy” as used in ORS 90.427(3)(b)
and ORS 90.427(1)(a). Again, we start with the text which
defines “first year of occupancy” as “all periods in which any
of the tenants has resided in the dwelling unit for one year
or less.” ORS 90.427(1)(a). The operative phrases of that defi-
nition for purposes of this appeal are “all periods” and “any
of the tenants.” We address each in turn.
“[W]e typically give terms of common usage their
plain, natural, and ordinary meaning, which is presumed
to be what is reflected in a dictionary.” State v. Berkey, 344
Or App 313, 316
, 581 P3d 149 (2025) (internal citations and
quotation marks omitted).
2
Tenants listed on the rental agreement who do not receive notice of a pend-
ing FED action could be able to raise defenses of defective notice (such as failure
to properly serve the notice or failure to calculate and cite the correct amount of
rent) and thus defeat a landlord’s attempt to regain possession of the dwelling
unit in its entirety. As a result, we anticipate landlords will act to ensure that
notice is properly served on all listed tenants. We observe that, here, landlord
served the termination notice on all listed tenants, and there was no challenge
made to the sufficiency of that service.
Cite as 347 Or App 637 (2026) 643

“All” is defined as “the whole amount or quan-
tity of * * * every member or individual component of * * *
every[.]” Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary 54 (unabridged
ed 2002). As used in the statute, the relevant definition for
“period” is “a portion of time determined by some recurring
phenomenon.” Id. at 1680. The “reoccurring phenomenon” is
the calendar year; here, “one year or less.” The phrase “all
periods” thus refers to “every portion of time” that is “one
year or less.”
Turning to the phrase “any of the tenants,” as most
applicable in this situation, “any” is defined as:
“one indifferently out of more than two * * * used as a func-
tion word esp. in interrogative and conditional expressions
to indicate one that is not a particular or definite individ-
ual of the given category but whichever one chance may
select * * * one, no matter what one[.]”
Id. at 97. “Any of the tenants” thus means “one[,] indiffer-
ently out of more than two,” “no matter what one” of the
people who are signatories to the residential agreement that
established the tenancy. Thus, under the plain text of ORS
90.427(1)(a), the “first year of occupancy” includes “every
portion of time” when “one, no matter what one” of the ten-
ants “has resided in the dwelling unit for one year or less.”
In sum, reading ORS 90.427(1)(a) and ORS 90.427(3)
(b) together, if “one, no matter what one” of the tenants has
resided in the dwelling unit for one year or less, a landlord
“may terminate the tenancy” in its entirety, and as to all
persons listed on the rental agreement, by “giving the tenant
notice in writing not less than 30 days prior to the date des-
ignated in the notice for the termination of the tenancy.”
Applying the correct interpretation of ORS 90.427(1)(a)
and ORS 90.427(3)(b) to the facts of this case, we conclude
that the trial court erred when it granted judgment in favor
of Simmons and “all other occupants.” It is undisputed that
Erlandson-Sims was added to the rental agreement on May 6,
2024. Thus, when landlord mailed a notice of termination of
tenancy on September 11, 2024, landlord gave notice “during
the first year of occupancy” as that phrase is defined in ORS
90.427(1)(a), because it was during a period when “any of the
644 Fircrest Properties, LLC v. Simmons

tenants ha[d] resided in the dwelling unit for one year or
less.” We conclude that the notice of termination was valid
under ORS 90.427(3)(b) as to all persons listed on the rental
agreement, including Simmons, because that rental agree-
ment established the month-to-month tenancy.
Having concluded that the notice of termination
was valid as to all persons listed on the rental agreement,
we turn to the appropriate disposition. Although Simmons
did not appear on appeal, he did appear at trial. His pri-
mary defense was that he had lived in the apartment for
longer than one year and therefore believed landlord did
not have the legal authority to pursue an ORS 90.427(3)(b)
termination proceeding against him. However, as we con-
cluded above, landlord initiated the termination proceed-
ings “during the first year of occupancy” because Erlandson-
Sims was added to the rental agreement in May 2024, and
ORS 90.427(1)(a) defines “first year of occupancy” as a time
period when “any of the tenants has resided in the dwelling
unit for one year or less.” Therefore, Simmons’s multi-year
residency is not a defense to the ORS 90.427(3)(b) termina-
tion proceeding.
Simmons also noted that he was up to date on his
rent, that no complaints had been filed against him during
his time as a tenant, and, therefore, that landlord had no
cause for the eviction. But because ORS 90.427(3)(b) permits
termination without cause of a month-to-month tenancy
“during the first year of occupancy,” those defenses do not
apply. Notably, Simmons did not claim that the notice of ter-
mination was defective or improperly served, such that the
case should be dismissed.
We therefore reverse and remand with instruc-
tions to enter a judgment of possession in favor of landlord.
Our conclusion on the first assignment of error eliminates
our need to address landlord’s second assignment of error,
regarding the default judgment that landlord asserts should
have been entered against “all other occupants.”
Reversed and remanded.

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Federal and State Courts
Filed
March 11th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Employers
Geographic scope
State (Oregon)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Judicial Administration
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Eviction Procedures Residential Tenancies

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