Recovery of escheated property.

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(2) The claim shall be made by a petition filed with the State Treasurer. The petition must include:

(a) A declaration by the petitioner under penalty of perjury in the form required by ORCP 1 E or an unsworn declaration under ORS 194.800 to 194.835 if the declarant is physically outside the boundaries of the United States;

(b) The age and place of residence of the claimant by whom or on whose behalf the petition is filed;

(c) A brief description of the property or source of funds believed to have been escheated to the state;

(d) That the claimant lawfully is entitled to the property or proceeds;

(e) That at the time the property escheated to the state the claimant had no knowledge or notice thereof or was unable to prove entitlement to the escheated property and has subsequently acquired new evidence of that entitlement;

(f) That the claimant claims the property or proceeds as an heir or devisee or as the personal representative of the estate of an heir or devisee, setting forth any relationship between the claimant and the decedent who at the time of death owned the escheated property;

(g) That 10 years have not elapsed since the death of the decedent or that eight years have not elapsed since the entry of the judgment or order escheating the property to the state; and

(h) If the petition is not filed by the claimant, the status of the petitioner.

(3) If the State Treasurer determines that the claimant is entitled to escheated estate property, the State Treasurer shall:

(a) Pay from the Unclaimed Property and Estates Fund the proportional share of the proceeds or value of the property without interest and subject to the proportional share of the costs of administering the estate, including attorney fees and personal representative fees paid by the estate; or

(b) If personal or real property is in the Unclaimed Property and Estates Fund, transfer the property without interest and subject to a claim of the Unclaimed Property and Estates Fund of a proportional share of the costs of administering the estate, including attorney fees and personal representative fees paid by the estate, and any property taxes or other costs of managing or improving the property, whether incurred before or after the close of the estate.

(4) If the person whose property escheated or reverted to the state was at any time a patient of a state institution in Oregon for persons with mental illness or of the Eastern Oregon Training Center, the reasonable unpaid cost of the care and maintenance of the person while a ward of the institution, regardless of when the cost was incurred, may be deducted from, or, if necessary, be offset in full against, the amount of the escheated property. The reasonable unpaid cost of care and maintenance shall be determined in accordance with ORS 179.701.

(5) For the purposes of this section, the death of the decedent is presumed to have occurred on the date shown in the decedent’s certified copy of the death record or in any other similar document issued by the jurisdiction in which the death occurred or issued by an agency of the federal government.

(6) A person aggrieved by a determination of the State Treasurer under this section may seek a contested case hearing under ORS 183.413 to 183.470. [Formerly 120.130; 2003 c.395 §18; 2003 c.576 §380a; 2007 c.70 §23; 2007 c.284 §3; 2009 c.595 §83; 2013 c.36 §34; 2013 c.218 §15; 2013 c.366 §61; 2019 c.678 §46; 2021 c.424 §16]


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