Phillip Cosley Querin’s legal practice in Portland, Oregon spans nearly 40 years. He has spent the last 25 years as a partner at the international law firm of Davis Wright Tremaine, one of the largest firms in the country. During 15 of those years, he co-chaired the firm-wide Real Estate Litigation Practice Group and was chair of the Real Estate Practice Group for the Portland office. In 2010 Phil decided to open a solo real estate practice, Querin Law Group, LLC, in Portland and Bend, Oregon. Phil graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Oregon, and went on to graduate from the University’s School of Law. His practice is limited exclusively to real estate litigation/mediation/arbitration and transactional matters. He has taught Real Estate Licensing Law and Real Estate Practices for several years at Portland Community College and other private licensing schools. He has also served as an adjunct professor in Business Law at Portland State University. Phil has authored and co-authored several real estate chapters in the Oregon State Bar’s Continuing Education Publications (“CLE”), as well as chapters for private continuing education real estate publishers. Most recently, in 2009 he spoke at three presentations for the Oregon State Bar’s Real Estate and Land Use Section on distressed sales, loan modifications, short sales, etc. He has also addressed the issue before the Bar’s Professional Liability Fund, touching on legal pitfalls in representing clients in distressed seller transactions. Phil currently serves on the Bar’s New Legislation Committee, which tracks real estate bills affecting the real estate industry. He is a member of the Bar’s Real Estate and Land Use Section, its Litigation Section, and its Dispute Resolution Section. He is also a member of the American Bar Association as well as its Real Estate and Litigation Committees. Phil is intimately involved in Oregon real estate, having served nearly 20 years as legal counsel for the Portland Metropolitan Association of Realtors® (“PMAR”) and one of its predecessor organizations, the Washington County Association of Realtors®. He has continuously served on PMAR’s Risk Management Committee since its inception and has spoken frequently on current and critical issues facing the industry. He served on PMAR’s Forms Committee since its inception and in 1997, following the creation of Oregon Real Estate Forms, LLC (“OREF”) the statewide Realtor® forms provider, he has continuously served on their Forms Committee. In this capacity, Phil is responsible for the review and final drafting of all real estate forms used by virtually all residential Realtors® throughout the state of Oregon. He is a frequently requested speaker at many professional organizations including the Portland Metropolitan Association of Realtors®, PMAR’s Million Dollar Club, PMAR’s Owners and Managers Forums, the Women’s Council of Realtors®, the Central Oregon Association of Realtors®, the Yamhill County Association of Realtors®, the Eugene Association of Realtors® and the Douglas County Association of Realtors®. He has also made presentations to the Oregon Real Estate Agency addressing OREF forms changes. Phil is also a frequent speaker for many of the local title insurance companies and real estate brokerages in Portland, Bend, and elsewhere, addressing broker risk management, distressed sales, and other topics of current interest. For nearly 20 years he has authored monthly or bi-monthly real estate articles that are widely read throughout the industry and frequently used as instructional material for brokerage company training. On average, Phil speaks to Realtor® groups 30 to 40 times a year, reaching thousands of industry members. Together with PMAR, he reviews its legislative initiatives in an effort to advance and improve real estate laws for consumers and the brokerage community. Phil has been a widely quoted expert in local newspapers, including the
Portland Business Journal and
The Oregonian. He often serves as an expert witness in court on standards of care, as well as other real estate issues in court and arbitrations. As an important corollary to his real estate practice, Phil represents the Manufactured Housing Communities of Oregon (“MHCO”), the statewide industry association for manufactured housing communities. Over the past 25 years he has participated in authoring legislation for landlords and owners of manufactured housing communities, and is responsible for the drafting all of MHCO’s landlord/tenant forms used by community landlords throughout the State. Consequently, he has testified before the Oregon Legislature on manufactured housing issues and has represented and advised community owners and managers on risk management issues and the Oregon Landlord-Tenant law. He has also written and spoken extensively on all aspects of this frequently complex and little understood body of law, including the Federal Fair Housing Laws. He has litigated numerous cases on behalf of landlords and many manufactured housing communities across the state. As a real estate trial lawyer, Phil’s experience is unsurpassed. He has litigated, arbitrated or mediated a wide range of real estate disputes, from adverse possession, to foreclosure, trespass, rescission, commission claims, and virtually every other type of real estate dispute arising in the industry. Similarly, on the transactional side, he’s drafted a multitude of real estate transactional forms, both for individual clients and industry clients. As a result, he is a frequent resource to other attorneys statewide regarding the purpose, intent, and effect of many real estate forms provisions, indirectly improving how real estate transactions are now handled throughout Oregon. In short, over his nearly 40 years of practice, if it deals with real estate, be it residential, commercial, or landlord/tenant, Phil’s probably done it. It is for this reason that he has been nominated by his peers as a real estate “SuperLawyer” for 2007, 2008 and 2009. He has been awarded an “AV” rating by Martindale-Hubble
[1], which is given only for
very high to preeminent legal ability (“A”) and
very high ethical standards (“V”).
[1] The primary law directory for consumers and lawyers. For over 140 years, it has assisted those selecting legal counsel to learn the credentials, legal ability and legal ethics of American and foreign lawyers and law firms.