1000 Friends of Oregon v. Linn County

475 P.3d 121, 306 Or. App. 432
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 10, 2020
DocketA174056
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 475 P.3d 121 (1000 Friends of Oregon v. Linn County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
1000 Friends of Oregon v. Linn County, 475 P.3d 121, 306 Or. App. 432 (Or. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Argued and submitted July 28, reversed and remanded September 10, petition for review denied December 10, 2020 (367 Or 290)

1000 FRIENDS OF OREGON, Respondent, v. LINN COUNTY, Respondent Below, and Ronald HENTHORNE, Virginia Henthorne, and Lynn Merrill, Petitioners. Land Use Board of Appeals 2019103, 2019104; A174056 475 P3d 121

Petitioners Ronald Henthorne, Virginia Henthorne, and Lynn Merrill seek judicial review of a final order of the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) that set aside a decision of the Linn County Board of Commissioners approving an appli- cation for a zone change and a comprehensive plan amendment. In that order, LUBA reversed a decision by the county approving petitioners’ application for a plan amendment and zone change from Farm Forest to Non-Resource 5 Acre Minimum (NR-5) for a 108-acre vacant parcel. It did so because it read two provi- sions of the county’s comprehensive plan to allow for only three potential resource designations for such wildlife habitat, none of which were the NR-5 plan and zone designation. On review, petitioners argue that LUBA legally erred in interpret- ing the provisions at issue because it did not defer to the county’s plausible con- trary interpretation. Petitioners also contend that, in any event, the provisions at issue do not impose a categorical prohibition of the use of the NR-5 designation on land mapped as wildlife habitat. Held: The county’s implicit interpretation of the provisions at issue allow for planning and zoning amendments outside of the three potential resource designations, such as the NR-5 designation, and that interpretation is plausible. Reversed and remanded.

Wendie L. Kellington argued the cause for petitioners. Also on the brief was Kellington Law Group PC. Andrew Mulkey argued the cause and filed the brief for respondent. Before Lagesen, Presiding Judge, and James, Judge, and Kamins, Judge. LAGESEN, P. J. Reversed and remanded. Cite as 306 Or App 432 (2020) 433

LAGESEN, P. J.

This case is before us on judicial review of a final order of the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) that set aside a decision of the Linn County Board of Commissioners approving an application for a zone change and a compre- hensive plan amendment. We reverse and remand because, in concluding that the requested plan amendment and zone change was not authorized, LUBA erroneously failed to defer to the county’s plausible interpretation of its own compre- hensive plan, as required under Siporen v. City of Medford, 349 Or 247, 262, 243 P3d 776 (2010). As a result, LUBA erro- neously concluded that the proposed zone change and com- prehensive plan amendment were categorically prohibited by two provisions of the county’s comprehensive plan.

Petitioners Ronald Henthorne, Virginia Henthorne, and Lynn Merrill seek review of the LUBA final order at issue. In that order, LUBA reversed a decision by the county approving petitioners’ application for a plan amendment and zone change from Farm Forest (F/F) to Non-Resource 5 Acre Minimum (NR-5) for a 108-acre vacant parcel. One reason that LUBA reversed the county’s decision is that petitioners’ property is in an area mapped as big game habitat. LUBA reads two provisions of the county’s comprehensive plan to preclude the use of the NR-5 plan and zone designation for such land. Specifically, LUBA reads Linn County Code (LCC) 903.550(A)(1) and LCC 903.510(B)(3), to require that land mapped as wildlife habitat must be designated on the comprehensive plan, and zoned, using one of three resource designations that do not include NR-5.

Before us, petitioners argue that LUBA legally erred in interpreting the provisions at issue because it did not defer to the county’s plausible contrary interpretation as required under Siporen, 349 Or at 262, and because, in their view, the text and the context of the provisions at issue, regardless of any deference owed to the county, do not impose a categorical prohibition of the use of the NR-5 des- ignation on land mapped as wildlife habitat. Petitioners also contend that LUBA erred in denying their motion to strike evidence from the local record pertaining to the standing of 434 1000 Friends of Oregon v. Linn County

respondent on appeal, 1000 Friends of Oregon, and to dis- miss 1000 Friends’ LUBA appeal for lack of standing. 1000 Friends views LUBA’s order differently. It responds that LUBA did not interpret the county’s plan provisions in the way that petitioners claim that it did and that we should affirm because, in its view, petitioners have not challenged the actual basis for LUBA’s decision. 1000 Friends asserts that what LUBA actually addressed was more a matter of timing than a conclusion that land mapped as wildlife habitat could never be designated and zoned NR-5: “LUBA determined that the county was wrong to conclude that it could defer its analysis of the potential impacts of the NR-5 zone on the property’s mapped big game habitat.” 1000 Friends also argues that the county never interpreted the plan provisions at issue, either implicitly or explicitly, and that, therefore, there was no interpretation to which LUBA was required to defer. Finally, 1000 Friends contends that LUBA was correct to deny petitioners’ motion to strike evidence from the local record. As an initial matter, we reject without further dis- cussion petitioners’ contention that LUBA erred in deny- ing their motion to strike evidence from the local record. As LUBA correctly noted, petitioners did not establish that there was any authority for it to grant that particular relief, and petitioners have not identified anything in their brief to us that calls LUBA’s judgment on that point into question. As for the remaining issues, the initial question raised by the parties’ arguments is what, exactly, did LUBA decide in the order on review? In particular, did LUBA interpret the county’s plan in the manner that petitioners claim that it did, that is, did LUBA’s decision hinge in whole or in part on its determination that the county’s plan does not permit the use of the NR-5 designation for land mapped as wildlife habitat? We conclude that it did. 1000 Friends is correct that LUBA also construed the county’s plan provisions to preclude the county from deferring its analysis regarding the impact of the plan and zone change on wildlife habi- tat until approval of development is sought. 1000 Friends Cite as 306 Or App 432 (2020) 435

additionally is correct to observe that petitioners have not challenged that aspect of LUBA’s ruling. That ruling, how- ever, is not the only interpretive ruling that LUBA made. LUBA reversed the county’s decision outright and did not remand it to conduct the deferred analysis that LUBA held the county had wrongfully deferred. LUBA took that path because it concluded that the county’s plan categorically precludes the use of the NR-5 designation for land mapped as wildlife habitat: “We will reverse a land use decision when the decision ‘violates a provision of applicable law and is prohibited as a matter of law.’ OAR 661-010-0071(1)(c). Intervenors seek a plan amendment and zone change to apply the NR plan and zoning designation to property that is, at least par- tially, mapped as peripheral big game habitat. In our res- olution of the first assignment of error, we concluded the LCC 903.510(B)(3) and LCC 903.550(A)(1) require resource plan and zone designations for property that is mapped big game habitat. Accordingly, changing the plan and zoning designations of property that [is] mapped as a peripheral big game habitat to [the] NR designation is ‘prohibited as a matter of law.’ ”

Thus, petitioners’ arguments attack the very legal ruling on which LUBA’s disposition turned.

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Related

1000 Friends of Oregon v. Linn County
324 Or. App. 559 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2023)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
475 P.3d 121, 306 Or. App. 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/1000-friends-of-oregon-v-linn-county-orctapp-2020.