Akiyama v. Tillamook County

333 Or. App. 315
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 26, 2024
DocketA183660
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 333 Or. App. 315 (Akiyama v. Tillamook 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
Akiyama v. Tillamook County, 333 Or. App. 315 (Or. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

No. 416 June 26, 2024 315

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON

Jennifer AKIYAMA; David Allen; Kimberly D.M. Bergstrom; Eric C.M. Bergstrom; Peter Birch; Kathy Hamel; Mark Buxton; Robin Buxton; Nate Castillo; Minerva Castillo; Doug Coates; Carl T. Coffman; Paul S. Cosgrove; Emily Draper; Christine Eisenschmidt; Robert Govender-Towle; Justin Greene; Nicole Ralston; Colin Grey; Karen Jackson; Brian Johnson; The Smith Johnson-Leupp LLC; Justin Jones, Trustee; Carrie Koepke; Cascadia Investment Properties, Inc.; Lana Kowalski; Mike Kowalski; Ron Lockwood; Martha Lockwood; Richard Lofton; Jeanine Lofton Hendrix; Andy Long; Sandra Y. Manning, Trustee; Bonnie McDowell; Phil Zapf; John P. McLoughlin; Katie McLoughlin; Desiree McMenamin; Dustin McMenamin; Maria M. Meyer; John Meyer; Skip Patten; Brian Patterson; Barbara Patterson; Stephen Piucci; Melissa Powers; Anthony Power; Holly Power; Susan Schomburg; Michael Smith; Janell Weeks; Heather L. Weigler; Jake Weigler; Kenneth G. Willett; Kevin Wingert; Brenda Huffstuttler; Jordan Winters; and Rachel Winters, Petitioners, v. TILLAMOOK COUNTY, Tom Prehoditch, Jerry Keene, Vickie Prehoditch, Jacki Hinton, David Boone, Barbara Triplett, Amy Bell, Gary Billingsley, Michael Woodin, Dave Benneth, Carol Hoke, Laurie Kovack, Bruce Bishop, Mark L. Roberts, Joanie Blum, Candice Miller, and Gregory Miller, Respondents. Land Use Board of Appeals 2023063; A183660

Argued and submitted April 24, 2024. 316 Akiyama v. Tillamook County

Heather A. Brann argued the cause for petitioners. Also on the brief was Heather A. Brann PC. Daniel Kearns argued the cause for respondents. Also on the brief was Reeve Kearns PC. Before Joyce, Presiding Judge, Lagesen, Chief Judge, and Jacquot, Judge. LAGESEN, C. J. Affirmed. Cite as 333 Or App 315 (2024) 317

LAGESEN, C. J. Petitioners seek judicial review of a final order of the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA). In that order, LUBA granted Tillamook County’s motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction petitioners’ challenge to county Ordinance 84-2, which regulates the use of private homes as short-term rentals. LUBA concluded that the ordinance was not a land use regulation and, consequently, was not within the stat- utory scope of LUBA’s review. LUBA also concluded that it did not have jurisdiction to review the ordinance under the common-law “significant impact” test. Petitioners assign error to each of LUBA’s determinations with respect to its jurisdiction. We review to determine whether LUBA’s order is unlawful in substance or procedure, ORS 197.850(9)(a), and affirm. I. LUBA’S JURISDICTION At issue in this case is the scope of LUBA’s juris- diction to review decisions of local governments. To provide context for the parties’ dispute and our analysis, we supply an overview of the law governing LUBA’s jurisdiction. LUBA’s jurisdiction to review local government actions derives from both statute and, perhaps surprisingly for a legislatively created body, the common law. Under both sources of law, the party seeking to invoke LUBA’s review has the burden of proving that their challenge to govern- ment action is within LUBA’s jurisdiction. Billington v. Polk County, 299 Or 471, 475, 703 P2d 232 (1985). A. Statutory Jurisdiction By statute, LUBA has “exclusive jurisdiction to review any ‘land use decision.’ ” ORS 197.825(1). A “land use decision” includes a decision by a local government “that concerns the adoption, amendment, or application of the [statewide planning] goals, a provision of the county’s com- prehensive plan, a land use regulation, or a new land use regulation.” ORS 197.015(10)(a)(A). A “land use regulation” includes a local government’s “zoning ordinance, land divi- sion ordinance * * * or similar general ordinance establish- ing standards for implementing a comprehensive plan.” ORS 318 Akiyama v. Tillamook County

197.015(11). Even when a local government does not char- acterize its actions as be land use regulations, LUBA long has held that its jurisdiction extends to actions that have a “clear connection” to the county’s comprehensive plan. Rest- Haven Memorial Park v. City of Eugene, 30 Or LUBA 282, 288, aff’d, 175 Or App 419, 28 P3d 1229 (2001).1 Consistent with the text of ORS 197.015(11), to meet the clear connec- tion test, LUBA has required challengers to show that the government action, however denominated, establishes stan- dards to implement the government’s comprehensive plan. Ramsey v. City of Portland, 30 Or LUBA 212, 217 (1995); Buys v. City of Portland, 69 Or LUBA 486, 491 (2014). B. Common Law Jurisdiction Under the common law, LUBA has jurisdiction to review local governmental actions that have a significant impact on land use, even if the action does not fall within the statutory definition of a land use decision. Marks v. LCDC, 327 Or App 708, 727-28, 536 P3d 995 (2023); Billington, 299 Or at 478-79. We will elaborate on the test later but note here that it focuses on expected impacts on land use that are “likely” to occur and are not speculative. Marks, 327 Or App at 728. The test, we have explained, is “deceptively easy to articulate” for a standard that, in practice, remains opaque. Id. at 727-28. II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND Having outlined the sources and scope of LUBA’s jurisdiction, we turn to the facts of this case. Petitioners seek LUBA’s review of Tillamook County’s Ordinance 84-2, which regulates short-term rentals of residential property. In their view, LUBA has both statutory and common law jurisdiction to review the ordinance. Understanding peti- tioners’ arguments requires understanding of both the reg- ulatory history of short-term rentals in the county, as well as an understanding of our previous decisions addressing LUBA’s jurisdiction over the county’s short-term rental regulations.

1 Although LUBA’s opinions are not binding on this court, they are relevant for persuasive value. Friends of Yamhill County v. Board of Commissioners, 351 Or 219, 251-52, 264 P3d 1265 (2011). Cite as 333 Or App 315 (2024) 319

In 2017, Tillamook County adopted Ordinance 84 to regulate the licensing2 and operation of private dwellings used as short-term rental units in unincorporated areas of the county.3 Ordinance 84 (2017) required owners of private dwellings intending to use them as short-term rentals to acquire and pay for an operation license before using the dwelling as a short-term rental. The 2017 ordinance also provided that a license could be revoked for noncompliance with the ordinance’s provisions; a licensee also could be sub- ject to a tax penalty.4 In 2022, the Tillamook County board of commis- sioners passed Board Order 22-03. The order temporarily suspended the county’s acceptance, processing, and issu- ance of new applications for short-term rental licenses. A number of parties sought LUBA’s review of the order. They argued that LUBA had jurisdiction to review the order on either or both of two bases. First, they argued that it was subject to LUBA’s review as a “development moratorium” because it paused the issuance of new short-term rental licenses. Second, they argued that it was a “land use reg- ulation” because, in petitioners’ view, it amended an exist- ing land use regulation. Specifically, petitioners contended that Ordinance 84 (2017) was itself a land use regulation, such that any amendment to the ordinance also qualified as a land use regulation. Winters v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
333 Or. App. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/akiyama-v-tillamook-county-orctapp-2024.