Alliance for Responsible Land Use v. Deschutes County

942 P.2d 836, 149 Or. App. 259, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 1033
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 23, 1997
DocketLUBA Nos. 96-145, 96-146; CA A96890
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 942 P.2d 836 (Alliance for Responsible Land Use v. Deschutes 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
Alliance for Responsible Land Use v. Deschutes County, 942 P.2d 836, 149 Or. App. 259, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 1033 (Or. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

DEITS, C. J.

Petitioners seek review, and respondent PMR Dev. Co. (respondent) cross-petitions for review, of LUBA’s order remanding a Deschutes County decision to rezone certain property in accordance with respondent’s application. The property is located within the City of Sisters urban growth boundary (UGB) but is outside the city’s territorial limits. Therefore, the area is subject to county land use legislation governing the Sisters urban area, and the county, rather than the city, is the decisionmaker here. The county’s decision changes the zone of the property from urban area reserve (UAR)1 to two residential classifications of different densities (RS and RH) that are to apply respectively to different parts of the property.2 We affirm on the petition and reverse on the cross-petition.

Petitioners contend that LUBA erred by upholding the county’s conclusion that the rezoning was permissible under policy 3 of the Sisters urban area plan. Policy 3 provides:

“In order to assure the economic provision and utilization of future public facilities and services, the present city should develop at 75% capacity before expanding into the reserve area.”

The parties agree that the term “present city’ in the policy refers to the city as of 1979. Two inventories, one prepared in 1979 and the other in 1981, are appended to the plan, and both show the “buildable acreage” in the city as 417 acres. Respondent presented data to the county indicating that the area of the city as of 1979 was, at the most, 388 acres. The county governing body accepted that lower figure as the one against which the 75 percent development requirement [262]*262of policy 3 should be measured. Petitioners contended to LUBA, and now contend in their first assignment to us, that the two appended inventories conclusively establish the relevant area and that the county erred by interpreting the plan policy as allowing the area to be defined by the alternative method.

LUBA noted that policy 3 does not specify either the area of the city or a method or source for ascertaining it, and that nothing in the two inventories or elsewhere in the plan purports to make the inventories the exclusive determinant of the city’s area. LUBA therefore concluded that the county’s interpretation of policy 3 as allowing the different method that respondent offered for calculating the area was not reversible under ORS 197.829(1) and Clark v. Jackson County, 313 Or 508, 836 P2d 710 (1992). We agree with LUBA that the county’s interpretation was not “clearly wrong” and that it therefore must be upheld under Clark. Goose Hollow Foothills League v. City of Portland, 117 Or App 211, 843 P2d 992 (1992). We accordingly reject petitioners’ first assignment of error. They make one other assignment, but its success depends on that of the first. We affirm on the petition and turn to the cross-petition.

Respondent contends that LUBA erred in holding that certain findings were required by Standard e of section 23(3) of the Sisters urban area zoning ordinance and that the county had not made the necessary findings. Standard e requires that, after determining that there is a public need for a zone change of the kind in question,3 the county must further determine:

“That need will be best served by changing the classification of the particular piece of property in question as compared with other available property.”

We quote LUBA’s explanation for its holding at some length:

“The county’s findings do not expressly interpret what Standard [e] requires. The findings recite the benefits of [263]*263changing the designation on the subject property. They also discuss the need for residential zoning of this property due to the constraints of existing RH designated property within the city. They do not, however, provide any comparison of the subject property to either other UAR-designated property or to other property within the city with zoning designations other than RH or RS. Petitioners argue, and we agree, that Standard [e] requires such a comparison.
“[Respondent] disputes that Standard [e] requires a comparison of other properties within the city. [Respondent] argues:
“ ‘[T]he findings of need required for compliance with Policy 4 require proof of need for more residential land than presently available for development in the city. It would be illogical to look to the area that lacks an adequate supply of land for the additional residential development lands needed by the community. For these reasons, the comparison required by this section of the zoning ordinance must be made with other reserve lands which are theoretically capable of supplying additional, needed residential land.’
“The problem with [respondent’s] argument is that it is not in accord with the language of Standard [e] and it does not take into account the possibility of rezoning land within the city to accommodate a need for more residential development. The language of Standard [e] requires a comparison of all other available property, not just other UAR-designated property.
<<**** *
“In order to satisfy Standard [e], the county must compare the subject property to both other UAR-designated properties and to other properties identified by petitioners within the city to determine whether the public need will be best served by changing the zoning of the subject property as compared to the others.”

The county’s findings contain comparisons of the property in question both with other UAR-zoned property and with property — principally RH-zoned land — that is located within the city and that is designated and/or zoned other than UAR. The part of the county’s order that deals [264]*264with Standard e and with related matters is extensive, covering almost four single-spaced typewritten pages. As we understand LUBA’s holding, the principal deficiency it finds in the county’s order is that the findings do not cover all of the sites within the city that petitioners asked to have compared with respondent’s property. Petitioners also suggest, and LUBA appears to have agreed, that the findings are flawed in that their treatment of other UAR locations is not sufficiently site-specific in its focus and, rather than being comparative in its approach, it discusses the advantages of respondent’s property generally without delineating the advantages and drawbacks of other properties.

The point of departure for LUBA’s analysis was that the county’s order does not contain an express interpretation of Standard e and, therefore, that LUBA itself was required to interpret the standard independently pursuant to ORS 197.829(2) and to determine whether the county’s findings were adequate to satisfy the standard as LUBA interpreted it. It is important to emphasize that LUBA did not hold that the county’s interpretation of the standard was reversible. Rather, LUBA concluded that the county had made no reviewable interpretation.

Respondent argues that LUBA erred both in the way that it

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ALL. FOR RES. LAND USE v. Deschutes Cty.
942 P.2d 836 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1997)

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Bluebook (online)
942 P.2d 836, 149 Or. App. 259, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 1033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alliance-for-responsible-land-use-v-deschutes-county-orctapp-1997.