Alto v. City of Cannon Beach

270 P.3d 392, 247 Or. App. 641, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 80
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 25, 2012
Docket082665; A142171
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 270 P.3d 392 (Alto v. City of Cannon Beach) 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
Alto v. City of Cannon Beach, 270 P.3d 392, 247 Or. App. 641, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 80 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

*643 HASELTON, P. J.

Petitioners appeal a judgment dismissing their writ of review proceeding concerning respondent City of Cannon Beach’s decision that, pursuant to section 5(3) of Ballot Measure 49 (2007), respondents George and Alexis Larsen (the Larsens) have a vested right to complete and continue the development of the use described in their Ballot Measure 37 (2004) waiver. 1 For the reasons set forth below, we conclude that, because petitioners have failed to establish statutory standing under ORS 195.318 — a statute establishing the requisites for challenging, by writ of review, a local government’s vesting determination under Measure 49 — the writ of review court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. Accordingly, we affirm.

The material facts for purposes of our review are procedural or uncontested. The Larsens own a duplex in the city. In March 2006, they obtained a Measure 37 waiver from the city to develop their property consistently with the land use regulations that were in effect in 1974 when they acquired the property. 2 Several months later, the Larsens applied for a variance to expand their existing duplex, and, in December 2006 and March 2007, petitioner Dorothy Alto testified in opposition to the variance at hearings before the planning commission and city council. The planning commission denied the Larsens’ application for a variance, and the city counsel upheld that denial.

*644 Thereafter, in July 2007, the Larsens submitted plans to modify and expand their structure so that it would qualify as a single-family dwelling under the regulations that existed in 1974. The city returned the plans because they did not comply with a city easement on the Larsens’ property. In August 2007, petitioners’ attorney submitted a letter to the city on their behalf “urg[ing] the City to retain whatever rights it has to that easement now and in the future.” Ultimately, the easement issues were resolved, and, on December 7, 2007 — the day after Measure 49 became effective — the city received a letter from the Larsens’ architect requesting a building permit for the expansion pursuant to the Larsens’ Measure 37 waiver.

In response, the city tentatively determined that the Larsens were not entitled to relief under Measure 49 for two reasons. First, the city reasoned that the Larsens were not entitled to relief under section 9 of Measure 49 “because [their] approved claim did not involve the subdivision or partition of land for one or more single-family dwellings, or the establishment of one or more single-family dwellings on land on which dwellings would not otherwise be allowed.” Second, the city reasoned that, pursuant to section 5(3) of Measure 49, 3 the Larsens “do not have a vested right as of December 6, 2007, to complete the use described in [their] approved claim for compensation and therefore the City is unable to issue the requested building permit.”

The Larsens disagreed with the city’s tentative determination under section 5(3). Specifically, the Larsens asserted that they “are entitled to just compensation pursuant to [section] 5(3) because their Measure 37 claim was approved March 7, 2006, prior to the effective date of Measure 49, and because * * * their property rights had vested prior to December 6, 2007.”

*645 On February 8, 2008, the city sent notices to neighboring property owners — including petitioners — that “[a] hearing [had been] scheduled before the City Council on March 4, 2008[,] at 7:00 p.m. to consider whether or not [the Larsens] are entitled to compensation pursuant to the provision of Measure 49.” The city sent petitioners’ notice to the same address that it had used to correspond with petitioners for 13 years — which is the address to which petitioners’ tax assessments are sent — and the notice was not returned to the city. Nonetheless, petitioners did not receive the city’s notice.

On March 4, the city council continued the hearing to its April meeting. Thereafter, on April 1, the city held a public hearing on the Larsens’ Measure 49 claim but continued the hearing again to June 3, at which point the city council closed the public hearing and tentatively determined that, subject to final findings of fact, the Larsens did have a vested right pursuant to section 5(3) of Measure 49 to complete and continue the use described in their Measure 37 waiver. Petitioners did not appear before the city council on April 1 or June 3 and did not submit written evidence, arguments, or comments concerning the Larsens’ Measure 49 claim.

After the June 3 meeting, petitioners learned about the hearing concerning the Larsens’ Measure 49 claim. Petitioner John Alto attended the next city council meeting on July 1 and was prepared to testify in opposition to the Larsens’ Measure 49 claim; however, when the city decided not to reopen the public hearing to take additional testimony, he was not able to testify at that meeting.

Ultimately, at that July 1 meeting, the city approved the Larsens’ Measure 49 claim. Specifically, the city determined that, pursuant to section 5(3) of Measure 49, the Larsens “have a common law vested right to complete and continue the development of their proposed improvement on the Property.”

Petitioners timely appealed the city’s decision to the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA). On respondents’ motion to dismiss, 4 LUBA concluded that the “challenged decision is *646 clearly a Measure 49 vested rights determination” and that “challenges to such vested rights determinations are not subject to LUBA’s jurisdiction.” 5 Alto v. City of Cannon Beach, 57 Or LUBA 739, 742 (2008). Rather than dismissing the appeal, however, LUBA granted petitioners5 motion to transfer the appeal to the circuit court. 6 Id. Accordingly, LUBA transferred petitioners’ notice of intent to appeal to the circuit court, where it was treated as a petition for a writ of review. 7 Id.

As an initial matter, before the circuit court (i.e., writ of review court), respondents moved to dismiss the writ of review because the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction and because petitioners had failed to state a claim for relief under ORS 34.040. 8 Specifically, with regard to the motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, respondents contended that petitioners could not establish statutory standing and, as a consequence, the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction.

*647

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 P.3d 392, 247 Or. App. 641, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alto-v-city-of-cannon-beach-orctapp-2012.