Brown v. City of Grants Pass

414 P.3d 898, 291 Or. App. 8
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 28, 2018
DocketA162006
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 414 P.3d 898 (Brown v. City of Grants Pass) 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
Brown v. City of Grants Pass, 414 P.3d 898, 291 Or. App. 8 (Or. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

EGAN, C.J.

*9Plaintiff sought a declaration that an ordinance enacted by the City of Grants Pass, requiring that marijuana plants grown at home for personal use be grown indoors, is preempted by ORS 633.738, which prohibits a local government from enacting or enforcing local limits on the production or use of plant seeds. Plaintiff appeals from a judgment of the trial court holding that the city's *900ordinance is not preempted by the statute, because the growing of marijuana plants at home is not subject to ORS 633.738. We agree with the trial court and affirm.

We begin with a brief description of the statutory context. In 1998, Oregon voters approved the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act (the OMMA), now codified at ORS 475B.785 to 475B.949, which authorizes the licensing, growing, processing, possession, prescription, and dispensing of marijuana for medical use, and exempts its use under the act from criminal liability. The Oregon Health Authority administers the OMMA.

In 2014, voters approved the Adult and Medical Use of Cannabis Act (the AMCA), now codified at ORS 475B.010 to 475B.545, which legalizes adult recreational use of marijuana. The Oregon Liquor Control Commission (OLCC) administers the licensing and permitting of producers, processors, wholesalers, and retailers of marijuana for recreational and medical use under the AMCA.

The AMCA also legalizes the noncommercial production, making, processing, possession, and storage of marijuana and marijuana products "at a household." ORS 475B.301(1). Persons who grow marijuana plants at home for personal noncommercial use are not subject to the licensing and permitting requirements that apply to commercial producers, processors, wholesalers, and retailers of marijuana under the AMCA, "if the total amount of homegrown marijuana at the household does not exceed four marijuana plants at any time." Id. ORS 475B.015(10) defines "homegrown" marijuana as marijuana plants or marijuana products "grown or made by a person 21 years of age or older for noncommercial purposes." ORS 475B.306 provides that *10a person may not "produce, process, possess or store homegrown marijuana" or marijuana products where they "can be seen by normal unaided vision from a public place."

The city has enacted an ordinance requiring that, after December 31, 2015, marijuana "cultivation, drying, curing, storage, production or processing" for recreational or medical use "shall be conducted indoors." Grants Pass Municipal Code (GPMC) 5.72.030(2). There is no similar restriction in the AMCA, but plaintiff concedes that restricting growing of marijuana to indoor areas "may not conflict with any restriction" in the AMCA. Plaintiff brought this action seeking a declaration that the city's ordinance is preempted by ORS 633.738, which provides, as relevant:

"(1) As used in this section:
"* * * * *
"(b) 'Nursery seed' means any propagant of nursery stock as defined in ORS 571.005.
"(2) *** [A] local government may not enact or enforce a local law or measure, including but not limited to an ordinance, regulation, control area or quarantine, to inhibit or prevent the production or use of agricultural seed, flower seed, nursery seed or vegetable seed or products of agricultural seed, flower seed, nursery seed or vegetable seed . The prohibition imposed by this subsection includes, but is not limited to, any local laws or measures for regulating the display, distribution, growing, harvesting, labeling, marketing, mixing, notification of use, planting, possession, processing, registration, storage, transportation or use of agricultural seed, flower seed, nursery seed or vegetable seed or products of agricultural seed, flower seed, nursery seed or vegetable seed."

(Emphasis added.) It is undisputed that the city's ordinance applies to the commercial, medical, and homegrown marijuana, and it is undisputed that the regulation of the growing of commercial, medical, and nonmedical marijuana is explicitly exempted from ORS 633.738. See ORS 475B.928; ORS 475B.940; ORS 475B.486. Plaintiff contended that the home growing of marijuana is not exempted from ORS 633.738, and that, by requiring that marijuana plants grown at home be grown indoors, the city has enacted a local law *11"inhibiting or preventing" the production or use of "flower seed" or "nursery seed" or their products, as prohibited by ORS 633.738. On the parties' cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court rejected plaintiff's contention, denied plaintiff's motion, and granted the city's motion. On appeal, plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in its construction of ORS 633.738 and *901that she is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

The City of Grants Pass is a "home rule" city. The city's charter states that the city "shall have all powers which the constitutions, statutes, and common law of the United States and of this State expressly or impliedly grant or allow municipalities." The charter provides that it is to be "liberally construed to the end that the city shall have all powers necessary or convenient for the conduct of its municipal affairs." The city's ordinances are valid if they are authorized by the local charter, and if they do not contravene state or federal law. Rogue Valley Sewer Services v. City of Phoenix , 357 Or. 437, 451,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
414 P.3d 898, 291 Or. App. 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-city-of-grants-pass-orctapp-2018.