Citizens for Resp. Devel. in The Dalles v. Walmart

461 P.3d 956, 366 Or. 272
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 2020
DocketS066596
StatusPublished

This text of 461 P.3d 956 (Citizens for Resp. Devel. in The Dalles v. Walmart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens for Resp. Devel. in The Dalles v. Walmart, 461 P.3d 956, 366 Or. 272 (Or. 2020).

Opinion

Argued and submitted November 14, 2019; decision of Court of Appeals affirmed, final order of the Department of State Lands reversed, and case remanded to Department of State Lands for further proceedings April 16, 2020

CITIZENS FOR RESPONSIBLE DEVELOPMENT IN THE DALLES, Respondent on Review, v. WAL-MART STORES, INC., Respondent, and DEPARTMENT OF STATE LANDS, Petitioner on Review. (DSL APP0043798RF) (CA A158346) (SC S066596) 461 P3d 956

The Department of State Lands (DSL), issued a permit, pursuant to ORS 196.825, to Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., to fill and remove wetlands on private prop- erty in order to build a new store. Citizens for Responsible Development in The Dalles (Citizens) opposed the project and argued on appeal that DSL erred when it issued the permit because it did not find that there was a “public need” for the project. The Court of Appeals agreed with Citizens and remanded the case to DSL. Held: The Court of Appeals erred to the extent that it held that ORS 196.825 requires a finding that a “public need” for the fill or removal project “predominates” over the loss to the waters of the state caused by the project for every approved permit. Rather, ORS 196.825 “requires that, if DSL finds that the proposed fill will ‘interfere with the paramount policy of this state to preserve the use of its waters for navigation, fishing and public recreation,’ then DSL must determine whether the interference is ‘unreasonable’ by weighing the interfer- ence with public uses for which ‘waters of this state’ are preserved against” a “list of public-benefit considerations” found in ORS 196.825(3). Under that standard, DSL failed to make a finding necessary to support its ultimate determination that the project will not “unreasonably interfere.” The decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed. The final order of the Department of State Lands is reversed, and the case is remanded to the Department of State Lands for further proceedings.

En Banc On review from the Court of Appeals.* ______________ * On judicial review from the Department of State Lands. 295 Or App 310, 433 P3d 364 (2018). Cite as 366 Or 272 (2020) 273

Inge D. Wells, Assistant Attorney General, Salem, argued the cause and filed the briefs for petitioner on review. Also on the briefs were Ellen Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General. Karl G. Anuta, Law Office of Karl G. Anuta PC, Portland, argued the cause and filed the brief for respondent on review. Also on the briefs was Cary Allen, Portland. FLYNN, J. The decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed. The final order of the Department of State Lands is reversed, and the case is remanded to the Department of State Lands for further proceedings. 274 Citizens for Resp. Devel. in The Dalles v. Walmart

FLYNN, J. The Department of State Lands (DSL) issued a permit, pursuant to ORS 196.825, for Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (“Walmart”) to fill and remove some wetlands on pri- vate property in order to build a new store in The Dalles. Citizens for Responsible Development in The Dalles (Citizens) opposed the project and appealed the fill per- mit, arguing that DSL lacked authority to issue the permit because DSL did not find that there was a “public need” for the project. The Court of Appeals agreed with Citizens that DSL erred in issuing the permit “[b]ecause DSL found that it was inconclusive whether the project would address a pub- lic need.” Citizens for Resp. Devel. in The Dalles v. Walmart, 295 Or App 310, 321, 433 P3d 364 (2018). We allowed DSL’s petition for review and now affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals to remand the case to DSL, although we disagree with its premise that ORS 196.825 conditions the issuance of every permit on a finding that the proposed project will serve a “public need.” The case requires us to construe ORS 196.825, which specifies that, before DSL issues a permit to fill any “waters of this state”—a term that includes “wetlands”—DSL must determine that the project “[w]ould not unreasonably inter- fere with the paramount policy of this state to preserve the use of its waters for navigation, fishing and public recre- ation.”1 ORS 196.800(15); ORS 196.815; ORS 196.825(1). The case also requires us to examine and explain the scope of our holding in Morse v. Oregon Division of State Lands, 285 Or 197, 204, 590 P2d 709 (1979), which construed a similar requirement in the 1977 fill-permit statute as meaning that DSL must identify and “weigh the extent of the public need for the fill as compared with the public interest in the pres- ervation of the water” for the specified public uses. According to the Court of Appeals, “Morse con- clude[d] that DSL lacks the authority to issue a permit without a finding that a public need predominates,” and the current fill statute retains that requirement. 295 Or 1 The same statutory requirements govern DSL permits to “remove material from the bed or banks” of “waters of this state,” but the permit at issue here was for “fill.” ORS 196.815(1); ORS 196.825(1). Cite as 366 Or 272 (2020) 275

App at 319. But DSL contends that Morse’s construction of the fill-permit statute did not extend to permits to fill wet- lands on private property and that, as amended following Morse, the statute now requires DSL only to “reflect on” or “give thought to” the “public need” for a project. According to DSL, it satisfied that requirement by considering—and finding “inconclusive”—whether there is a “public need” for the project. We agree with DSL in part. The reasoning of the Court of Appeals overstates the holding of Morse and under- states the significance of subsequent legislative amend- ments. On the other hand, the argument advanced by DSL understates the holding of Morse and overstates the signif- icance of the subsequent legislative amendments. Properly understood, Morse required DSL to determine and weigh the “public need” for a fill project only if the proposed fill would “interfere with” the state’s “paramount policy” of preserv- ing its waters for the specified public purposes. Moreover, the legislature has since expanded the categories of public benefit that DSL must consider, so that its finding that the “public need” for Walmart’s project is “inconclusive” does not necessarily require DSL to deny the permit. However, we agree with the Court of Appeals that the current fill statute incorporates Morse’s core conclusion: DSL’s statutory obliga- tion to determine whether a proposed project “unreasonably interferes” with the state’s “paramount policy” requires it to weigh any interference against—the now-expanded catego- ries of—public benefit.

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461 P.3d 956, 366 Or. 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-for-resp-devel-in-the-dalles-v-walmart-or-2020.