Ericsson v. State

285 P.3d 722, 251 Or. App. 610, 2012 WL 3195142, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 984
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 8, 2012
DocketC096522CV; A145698
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 285 P.3d 722 (Ericsson v. State) 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
Ericsson v. State, 285 P.3d 722, 251 Or. App. 610, 2012 WL 3195142, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 984 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

SERCOMBE, J.

Petitioners appeal a judgment affirming an order of the Department of Land Conservation and Development (DLCD or department) that denied relief to petitioners under section 6 of Measure 49 (2007).1 Petitioners obtained land use regulation waivers from DLCD under Measure 37 (2004) in order to facilitate residential development of two adjacent lots in rural Washington County.2 Measure 49 repealed Measure 37 waiver remedies, replacing them with various processes to obtain state approvals for “home sites” on the affected properties. DLCD denied petitioners’ application for homesite approvals for both lots, concluding that neither lot met a homesite approval standard in section 6(6)(f) of Measure 49 that requires that, “[o]n the claimant’s acquisition date, the claimant lawfully was permitted to establish at least the number of lots, parcels or dwellings on the property that are authorized [by Measure 49].” On judicial review, the court affirmed DLCD’s order. On appeal, petitioners assert that the court erred in affirming the order and in excluding evidence from the record on review. We affirm for the reasons stated below.

As noted, Measure 49 limits the extent and type of development that can be allowed to a Measure 37 waiver claimant, replacing the full extent of the residential uses permitted at the time the owner acquired the property — the compensation allowed under Measure 37 — with a limited number of homesite approvals. See generally Corey v. DLCD, 344 Or 457, 184 P3d 1109 (2008) (describing the purpose and effect of Measure 49).

[613]*613Petitioners’ claim arose under section 6 of Measure 49, which provides that a qualifying Measure 37 claimant is “eligible for [up to] three home site approvals on the property if the requirements of this section and * * * [s]ections 8 and 11 *** are met.” § 6(l)(a). “Home site approval” means “approval of the subdivision or partition of property or approval of the establishment of a dwelling on property.” ORS 195.300(12).3

To qualify for homesite approvals under section 6, a property owner is required to show a timely claim under Measure 37 and establish satisfaction of the substantive criteria of section 6(6) of Measure 49, including a showing that, “[o]n the claimant’s acquisition date, the claimant lawfully was permitted to establish at least the number of lots, parcels or dwellings on the property that are authorized under this section.” (Emphasis added.)4 The dispute in this [614]*614case is whether petitioners made that showing as part of their Measure 49 claim. That dispute arose in the following factual context as described in the DLCD order and the administrative record.

Petitioners own tax lots 101 and 200 in rural Washington County. The adjacent lots are zoned for agricultural and forestry uses. Petitioners acquired tax lot 101 on April 1, 1986. At that time, the 120-acre lot was zoned Exclusive Forest and Conservation (EFC) under the acknowledged Washington County Community Development Code (CDC). In 1989, petitioners constructed a dwelling on the lot; the dwelling had been approved in 1985 as related to forestry use of the lot.

Petitioners acquired tax lot 200, an adjacent 10-acre lot, by deed on February 12, 1990, at a time when the property was zoned Agricultural and Forest (AF-10). Subsequently, petitioners obtained approval for and ultimately constructed a forestry-related dwelling on that lot as well. In 1993, shortly after acquiring tax lot 200, petitioners were denied a requested plan and zone change from AF-10 to AF-5, a zone change that would have allowed division of the tract into additional lots. Petitioners sought review of the denial from the Land Use Board of Appeals, which upheld the county action. Ericsson v. Washington County, 26 Or LUBA 169 (1993).

Soon after the adoption of Measure 37, petitioners filed claims for compensation for both lots with the state and county. Petitioners claimed compensation for tax lot 101 because post-acquisition land use regulations — at both the state and county levels — might have prevented them from dividing the property into five parcels, building three more [615]*615forest dwellings, and legitimizing a temporary mobile home use. Similarly, petitioners claimed that changes to state and local law prevented them from rezoning tax lot 200 to AF-5 zoning, dividing that lot into three parcels, and building two more farm dwellings on the resulting parcels.

DLCD issued Measure 37 waivers for both properties. The department concluded that, since it was “possible that [tax lot 101] could have been divided and dwellings sited under the [state] provisions in effect at the time of purchase,” and the property “could have potentially been divided into some parcels” under the county laws, “it is more likely than not that there has been some reduction in the fair market value of the property.” Similarly, the department determined that “it is more likely than not that there has been some reduction in the fair market value of [tax lot 200] as a result of land use regulations enforced by the Commission or the department.” Washington County had not acted on the Measure 37 waiver requests by the time of the adoption of Measure 49.

In March 2008, following the adoption of Measure 49, petitioners sought approval of three parcels and homesites for each of the lots pursuant to section 6. They submitted information and arguments about the effect of county zoning at the time that they acquired each lot. DLCD concluded in a preliminary evaluation of their claims that “it appears that the claimants are not eligible for any relief under Measure 49 because the claimants would not have been lawfully permitted to establish any additional home sites when they acquired the property.” Petitioners filed further argument, contending that the zoning law at the time of the acquisitions allowed additional homesites on each property (beyond the single residence earlier approved for each lot), specifically through a partitioning process to allow a forest use for tax lot 101 and an administrative zone change process for tax lot 200. Ultimately, DLCD concluded in its final order that no relief arose under section 6 of Measure 49:

“On April 1, 1986, tax lot 101 of the Measure 37 claim property was subject to Washington County’s acknowledged Exclusive Forest and Conservation (EFC) zone. Washington County’s EFC zone required 76 acres for the creation of a [616]*616new lot or parcel on which a dwelling could be established. Tax lot 101 of the claimants’ property consists of 120 acres and is developed with one dwelling. Therefore, the claimants lawfully could not have established any additional home sites on their date of acquisition.
“On February 2,1990, [tax lot 200 of] the Measure 37 claim property was subject to Washington County’s acknowledged Agriculture and Forest (AF-10) zone. Washington County’s AF-10 zone required 8 acres for the creation of a new lot or parcel on which a dwelling could be established. The claimants’ property consists of 10 acres and is developed with one dwelling. Therefore, the claimants lawfully could not have established any additional home sites on their date of acquisition.”

The final order recognized that

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
285 P.3d 722, 251 Or. App. 610, 2012 WL 3195142, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ericsson-v-state-orctapp-2012.