Friends of Yamhill County, Inc. v. Board of Commissioners

264 P.3d 1265, 351 Or. 219, 2011 Ore. LEXIS 774
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 2011
DocketCC CV080305; CA A140899; SC S058915
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 264 P.3d 1265 (Friends of Yamhill County, Inc. v. Board of Commissioners) 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
Friends of Yamhill County, Inc. v. Board of Commissioners, 264 P.3d 1265, 351 Or. 219, 2011 Ore. LEXIS 774 (Or. 2011).

Opinion

*222 KISTLER, J.

The question in this case is whether a landowner holding a Measure 37 waiver had a common law vested right to construct a residential subdivision that he had begun but not completed by the effective date of Measure 49. Yamhill County found that the costs that the landowner had incurred were sufficient to establish a vested right to complete construction of the subdivision, and the circuit court upheld the county’s decision on a writ of review. The Court of Appeals reversed the circuit court’s judgment and remanded the case for further proceedings. Friends of Yamhill County v. Board of Commissioners, 237 Or App 149, 238 P3d 1016 (2010). The Court of Appeals started from the proposition that, in the context of Measure 49, a common law vested right turns primarily on the ratio between the costs that a landowner has incurred and the projected cost of the development. It reversed because the county had given too little weight to that factor. We allowed the landowner’s petition for review to clarify the standard for determining when, in the context of Measure 49, a common law right to complete a development will vest. We now affirm the Court of Appeals decision, although for different reasons than those stated in the Court of Appeals opinion.

Before turning to the facts of this case, we first discuss briefly the statutory context in which this issue arises. Comprehensive zoning laws first emerged in the early part of the twentieth century. See Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co., 272 US 365, 386-87, 47 S Ct 114, 71 LEd 303 (1926) (discussing the origins of zoning laws); Eugene McQuillin, 8 The Law of Municipal Corporations § 25:3, 12-13 (3d ed 2010) (same). Before then, local governments regulated the location of certain nuisance uses but did not control the use of land within their jurisdictions on a comprehensive basis. McQuillin § 25:3 at 12-13. As a result of increasing urbanization, local governments sought to organize more effectively the variety of different and, at times, incompatible uses of land within their communities. See Patricia E. Salkin, 2 American Law of Zoning § 12:2, 12-7 (5th ed 2008); Village of Euclid, 272 US at 386-87 (“Until recent years, urban life was comparatively simple; but with the great increase and *223 concentration of population, problems have developed, and constantly are developing, which require, and will continue to require, additional restrictions in respect of the use and occupation of private lands in urban communities.”).

To that end, state legislatures began enacting enabling legislation that authorized local governments to pass comprehensive zoning ordinances. See, e.g., Or Laws 1919, ch 311 (permitting municipalities to enact comprehensive zoning ordinances). 1 In exercising that authority, local governments retained relative autonomy to craft the planning and zoning policies that governed their communities. See Hector Macpherson & Norma Paulus, Senate Bill 100: The Oregon Land Conservation and Development Act, 10 Will L J 414, 414 (1974). By the latter half of the twentieth century, however, that decentralized zoning authority had yielded, at least in Oregon, to statewide coordination of the standards governing land use. See id. at 415. In 1973, the Oregon legislature enacted Senate Bill 100, which established statewide land use planning goals and delegated the authority to modify and enforce those goals to a state agency. See generally ORS ch 197 (establishing the Land Conservation and Development Commission and setting out statewide land use planning goals). 2

Oregon’s statewide land use planning system did not come without controversy, however. In some parts of the state, implementing the statewide goals resulted in greater restrictions on the use of property than local zoning law previously had imposed. See Edward J. Sullivan & Jennifer M. Bragar, The Augean Stables: Measure 49 and the Herculean Task of Correcting an Improvident Initiative Measure in Oregon, 46 Will L Rev 577, 577-78 (2010). Some persons came to view the statewide goals, which were calculated to protect farm- and forest-resource lands, as unfairly limiting the rights of landowners who acquired their property before *224 those restrictions were put in place. See id. In particular, they were concerned with the limitations that the land use laws placed on a landowner’s ability to build homes on his or her land. Id.

Those concerns culminated in Ballot Measure 37. Or Laws 2005, ch 1, codified at former ORS 197.352 (2005). That measure provided landowners with “just compensation” for land use regulations, enacted after they had acquired their property, that restricted the use of the property and, as a result, diminished its value. See State ex rel English v. Multnomah County, 348 Or 417, 420-22, 238 P3d 980 (2010) (describing Measure 37). When faced with a claim for “just compensation” under Measure 37, a government could choose: (1) to pay the landowner compensation for the diminished value of the property and enforce the regulation or (2) to waive the regulation and permit the owner “to use the property for a use permitted at the time the owner acquired the property.” Former ORS 197.352(8) (2005).

Measure 37 also was not without controversy. Some believed that the measure went farther than many voters had intended in that it not only permitted landowners to build a small number of additional homes on their property, unrelated to the resource use of the land, but it also authorized the large-scale development of formerly protected lands. See Official Voters’ Pamphlet, Special Election, Nov 6, 2007, 20 (Legislative Argument in Support of Measure 49). In response to those concerns, the 2007 Legislative Assembly considered several draft bills intended to reform Measure 37. After several public hearings, those draft bills were consolidated into a single bill, House Bill 3540 (2007). See Tape Recording, Joint Special Committee on Land Use Fairness, HB 3540, Apr 26, 2007, Tape 50, Side A (statement of Sen Greg Macpherson). The legislature did not enact HB 3540 directly; instead, it referred the proposed legislation to the voters on June 15, 2007, as Ballot Measure 49. See Or Laws 2007, ch 750, § 2 (referring HB 3540 to the voters). In a special election held on November 6, 2007, the voters approved Measure 49 and, on December 6, 2007, the measure became effective.

Among other things, Measure 49 retroactively extinguished previously issued Measure 37 waivers of land use *225 regulations. See Corey v. DLCD, 344 Or 457, 466-67, 184 P3d 1109 (2008) (“Measure 49 by its terms deprives Measure 37 waivers — and all

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Bluebook (online)
264 P.3d 1265, 351 Or. 219, 2011 Ore. LEXIS 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friends-of-yamhill-county-inc-v-board-of-commissioners-or-2011.