Gienger v. Department of State Lands

214 P.3d 75, 230 Or. App. 178, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1100
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 5, 2009
Docket114983, A131298
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 214 P.3d 75 (Gienger v. Department of State Lands) 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
Gienger v. Department of State Lands, 214 P.3d 75, 230 Or. App. 178, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1100 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*180 SERCOMBE, J.

Petitioner 1 seeks judicial review of a final order of the Department of State Lands (the department) that found that petitioner had violated ORS 196.810 by removing material from the bed and banks of a waterway known as Golf Course Creek without a permit. On review, he raises five assignments of error to the department’s final order. We conclude that the department correctly determined that Golf Course Creek is a “water of the state” and not exempt from the requirements of ORS 196.810. Consequently, we affirm.

Although there are some purported factual issues raised by petitioner in this case, the following facts were found by the administrative law judge (ALJ) and the department and are undisputed. Petitioner is a dairy farmer and owns a farm in Tillamook County. This case arose as a result of petitioner’s removal of more than 50 cubic yards of material from Golf Course Creek without a permit. The portion of Golf Course Creek at issue in this proceeding runs through land that is part of petitioner’s dairy farm. Petitioner uses the fields on that part of the farm to grow rye grass to feed to his dairy cows. The rye grass fields have an underground tile drainage system that drains into Golf Course Creek.

Golf Course Creek began as a natural waterway, but parts of it have been channelized and relocated over the past 150 years. When petitioner purchased the land over which the relevant portion of Golf Course Creek runs, the creek drained into the Wilson River through a four-foot culvert and a tide gate. The culvert ran under Boquist Road at a point just north of the Wilson River. Sometime after purchasing his land, petitioner constructed a drainage ditch connecting Golf Course Creek with the Wilson River by way of a two-foot culvert under Boquist Road. After construction of the drainage ditch, the western part of the creek drained into the Wilson River through the older, larger culvert only in the winter when there was excess water in the creek.

*181 The Tillamook County Creamery is adjacent to the portion of petitioner’s farm at issue in this case. Late in 2003, the creamery began to discharge its effluent water into a marsh near the north end of Golf Course Creek. That additional water raised the level of the creek two and one-half feet and caused water to back up onto petitioner’s farm fields. At the same time, the west end of Golf Course Creek was overgrown with reeds and canary grass, and the four-foot culvert was partially clogged with dirt and debris.

In January 2004, petitioner used a trackhoe to remove more than 50 cubic yards of material, including dirt and canary grass, from the west end of Golf Course Creek. As the result of a complaint to the Department of Fish and Wildlife, officers conducted an investigation and observed evidence of what appeared to be several hundred cubic yards of material removed from the banks of Golf Course Creek. That was later confirmed when an official from the department inspected the excavation site.

The department issued a cease and desist order dated January 23, 2004, and that order was served on petitioner the same day. Thereafter, the department issued a proposed order fining petitioner for the unpermitted removal of material from the creek. A contested case hearing was held in December 2004, and the ALJ later issued a proposed order that included findings of fact and conclusions of law. The ALJ concluded that, although Golf Course Creek was a “water of the state” pursuant to ORS 196.810, 2 it was exempt from the *182 permit requirement of that statute pursuant to ORS 196.905(3), (4), and (6). 3 The department submitted exceptions to the proposed order, and the ALJ submitted a response to those exceptions. Ultimately, the department issued a final order wherein it adopted the ALJ’s findings of fact, added one historical fact that had not been included in the proposed order, and concluded that, legally, none of the exemptions from the permit requirement discussed in the ALJ’s proposed order applied. Petitioner then sought judicial review before this court.

As noted, in the final order, the agency included an additional finding of fact that the ALJ had not included in the proposed order. The final order explained the reason for that addition:

“In her finding of fact number 5, the ALJ found certain facts concerning the nature of Golf Course Creek. However, that *183 finding is incomplete, in that it does not address the significance of the facts that Golf Course Creek originates in the headwaters and flows into the Wilson River. [The final order’s additional factual finding] states a fact that can reasonably be inferred from the ALJ’s findings and which addresses the significance of the facts noted above. [The final order also includes an additional] corresponding conclusion of law about the nature of Golf Course Creek. That legal conclusion notes that Golf Course Creek is not a ‘drainage ditch.’ ”

The additional factual finding included in the final order is that

“[although the western portion of Golf Course Creek, particularly that portion situated west of Highway 101, has been channelized and relocated over the last 150 years, its essential character as a natural waterway has persisted, in that this stream has headwaters starting in the foothills and carries a natural flow into the Wilson River.”

As part of his first assignment of error, petitioner contends that the agency’s addition of that factual finding to the final order improperly “contradicts the findings made by the ALJ[.]” 4 (Emphasis omitted.)

ORS 183.650 provides, in part:

“(3) An agency conducting a contested case hearing may modify a finding of historical fact made by the administrative law judge assigned from the Office of Administrative Hearings only if the agency determines that the finding of historical fact made by the administrative law judge is not supported by a preponderance of the evidence in the record. For the purposes of this section, an administrative law judge makes a finding of historical fact if the administrative law judge determines that an event did or did not occur in the past or that a circumstance or status did or did not exist either before the hearing or at the time of the hearing.
*184

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 P.3d 75, 230 Or. App. 178, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gienger-v-department-of-state-lands-orctapp-2009.