Heilman v. City of Roseburg

591 P.2d 390, 39 Or. App. 71, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 2537
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 5, 1979
Docket77-0781, CA 10167
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 591 P.2d 390 (Heilman v. City of Roseburg) 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
Heilman v. City of Roseburg, 591 P.2d 390, 39 Or. App. 71, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 2537 (Or. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

*73 TANZER, J.

Petitioners in this writ of review proceeding appeal from an order of the circuit court affirming the city council’s denial of petitioners’ application for a zone change. Petitioners contend that the city council failed to follow proper procedures and that its findings are inadequate and not supported by substantial evidence. ORS 34.040. We reverse and remand.

Petitioners applied for a zone change for approximately three acres in the city of Roseburg. At the same time, they also applied for annexation and rezoning of an adjacent parcel, but the denial of that application is not challenged on judicial review. Following a hearing, the planning commission recommended approval of both applications. On February 14,1977, the council held a hearing on both matters and heard additional testimony from petitioners and opponents. It voted to deny the applications and directed the city attorney to prepare findings. Proposed findings were submitted to and approved by the council on February 28, 1977.

Petitioners’ first contentions concern the procedures at the council hearing. Petitioners argue that the council should have afforded a presumption of some sort to the commission’s findings and recommendations 1 and that it was improper for the council to hear additional testimony, especially from persons who were not parties to the hearing before the commission. There is no authority for the proposition that the council must defer to the commission’s recommendation to approve a zone change. The applicable ordinance provides that the commission shall make recommendations to the council, 2 but it neither expressly nor impliedly directs that any legal weight be accorded to *74 them. The council has the responsibility to make the zoning decision based upon its own valid findings. It is not bound by the commission’s findings even if they are supported by substantial evidence. Greb v. Klamath County Comm’rs, 32 Or App 39, 42, 573 P2d 733 (1978); Link v. City of Coos Bay, 23 Or App 648, 650-61, 543 P2d 1082 (1975).

The council’s receipt of additional testimony was lawful. Petitioners concede that the council was obliged to hold a public hearing on the proposed annexation, ORS 222.120, but argue that it was error to comingle testimony regarding both applications. The applicable ordinance provides that the council is to review zone change applications based on the record of the hearing before the commission "[w]ithout further hearing, unless the council should elect otherwise, but with the right of oral argument by any party.” 3 The ordinance thus allows the council to receive additional evidence if it so chooses. Petitioners contend that the council’s choice must be by a formal majority vote. Here, the council’s election to do so is implicit in its receipt of further testimony. Nothing in the ordinance or the state or federal constitutions requires a formal council vote specifically on that procedural decision.

Petitioners’ next contention is that the council’s decision was not based on findings of fact because the order preceded the findings. The state of the record is peculiar: there is no formal order of denial; there was a vote to deny and, two weeks later, findings were formally adopted. The findings were not incorporated into an order. Petitioners treat the vote to deny as the order of denial and the minutes as an adequate formal commemoration of that denial. Petitioners argue that the findings flowed from the decision rather than the decision flowing from the facts. Respondents contend that the vote was merely a preliminary and tentative device for determining the inclination of the council so that final and formal work could proceed. Such a vote *75 would have been entirely proper, but if the vote was only tentative, then there is no final order of denial in this case. The memorialized vote must be regarded as the order because, for one thing, it is the only action taken by the council on petitioners’ application and the process of review is based on that action. Whether findings would ever be issued is immaterial to an aggrieved person who is counting the days left to file a petition for review. The issue, then, is the sufficiency on review of an order issued without preliminary or contemporaneous findings.

This was a quasi-judicial proceeding in which petitioners are entitled to findings, Fasano v. Washington County, 264 Or 574, 507 P2d 23 (1973), 4 and the very heart of adjudication is that the determination of facte must be preliminary. Only after the facte are known, the adjudicator draws those conclusions which are suggested by those facte and issues an appropriate order. Here there is no order made contemporaneously with or after the fact-finding and the findings themselves do not in any express or implied way suggest a deliberate ratification of an earlier tentative decision. 5 Therefore, if the error prejudiced the substantial rights of petitioners, ORS 34.040, the order to dismiss the writ of review must be reversed and the respondent’s order of denial must be vacated.

The trial court found, and we agree, that the evidence regarding the rezoning application was conflicting and that there was substantial evidence to *76 support either a denial or approval of the application. We cannot say on review that the council’s adoption of findings at the second meeting constituted a ratification of its previous decision, because the council held no discussion of the application and issued no order at the subsequent meeting. Where there are substantial conflicts in the evidence before the council, it is essential for the council to find facts before reaching its conclusion. We realize that a victory on this ground may be Pyrrhic in view of the remand. We further recognize that past orders which were not timely challenged on review are unaffected. We realize further that the problem is unlikely to recur in light of ORS 227.173(2), which now requires that the order be "based upon and accompanied by” findings. Nevertheless, under Fasano, these petitioners were entitled to the form and substance of fair adjudication.

Because petitioners’ other contentions raise issues which may recur on remand, we consider the other assignments of error. Petitioners also contend that the council's findings 6 are inadequate because they ad *77 dress only one goal of the city’s comprehensive plan. 7 This contention is incorrect.

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Bluebook (online)
591 P.2d 390, 39 Or. App. 71, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 2537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heilman-v-city-of-roseburg-orctapp-1979.