Holland v. City of Cannon Beach

962 P.2d 701, 154 Or. App. 450, 1998 Ore. App. LEXIS 971
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 17, 1998
DocketLUBA No. 79-079; CA A100752
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 962 P.2d 701 (Holland v. City of Cannon Beach) 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
Holland v. City of Cannon Beach, 962 P.2d 701, 154 Or. App. 450, 1998 Ore. App. LEXIS 971 (Or. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

RIGGS, P. J.

Petitioner Holland seeks review of LUBA’s decision affirming the City of Cannon Beach’s denial of his application for a subdivision. We reverse.

Petitioner filed his application in September 1994. The city’s initial disposition was to deny the application on the ground that the proposed subdivision did not comply with various provisions of the city’s comprehensive plan. Petitioner appealed the city’s decision and, after the case made its way to LUBA, us, the Supreme Court and back to us, we instructed LUBA to remand the decision to the city on the ground that the plan provisions on which the city had relied were inapplicable. Holland v. City of Cannon Beach, 142 Or App 5, 920 P2d 562, rev den 324 Or 229 (1996). On remand, the city council again denied petitioner’s application. Its order holds, inter alia, that the proposed subdivision does not comply with the slope and density requirements of section 16.04.220(A) of the subdivision design standards in the city’s land use regulations. Petitioner argued to the city and LUBA, and now argues to us, that section 16.04.220(A) was not an applicable approval standard or criterion at the time he filed his application in 1994. Hence, ORS 227.178(3) precluded the city from basing its denial of the application on that section. ORS 227.178(3) requires, as material, that a city’s

“approval or denial of [an] application shall be based upon the standards and criteria that were applicable at the time the application was first submitted.”1

A review of the way in which the city has applied— and not applied — section 16.04.220(A) in recent years is essential to an understanding of petitioner’s argument and our holding. On September 30,1993, city attorney William R. Canessa wrote a letter opinion in response to questions from city manager John Williams. The letter describes [453]*453Williams’ first question as being whether the “density standards found in Section 16.04.220(A) * * * were still applicable in light of’ certain 1992 comprehensive plan amendments; Canessa responded that the plan amendments impliedly repealed section 16.04.220(A).

During the city’s first consideration of petitioner’s present application, the only thing of note that was said about the section and its applicability appears in the November 1994 staff report. It states that Canessa’s letter had “concluded [that] this standard was no longer applicable[.]” The subject was not revisited by the planning commission or the city council, because their dispositions were based on the plan provisions that we later held to be inapplicable instead of ordinance provisions such as section 16.04.220(A). The city council’s decision denying the application the first time was dated March 7,1995.

Between the 1994 filing of petitioner’s .application and our July 3,1996, opinion directing that the city’s decision be remanded to it,2 section 16.04.220(A) arose in two other contexts of which we are apprised. First, in May 1995, in a decision approving a subdivision proposed by a different applicant (The Chapman Point subdivision), the city council concluded that section 16.04.220(A) was “[n]ot applicable as per the September 30,1993 letter” from Canessa to Williams. Second, in February 1996, the city council concluded that section 16.04.220(A) was applicable to a partition application by petitioner that concerned the same property but was separate from the application involved here. The council denied the partition application, inter alia, because it did not satisfy the substantive criteria of section 16.04.220(A).3

[454]*454The city’s proceedings following the remand of its denial of the present application culminated in an April 29, 1997, decision by the council, in which the application was again denied. Among the bases for the decision was that the proposed subdivision did not comply with section 16.04.220(A). The council’s order notes petitioner’s argument that it had held the section to be inapplicable in connection with the Chapman Point subdivision and that “the city has not been consistent in its application of Section 16.04.220.” The order explains, however:

“The September 30, 1993 letter from Bill Canessa to John Williams concluded that the provisions of Section 16.04.220 had been impliedly repealed. It was not until its February 20, 1996 order denying the Holland minor partition request, that the council determined that adoption of Ordinance 92-11 did not impliedly repeal section 16.04.220(A) and that in fact it constituted a review criterion for partitions and subdivision applications. The latter council interpretation is adopted by this council in this order.”

Petitioner contends that, against that historical background and under ORS 227.178(3), section 16.04.220(A) was not a standard or criterion that was applicable to his 1994 application at the time he filed it. He asserts, generally and through a variety of particular theories, that the city had treated section 16.04.220(A) as inapplicable when he submitted his application and on relevant occasions thereafter, and that the city’s later use of the provision as a basis for denying his application therefore violated ORS 227.178(3).

LUBA rejected petitioner’s argument. It reasoned, first, that the city had made no express and authoritative determination that section 16.04.220(A) was not an applicable approval standard or criterion at any time in direct connection with the processing of this application. LUBA explained:

“We disagree that the initia'r;[l994] staff interpretation in this case was sufficient to e5- tablish that SDS [section] 16.04.220(A) is not an applicable criterion for purposes of ORS 227.178(3). The staff interpretation was not the basis for the council’s [first] denial. F Titioner does not cite any authority for the proposition tha the staff interpretation or the city attorney’s 1993 interpr tation is binding on the [455]*455city. For purposes of ORS 227.178, the city identified SDS 16.04.220(A) as an approval criterion at the time the application was filed[4] and during the course of proceedings on this application the council never expressly determined that SDS 16.04.220(A) is not an applicable approval criterion.” (Emphasis in original.)

LUBA then turned to and rejected other permutations of petitioner’s argument. LUBA stated:

“Nonetheless, petitioner argues that in the subsequent Chapman Point decision the council adopted without any discussion the city attorney’s interpretation that SDS 16.04.220(A) had been impliedly repealed. We understand petitioner to contend that the lack of discussion or explicit interpretation demonstrates that that interpretation was implicitly

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Bluebook (online)
962 P.2d 701, 154 Or. App. 450, 1998 Ore. App. LEXIS 971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-v-city-of-cannon-beach-orctapp-1998.