Johnson v. City of La Grande

1 P.3d 1036, 167 Or. App. 35, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 714
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 3, 2000
DocketLUBA 99-053; CA A108908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 P.3d 1036 (Johnson v. City of La Grande) 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
Johnson v. City of La Grande, 1 P.3d 1036, 167 Or. App. 35, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 714 (Or. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*37 DEITS, C. J.

The City of La Grande adopted a decision to annex a 155-parcel area, including respondents’ property, without an election pursuant to ORS 222.170. Respondents appealed to LUBA, which remanded the decision to the city. The city petitions and respondents cross-petition for our review. We affirm.

We begin by setting out the relevant statutes. ORS 222.170(1) provides for annexation without an election

“if more than half of the owners of land in the territory, who also own more than half of the land in the contiguous territory and of real property therein representing more than half of the assessed value of all real property in the contiguous territory consent in writing to the annexation of their land in the territory and file a statement of their consent with the [city] legislative body * * *[.]”

ORS 222.170(2) also allows property to be annexed without an election

“if a majority of the electors registered in the territory proposed to be annexed consent in writing to annexation and the owners of more than half of the land in that territory consent in writing to the annexation of their land and those owners and electors file a statement of their consent with the [city] legislative body * * *[.]”

Under ORS 222.173, the consents are valid for a period of one year, unless the period is waived in writing by the persons granting the consents. Under ORS 222.175, a city must provide the owners or electors from whom it solicits consents with specified information, constituting what the parties describe as an “annexation plan.” See also Skourtes v. City of Tigard, 250 Or 537, 444 P2d 22 (1968).

The foregoing statutes predate 1991. That year, the legislature adopted Oregon Laws 1991, chapter 637, through which two additional relevant provisions were enacted. The first, ORS 222.115, provides:

“A contract between a city and a landowner relating to extraterritorial provision of service and consent to eventual annexation of property of the landowner shall be recorded *38 and, when recorded, shall be binding on all successors with an interest in that property.”

The other is the following language that section 6 of the 1991 Act added to ORS 199.487(2):

“Notwithstanding ORS 199.490(2)(b), 222.173(1), 222.175 or any other requirement for obtaining consent to annexation, a city or district may use a consent to annexation contained in contracts authorized by ORS 198.869 or 222.115 in formulating annexation proposals or petitions under ORS 198.855, 199.490(2), 222.125 or 222.170 for properties whose owners have signed such consents to annexation.”

The proposed annexation in this case involves an area to which the city has been providing extraterritorial water and sewer services since the early 1970s. The area has been the scene of expanding residential development between that time and 1999, when the city made the present decision. It appears from the parties’ briefs and arguments that some of the consents to annexation that the city procured were in the form of contractual exchanges for city services. Of those, some were obtained before the enactment of ORS 222.115, and some were obtained after the statute’s adoption. It also appears that some of the consents were obtained pursuant to the procedures of ORS 222.170 et seq. rather than as contractual exchanges for the extraterritorial municipal services.

Beyond those undifferentiated facts, however, neither the parties nor the record have provided us with the specific numbers of consents that come within the respective categories or of the total number of consents from the combined sources that would be necessary to support the city’s action. This lack of specific information becomes a problem, because LUBA’s remand was based on its acceptance of five of the many specific contentions that respondents made to it. The various bases for LUBA’s disposition could affect the different kinds of consents in different ways, both as to matters of law and fact. However, the city now challenges only one of the five rulings. 1 It is not presently discernible to us whether the *39 issue that the city raises will retain any potential disposi-tional significance on remand, in light of the other grounds for the remand that the city does not challenge, and in light of any factual findings that the city makes on remand in connection with those other issues. Nevertheless, the issue that the city does raise on remand can be resolved as a matter of law, given the information that is available to us. The same is true of two of the three assignments that respondents make . in their cross-petition. Given the substantial possibility that they will arise on the remand to the city, we will address all but one of the issues that the parties raise.

The city challenges LUBA’s ruling that, before the enactment of ORS 222.115 in 1991, cities had no authority to require consents to annexation in exchange for providing extraterritorial services. LUBA relied on our statement in Bear Creek Valley Sanitary v. City of Medford, 130 Or App 24, 30-31, 880 P2d 486, rev den 320 Or 493 (1994):

“In sum, reading ORS 222.115 in the context of the 1991 Act through which it was adopted, we interpret the statute to be the defining source of and limitation on city authority to obtain consents to annexation in exchange for extraterritorial services.”

The city appears to share LUBA’s understanding that that statement implies that there was no authority for cities to enter into such contracts before the adoption of the 1991 Act, but it argues that Bear Creek was wrong as a matter of law and historical fact and was contrary to our earlier decision in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 P.3d 1036, 167 Or. App. 35, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-city-of-la-grande-orctapp-2000.