Jones v. Willamette United Football Club

479 P.3d 326, 307 Or. App. 502
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 18, 2020
DocketA174182
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 479 P.3d 326 (Jones v. Willamette United Football Club) 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
Jones v. Willamette United Football Club, 479 P.3d 326, 307 Or. App. 502 (Or. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Argued and submitted August 20, affirmed November 18, 2020

Mitchell JONES, Harold K. Lonsdale, and Clackamas County, Respondents, v. WILLAMETTE UNITED FOOTBALL CLUB, Petitioner. Land Use Board of Appeals 2019135; A174182 479 P3d 326

In a land use action, the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) reversed and remanded a Clackamas County hearings officer’s decision approving an applica- tion by a soccer club for a conditional use permit to develop and operate a pro- posed sports facility. LUBA concluded that the hearings officer erred when he approved the conditional use permit without first determining for himself that the proposed facility was a conditionally permitted use within the location’s zon- ing. He believed that he was bound, due to local ordinance, to a prior determi- nation by the county’s planning director that the proposed use was similar to an expressly listed conditional use. On review, the soccer club contends that the hearings officer properly treated as binding a prior determination by the county planning director. Held: LUBA’s order was not unlawful in substance. LUBA’s decision did not represent a collateral attack on the earlier similar use determi- nation of the planning director; the planning director’s determination was not a “standard and criterion,” nor fixed “goal-post,” that the hearings officer must follow; and LUBA’s decision did not preclude the hearings officer from giving the opinion of the planning director whatever consideration is due in reaching an independent decision on the conditional use permit. Affirmed.

Anna M. Joyce argued the cause for petitioner. Also on the brief were Paul S. Bierly and Markowitz Herbold P.C. Carrie A. Richter argued the cause for respondents Mitchell Jones and Harold K. Lonsdale. Also on the brief was Bateman Seidel Miner Blomgren Chellis & Gram, P.C. No appearance for respondent Clackamas County. Before DeVore, Presiding Judge, and DeHoog, Judge, and Mooney, Judge. DeVORE, P. J. Affirmed. Cite as 307 Or App 502 (2020) 503

DeVORE, P. J. In this case, we review a final order of the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA). The order remanded a Clackamas County hearings officer’s decision approving an application for a conditional use permit for the Willamette United Football Club (Willamette United). LUBA concluded that the hearings officer erred when he approved the con- ditional use permit without first determining for himself that Willamette United’s proposed sports facility was a conditionally permitted use within the location’s zoning. Willamette United contends that the hearings officer prop- erly treated as binding a prior interpretation by the county planning director that the proposed sports facility would be a use that is “similar” to a recreational use—a use that is expressly permitted. Willamette United urges a number of reasons why the planning director’s prior interpretation should be binding on the subsequent, conditional use deci- sion. We review those reasons and, ultimately, conclude that LUBA is correct. We affirm. I. PARALLEL PROCEEDINGS We take the facts from LUBA’s opinion and the decision of the hearings officer. Willamette United seeks to develop a sports facility on Borland Road on a 24-acre prop- erty that is zoned Rural Residential Farm Forest 5-Acre (RRFF-5). The proposed facility includes “three outdoor artificial turf sports fields, an indoor turf training field, an operational building containing a group training room, a concessions area, restrooms, equipment storage, and staff offices. Other park facilities would include parking, an outdoor sports court, picnic area, barbeque area, playground, walking and jogging [trails], an ecological observation station, runoff water retention ponds, and a septic [field].”

(Brackets in LUBA opinion.) In 2017, Willamette United sought an interpre- tation of the Clackamas County Zoning and Development Ordinance (ZDO) to determine whether the proposed facilities are conditionally allowed uses as uses similar to 504 Jones v. Willamette United Football Club

conditionally allowed “Recreational Uses.”1 We will refer to that process as the “similar use determination.”2 It was allowed and limited by a provision of the ZDO, which stated: “The Planning Director has the authority to interpret the Comprehensive Plan and this Ordinance and their appli- cability to specific properties, except where such authority is specifically granted by this Ordinance to the Hearings Officer, or to the Planning Commission or Board of County Commissioners on appeal.” ZDO 1308.01. That general ZDO provision did not indicate whether an interpretation would be deemed to be influen- tial advice or a binding authorization with regard to any proceedings when a permit application might later be con- sidered by a hearings officer, the planning commission, or the board of commissioners. A related ZDO provision at that time made reference to such later proceedings, stating: “If a use is found to be similar to a primary, accessory, limited, or conditional use, it shall be subject to the same approval criteria, review process, dimensional standards, and development standards as the use to which it is found to be most similar.” ZDO 106.02(E) (2016).3 Again, that provision did not explic- itly indicate whether the planning director’s similar use determination would necessarily predetermine that issue when subsequent approval or review proceedings ensued before decision-making bodies. In December 2017, the planning director issued his similar use determination. In it, the planning director con- cluded that Willamette United’s proposed uses are similar uses to recreational uses and are conditionally allowed on any property zoned RRFF-5. As it happened, two property owners who own property within 500 feet of the site, Jones 1 ZDO Table 316-1 lists the uses permitted in the RRFF-5 zone, which includes “recreational uses.” 2 The determination has been variously termed an interpretation or an authorization. For example, ZDO 106.02(A) (2016) provided, “Authorization of a similar use is a type of interpretation application processed pursuant to Section 1308, Interpretation.” 3 As part of amendments to the ZDO in 2018, the language in ZDO 106.02(E) was moved to ZDO 106.01(C) and revised, but not in a material way that affects our analysis. Cite as 307 Or App 502 (2020) 505

and Lonsdale, had not received notice of the similar use proceeding. In May 2018, the county commissioners amended the ZDO to add a new provision, ZDO 106.01(B), stating: “An authorization of a similar use is not a site-specific application, but rather it is a use-specific application. The decision on an application for authorization of a similar use is applicable to all land in the zoning district for which the request was made and is applicable only to the use described in the application.” As later explained, that new provision would become a focus of arguments in this case, as a purported indication of the binding effect of a similar use determination. In April 2019, Willamette United applied for a con- ditional use permit to develop and operate its sports facility on the site. Jones and Lonsdale received notice of the condi- tional use permit application and, as a consequence, learned of the earlier, similar use determination made by the plan- ning director. Jones and Lonsdale challenged the similar use determination in an appeal to LUBA. That appeal, how- ever, was not decided at the time of the hearings officer’s decision on the conditional use permit in this case.4 In the meantime, the county’s hearings officer approved the conditional use permit. In his order, he framed the issue raised by the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
479 P.3d 326, 307 Or. App. 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-willamette-united-football-club-orctapp-2020.