Langford v. City of Eugene

867 P.2d 535, 126 Or. App. 52, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 19, 1994
DocketLUBA 93-090; CA A81712
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 867 P.2d 535 (Langford v. City of Eugene) 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
Langford v. City of Eugene, 867 P.2d 535, 126 Or. App. 52, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 67 (Or. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

*54 DEITS, P. J.

The City of Eugene (city) and Lane County Housing Authority and Community Services Agency (HACSA) seek review of LUBA’s decision remanding the city’s approval of HACSA’s application for a conditional use permit to construct a “controlled income and rent” (CIR) low income housing project. 1 LUBA concluded that the city erred in three respects: its findings relating to the adequacy of the emergency response system that would serve the project were conclusory and insufficient; its findings that school facilities would be adequate to meet anticipated demand were not supported by substantial evidence; and the city misinterpreted its zoning legislation as allowing the application to be approved on the basis of its code’s CIR provisions alone, rather than also applying the planned unit development (PUD) provisions in the code. Petitioners challenge each of LUBA’s adverse rulings. We agree with LUBA’s conclusions on the first two issues, and no discussion of them is necessary. However, we disagree with LUBA’s conclusion that the city’s interpretation of its code is reversibly wrong.

HACSA’s application proposed a 25 multi-family dwelling unit development on one undivided lot. The city concluded that section 9.724 of the Eugene Code (EC), 2 which pertains to CIRs, contained the applicable approval criteria, and that the PUD provisions in sections 9.508 et seq, were not applicable to the proposal. Respondents argued to the city that section 9.724 governs density issues, but does not address certain other matters that are covered by the PUD provisions. Therefore, respondents concluded that the PUD provisions, as well as the CIR provisions, had to be applied in order to obtain approval relating to those other matters — specifically, whether to allow development to take place on a single lot and to allow the development to consist entirely of multi-family units rather than containing a majority of lots dedicated to single family occupancy.

The city disagreed with that argument. It found, as quoted in LUBA’s opinion:

“It is contended that the C.I.R. process addresses the issue of density but does not authorize the project’s proposed *55 single lot aspect and the development of an exclusively multifamily housing project. Section 9.384 of the Eugene Code contains the listing, in matrix form, of allowable uses in the residential districts. Under the general category of ‘dwellings,’ the use ‘Controlled income and rent with increased density’ is listed, similarly to other uses listed in this matrix. That listing indicates that this use can be located by conditional use permit in the RA and R-l districts. The listing states that ‘Standard 13’ is applicable. The cited Standard 13 merely states that this use ‘must conform to the standards and procedures in Section 9.724.’
“Section 9.724 is entitled and deals exclusively with ‘Conditional Use Permits for Controlled Income and Rent Housing.’ The last sentence of Subsection (1) of E.C. 9.724 states:
“ ‘A conditional use permit for CIR housing is not necessary unless the increased density provided for in Section 9.724 is required.’
“It is argued by those opposed to the project that, based upon this language, the C.I.R. process is only one to allow an increase in density and where, as here, the project could be developed without an increase in density if it was not for the wish to develop on a single parcel multiple family dwellings, the proposal should be subject to * * * review [under] the planned unit development process.
“[The city’s] construction of the ordinance is that a controlled income and rent housing project is articulated as a use in the Eugene Code and is not merely a means to provide increased density. [T]helast sentence of E.C. 9.724(1), above quoted [means] that controlled income and rent housing, as that use is defined at E.C. 9.015, could be developed pursuant to planned unit development procedures if it would comply with the maximum density per gross acre allowed under E.C. 9.510(6)(a). The intent of the last sentence of E.C. 9.724(1) was to make it clear that a planned unit development that involved controlled income and rent housing was not going to be subject to the criteria and review of E.C. 9.724 unless an increase in density over that allowed by the planned unit development provisions was sought. [T]he language of EC 9.724 clearly indicates that only the criteria of that section are applicable.”

LUBA rejected the city’s interpretation, concluding that it was inconsistent with the express language of the local legislation and, therefore, was not affirmable under Clark v. *56 Jackson County, 313 Or 508, 836 P2d 710 (1992), and our cases that implement Clark. LUBA reasoned, inter alia:

“On its face, the CIR provisions set out in EC 9.724 are, as petitioners argue, simply a density increasing provision for CIR housing, whatever form that housing may take — single family or multi-family. There is nothing in the wording or context of EC 9.724 permitting deviations from the requirements that otherwise apply under the applicable zoning district. If, for example, code provisions made it clear that CIR housing necessarily includes exclusively multi-family housing or necessarily includes more multi-family housing than allowed under limitations imposed by the underlying zoning, we might agree that approval of increased density CIR housing under EC 9.724 would include approval of that aspect of the disputed project without PUD approval. Similarly, if the increased density CIR approval provisions contained language that either suggested such housing necessarily would be constructed on single parcels, without the need to subdivide or seek PUD approval, or suggested that additional approvals to deviate from the limits on developing single parcels that otherwise apply under the R-l zone need not be obtained, we might agree with the city’s interpretation. No such language exists in EC 9.724.
“The city’s reference to the fact CIR housing is listed in the matrix at EC 9.384 makes it clear that CIR housing with increased density is allowed in the R-1 zone, but says nothing about whether such increased density CIR housing must comply with other requirements of the CIR zone, or obtain any appropriate approvals necessary to deviate from those requirements. In this regard the definition of CIR housing is important. EC 9.015 defines CIR housing as follows:
“ £A housing project sponsored by a public agency, a nonprofit housing sponsor * * * to undertake, construct, or operate a controlled income and rent housing project.’
“This definition says nothing about how much multi-family housing will be included in a CIR project or whether such a housing project will be developed on a single parcel or as part of a subdivision.

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Bluebook (online)
867 P.2d 535, 126 Or. App. 52, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langford-v-city-of-eugene-orctapp-1994.