League of Women Voters v. Coos County

712 P.2d 111, 76 Or. App. 705
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 11, 1985
Docket85-023; CA A37115
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 712 P.2d 111 (League of Women Voters v. Coos County) 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
League of Women Voters v. Coos County, 712 P.2d 111, 76 Or. App. 705 (Or. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinions

JOSEPH, C. J.

Coos County’s governing body decided that respondents League of Women Voters (League) and Watkins lacked standing to appeal and had also failed to file a timely appeal to the governing body from the planning commission’s allowance of a conditional use permit for the construction of a residence and a barn in a forest district. LUBA reversed that decision, and the county appeals. We affirm.

Watkins is a member of the League. She appeared at the planning commission’s November 8,1984, hearing on the permit application and testified:

“One of the concerns that we’ve had is the protection of forest lands and the reason that * * * the county zoned that land * * * is that it is commercial forest and should be saved for the production of timber. One of the things that concerns me is that, Menasha has said that they plan to cut timber in the area and they will be spraying. And the spray, most of the sprays that are used * * * have an adverse effect on gardening and on fruit trees and also on the water supply. And that’s one of the problems that we have when we allow residences in the commercial forest land.”

The planning commission’s minutes reflect that “Marguerite Watkins, LWV” opposed the application.

The planning commission approved the application at the November 8 meeting. The county did not send respondents a notice of that decision. The written order approving the application was entered in the county records on November 9, and respondents subsequently discovered the order while reviewing the county planning department’s files. They filed their appeal to the governing body on December 19, 1984. The relevant provision of the county zoning ordinance allows a 30-day period for appeals from the planning commission to the governing body. Respondents appealed more than 30 days after the planning commission’s decision was entered but within 30 days of their discovery of the decision.

The governing body dismissed the appeal on several grounds: it was untimely; respondents did not have standing to appeal, because, inter alia, “[t]he hearings body did not recognize [their] interest as they did not assert a position on the merits of the application” and “were merely disinterested witnesses [whose] abstract interest in land use planning * * * [708]*708is [not] the type of interest which qualifies them as being ‘aggrieved’ * * * to confer standing in a quasi-judicial decision”; and respondents also lacked standing, because the League is a corporation and it did not appear before the planning commission through an attorney, as the county understood ORS 9.320 and a provision of the planning commission procedural ordinance to require. LUBA disagreed with the county on each point.

The first of the county’s four assignments is that LUBA erred by rejecting the county’s conclusion that respondents’ failure to appear through an attorney at the planning commission hearing affected their standing to appeal to the governing body. Neither ORS 9.320 nor the county provision purports by its terms to have any effect on the standing or the appeal rights of corporations which appear other than through an attorney.1 We decline to read that effect into the provisions. Neither the substance nor the purpose of ORS 9.320 supports the county’s understanding that a corporation loses its right to appeal a decision, with the assistance of an attorney,2 because it was allowed to appear without counsel before the inferior tribunal which rendered the decision. The county ordinance provision is presumably modeled after ORS 9.320; in any event, assuming that the county had any authority to adopt the provision, but see Re Application of Jesse Crum, 103 Or 296, 204 P 948 (1922), we find no basis for interpreting the ordinance differently from the statute. The League’s failure to have an attorney at the planning commission hearing does not defeat its standing to appeal to the governing body, and the failure has no arguable bearing on Watkins’ individual standing.

The county makes two assignments of error directed against LUBA’s conclusion that respondents were aggrieved [709]*709by the planning commission’s decision and that they therefore had standing to appeal to the governing body under section 5.8.100(8) of the county zoning ordinance and, implicitly, under ORS 215.422.3 The county argues that its denial of standing was a proper exercise of the “gate-keeping” function described in Jefferson Landfill Comm. v. Marion Co., 297 Or 280, 686 P2d 310 (1984), and that LUBA’s conclusion is inconsistent with findings by the county that were supported by substantial evidence and were binding on LUBA.

Under Jefferson Landfill, a person satisfies the “aggrievement” criterion of the LUBA statute for standing to appeal a land use decision to LUBA if (1) the person’s “interest in the decision was recognized by the local land use decision-making body,” (2) the person “asserted a position on the merits” and (3) the local body “reached a decision contrary to the position asserted.” 297 Or at 284. However, the court went on to explain that the local decision-makers function as gate-keepers and could

“by ordinance or otherwise * * * determine who will be admitted or excluded as an interested person or limited to the status of a disinterested witness * * *. If the decision-makers have not made such a determination, by ordinance or otherwise, it will be assumed that when a person appears before the local body and asserts a position on the merits, the person has a recognized interest in the outcome.” 297 Or at 284.

In Lamb v. Lane County, 70 Or App 364, 689 P2d 1049 (1984), we held that the Jefferson Landfill analysis is applicable to the determination of whether a person is “aggrieved” within the meaning of ORS 215.422 for purposes of having [710]*710standing to appeal a county hearings officer’s decision to its governing body. We also said:

“Some of the language in Benton County v. Friends of Benton County [294 Or 79, 90-91, 653 P2d 1249 (1982)], suggests that as long as the local body applies the correct test, it may reach a conclusion [on standing] different from that which a court might reach.” 70 Or App at 369. (Footnote omitted.)

However, we concluded, in the light of Jefferson Landfill and Friends of Benton County, that the county had not applied the correct test and that it was ascertainable as a matter of law that, contrary to Lane County’s conclusion, Lamb was aggrieved.

It may be, as the county postulates and respondents ask us to refute, that the gate-keeping function devised in Jefferson Landfill can be construed or used by local decision makers to insulate their decisions from the otherwise quite non-restrictive tests of aggrievement that

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Related

League of Women Voters v. Coos County
729 P.2d 588 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
712 P.2d 111, 76 Or. App. 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/league-of-women-voters-v-coos-county-orctapp-1985.