Marquam Farms Corp. v. Multnomah County

936 P.2d 990, 147 Or. App. 368, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 499
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 16, 1997
DocketLUBA 95-254; CA A95801
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 936 P.2d 990 (Marquam Farms Corp. v. Multnomah 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
Marquam Farms Corp. v. Multnomah County, 936 P.2d 990, 147 Or. App. 368, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 499 (Or. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

*370 DEITS, P. J.

In 1995, petitioners Schillereff applied to petitioner Multnomah County for “conditional use approval, or, alternatively, an alteration of a non-conforming use,” to allow the Schillereffs to enlarge a kennel use on high-value farmland in an exclusive farm use (EFU) zone. The applicants sought to increase the use from its ostensible existing level of 50 dogs to 75. 1 The county treated the filing as three separate applications, respectively for (1) an “initial” (i.e., new) conditional use permit, (2) an expansion of an existing conditional use, and (3) an expansion of a nonconforming use. The county hearings officer approved all three variations, and, on respondent’s appeal, the county governing body effectively adopted the hearings officer’s opinion and approved the expanded use. Respondent appealed to LUBA. LUBA disagreed with the county’s disposition of each application and remanded the decision to the county. Petitioners seek review, and we affirm.

The applicants acquired the affected property and began operating a commercial kennel on it in 1989. Their various predecessors had at times operated a commercial kennel on the property and, apparently, were doing so in the mid-1950s, when the county enacted zoning legislation disallowing the kennel use. Thereafter, the continuity and exact extent of the use varied considerably, as the property was transferred among the various owners. As LUBA explained, the “parties appear to agree that prior to 1989 there had not been a commercial kennel on the property for at least 15 to 20 years.” However, under relevant county legislation, a facility with as few as four adult dogs is defined as a “kennel”; hence, the county’s designation could apply to kennel uses that, depending on the specific nature of the use, could fall well short of commercial or other quantitative levels that might nevertheless be relevant to the determination of the nature and extent of the use.

*371 The evidence here was in conflict as to how many dogs occupied the property at various times between the enactment of restrictive zoning and the present. There was some evidence that only the owner’s own dog or dogs inhabited the facility at some times, and there was even evidence that periods elapsed when no kennel activity was occurring on the property. However, the applicants presented evidence to the effect that there was a minimum of at least four dogs on the property at all relevant times. The county found that “some degree of kennel operations has persisted unabated from 1952 forward.” However, it made no findings concerning the level of kennel activity at the time that the restrictive legislation became effective or at any subsequent time.

In 1977, the county enacted what is now Multnomah County Code (MCC) 11.15.2028(B) (section 2028(B)). As amended in 1980, it provides:

“Conditional uses listed in subpart MCC.2012 legally established prior to August 14, 1980, shall be deemed conforming and not subject to the provision of MCC.880[5], provided however, that any change of use shall be subject to approval pursuant to the provisions of MCC.2012.”

Section .2012 of the code contains a list of uses that “may be permitted when approved by the [county] pursuant to the county conditional use procedures.” Kennel uses were added to that list in 1986. Section .8805 prohibits the resumption of a nonconforming use that has been discontinued or abandoned for a two-year period, unless the use meets applicable code requirements at the time of its proposed resumption.

In 1990, the applicants sought design review approval from the county for “remodeling a kennel for 50 dogs” and also sought a conditional use permit for a watchman’s residence. Both applications were approved by the planning commission, and neither decision was appealed. 2 In *372 1994, the applicants again sought a design review approval from the county, this time to increase the kennel from a 50-dog to a 75-dog capacity. As described by LUBA, the county hearings officer concluded in 1994 that, notwithstanding the 1990 decisions, he could not approve the applicants’ request because the applicants could not demonstrate that the underlying 50-dog use was authorized either by a “valid conditional use permit” or as the product or byproduct of a “valid, nonconforming use [existing] in 1980, which could become a ‘conforming conditional use’ under [section 2028].” The hearings officer denied the 1994 application “without prejudice.” His decision was not appealed.

The next year, the applicants tendered the present applications to the county. The county found that some kennel use had continued on the property from 1952 through the present and, therefore, the applicants had established the existence of a nonconforming use on which the requested expansion of a commercial use could be predicated. The county further determined that the applicants enjoyed a conditional use for the 50-dog kennel by virtue of section 2028(B), and therefore also qualified for the requested expansion, as an enlargement of an existing conditional use, on that basis. In so determining, the county hearings officer and, in turn, the governing body made the following interpretation of section 2028(B):

“I therefore conclude that the most probable and reasonable meaning to be accorded .2028(B) is this: It purports to apply to a use that, but for the absence of a conditional use permit, would be a true conditional use. The resulting use comprises a ‘conforming’ conditional use or what might be described as a ‘.2028(B)’ use. Such a ‘conforming’ conditional use may be curtailed or discontinued and resumed in the same manner as a true conditional use, unburdened by notions of‘abandonment’ or ‘discontinuance’ normally associated with non-conforming uses.
“That interpretation also resolves a profound dilemma for a use that had, for example, been a non-conforming use and later became a ‘listed’ conditional use. A pre-existing use *373 that suddenly becomes a ‘listed’ conditional use can scarcely be described as a ‘nonconforming use.’ * * * MCC 11.15.2028(B) renders that species of use a ‘conforming’ conditional use without the need to apply for a conditional use permit in order to maintain a use that, but for the absence of a permit, is already a conditional use.
“MCC 11.15.0010’s definition of ‘non-conforming use,’ for instance, describes a use ‘which does not conform with the use regulations of the district in which it is located.’ Obviously, a ‘non-conforming use’ that suddenly attains a new status as a ‘listed’ conditional use falls outside that definition. Even if the definition of‘non-conforming use’ said ‘did not conform’ instead of ‘does not conform,’ it would defy logic or reason to describe a ‘listed’-but-never-formally-approved conditional use as a ‘nonconforming’ use.” (Emphasis in original.)

Finally, the county concluded that, independently of the preceding grounds for the expansion

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936 P.2d 990, 147 Or. App. 368, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marquam-farms-corp-v-multnomah-county-orctapp-1997.