Mid-County Future Alternatives Committee v. Portland Metropolitan Area Local Government Boundary Commission

706 P.2d 924, 300 Or. 14
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 1985
Docket1950; CA A30904; SC S31647, S31660, S31748
StatusPublished

This text of 706 P.2d 924 (Mid-County Future Alternatives Committee v. Portland Metropolitan Area Local Government Boundary Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mid-County Future Alternatives Committee v. Portland Metropolitan Area Local Government Boundary Commission, 706 P.2d 924, 300 Or. 14 (Or. 1985).

Opinion

LENT, J.

The issue is whether petitions filed by the City of Fairview with the Portland Metropolitan Area Local Government Boundary Commission (Commission) were legally sufficient, as provided by ORS 222.210 to 222.310, to permit action by the Commission on the proposed major boundary change1 that was the subject of the petitions. The answer depends on whether participation of at least two cities is required for initiation of consolidation proceedings under ORS 222.210 to 222.310. We hold that at least two cities are necessary and, therefore, that the petitions in this instance were not legally sufficient.

On August 18, 1983, the City of Fairview (Fairview) filed with the Commission petitions signed by ten percent of the registered voters of Fairview and petitions signed by ten percent of the registered voters of an unincorporated area of Multnomah County. The petitions proposed consolidation of Fairview with the unincorporated area, which lies between the cities of Portland (Portland), Gresham (Gresham) and Fair-view. The sponsors of the petitions were a citizen committee called Mid-County Future Alternatives Committee (MCFAC) and the other named petitioners on review in this court.

The Commission conducted public hearings on the proposal. Portland and Gresham participated and presented evidence and argument against the proposal. On November 28, 1983, the Commission voted to disapprove the proposal. On December 8,1983, the chairman of the Commission signed an order disapproving the proposal and terminating the proceedings.

ORS 199.476(3) provides:
“If the decision of the commission on the petition is not filed with the filing agency within the 120 days, the petition shall be considered approved by the commission.”2

December 16, 1983, was the 120th day. It was not until December 20,1983, that the Commission filed with the filing agency a copy of the Commission’s decision, and even then the [18]*18copy was not certified as required by ORS 199.476(2) and 199.480.

MCFAC and the other petitioners on review in this court, but not Fairview, sought judicial review by the Court of Appeals under ORS 199.461(4) and 183.482. The relief they sought in the Court of Appeals was “vacation of the Final Order which disapproved and terminated the consolidation.” The petitioners for judicial review named the Commission as respondent. Portland and Gresham moved to intervene, and the Court of Appeals allowed the motions.

The original briefs of the Commission and the intervenors in the Court of Appeals joined issue with the legal arguments made by the petitioners in that court but did not address the issue stated at the outset of this opinion. By a memorandum of supplemental authorities submitted under ORAP 7.50(1) before oral argument in the Court of Appeals, Portland argued for the first time that the consolidation proposal “was not a valid major boundary change proposal over which the Boundary Commission had jurisdiction” because ORS 222.210 to 222.310 requires that at least two cities join in proposing consolidation. The Court of Appeals rejected this argument in a discussion appearing in footnote 4 of that court’s opinion. Mid-County Future Alt. v. Port Metro. Area LGBC, 72 Or App 235, 240, 695 P2d 937, 940 (1985).

The Court of Appeals held that by reason of ORS 199.476(3) “the commission was conclusively deemed to have approved the petition before it filed its order with the city [Fairview] and that the later filed order is a nullity.” 72 Or App at 240, 695 P2d at 940. The Court of Appeals’ decision was “Order vacated.”3

We allowed the petitions for review of the Commission, Portland and Gresham, each of which urged that the Court of Appeals had erred with respect to the issue of the validity of the boundary change proposal made by only one city and an unincorporated area. That is the issue to which [19]*19Portland’s memorandum of supplemental authorities and the Court of Appeals’ footnote 4 were addressed.

ORS 199.476(1) provides:
“When a major boundary change is initiated by a legally sufficient petition as provided by the principal Act [in this case, ORS 222.210 to 222.310], if the territory subject to the petition is within the jurisdiction of a boundary commission, the filing agency notwithstanding the principal Act, shall file * * * a certified copy of the petition with the boundary commission having jurisdiction of the change. * * *” (Emphasis added.)

The genesis of ORS 222.210 to 222.310 is found in Oregon Laws 1941, chapter 459, which was an act entitled:

“Providing for the creation of incorporated cities or towns from adjoining or nonadjoining incorporated cities or towns, or from adjoining or nonadjoining incorporated cities or towns and adjoining or nonadjoining unincorporated territory

Section 1, which eventually became ORS 222.210 provided:

“Incorporated cities or towns may be created from adjoining or nonadjoining incorporated cities or towns, or from two or more adjoining or nonadjoining incorporated cities or towns and adjoining or nonadjoining unincorporated territory after proceedings had as required by this act. * * *”

The text of the rest of chapter 459 consistently referred in the plural to such cities and towns as might seek incorporation as a new city or town.

Prior to 1971 legislative amendment, ORS 222.270 required that for a consolidation measure to succeed it had to obtain a favorable vote in each of the incorporated cities and in the unincorporated territory included in the measure. The effect of this requirement was that any one city or the unincorporated territory could defeat the entire proposal for consolidation if the measure failed in that city or territory.

With but a minor exception not pertinent here, the law was not amended until 1971. In 1971 Senate Bill 519 was introduced to revise “the procedure for consolidation of cities, with or without unincorporated areas.” The title of the act proposed by Senate Bill 519 was:

[20]

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Bluebook (online)
706 P.2d 924, 300 Or. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-county-future-alternatives-committee-v-portland-metropolitan-area-or-1985.