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

695 P.2d 937, 72 Or. App. 235
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 27, 1985
Docket1950; CA A30904
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 695 P.2d 937 (Mid-County Future Alternatives Committee v. Portland Metropolitan Area Local Government Boundary Commission) 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
Mid-County Future Alternatives Committee v. Portland Metropolitan Area Local Government Boundary Commission, 695 P.2d 937, 72 Or. App. 235 (Or. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

JOSEPH, C. J.

On August 18, 1983, the City of Fairview filed a petition and related documents with the respondent Boundary Commission as part of a process to consolidate the city with unincorporated territory in Multnomah County and to form the new city of Columbia Ridge. ORS 199.460-.480. On December 8, fewer than 120 days after the filing of the documents, the chairperson of the commission signed a final order disapproving the consolidation and terminating further consolidation proceedings under ORS ch 222. ORS 199.480(2). However, the commission’s order was not mailed to the city until December 20, more than 120 days after the city had filed the petition. Petitioners appeal from the commission’s order. They contend, inter alia, that under ORS 199.476(3) the commission’s failure to transmit the order to the city within 120 days after its August 18 filing resulted in automatic approval of the consolidation petition by the commission.

ORS 199.476 provides, in relevant part:

“(2) The proceeding under [ORS ch 222] shall be suspended from the date the petition is filed with the filing agency until the date the commission files a certified copy of its final order with the filing agency. Suspension of the proceedings under this section shall not continue for more than 120 days after the date the commission receives the petition.
“(3) 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.
“(4) Notwithstanding subsection (3) of this section, if a final order of a commission is appealed for review by the Court of Appeals and a copy of the petition for judicial review is filed with the filing agency within 60 days after the date on which the final order is issued, the suspension period shall be extended and continue until the petition for judicial review is determined and the results thereof certified to the filing agency.”

See also ORS 199.480.

Petitioners argue, in essence, that ORS 199.476(3) means exactly what it says. The commission and intervenors [238]*238argue1 that (1) a literal construction of that subsection would be contrary to the general purposes and intent of ORS ch 199, and the commission’s action was consistent with the statutory purposes; (2) even if the 120-day limit is construed literally, the commission substantially complied with the requirement; (3) under ORS 199.476(4), petitioners’ appeal to this court reactivated the suspension of the ORS ch 222 proceedings and eliminated any automatic approval of the proposal that resulted from the untimeliness of the commission’s action; (4) the 120-day provision of ORS 199.476(3) is directory rather than mandatory; and (5) deleterious effects to these parties and the law would follow from a strict interpretation of ORS 199.476(3).

Little needs to be said about the commission’s and intervenors’ first, fourth and fifth arguments. The first and fourth are effectively answered by petitioners’ observation that

“[t]he legislature has made the statute as clear as it could that if the Commission does not file a certified copy of its order within 120 days, the petition is as valid as if the Commission had approved it. If [ORS 199.476(3)] does not apply to the case at bar, there is no case that it applies to and the statute is meaningless.”

The answer to the fifth argument is that the consequences that might ensue from the enforcement of an unambiguous and valid statute are for the legislature to consider and are not for us to weigh in construing the statute.

The commission’s and the intervenors’ substantial compliance argument turns on the fact that the commission did almost everything the applicable statutes require and that its order was in fact prepared and signed within the 120-day period.2 They also argue that petitioners were not prejudiced by the delay. Counsel for the commission urged at oral argument that the “administrative screw-up” of failing to transmit the order to the City of Fairview within the 120-day [239]*239statutory period should not nullify the action on and disapproval of the petition that the commission did complete within that period.

Petitioners rely by analogy on Oregon appellate court decisions that have adopted a substantial compliance rationale in election cases and in cases involving the sufficiency of notices under the Tort Claims Act. Those decisions are not persuasive by analogy, because they are not analogous. There is a strong policy incentive to sustain the validity of elections and the validity of a notice that, notwithstanding its technical insufficiency, reaches and imparts the necessary information to an opposing litigant. Conversely, as the intervenor City of Gresham states in its brief, the objective of ORS 199.476(3) is “to allow the [consolidation] process to continue if the Boundary Commission took no action on a proposal in a timely manner.” There is no policy or other reason discernible to us why the legislature would have intended the language of ORS 199.476(3) other than literally. None of the statutes that were held to have been “substantially complied” with in the cases on which the commission and the intervenors rely was as clear and imperative as ORS 199.476(3) is in its statement that a particular consequence follows from an event. There is nothing in the very precise language of the statute that would make a substantial compliance interpretation possible, even assuming one were desirable.

The commission’s and the intervenors’ remaining argument concerning ORS 199.476 is that, if the suspension of the ORS ch 222 proceedings did end and the petition was considered approved after the 120-day period elapsed, those effects were cancelled pursuant to ORS 199.476(4) when petitioners sought review in this court.

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Bluebook (online)
695 P.2d 937, 72 Or. App. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-county-future-alternatives-committee-v-portland-metropolitan-area-orctapp-1985.