Publishers Paper Co. v. Benton County

665 P.2d 357, 63 Or. App. 632, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 3019
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 22, 1983
Docket82-035; A26344
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 665 P.2d 357 (Publishers Paper Co. v. Benton 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
Publishers Paper Co. v. Benton County, 665 P.2d 357, 63 Or. App. 632, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 3019 (Or. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

VANHOOMISSEN, J.

Petitioner Carol Hemphill appeals from a final order of the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) that affirmed Benton County’s issuance of a conditional use permit for a dwelling on forest land. She contends that LUBA erred (1) by failing to hold that approval of a forest dwelling on a parcel smaller than the minimum lot size violated Benton County’s zoning ordinance, (2) by holding that Benton County did not misapply the “compatability” criterion of its zoning ordinance and (3) by holding that statewide planning Goal 4 (Forest Lands) authorizes dwellings not necessary for commercial production of wood fiber on land suitable for commercial forest uses. We affirm.

The Williamses filed an application for a conditional use permit for placement of a single-family residence for forest-management purposes on a 27.4-acre parcel of forest land. Benton County approved the application. Petitioner appealed that decision to LUBA. LUBA filed a Proposed Opinion and Order for submission to the Land Conservation and Development Commission (LCDC) that held that approval of the application violated Goal 4 (Forest Lands), because the proposed residence was not necessary for forest management of the subject property. LCDC disagreed with LUBA’s interpretation of Goal 4, and, pursuant to Oregon Laws 1979, chapter 772, section 6(3),1 it directed LUBA to make a new order consistent with LCDC’s determination. LUBA amended its order and resubmitted it to LCDC. LCDC entered a “Determination on Reconsideration,” again rejecting LUBA’s interpretation of Goal 4. LUBA then entered its Final Opinion and Order upholding Benton County’s decision.

[635]*635We review for substantial evidence. The following findings of fact were adopted by LUBA from the county’s order:

“Benton County granted approval for a dwelling in the county’s forest zone (FC - 40 acre minimum lot size), for a 27.4 acre parcel. The parcel is owned by the owner of a contiguous 6.9 acre parcel which already has a residence. The findings indicate the following about creation of these parcels:
“ ‘The parcel was first created in 1967 when Tax Lot 300 was sold separately from Tax Lots 400 and 401 (M-6920, M-2020, M18159, CS 4373). In April of 1975, Tax Lots 300 and 400 were sold as one parcel (M-55011) and have been described under one deed since that time. The parcel to the east is held in the same ownership as the subject property and contains the owner’s residence. The applicants are negotiating to purchase the subject parcel on contract.’
“The county found that the predominant soil type on the 27.4 acre parcel ‘is Jory silty clay loam with a forest site Class 2.’ The county further found ‘the soil is well suited for timber production.’
“The findings state the 27.4 acre parcel was selectively logged in 1978. The present owner was found to have neither the financial nor physical resources to conduct ‘good forest management practices’ on the property (both parcels). The applicants have expressed their intention to intensively manage the property for forest purposes, but can only do so economically if allowed to erect a dwelling and live on the property. The county found the applicants were sincere and qualified to reforest the property. The county also found the 27.4 acre parcel would not be incompatible with adjacent forest uses as the parcel would itself by used for such purposes. The county approved issuance of a permit conditoned upon the applicants’ reforestation of nine of the 27.4 acres. The applicants submitted a management plan, but the management plan was not made a condition of the approval. The county did require that reforestation of the entire parcel occur before the end of 1987, although it is unclear what enforcement authority the county has to insure this condition is met. The county found the dwelling ‘could potentially increase the risk of fire.’ Issuance of the permit was, thus, conditioned upon the applicants’ 1) maintenance of a 30’ wide firebreak around the house; 2) installation of spark arresters for the chimney and fire retardant roof treatment; and 3) siting the house no closer than 300 feet from the south and west property lines.
[636]*636“Lands surrounding the 27.4 acre parcel, with the exception of the 6.9 acre parcel, are large ownerships in commercial forest production. Starker Forests owns 576 acres to the south, and Hull-Oakes Lumber Company owns 822 acres to the north.
“In granting approval, the county applied numerous policies of the comprehensive plan as well as the requirements of its conditional use ordinance with which any forest dwelling in the FC zone must comply. The county did not address Goal 4 directly, although the county’s plan has not received acknowledgement.”

Petitioner first contends that LUBA erred by failing to hold that approval of a forest dwelling on a parcel smaller than the minimum lot size violated Benton County’s zoning ordinance. The area is zoned forest land, 40-acre minimum. Petitioner points out that the county erroneously applied criteria under 111.04(2) of the Benton County Zoning Ordinance that applied to applications for a “forest-related” dwelling on parcels of 40 acres or more. The subject parcel consists of only 27.4 acres. LUBA dismissed this error as technical, noting that the standards in the county’s ordinance 111.04(3) for approval of nonforest dwelling on parcels of less than 40 acres are identical to those contained in 111.04(2), except only that a non-forest dwelling must be set back 300 feet from contiguous resource property. Here, the county imposed such a set-back as a condition for approval of the permit.

LUBA considered the county’s treatment of the application as one for a forest-related residence “of no merit because the criteria which the County addressed were the same as those for a nonforest dwelling.” The county specifically found that the applicants also satisfied the criteria contained in 111.04(3) for placement of a nonforest-use dwelling in an FC-40 zone on a lot smaller than the minimum size. The county’s characterization of the application as a forest-related dwelling was error. However, the error was cured or rendered harmless by the county’s concurrent finding that the application also met the criteria for a nonforest-use dwelling. Because identical criteria were at issue, no party was prejudiced by a lack of notice. We find no error.

Petitioner next asserts that LUBA erred in holding that the county did not misapply the “compatibility” criterion of its zoning ordinance. In order to approve a nonforest use on [637]*637land zoned for forest use, the criteria of 111.04(3) (a) must be met. Among other things, the county must find that the non-forest use “is compatible with existing forest uses.” We conclude that the county erroneously compared the applicants’ plan to grow trees on the parcel with the existing surrounding uses. It should have compared the building of a nonforest-use dwelling with surrounding forest management in its determination of whether the dwelling was compatible with existing forest uses. LUBA acknowledged this error, but it concluded that sufficient evidence existed in the record to support the county’s findings on 111.04(3) (b) and that these findings also satisfied the requirement of 111.04(3) (a) and obviated a need to remand the case to the county for a finding on this issue.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

1000 Friends v. Land Conservation & Development Commission
696 P.2d 550 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1985)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
665 P.2d 357, 63 Or. App. 632, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 3019, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/publishers-paper-co-v-benton-county-orctapp-1983.