Stewart v. State Ex Rel. Division of State Lands

239 P.3d 263, 237 Or. App. 86, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 998
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 1, 2010
Docket9510026; A136441
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 239 P.3d 263 (Stewart v. State Ex Rel. Division of State Lands) 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
Stewart v. State Ex Rel. Division of State Lands, 239 P.3d 263, 237 Or. App. 86, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 998 (Or. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

*88 SCHUMAN, P. J.

This case is the most recent chapter in a land use dispute that goes back more than 17 years, dealing with plaintiffs attempt to obtain a permit to build residential units on two acres of land that he owned in Benton County. The trial court, over plaintiffs objection, granted the Department of State Land’s (DSL) motion to bifurcate the trial, with the issue of liability for a “taking” tried to the court and, if necessary, the issue of damages tried to a jury. 1 On the first day of the bench trial, plaintiff (acting pro se, as he had through much of the litigation) refused to put on evidence, arguing that to do so would waive his right to a jury trial. DSL then moved to dismiss the case for insufficiency of the evidence, ORCP 54 B(2), and the court granted the motion. Plaintiff appeals, raising 13 assignments of error, most of which we reject without discussion. The assignments of error that we do discuss relate to the denial of a jury trial and the grant of DSL’s motion to dismiss. We affirm.

The property at issue is a two-acre parcel that was previously part of a 41-acre parcel annexed to the City of Corvallis (the city) in 1981. Plaintiff sold the larger parcel sometime before 1982 to a purchaser who planned to develop the property. That developer obtained approval for a residential development. The permit provided that the two-acre parcel at issue in this case was to be a park, and it was zoned by the city for that purpose. Later, the city brought foreclosure proceedings against the developer for not paying certain assessments. The city then deeded the two-acre parcel back to plaintiff. 2

The conflict between DSL and plaintiff began in 1992. A portion of the two-acre parcel had been designated by DSL as a wetland. Therefore, before it could be developed, plaintiff had to obtain a “wetland removal-fill” permit. ORS *89 196.810(1)(a); ORS 196.800. Former ORS 196.825(5) (1991) provided, in part, that

“[t]he director [of DSL] shall impose, as conditions to any permit, general authorization or wetland conservation plan, measures to provide mitigation for the reasonably expected adverse impacts from project development.”

In his first permit request in 1992, plaintiff argued that the parcel no longer had the “functional attributes” of a wetland. Therefore, he contended, his proposed development would not have an adverse impact on any wetland, and no mitigation was necessary. DSL disagreed and denied the permit, concluding that,

“until a specific plan to replace lost resource values is developed [DSL] cannot conclude the proposal conforms with public uses of waters of the state [and with former ORS 196.825(5) (1991)]. * * * Finally we do not have evidence [that] the proposed use is consistent with the city of Corvallis comprehensive plan.”

Plaintiff proposed a mitigation plan under which he would pay $1,000 per acre into a fund for enhancement of a nearby wetland and requested that DSL reconsider his application with that condition. DSL again denied the permit, concluding that

“[p]ayment of $1,000 per acre into an enhancement fund * * *, in lieu of providing a project proposal to actually and directly replace lost wetland functions and values, will not meet the mitigation criterion at [former] ORS 196.800(10)(e) [(1991)] of ‘compensating for the impact by replacing or providing comparable substitute or water resources.’ ”

DSL also requested that plaintiff hire a wetland consultant in order to determine the proper mitigation plan.

Instead, plaintiff requested a contested case hearing to challenge the order. The director of DSL issued a final order without a hearing, concluding that, because there were no disputed issues of fact, a hearing was not necessary. The director concluded that

“it was not unreasonable for DSL to refuse to rely upon [plaintiffs] opinion alone [as to the value of the wetland], *90 and to require the expert opinion of a wetlands consultant. Without a reliable opinion on reasonably expected adverse impacts, DSL has insufficient information available to determine whether the provision in [plaintiffs] plan * * * would provide for ‘comparable substitute wetland.’ ”

Plaintiff appealed the denial to this court. We affirmed without opinion, and the Supreme Court denied review. Stewart v. Division of State Lands, 126 Or App 314, 868 P2d 1373 (1993), rev den, 319 Or 81 (1994).

In 1995, after the denial of the first permit had been decided, plaintiff brought this action in circuit court against DSL and the city alleging inverse condemnation. DSL and the city moved for summary judgment, arguing that plaintiff did not have a right to residential development because the land was designated as a park and, further, that he had not exhausted his administrative remedies. The court granted the state’s motion, concluding:

“The fundamental ‘bottom line’ issue raised by the motions is whether, because [plaintiff] only owns land legally designated as a park, he really has a claim for damages to his property for inverse condemnation * * *. The facts are undisputed. [Plaintiff] has no LEGAL right to have the park land re-zoned for a higher use. The question, therefore, is whether his hopes to have it re-zoned, which to date have been frustrated by the wetlands issue, can be the basis for a claim of damages on any of the theories alleged in the complaint.
“The Court could probably decide the motion for summary judgment on this basis alone. I am, however, reluctant to do so for the following reasons: 1) I would like to hear further argument on the basic issue discussed above; and 2) the Court is going to grant the city and State’s motion for summary judgment on the grounds that [plaintiff] did not exhaust his administrative remedies. The Court is inclined to abate this lawsuit to allow [plaintiff] six months to pursue his administrative remedies. If he resolves the wetland issue, the lawsuit would become moot. If not, the Court would be willing to revisit the issue of whether [plaintiff] can show that he has a claim for damages for his park land. * * * ”

*91 Plaintiff requested that the case be abated while he pursued available administrative remedies, and the court granted the request.

In 1995 and 1997, plaintiff submitted major development modifications and tentative subdivision plans to the city. The city denied a permit, including these modifications, because they did not meet the requirement that the two-acre parcel be dedicated as a park.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 P.3d 263, 237 Or. App. 86, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-state-ex-rel-division-of-state-lands-orctapp-2010.