VanSpeybroeck v. Tillamook County

191 P.3d 712, 221 Or. App. 677, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 1130
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 13, 2008
Docket2007098, 2007099; A138330
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 191 P.3d 712 (VanSpeybroeck v. Tillamook 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
VanSpeybroeck v. Tillamook County, 191 P.3d 712, 221 Or. App. 677, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 1130 (Or. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

*680 SERCOMBE, J.

Petitioners appealed a county decision to the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA). The decision approved a building permit for the expansion and remodeling of a mixed-use commercial structure to include motel dwelling units on an added third floor of the building, a different configuration of a second-floor residential unit, and a new arrangement of the first-floor tavern. The decision also verified and approved the second-floor residence as a nonconforming use. LUBA’s opinion and order upheld the county’s nonconforming use findings, but remanded for further determinations on the nonconforming use status of the remodeled first-floor tavern. VanSpeybroeck v. Tillamook County,_Or LUBA_, 2008 WL 611617 (2008). Petitioners, nearby residents who object to the expansion, seek review, claiming that LUBA erred in its approval of the county’s nonconforming use determinations on the residence. Respondent Piskorski, the property owner, cross-petitions for review, asserting that LUBA erred in remanding for further determinations on the tavern uses. Based on the standards of review of a LUBA order under ORS 197.850(9), we affirm on the petition and cross-petition.

LUBA’s opinion states the relevant facts. The controversy concerns a remodel and expansion of the Anchor Tavern, located in the Oceanside community in Tillamook County. In 1940, a two-story building was moved to the subject property. The first floor of the building was used as a tavern and the second floor as a residence for the owner. The property was first zoned in 1981 by Tillamook County as a Neighborhood Commercial Zoning District; the same zoning was imposed in 1998 under a different name, Commercial Oceanside (COS), and the zoning has remained the same since then. The commercial zoning allows the tavern (“eating and drinking establishment”) and residential use (“dwelling unit or units accessory to an active commercial use, located above the first story”) as outright permitted uses and authorizes the motel use as a conditional use (“motel or hotel containing not more than 35 units”).

The tavern and residential uses, however, are nonconforming uses. A nonconforming use is one that “ ‘lawfully *681 existed prior to enactment of a zoning ordinance, and which is maintained after the effective date of the ordinance although it does not comply with the use restrictions applicable to the area * * ” Clackamas County v. Portland City Temple, 13 Or App 459, 461 n 1, 511 P2d 412 (1973) (quoting 1 Anderson, American Law of Zoning 306, § 6.01 (1968)). Under state and local law, a nonconforming use can continue until abandoned, but alterations or replacements of the use are regulated. ORS 215.130. In this case, because the building occupies almost the entire lot, there is no room for the off-street parking for the tavern and residence that has been required by the zoning ordinance since 1981. The Tillamook County Land Use Ordinance (“TCLUO”) requires one parking space for each 150 square feet of floor area for an eating and drinking establishment, two parking spaces for a dwelling unit, and one parking space for each motel or hotel unit. Thus, the ongoing tavern and residential uses are nonconforming uses because of the lack of parking.

In 2004, the then-owner of the property, Camden Inns, LLC (Camden) filed a conditional use application to allow a 10-unit motel on an expanded second floor and new third floor of the building. The submitted plans included expansion and remodeling of the tavern on the first floor, purportedly to comply with federal requirements for access for persons with disabilities. Camden proposed to build a parking lot in the adjacent residential neighborhood to meet the parking requirements. The request met with heavy opposition, largely because of the parking lot. Camden proposed, and the planning commission agreed to, a compromise — the reduction of the motel use to five units and elimination of the parking requirements for that use. The conditional use permit application was approved on that basis in October 2004. That allowance, however, said little about any alteration of the tavern and residence nonconforming uses.

Later that year, Camden applied for and obtained a building permit to expand and remodel the building. That permit was appealed to the planning commission. The opponents contended that the October 2004 conditional use permit compromise limited the use to a two-story structure, with five motel rooms on the second floor. The opponents also complained that planning review was needed for the changes to *682 the nonconforming tavern and residence uses. The planning commission upheld the building permit, concluding that the conditional use permit did not limit the number of stories but instead set a height limitation of 35 feet. The commission further determined that the remodel and expansion of the tavern did not need nonconforming use review because TCLUO 7.020(10) allows alterations that are “necessary to comply with any lawful requirement,” but that the remodel of the second floor for continued residential use did require nonconforming use review and had not been reviewed as part of the conditional use permit approval.

After an appeal, the board of county commissioners (board) approved the building permit in December 2005. The board remanded some part of the proceedings to the planning commission for a determination of whether major or minor nonconforming use review was required for the changes to the second floor residence. The planning commission discussed that issue at a public meeting and, without holding a public hearing, issued a decision requiring minor nonconforming use review under TCLUO 7.020(11). The decision stated that it could be appealed to the board and a copy of the decision was given to petitioners.

Camden then applied for minor nonconforming use review for the residence. That application was approved by the planning commission, and, on appeal, the approval was affirmed by the board in May 2007. That decision also incorporated the earlier December 2005 approval of the building permit. From the county’s perspective, the May 2007 decision concluded land use review of the expansion of the Anchor Tavern because the motel uses had been authorized by the 2004 conditional use permit, the alteration of the residential nonconforming use was approved, and review of the nonconforming tavern use expansion was not needed because the changes were required by federal law.

Petitioners appealed the May 2007 decision to LUBA. LUBA upheld all but one the county’s determinations, including those that verified the nonconforming use status of the second-floor residence, precluded contest of the planning commission’s determination to use a minor review process for that verification, and sustained the application of *683 the standards for approving the alteration of the nonconforming residence use. LUBA, however, found that the county erred in not requiring nonconforming use review for the expansion and remodeling of the first-floor tavern.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 P.3d 712, 221 Or. App. 677, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 1130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanspeybroeck-v-tillamook-county-orctapp-2008.