Wagner v. Marion County
This text of 719 P.2d 31 (Wagner v. Marion 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.
Opinion
The issue in this case is whether the action of Marion County which petitioner appealed to LUBA was a “land use decision.” LUBA held that it was not and dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. ORS 197.825. We reverse and remand for reconsideration.
In 1976, the county approved two partitioning requests by A. L. Gregory. As part of the resolutions approving the partitions, the county restricted access to a public road, Emerald Green Lane, from the divided parcels. In 1984, petitioner Wagner conveyed to Hicks five acres of land within the area subject to the access restriction.1 Petitioner and Hicks requested a “lot line adjustment” from the county and, as part of the request, they sought permission for Hicks to use Emerald Green Lane. The county granted the lot line adjustment but denied Hicks access to the road. Petitioner appealed that denial to LUBA. LUBA concluded that the county’s action did not have a “significant impact on present or future land uses” in the area and that it therefore did not qualify as a “land use decision” under Billington v. Polk County, 299 Or 471, 703 P2d 232 (1985), and City of Pendleton v. Kerns, 294 Or 126, 653 P2d 992 (1982). LUBA explained:
“* * * In this appeal, we have considerable difficulty applying the significant impact test. As we construe the decision, the county refused to waive or rescind previously adopted orders. This has the effect of maintaining the status quo. The significant impact test does not appear to contemplate a situation in which the status quo is maintained by rejection of a proposal to waive or rescind a prior order.
“Even if the significant impact test could be applied to the circumstances here, we believe petitioners have not demonstrated that the test is met. As noted, the decision maintains, rather than alters the status quo in this area. The petition does not demonstrate why the county’s refusal to allow requested access will have a significant impact on present or future land use in the area.”
Although we share LUBA’s view that the “significant impact test” is difficult to apply here, we do not agree that the perpetuation of the restriction necessarily perpetuates the [236]*236status quo; at least one other factor has changed since the access restriction was established in 1976. After the county imposed the restriction, it rezoned the area from low density residential to an exclusive farm use designation.
Petitioner argues that the access restriction as applied to Hicks’ property violates certain provisions of ORS chapter 215 pertaining to EFU zones. The county argues that the restriction does not violate the statutes. However, the immediate issue is not whether the application of the restriction in the EFU zone does or does not violate the statutes; the question is whether LUBA has jurisdiction to review the county’s continuation of the restriction to ascertain whether it violates the statutes or any other applicable land use standards. The significant impact test is a determinant of jurisdiction, not of the merits of a review.2
We imply no answer to the jurisdictional question at this time. We hold only that LUBA’s decisional premise, that a decision not to change an existing situation cannot have a significant impact, no matter what related changes have occurred since the situation came into being, is not a satisfactory basis for answering the question.
The significant impact test articulated in Kerns and Billington is one of two alternative ways by which a local decision can come within LUBA’s jurisdiction. The other is for the action to be a “land use decision” as defined in ORS 197.015(10), inter alia, because it involves the application of the goals, a comprehensive plan provision or a land use regulation. The county hearings officer’s order, which the governing body affirmed, states that “[t]he standards and criteria relevant to this application are found in the statewide goals and guidelines, Marion County Zoning Ordinance, and the Marion County Comprehensive Plan.” The order does not come down to particulars, nor does it specify whether the standards and criteria governing the lot line adjustment and [237]*237the access denial have the same sources. On remand, LUBA should reconsider whether the county’s action comes within the statutory definition of a “land use decision,” as well as reconsider the significant impact issue.
Reversed and remanded for reconsideration.3
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
719 P.2d 31, 79 Or. App. 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-marion-county-orctapp-1986.