Younger v. City of Portland

752 P.2d 262, 305 Or. 346
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1988
DocketLUBA 86-046; CA A43194; SC S34287
StatusPublished
Cited by94 cases

This text of 752 P.2d 262 (Younger v. City of Portland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Younger v. City of Portland, 752 P.2d 262, 305 Or. 346 (Or. 1988).

Opinions

[348]*348LENT, J.

The Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) may reverse or remand a local government’s land use decision if the decision is “not supported by substantial evidence in the whole record.” ORS 197.835(8)(a)(C). The issue is whether LUBA must evaluate the substantiality of evidence supporting a decision by considering the supporting evidence alone or by considering all the evidence in the record, including countervailing evidence. The Court of Appeals held that LUBA’s evaluation of substantiality properly considered only supporting evidence. Younger v. City of Portland, 86 Or App 211, 216-18, 739 P2d 50 (1987). We hold to the contrary that ORS 197.835(8) (a) (C) requires LUBA to evaluate substantiality on the basis of the entire record. Because we cannot ascertain whether LUBA correctly evaluated the evidence in this case, we reverse and remand to LUBA for reconsideration.

I.

Respondents Fred Meyer Real Estate Properties, Ltd. (Fred Meyer) and Hyster Company applied to respondent City of Portland for a comprehensive plan1 amendment and zone changes for a 17.4-acre site in Portland that had been used by Hyster for a manufacturing plant. The site was designated for heavy and general manufacturing in the city’s comprehensive plan and zoned accordingly. Respondents sought a plan amendment and zone changes to light manufacturing in order to permit Fred Meyer to build on the site a shopping center and offices, which are permitted uses under that classification. Petitioners, most of whom are residents of areas adjacent to the proposed development, objected to the plan amendment and zone changes on the grounds that the changes would produce traffic increases and adverse effects on neighboring businesses that would violate numerous provisions of the city’s comprehensive plan.

Following hearings on respondents’ application, a [349]*349hearings officer for the city denied the application. The Portland City Council, however, after conducting further hearings, approved the application by a three to two vote.

Petitioners appealed to LUBA, contending, inter alia, that the city’s findings with respect to traffic and economic effects were insufficiently supported by evidence in the record.2 In particular, petitioners argued that the evidence upon which the city council relied was so undermined by other evidence in the record that the city council’s decision could not be said to be supported by “substantial evidence in the whole record.”

LUBA rejected petitioners’ arguments and affirmed.

“We do not find the evidence presented by the petitioner to be necessarily more ‘believable’ than that famished by the applicant. Further, it is not our function to decide which evidence is the more correct. Our review of the evidence suggests that evidence on both sides would support a decision. That is, either the evidence of the petitioner or that of the applicant is sufficient to form the basis for a decision. It is not our place to decide for the city which evidence it should believe. The city has done what it is required to do. It considered the evidence on both sides, weighed it (and in so doing considered its credibility) and made findings. Braidwood v. City of Portland, 24 Or App 477, 546 P2d 277 (1976). Under these circumstances, we cannot say that the evidence supporting the city’s decision is not substantial evidence. Home Builders Association of Metropolitan Portland v. Metropolitan Service District, 54 Or App 60, 633 P2d 1320 (1981).”

Younger v. City of Portland,_Or LUBA_(86-046) (January 30,1987) (slip op at 8-9).3

[350]*350On judicial review, the Court of Appeals affirmed LUBA. The court, relying primarily on its decision in Home Builders v. Metro Service Dist., 54 Or App 60, 633 P2d 1320 (1981), rejected petitioners’ argument that LUBA should have evaluated the substantiality of supporting evidence by considering all the evidence in the record.4 In Home Builders, the court had stated, without addressing the meaning of the phrase “in the whole record,”

“[W]here there is conflicting evidence based upon differing data, but any of the data is such that a reasonable person might accept it, a conclusion based upon a choice of any of that data is, by definition, supported by substantial evidence.”

Id., 54 Or App at 63. Because the Legislative Assembly had not acted to change the construction given to LUBA’s scope of review by Home Builders, the Court of Appeals concluded that LUBA had correctly refused to evaluate the substantiality of supporting evidence in the manner urged by petitioners. Younger v. City of Portland, supra, 86 Or App at 217-18.5

II.

ORS 197.835(8)(a)(C) provides:

“[LUBA] shall reverse or remand the land use decision under review if [LUBA] finds:
“(a) The local government or special district:
[351]*351<<* * * * *
“(C) Made a decision not supported by substantiaf evidence in the whole record[.]”

The issue in this case turns on the meaning of the phrase “in the whole record.”6

ORS 197.835(8)(a)(C) was enacted in 1983, Or Laws 1983, ch 827, § 32a(8)(a)(C), but the provision has a much longer history. The 1983 enactment was taken virtually verbatim from Oregon Laws 1979, chapter 772, section 5(4)(a)(C), which was a part of the act that created LUBA.7 Persons involved in drafting the 1979 act testified before the Senate Committee on Trade and Economic Development and before the House Committee on the Judiciary that the “substantial evidence” provisions of the act were intended to conform to the “substantial evidence” provision for contested [352]*352cases under Oregon’s Administrative Procedure Act (APA). See Minutes, Senate Committee on Trade and Economic Development, March 14, 1979, exhibit D, p 5 (testimony of Steven Schell); Minutes, House Committee on the Judiciary, June 23, 1979, pp 20-22 (testimony of Elizabeth Stockdale, legislative counsel). At that time, the APA provided, in ORS 183.482(8)(d), that a court could reverse or remand an agency order in a contested case if the order was “not supported by substantial evidence in the whole record,” the identical language used to describe LUBA’s scope of review.8

The phrase “substantial evidence in the whole record” entered the APA in 1971 as part of an overhaul of the APA effected by HB 1213, which was drafted by an administrative law committee of the Oregon State Bar.

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Bluebook (online)
752 P.2d 262, 305 Or. 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/younger-v-city-of-portland-or-1988.