State Housing Council v. City of Lake Oswego

Decision Date03 November 1981
Citation291 Or. 878,635 P.2d 647
PartiesSTATE HOUSING COUNCIL and 1,000 Friends of Oregon, Petitioners, v. CITY OF LAKE OSWEGO, Land Conservation and Development Commission, Department of Land Conservation and Development, W. J. Kvarsten, Director, City of Beaverton, City of Milwaukie, and City of Gresham, Respondents. LCDC 78-030; CA 15395; SC 27432.
CourtOregon Supreme Court

Robert E. Stacey, Jr., Portland, argued the cause and filed briefs for petitioners. With him on the reply brief was Mark J. Greenfield, Portland.

James M. Coleman, Lake Oswego City Atty., argued the cause and filed briefs for respondent City of Lake Oswego.

Mary J. Deits, Asst. Atty. Gen., Salem, argued the cause for respondents LCDC and DLCD. With her on the brief were James A. Redden, Atty. Gen., and Walter L. Barrie, Sol. Gen.

Eleanore S. Baxendale, Asst. City Atty., filed a brief for respondent City of Beaverton.

Kevin L. Hanway, Portland, filed a brief for National Association of Home Builders, Oregon State Home Builders Association, and Homebuilders Association of Metropolitan Portland as amici curiae.

PER CURIAM.

In 1978 the City of Lake Oswego adopted an ordinance subjecting various kinds of land development to certain "systems development charges" for the capital costs of streets, sewers, parks, and water systems. The State Housing Council petitioned the Land Conservation and Development Commission ("LCDC") to review this ordinance for compliance with the commission's statewide planning goals, asserting that the ordinance was an exercise of the city's "planning and zoning responsibilities" 1 reviewable by LCDC under ORS 197.300(1)(c). 2 Petitioner 1,000 Friends of Oregon, two associations of home builders, and three cities intervened in the LCDC proceeding. After considering certain preliminary issues concerning the State Housing Council's standing to initiate the proceeding, LCDC's hearings officer concluded that the ordinance was reviewable by LCDC and that the systems development charges contravened applicable procedural and substantive goals by increasing new housing costs without a justification supported by supporting findings and reasons.

The commission did not adopt the hearings officer's recommended decision. Instead, its Final Order recited:

"The Ordinance presents a close question but we conclude that there is no substantial evidence in the record that the Ordinance impacts the availability of housing nor makes such housing unaffordable to persons who would otherwise be in the market for housing in Lake Oswego. An ordinance resulting in increased housing cost does not necessarily, by that fact alone, violate the interests to be protected (by Goal 2) or by Goal 10. An ordinance increasing housing costs may significantly affect a shift in land use or discourage affordable housing, and would then constitute a land use action and require the addressing of the planning goals. There is, however, no such evidence in this case."

The order concluded:

"It is hereby ordered and declared that the enactment of Ordinance No. 1706, creating a systems development charge, was not proven to be a land use action."

The Court of Appeals affirmed the commission's order. 48 Or.App. 525, 617 P.2d 655 (1980). The court first pointed out that from the foregoing quotations "it is not completely clear whether (the order) was on the merits or jurisdictional grounds." The court then concluded that the commission did not have statutory jurisdiction to review the city's systems development charge for compliance with the land use goals.

The Court of Appeals based its conclusion on these considerations: On one hand, "the systems development charge has impacts on land use-the provision of public facilities and services, and the availability and affordability of housing." On the other hand, "the systems development charge is primarily a fiscal measure designed to raise and allocate public revenue." Although "taxation was once intended solely to raise revenue for government," it is now increasingly used to shape other social goals, including land use consequences such as the attraction of industry or urban rehabilitation. 48 Or.App. at 532, 617 P.2d 655. In ORS chapter 197, the Legislative Assembly might have intended that "(1) all fiscal policy that might impact land use must comply with the statewide planning goals; (2) some, but not all, fiscal policy must comply with the goals; and (3) no fiscal policy need comply with the goals, regardless of the extent of its impact on land use." Assuming that LCDC adopted the second of these interpretations, this is "the least satisfactory" answer, at least as phrased by the commission. A test which requires evidence of the land use effect of a fiscal measure in order to determine whether the local government must comply with the procedural goal requirement of a hearing and record on the measure is circular and unworkable. Therefore "no local taxation or budget ordinance has to comply with the goals." 48 Or.App. at 538, 617 P.2d 655.

We allowed review to examine whether this conclusion went too far to immunize local fiscal devices directed at land development from compliance with the statewide land use goals. After review was allowed, however, the Legislative Assembly undertook a revision of the land use laws. The eventual result was 1981 Oregon Laws, chapter 748. Because it appeared that the new legislation might affect the jurisdictional question decided by the Court of Appeals and the law applicable to future similar cases, we asked for additional memoranda. The responses show some disagreement about the effect of chapter 748. In part this is due to the fact that the opinion of the Court of Appeals addressed simultaneously the question whether local fiscal measures could be subject to the planning goals and whether LCDC had jurisdiction to review such measures for compliance with the goals.

Two statutory provisions are involved. One is ORS 197.175, supra n. 1, which obliges cities and counties to "exercise their planning and zoning responsibilities ... in accordance with ... the state-wide planning goals." That obligation, which has not been narrowly confined to the adoption of land use plans and zoning ordinances, 3 remains substantially unchanged.

The second provision governs the procedure for review of local decisions. When the present case began, LCDC had authority to review "a comprehensive plan provision or any zoning, subdivision, or other ordinance or regulation" for compliance with the goals. Amendments made in 1979 divided the functions of review between the commission itself and a new Land Use Board of Appeals ("LUBA"). 1979 Or.Laws ch. 772, §§ 1 to 6a. The provisions for review were further amended by 1981 Oregon Laws, chapter 748. Section 4 of the 1979 version placed the review of "land use decisions" with LUBA, subject to further review by the commission when an alleged goal violation was in issue. 4 A "land use decision" was defined in 1979 as including the adoption, amendment or application of a "zoning, subdivision or other ordinance that implements a comprehensive plan." 5 This definition of "land use decision" was changed in 1981 to include the adoption, amendment or application of a "land use regulation," a new term which in turn was defined to include "any local government zoning ordinance, land division ordinance ... or similar general ordinance establishing standards for implementing a comprehensive plan." 1981 Or.Laws ch. 748, §§ 1(10) and (11). 6

Since this case began, therefore, there has been a legislative change of initial review authority from LCDC to LUBA and a shift in the phrasing of the reviewable local action from "any zoning, subdivision, or other ordinance or regulation," first to "zoning, subdivision, or other ordinance that implements a comprehensive plan," and now to any "zoning ordinance, land division ordinance ... or similar general ordinance establishing standards for implementing a comprehensive plan" (emphasis supplied). Petitioners contend that the changes in the italicized phrases do not affect LCDC's ultimate authority to review an ordinance such as the city's systems development charge. 7 The city contends that the Court of Appeals correctly denied LCDC's authority to review its ordinance under former ORS 197.300(1)(a), and that legislative action (and inaction) since LCDC's 1979 order "lend support to the City's argument that adoption of Ordinance 1706 was not an exercise of its planning and zoning responsibility." Amicus curiae disagrees with this assessment of legislative history. The commission's own reply to our supplemental questions suggests that "a systems development charge in limited cases could be viewed as a 'similar general ordinance establishing standards for implementing a comprehensive plan,' " in the terms of the new review provision.

Understandably, the ultimate question that concerns the parties is whether and by what criteria a local ordinance imposing fees or charges rather than prohibitions and permits can be an exercise of "planning or zoning responsibilities," subject to land use goals. The actual decision of the Court of Appeals, however, was that LCDC had not been given jurisdiction to review such an ordinance. On that question, the subsequent revisions of the commission's jurisdiction make an interpretation of former ORS 197.300(1) irrelevant beyond this case. This case itself is not moot. But if upon detailed scrutiny we were to disagree with the Court of Appeals about former ORS 197.300(1), we would still face the previously mentioned ambiguity whether the commission's order was on the merits or on jurisdictional grounds.

Under the circumstances, we conclude that the better course is to dismiss the present judicial review proceeding and leave these or other parties free to proceed under the amended statutes, if they are so inclined. The...

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