Summary
In Warner v. Clackamas County, 111 Or. App. 11, 824 P.2d 423 (1992), we analyzed Polk County v. Martin, 292 Or. 69, 636 P.2d 952 (1981), and agreed with LUBA's conclusion that, under that case, "factors such as intermittency and infrequency are relevant to the scope of the [nonconforming] use, not its existence."
Summary of this case from Rhine v. City of PortlandOpinion
LUBA 91-094; CA A72335
Argued and submitted December 16, 1991
Motion to strike denied; affirmed January 22, 1992
Judicial Review from Land Use Board of Appeals.
Michael E. Judd, Chief Assistant County Counsel, Oregon City, argued the cause for petitioner. With him on the brief was Clackamas County Counsel, Oregon City.
David B. Smith, Tigard, argued the cause and filed the brief for respondents.
Before Richardson, Presiding Judge, and Deits and Durham, Judges.
RICHARDSON, P.J.
Motion to strike denied; affirmed.
Clackamas County seeks review of LUBA's remand of the county's determination that respondents Warner did not prove a nonconforming use in an airstrip on their property. Respondents also applied for an expansion of the use, and the county's denial of the expansion was also remanded by LUBA. We affirm.
The county hearings officer relied on Clackamas Co. v. Port. City Temple, 13 Or. App. 459, 511 P.2d 412, rev den (1973), and concluded, inter alia, that the intermittent and infrequent nature of the use since the time of restrictive zoning did not establish a nonconforming use under ORS 215.130 or applicable county zoning ordinance provisions. The hearings officer found in the alternative that the use had been interrupted and that expansion of the use did not qualify under approval provisions of the ordinance.
Respondents appealed to LUBA. It concluded that Polk County v. Martin, 292 Or. 69, 636 P.2d 952 (1981), changed the rules of Port. City Temple and other earlier cases for determining whether a nonconforming use exists. Under Martin, factors such as intermittency and infrequency are relevant to the scope of the use, not its existence; the test for the latter determination is whether the use was lawful at the time that the preclusive legislation took effect. LUBA held that respondents had established a nonconforming use as a matter of law under the Martin test. It remanded the decision to the county to determine the scope of the original nonconforming use, whether it had been interrupted and whether the expansion should be allowed.
The county contends in its first assignment that LUBA erred in concluding that Polk County v. Martin, supra, requires the determination that respondents enjoy a nonconforming use. It explains that Martin dealt with a nonconforming quarry site on property that had been dedicated in its entirety to quarry use. Here, conversely, the property is used primarily for farming, and the airstrip was never more than incidental. The county concludes that, under these circumstances, the test of Clackamas Co. v. Port. City Temple, supra, and the other earlier cases should remain applicable because, under LUBA's application of Martin,
"[i]t would not matter that the use is not a primary use of the property, or how many such uses there may be. That could hardly have been the intent of the Supreme Court in Martin. A better interpretation of the holding in that case is that a nonconforming use may be established even if the use is infrequent and does not require a substantial investment, if it is the sole, or at least a primary, use of the property. Such an interpretation is consistent with the language in ORS 215.130(5): ` The lawful use of any building, structure or land * * * may be continued' The words 'The lawful use' seem to imply continuation [of] a single use rather than any number of activities occurring on a particular property." (Emphasis the county's.)Martin lends no support to the distinction that the county draws. Indeed, the primary versus incidental nature of the activity appears to be the exact kind of factor that the court considered to be relevant to the scope, rather than the existence, of a nonconforming use. We also reject the county's statutory argument and its first assignment.
In its second assignment, the county contends that the remand of the decision was error because, even if a nonconforming use had been established, the hearings officer's alternative finding that the expansion does not satisfy the approval criteria in the ordinance is independently dispositive. LUBA concluded, however, that the resolution of the other questions is dependent on the determination of the scope and nature of the original nonconforming use. LUBA is correct.
Respondents have moved to strike the county's brief, because it does not set out the standard of review of its assignments of error, as required by ORAP 5.45(6). The motion is denied.
Motion to strike denied; affirmed.