Petitioner seeks judicial review of a final opinion and order of the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) reversing a Yamhill County decision approving petitioner’s application
Petitioner owns a 5.5-acre piece of property in Yamhill County that is zoned commercial forestry. The property is part of what the parties refer to as the “Eagle Point Ranch” subdivision, which consists of 67 tracts of land, each with an average size of approximately five acres. The lots have never received final subdivision approval from the county. Still, the original developer sold the tracts, in violation of the law.
See Yamhill County v. Ludwick,
Petitioner applied for a forest template dwelling, that is, she applied for permission to build a dwelling on her tract, in spite of its commercial forestry zoning. ORS 215.750(l)(c) provides that the governing body of a county may approve the construction of a single-family dwelling within a forest zone if, among other things, “[a]ll or part of at least 11 other lots or parcels that existed on January 1,1993, are within a 160-acre square centered on the center of the subject tract.” Petitioner contended that her tract satisfied that requirement. Friends of Yamhill County and two county residents (Friends) objected to the application on the ground that petitioner had not satisfied the statute, because the “parcels” that petitioner was counting to satisfy that statute had not been lawfully created. Petitioner contended that the statute does not require that the parcels have been lawfully created. The county agreed with petitioner and approved the application.
Friends appealed to LUBA, and LUBA reversed. LUBA noted that ORS 215.010(l)(a) expressly defines the term “parcel” for the purposes of ORS chapter 215 to mean a unit of land created
“(A) By partitioning land as defined in ORS 92.010;
“(B) In compliance with all applicable planning, zoning and partitioning ordinances and regulations; or
“(C) By deed or land sales contract, if there were no applicable planning, zoning or partitioning ordinances or regulations.”
According to LUBA, that statute
“makes clear that when the word ‘parcel’ is used in ORS Chapter 215, it has the meaning given in the statute. The definition makes clear that in order for a unit of land to be a ‘parcel,’ it must have been created in compliance with applicable partitioning laws or created before any partitioning laws were in place. In other words, it must have been ‘lawfully established.’ ”
Friends of Yamhill County v. Yamhill County, 58 Or LUBA 315, 319 (2009). LUBA noted that the statute does not define the term “lot,” but other provisions in the state’s land use statutes make clear that the term is synonymous with the term “parcel.” Id. at 321 (citing ORS 92.010(4) and (6), which define “lot” and “parcel” in nearly identical terms). In this case, LUBA noted, petitioner cannot satisfy the requirements of the statute without counting illegally created lots or parcels. It follows, LUBA concluded, that the county erred in approving the forest template dwelling application. Id. at 322.
On review, petitioner contends that LUBA erred in “inserting a ‘legal’ lot and parcel requirement for a template dwelling under ORS 215.750(l)(c) when no such threshold requirement is in the template dwelling statute or its applicable legislation.” According to petitioner, all that the statute requires is that a certain number of parcels—whether or not lawfully created—existed as of January 1, 1993. Petitioner advances no argument concerning LUBA’s construction of the term “lots” as it is used in ORS 215.750(l)(c).
Friends responds that LUBA did not err in construing the forest template dwelling statute. According to Friends, by its very terms, the definition of “parcel” in ORS 215.010(1)—which includes the requirement that the units of land have been lawfully created—applies to that statute.
The parties’ contentions present to us an issue of statutory construction, resolved by application of the principles set out in
We begin with the text of the statute. What is known as the forest template dwelling statute is part of a group of statutes, ORS 215.700 to 215.783, that addresses the extent to which owners of forestland may construct dwellings on that land.
Those statutes authorize, subject to various conditions and approval criteria, the construction of lot-of-record dwellings, ORS 215.705; large-tract dwellings, ORS 215.740; alternative, or “template,” dwellings, ORS 215.750; replacement dwellings, ORS 215.755(1); and temporary hardship dwellings, ORS 215.755(2).
At issue in this case is the statute that authorizes the approval of forest template dwellings. That statute, as we have noted, provides that the governing body of a county may approve the construction of a single-family dwelling within a forest zone if, among other things, “[a]ll or part of at least 11 other lots or parcels that existed on January 1, 1993, are within a 160-acre square centered on the center of the subject tract.” ORS 215.750(l)(c). (The 160-acre square is regarded as the “template” that is placed over a map of the area to determine whether there are sufficient lots and parcels; hence, the term “template dwelling.”) That particular statute does not define what constitutes a “parcel.”
ORS 215.010(1) does, however. And it expressly provides that the term “parcel” includes units of land either created by partitioning pursuant to statute, or “[i]n compliance with all applicable planning, zoning and partitioning ordinances and regulations,” or by deed or contract, if no such ordinances or regulations were applicable. Moreover, the definition expressly applies to “this chapter,” that is, ORS chapter 215.
We note that the statutory definition is phrased in terms of what a “parcel”
includes,
not what it
means.
Although petitioner does not make the argument, it could be asserted that the legislature, by merely stating what the term includes, has not foreclosed the courts from determining that it means units of land without regard to whether they were lawfully created. The argument is untenable for at least two reasons, however. To begin with, under the principle of
ejusdem generis,
when a court confronts the question whether an open-ended statutory list includes something not expressly listed, the court is limited by the common characteristics of those things already in the list. As we explained in
Schmidt v. Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon,
Petitioner acknowledges that ORS 215.010(1) purports to define the term “parcel” to include a requirement of lawful creation. She nevertheless insists that the legislature did not intend that definition to apply to ORS 215.750 for essentially three reasons. First, she contends that one of the other forest dwelling statutes, ORS 215.705, expressly requires that the parcel on which the dwelling is to be placed have
We conclude that none of petitioner’s arguments is availing. We begin with petitioner’s reliance on ORS 215.705. Petitioner is correct that the statute refers to ‘lawfully created” parcels. Specifically, ORS 215.705(1) provides that a county may allow the construction of a single-family dwelling on a lot or parcel located in a farm or forest zone if, among other things, “[t]he lot or parcel on which the dwelling will be sited was lawfully created” and was acquired by the current owner before January 1, 1985. Given the fact that ORS 215.010(1) already defines “parcel” to refer to units of land that were lawfully created, petitioner has a point that the inclusion of the term “lawfully created” is redundant.
That said, the existence of such a possible redundancy does not necessarily support the conclusion that petitioner draws from it. If petitioner is correct that the inclusion of the words “lawfully created” in ORS 215.705(1) implies that no such requirement exists where those words do not appear—for example, in ORS 215.750(1)—then the necessary consequence is that the definition in ORS 215.010(1) thereby becomes meaningless.
Thus, under LUBA’s reading of ORS 215.750(1) in this case, the words “lawfully created” in a related statute are indeed redundant. But, under petitioner’s reading of the statute, so also is the definition of “parcel” in ORS 215.010(1). Indeed, under petitioner’s reading, the definition does not mean what it plainly says, viz., that, as used in ORS chapter 215, the word “parcel” means a unit of land that was lawfully created as such. According to petitioner, the word “parcel” does not mean that unless the words “lawfully created” are included in the operative provisions of the statute. In other words, in petitioner’s view, the word “parcel” does not mean what ORS 215.010(1) plainly says it means.
We are faced, then, with the somewhat awkward choice between an interpretation that suggests that the legislature was perhaps redundant, on the one hand, or that the
legislature was simply incorrect, on the other. When confronted with such a choice, the courts of this state routinely select the former interpretation.
See, e.g., S-W Floor Cover Shop v. Natl. Council on Comp. Ins.,
We turn to petitioner’s reliance on the legislative history of ORS 215.750(1). She relies, in particular, on a single statement of a single legislator who offered an “overview” of the bill of which the forest template dwelling statute was a part:
“This bill is really about fairness and equity and, at the same time, about protecting our good farmland. The key word in this bill is ‘balance.’ It was hard to achieve; it made for a complicated bill because fairness in a complicated area sometimes means complex solutions. But it includes all of those elements. For the very first time in land use planning, there is at least one type of application where you can go to the county planning office and, at the counter—yes, you may need some charts, you may need a template, but right there—youwill get your answer, you will know how that answer was devised, and that kind of objective criteria is a giant step forward in this arena.”
Tape Recording, House Floor Proceedings, HB 3661, Aug 3, 1993, Tape 230, Side A (statement of Rep Marilyn Dell). According to petitioner, the foregoing quotation “demonstrates a legislative intent not to require a legal lot of record threshold test” because the statute was intended to establish an application process that could occur “at the land use planning counter.”
We are not persuaded. To begin with, the statement is of a single legislator,
see, e.g., Gaines,
That leaves petitioner’s reliance on this court’s case law, which she argues supports her contention that the definition supplied by ORS 215.010(1) does not apply to the forest template dwelling statute. Petitioner relies on three decisions, in particular, for that contention.
Petitioner first cites
Citizens for Responsibility v. Lane County,
The problem with petitioner’s reliance on Citizens for Responsibility is the fact that, as we noted, the statute contained no language imposing the requirement that the use at issue have been lawfully authorized. In this case, in contrast, ORS 215.010(1) supplies precisely what was missing in Citizens for Responsibility. The decision simply does not support what petitioner claims from it.
Next, petitioner relies on
Maxwell v. Lane County,
Finally, petitioner contends that we determined, in
1000 Friends of Oregon v. LCDC,
We conclude, then, that the definition contained in ORS 215.010(1) applies and that, as a result, only parcels lawfully created may be counted in determining whether the requirements of the forest template dwelling statute have been met. LUBA, in other words, correctly construed the statute and did not err in reversing the county’s approval of the forest template dwelling.
Affirmed.
