SCHUMAN, P.J.
Intervenors applied to Lane County for a permit to build a bridge. Petitioner unsuccessfully opposed the application and then appealed the county's adverse decision to the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA). Lane County submitted the record in the case to LUBA. Subsequently, after receiving petitioner's petition for LUBA review, the county filed a motion for a voluntary remand, relying on LUBA's longstanding practice of permitting a local government to voluntarily withdraw a land use decision if the local government agreed to consider each of the petitioner's assignments of error. Petitioner opposed the motion, arguing that, although LUBA must permit a local government to withdraw a decision before the local government submits the record, the relevant statute, ORS 197.830(13), does not permit a voluntary remand after that event. LUBA granted the county's motion and remanded the decision. Dexter Lost Valley Community Association v. Lane County, ___ Or. LUBA ___ (LUBA No 2012-044, Oct. 16, 2012). Petitioner seeks judicial review. We reverse and remand.
The relevant facts are all procedural. Three developers applied for a permit to build a bridge as part of a project in rural Lane County.
(Emphasis added.)
LUBA granted the motion, relying on a variety of its own precedents and policy considerations:
Dexter Lost Valley Community Association, ___ Or LUBA at ___ (LUBA No 2012-044 at 2-3 (footnote omitted; second omission in original; third through fifth brackets in original)). This judicial review ensued.
Before this court, petitioner once again calls our attention to the well-settled precept that an administrative agency cannot act outside of its legislative grant of authority in order to "amend, alter, enlarge or limit the terms of a legislative enactment." U. of O. Co-Oper. v. Dept. of Rev., 273 Or. 539, 550, 542 P.2d 900 (1975); accord Avis Rent A Car System, Inc. v. Dept. of Rev., 330 Or. 35, 41, 995 P.2d 1163 (2000). Petitioner argues that, in ORS 197.830(13)(b), the legislature affirmatively limited LUBA's authority to allow voluntary remands after submission of the record. By allowing local governments to withdraw orders before submission of the record, the legislature implicitly prohibited withdrawal afterward.
Respondents' brief on appeal focuses preliminarily on reviewability. Their first argument is that, by asking — in its original petition for review to LUBA — that LUBA reverse or remand, petitioner forfeited the right to seek judicial review when LUBA, in fact, remanded. We disagree. After the county filed its motion for voluntary remand, petitioner submitted an express and vigorous "Opposition to Motion for Voluntary Remand." Further, to the extent that petitioner sought remand in its original petition for review to LUBA, petitioner was seeking at least a partial adjudication on the merits of the county's decision; when petitioner now challenges the county's remand, petitioner is opposing LUBA's decision to refrain from an adjudication on the merits by allowing the county to reconsider its order. Those are different objectives, and asking for the first did not invite LUBA to perform the second. For similar reasons, we reject respondents' second reviewability contention — that petitioner has not demonstrated
In addressing petitioner's argument, as opposed to the argument's reviewability, respondents maintain, "What is missing * * * is any sound explanation as to why LUBA's practice of issuing voluntary remands after the filing of the record is contrary to any statute or rule." (Underscoring in original.) According to respondents, ORS 197.830(13)(b) does not limit LUBA's authority to grant voluntary remands; seen in the context of LUBA's "historic" and "long-standing practice," the statute, "on its face, expands LUBA's authority to approve voluntary remands." (Underscoring in original.) Respondents' argument appears to be that, before the enactment of "the relatively recent" ORS 197.830(13)(b), LUBA had adopted the practice of granting voluntary remands at any time in the review process before hearing, but only if the local government agreed to address all of the issues. In order to enlarge LUBA's authority, the legislature in enacting ORS 197.830(13)(b) eliminated the requirement that a local government agree to address the issues, thereby empowering LUBA to do what it had not been empowered to do previously.
Further, respondents echo LUBA's reasoning. ORS 197.830(13)(b), they argue, establishes that LUBA must permit a local government to withdraw a decision if the withdrawal occurs after the filing of the notice of intent and before the date set for filing the record.
We conclude that each side has plausible textual and contextual arguments. Respondents' argument, however, cannot be reconciled with unusually persuasive legislative history. What is now ORS 197.830(13)(b) was enacted by the 1991 Legislative Assembly. Or. Laws 1991, ch 817, § 7. At one point in the process (in the "A3" amendments), the relevant portion of the provision read, "At any time subsequent to the filing of a notice of intent and prior to the date set for oral argument, the local government or state agency may withdraw its decision for purposes of reconsideration." HB 2261-A3 (June 3, 1991) (emphasis added). Written testimony submitted by 1000 Friends of Oregon suggested a flaw in that language. In a letter to the chair and members of the Senate Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee, 1000 Friends' staff attorney stated,
Testimony, Senate Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee, HB 2261, June 7, 1991, Ex Q (statement of Neil Kagan). 1000 Friends' staff attorney further explained the proposed amendment in another memorandum addressed to the same committee:
Testimony, Senate Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee, HB 2261, June 12, 1991, Ex G (statement of Neil Kagan). The bill that ultimately passed and is now ORS 197.830(13)(b) incorporated 1000 Friends' suggested language.
From the foregoing legislative history, we conclude that ORS 197.830(13)(b), in allowing a state or local government to withdraw a decision "subsequent to the filing of a notice of intent and prior to the date set for filing the record," necessarily prohibits a state or local government from withdrawing a decision thereafter. LUBA's grant of Lane County's motion to withdraw its decision in this case was, therefore, error.
Reversed and remanded.