This case concerns whether plaintiffs' rights to develop a residential subdivision had vested under Measure 49. In 1969, plaintiffs acquired a 62-acre tract of land in rural Clackamas County. At that time, the property's zoning allowed residences to be built on one-acre parcels. More restrictive zoning was subsequently applied that confined the uses of the property to agricultural and forestry uses. Pursuant to Measure 37, former ORS 197.352(8) (2005), amended by Or. Laws 2007, chapter 424, section 4, renumbered as ORS 195.305 (2007), plaintiffs obtained county and state waivers of the land use regulations that inhibited residential development of the property. Plaintiffs sought a judgment declaring that their actions taken under those waivers were sufficient to vest rights to develop the property as a residential subdivision under section 5(3) of Measure 49. Or. Laws 2007, ch. 424, § 5(3). That part of Measure 49 permits development allowed by a Measure 37 waiver "to the extent that the claimant's use of the property complies with the waiver and the claimant has a common law vested right" as of December 6, 2007, to complete and continue the development. Id.
Following a trial, the court applied the standards for a common-law vesting set forth in Clackamas Co. v. Holmes, 265 Or. 193, 198-99, 508 P.2d 190 (1973), and denied the requested relief for two alternative reasons: first, because the expenditures to develop the property were not incurred by plaintiffs but were incurred by a developer acting on its own behalf; and, second, the expenditures were insufficient to vest development rights given the costs of the entire project and the application of the other Holmes vesting criteria.
Plaintiffs appeal a limited judgment denying their declaratory relief claim, contending that both of the reasons advanced by the court were improper bases for denying the relief sought. Defendant Clackamas County cross-assigns error to the court's determination that plaintiffs acted in good faith. The county argues that plaintiffs' purported bad faith was an alternative reason to deny the requested declaration of vested rights.
We have treated declaratory judgment proceedings to determine vested rights as equitable in nature. See Milcrest Corp. v. Clackamas County, 59 Or.App. 177, 179 n. 2, 650 P.2d 963 (1982); Webber v. Clackamas County, 42 Or.App. 151, 153 n. 1, 600 P.2d 448 (1979) (so stating).
As noted, Measure 37, an initiative measure adopted in 2004, required state and local governments to compensate property owners for the reduced value of property caused by a post-acquisition downzoning. That compensation could occur by either paying the amount of the reduction in value or by deciding to "modify, remove, or not to apply the land use regulation * * * to allow the owner to use the property for a use permitted at the time the owner acquired the property." Former ORS 197.352(8). Plaintiffs sought and obtained Measure 37 waivers of the zoning restrictions that limited residential use from the county and the state. The state's waiver allowed "division of the 62.7-acre property into approximately one-acre parcels [and] * * * development of a single-family dwelling on each parcel."
Plaintiffs proceeded to develop the property for those uses. In the course of that development, on November 7, 2007, the voters adopted Measure 49. Measure 49 limited the remedies for past and future claims for compensation for the lost fair market value
We have issued a number of recent opinions describing and applying the factors used to determine the existence of a common-law vested right under section 5(3). As we recently explained in Kleikamp v. Board of County Commissioners, 240 Or.App. 57, 60, 246 P.3d 56 (2010),
The issue in this case is whether plaintiffs' efforts to develop the property were sufficient to create a common-law vested right on December 6, 2007, to complete and continue a residential subdivision on the parcels. By that time, plaintiffs had entered into a development services agreement with Root Holdings, LLC, and its owner, Gordon Root (the developer). Among other things, that agreement obligated the developer to obtain the required engineering and planning approvals for a subdivision and construct the necessary site improvements, provided that the "necessary and reasonable costs for such entitlements and site development will be borne by the Developer," and set out a method of dividing the proceeds of lot sales between plaintiffs and the developer.
The developer obtained preliminary subdivision approval for a 41-lot subdivision on June 18, 2007, naming the project "Tumwaters at Pete's Mountain." That approval was appealed to LUBA. The board remanded the approval back to the county on November 15, 2007. Pete's Mtn. Home Owners Assn. v. Clackamas County, 55 Or. LUBA 287 (2007). Between the time of the preliminary subdivision approval and November 7, 2007, and during the pendency of the LUBA proceeding, the developer cleared and graded the parcels and constructed the road beds for the subdivision. That project involved considerable cut and fill activity on the hilly terrain, moving 83,000 cubic yards of earth and laying down 475 truckloads of rock for the road base and erosion control. Work stopped on the project when Measure 49 was adopted.
In December 2007, plaintiffs filed complaints against the county and the state. Those complaints were amended in early 2008. The amended complaints sought declaratory relief on the Measure 49 vested rights claims, specific performance and other remedies under Measure 37, and compensation for an inverse condemnation. At the conclusion of a May 2008 trial on the declaratory judgment claims, plaintiffs and the developer amended the development services agreement.
In a letter opinion, the trial court declined to issue declaratory relief in favor of plaintiffs for two reasons. First, the court found that, notwithstanding the development services agreement, "[p]laintiffs have not actually spent any money to develop the property" so as to allow vesting because of substantial expenditures on the use by the landowners.
The court also found that the expenditures were adaptable to the development of three large homesites (the extent of development under section 5(1) of Measure 49 contemplated at the time of trial) and that plaintiffs operated in good faith. The court entered the limited judgment in favor of the county, the state, and intervenors on plaintiffs' declaratory judgment claim. The judgment incorporates the court's letter opinion and further provides that "[p]laintiffs are not entitled to declaratory judgment." Plaintiffs appeal that limited judgment.
On review, plaintiffs dispute both bases for the trial court's conclusion that no vested right to an improved subdivision was proved. As explained below, we conclude that a declaration should be entered that plaintiffs had no vested rights to complete and continue an improved subdivision because the expenditures on the project were insubstantial as of December 6, 2007, in light of the Holmes factors. Given that conclusion, plaintiffs' rights would not be affected by any supplemental determination of whether the developer's expenditures count in applying the expenditure ratio test. The judgment on remand should be limited to the sufficiency of the expenditures to vest the alleged development rights.
We begin and end, then, with the trial court's determination that there was insubstantial progress toward completion of the subdivision project for development rights to vest. Beginning with Friends of Yamhill County, we have decided a number of vested rights cases under section 5(3) of Measure 49. In that case, we reasoned that
237 Or.App. at 165, 238 P.3d 1016.
On review, that reasoning was adopted by the Supreme Court. The court held that,
Friends of Yamhill County, 351 Or. at 242-43, 264 P.3d 1265 (citation omitted). The court later reemphasized that, after determining the expenditure ratio, it is necessary to examine whether, "in light of the other Holmes factors, [the expenditure ratio is] substantial enough to establish a vested right." Id. at 247, 264 P.3d 1265. The court cautioned that
Id. at 247-48, 264 P.3d 1265 (footnote omitted). We earlier concluded, to the same effect, that, "[f]or vesting purposes, we understand that the concept of `substantial expenditures' * * * requires an examination of both the absolute amount expended and the percentage yielded by the expenditure ratio." Kleikamp, 240 Or.App. at 66, 246 P.3d 56.
In those cases where, as here, the Measure 37 waivers were obtained in order to subdivide the property and construct residences, the project cost—the denominator of the expenditure ratio—includes the costs of constructing residences on the property. As we noted in Fischer v. Benton County, 244 Or.App. 166, 174, 260 P.3d 647 (2011),
(Emphasis in original.)
Because the vested rights determination under Measure 49 is made as of December 6, 2007, the effective date of the measure, "it is incumbent on the property owner to establish the likely total project cost in relation to the size and character of the structures that the owner contemplated building in compliance with a Measure 37 waiver as of December 6, 2007." Kleikamp, 240 Or.App. at 66-67, 246 P.3d 56. Moreover, the likely total project cost is "`based on construction costs as of December 6, 2007.'" Id. at 66, 246 P.3d 56 (quoting Friends of Yamhill County, 237 Or.App. at 178, 238 P.3d 1016) (emphasis omitted); see also Damman v. Board of Commissioners of Yamhill County, 241 Or.App. 321, 329, 250 P.3d 933 (2011) (same).
Applying those principles to the evidence presented here, we conclude that plaintiffs failed to prove an entitlement to a vested right to complete and continue the 41-lot residential development use. The developer incurred $1,295,869 in costs between the
We agree with the trial court's implicit determination that, as of December 6, 2007, plaintiffs and the developer intended to market the lots for development of expensive homes. The June 2006 development services agreement recited the developer's qualifications "to develop the property from its current state into an upscale single family residential subdivision." At a neighborhood group meeting in early 2007, the developer represented that the houses in the subdivision would average $2,900,000 in price and 6,000 square feet in size, and would "increase property values in the area." The developer testified that he originally planned to market the lots at a price of $300,000 to $500,000 in order to construct a higher-end development of expensive homes. Lot reservations were sold to high-end builders. As part of the subdivision approval process, shortly before the enactment of Measure 49, the developer filed draft covenants, conditions, and restrictions of record with the county in the fall of 2007 that limited the dwellings to a minimum size of 4,300 square feet.
Construction of homes priced in the $1 million to $2 million range would have been consistent with the character of the immediate neighborhood. The state's appraiser witness, Herman, opined that
Consistently with that opinion, a county planner testified that the average cost of constructing new homes in the area between January 1, 2007 and May 14, 2008, as reflected in building permit applications, was $873,768.
Hartwell, a custom-home builder, testified that it would cost about $590,000 to construct a 4,300-square foot home at the Tumwater subdivision. Thus, the evidence in the record suggests that the minimum cost of constructing a higher-end residence for the Tumwater subdivision was $663,052 ($590,000 home construction costs plus $73,052 lot development costs), for a total 41-home project cost of $27,185,132. Using that figure as the denominator, and $1,295,869 as the numerator, the expenditure ratio is 4.7 percent.
Plaintiffs presented evidence that the deterioration of the housing market during 2007 to mid-2008 would have prompted construction of homes at a lower cost of $345,000 per home, increasing the expenditure ratio to approximately 7.5 percent.
An expenditure ratio of 4.7 percent is insufficient to establish a commonlaw vested right to complete the development in light of the other Holmes factors. See Friends of Yamhill County, 351 Or. at 243, 264 P.3d 1265 ("The other Holmes factors will bear on
As noted, the judgment under review provided that "[p]laintiffs are not entitled to declaratory judgment." However, the correct form of relief is to enter a declaration that plaintiffs had no vested rights to complete and continue an improved subdivision because the expenditures on the project were insubstantial as of December 6, 2007, in light of the Holmes factors. See Curry v. Clackamas County, 240 Or.App. 531, 536, 248 P.3d 1, rev. den., 350 Or. 573, 258 P.3d 1239 (2011) (dismissal of declaratory judgment claim held improper and claim remanded for issuance of judgment declaring rights in accordance with this court's view of the merits of the controversy).
Judgment vacated and remanded.