Two of Today's Opinions: Rural land use and DSHS

Whatcom County locator mapGold Star Resorts v. Futurewise and Whatcom County, No. 80810-4. Pursuant to the Growth Management Act (GMA), Whatcom County adopted a "comprehensive plan" in 1997. Two months after the plan was adopted, the legislature amended the GMA to include "limited areas of more intensive rural development" (LAMIRDs). The County revised its plan seven years later as required by the GMA. On March 25, 2005, the anti-growth organization Futurewise commenced this litigation by appealing the County's plan and related ordinances to the Western Washington Growth Management Hearings Board.

Futurewise challenged that the plan violated the GMA by protecting the rights of certain rural private property owners to develop their land.

[Futurewise] argued that the County failed to update its comprehensive plan to bring it into conformity with the GMA's LAMIRD amendments in three ways: (1) the County adopted comprehensive plan policies that allow and encourage expansion of areas of more intensive growth in rural areas; (2) the plan contains descriptors for areas of more intensive rural development that do not comply with the GMA; and (3) the County established zoning designations ... that improperly apply beyond the logical boundaries of valid LAMIRDs.

Gold Star Resorts intervened because Futurewise's challenge might diminish Gold Star's property rights on a parcel Gold Star owns in Whatcom County adjacent to Interstate 5. The Hearings Board upheld five of the County's policies, but overturned a sixth because it allowed designating town boundaries "based on 'existing development'" in 2004 rather than being "restricted to the built environment as of July 1990." The Cabin in Whatcom CountyHearings Board also found that the County's criteria and analysis for determining the boundaries of LAMIRDs failed to satisfy the mandates of the GMA.

Gold Star petitioned for review and prevailed in superior court. The court determined that the Hearings Board had "improperly used a bright line rule of one residence per five acres" and that some of the issues had been litigated in a 1998 case. Futurewise appealed. The Court of Appeals overturned the lower court, holding that neither res judicata nor collateral estoppel applied and that the Hearings Board had not used an impermissible "bright line rule."

Today, the Supreme Court in an opinion by Justice Madsen unanimously reaffirms its earlier decision in Thurston County v. Western Washington Growth Management Hearings Board (2008).

First.... Futurewise could challenge the portions of the County's comprehensive plan affected by the GMA amendments pertaining to LAMIRDs but, contrary to Futurewise's argument, could not challenge any and all aspects of the plan alleged to be noncompliant with the GMA.

The second holding in Thurston County that applies here is that when differentiating between urban and rural densities, the Board cannot employ bright line rules. Thus, the Board improperly relied in this case on a "one residence per five acre" rule.

The Court remands the case to the Hearings Board to reconsider Futurewise's claims without applying a bright line rule. The Court also requires Whatcom County to update its rural development criteria based on the LAMIRD provisions of GMA and to revise its comprehensive plan. Congratulations to the Pacific Legal Foundation, which filed an amicus brief in this case against the Hearings Board's use of a bright line rule. (argument and briefs)

After the jump: Ducote v. DSHS, No. 81714-6.

Ducote v. DSHS, No. 81714-6. Kent Ducote was accused by his 14-year-old stepdaughter of sexual misconduct, resulting in an investigation by the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) and court orders preventing Ducote from access to his home and family. About six months later, the trial court determined that the accusations were not supported by the evidence and lifted the orders. Ducote sued DSHS for negligent investigation. The State answered that stepparents are not owed a duty of care under the statute and that such claims are "limited to children, parents, guardians, and custodians." The trial court granted summary judgment and the Court of Appeals affirmed.

Today, the Court notes that negligent investigation is not a common law cause of action, but one created by inference from RCW 26.44.050. Because the statute references specific categories of persons and does not include stepparents, the Court affirms the lower courts. Justice Mary Fairhurst wrote the opinion, joined by four other justices and by Justice Pro Tem. Karen Seinfeld. Justice Chambers, joined by Justices Sanders and Stephens, dissents. The Chief Justice did not participate. (argument and briefs)

Oral arguments today - Sept. 22, 2009

Today the Court will hear arguments in four cases dealing with criminal procedure, public records, preemption, and the Growth Management Act. (docket, case briefs)

In the morning session, starting at 9:00 a.m., the Court will hear:

State v. Magee, No. 81746-4. On appeal from the Division Two Court of Appeals, this case originated in Pierce County Superior Court. The case concerns whether a police officer had authority to issue a ticket for a traffic infraction that was not committed in the officer's presence.

In driving to help a friend whose car had stalled on a freeway, Andrew Magee made a U-turn on an on-ramp, parking his car backwards on the shoulder to be nose-to-nose with the other car. A state trooper responded to a report of a car driving backwards, and upon seeing Magee's car she assumed it was him, issuing him a traffic citation. Magee argued there was insufficient evidence to prove the infraction, and that the trooper had no authority to issue the ticket because she didn't see him driving backwards. Both the Superior Court and Appeals Court upheld the conviction.

Yousoufian v. Ron Sims, No. 80081-2. An open records case that has gone up and down the court system for the past ten years, the final issue in Yousoufian was settled by the Court in January. But Justice Sanders, who wrote the majority opinion, was determined to have a conflict of interest and King County asked for this rehearing. Both Sanders and Justice Stephens are recused from the argument.

The Court will review the appropriate level of penalties for King County's gross negligence in providing public records to Yousoufian. Justice Sanders' original decision also provided a long-desired framework for how judges should set penalties in public records cases. He was joined by five other justices in this part of his decision.

In the afternoon session, starting at 1:30 p.m., the Court will hear:

Gold Star Resorts v. Futurewise and Whatcom County, No. 80810-4. This case is on appeal from Division One Court of Appeals, originating from a Growth Management Hearings Board decision reviewed by the Whatcom County Superior Court. The questions before the Court concern whether the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel (preventing litigation of the same question twice) apply in land use cases, and whether the Growth Management Board improperly established a bright-line rule about the density of homes allowed in rural residential areas.

Futurewise challenged Whatcom's land use plan as noncompliant with the Growth Management Act, arguing that the rural density levels were too high and that some limited areas of "intensive rural development" were too large. Gold Star would have been harmed if Futurewise won, so it intervened in the case, arguing that the "intensive rural development" issue had already been found to comply with the Growth Management Act in a prior Futurewise case, and that Futurewise was barred from re-litigating the same issue again (violating res judicata).

Gold Star also argues that the Growth Management Board cannot impose a bright-line standard for permissible rural densities, since local governments are given broad discretion in the Growth Management Act to tailor their plans to the particular needs of their communities.

Lawson v. City of Pasco, No. 81636-1. This case is on appeal from Division Three Court of Appeals, and arose in Franklin County Superior Court. The question before the Court is whether the Manufactured/Mobile Home Landlord-Tenant Act preempts a city's ordinance banning the use of recreational vehicles as permanent homes in mobile home parks.

Paul Lawson owns a mobile home park in Pasco, and has at least one tenant who uses a fifth-wheel as a permanent home. Pasco has an ordinance preventing this use of a recreational vehicle, and ordered Lawson to evict all such tenants. Lawson defends on the basis that the Landlord-Tenant Act allows the use, and that the Act preempts the City's ordinance.