Bsre Point Wells, Lp v. Snohomish County

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 8, 2021
Docket80377-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bsre Point Wells, Lp v. Snohomish County (Bsre Point Wells, Lp v. Snohomish County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bsre Point Wells, Lp v. Snohomish County, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

BSRE POINT WELLS, LP, a Delaware limited partnership, No. 80377-8-I

Appellant, DIVISION ONE

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION SNOHOMISH COUNTY,

Respondent,

CITY OF SHORELINE, a Washington municipal corporation,

Respondent-Intervenor.

CHUN, J. — BSRE Point Wells, LP applied to build a mixed-use “Urban

Center” in Snohomish County. A Hearing Examiner denied BSRE’s application,

finding substantial conflicts between the application and the county code. The

Hearing Examiner ruled that BSRE could not reactivate its application. The

Snohomish County Council (County Council) affirmed the Hearing Examiner’s

rulings on appeal. BSRE then petitioned for review in King County Superior

Court under the Land Use Petition Act (LUPA). The superior court determined

that BSRE could reactivate its application before the Hearing Examiner and

declined to rule on BSRE’s other requests for relief. BSRE proceeded to

reactivate its application. BSRE appeals the superior court’s refusal to rule on

the interpretation of two provisions of the county code as well as the Hearing

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 80377-8-I/2

Examiner’s and County Council’s decisions that BSRE’s application conflicted

with those provisions. We dismiss the appeal as unripe.

I. BACKGROUND

In 2009 and 2010, the County Council revised its comprehensive plan for

the County, adopted Chapter 30.34A SCC,1 and rezoned Point Wells, the land at

issue, as an Urban Center. In 2011, BSRE applied2 to develop Point Wells as a

mixed-use Urban Center with residential and commercial buildings.

In 2013, the County sent a Review Completion Letter to BSRE, noting

numerous conflicts between the application and the county code. Over the next

five years, BSRE requested three extensions of the application deadline, which

requests the County granted, resulting in a final deadline of June 30, 2018. In

April 2017, BSRE resubmitted its application.

In October 2017, the County sent another Review Completion Letter to

BSRE saying that, while the applicant had addressed a handful of the conflicts

noted in the April 2013 letter, it failed to address most of the problems. The

County also said that it would potentially recommend a denial of the application

as it stood and that it would grant no more extensions “absent extraordinary

circumstances.” The County requested that BSRE resubmit its application by

January 8, 2018 so that the County would have enough time to review the

1 This chapter of the County Code regulates Urban Center development. 2 BSRE submitted multiple applications in 2011 but this opinion refers to them as one combined application.

2 No. 80377-8-I/3

materials for consistency, draft a recommendation for the Hearing Examiner, and

schedule a hearing before the application expiration date of June 30, 2018.

BSRE did not resubmit its application materials by January 8. On January

9, the County sent a letter informing BSRE that it was starting the final review

process based on the materials it had received. On January 12, BSRE

requested a fourth extension, to June 30, 2020, which the County denied. On

April 17, the County issued a Staff Recommendation Letter recommending that

BSRE’s application be denied based on eight substantial conflicts. On April 27,

BSRE submitted revised application materials. The County reviewed the

materials and issued a supplemental recommendation on May 9 determining that

BSRE had resolved three out of the eight issues but still recommending denial.

The Hearing Examiner for the County held an open hearing on BSRE’s

application, which ran from May 16 to 24, 2018. The Hearing Examiner

concluded that it would terminate the application based on the five substantial

conflicts with the county code.

BSRE moved for reconsideration and for clarification about whether the

Hearing Examiner’s decision was granted with prejudice. A repealed county

code provision in effect at the time of BSRE’s first application, former

SCC 30.34A.180(2)(f) (2007), stated: The hearing examiner may deny an urban center development application without prejudice pursuant to SCC 30.72.060. If denied without prejudice, the application may be reactivated under the original project number and without additional filing fees or loss of project vesting if a revised application is submitted within six months of the hearing examiner’s decision. In all other cases a new application shall be required.

3 No. 80377-8-I/4

(Emphasis added.) The Hearing Examiner decided that this provision was not

part of BSRE’s vested rights and that it lacked the authority to allow BSRE to

reactivate its application under the repealed provision.3 The Hearing Examiner

reaffirmed its decision on termination and clarified that the decision was without

prejudice.

BSRE appealed to the County Council. Following a closed hearing, the

County Council affirmed the Hearing Examiner’s decision.

BSRE then appealed to King County Superior Court under LUPA, seeking

reversal of the denial of BSRE’s application, an extension of the deadline, a

finding that its development rights vested to the code provision allowing for

reactivation of its application, and a reversal of all related findings of fact and

conclusions of law. See chapter 36.70C RCW.

In June 2019, the superior court reversed the Hearing Examiner’s

conclusion that BSRE did not have a vested right to the reactivation provision of

the code. The superior court determined that BSRE could reactivate its

application by submitting revised materials within six months of the court’s

decision. The superior court declined to address the remaining issues,

concluding that doing so was unnecessary given its ruling.

BSRE appealed and moved for a stay of enforcement of the superior

court’s ruling, seeking to delay the start of the six-month reactivation period. A

3 In Town of Woodway v. Snohomish County, our Supreme Court held that BSRE’s development rights had vested to the county code as it existed the day the company submitted a complete application. 180 Wn.2d 165, 175, 322 P.3d 1219 (2014), abrogated by Yim v. City of Seattle, 194 Wn.2d 682, 451 P.3d 694 (2019).

4 No. 80377-8-I/5

commissioner of this court denied the motion. BSRE revised its application

materials and submitted them within the six-month period.

II. ANALYSIS

The County says that because the superior court allowed BSRE to

reactivate its application, the case is not ripe for review. It thus asserts that

BSRE will either fully comply with the code, making this appeal moot, or BSRE

will not comply, leading to a new decision terminating the application, and that

termination decision would be a basis for appeal. Intervenor, the City of

Shoreline (Shoreline), adds that the appeal is not ripe because the superior court

did not rule on the conflicts issues, and thus there is nothing for us to review.4

BSRE does not explicitly argue that its claim is ripe but says we can reach the

merits because it satisfied the exhaustion requirements of LUPA and there is a

final judgment for us to address. We conclude that this case is not ripe.

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Bluebook (online)
Bsre Point Wells, Lp v. Snohomish County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bsre-point-wells-lp-v-snohomish-county-washctapp-2021.