Byers v. BD. OF CLALLAM CY. COMM'RS
This text of 529 P.2d 823 (Byers v. BD. OF CLALLAM CY. COMM'RS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
ERNEST H. BYERS et al., Respondents,
v.
THE BOARD OF CLALLAM COUNTY COMMISSIONERS et al., Appellants.
The Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.
S. Brooke Taylor, Prosecuting Attorney, and Craig A. Ritchie, Deputy, for appellants.
Niichel & Cossel, P.S., and Richard J. Niichel, for respondents.
Smith Troy, Prosecuting Attorney, by Thomas J. Taylor, Jr., Deputy, and John C. Merkel, Prosecuting Attorney, amici curiae.
STAFFORD, J.
On March 2, 1972, the Board of County Commissioners for Clallam County (hereinafter the Board) passed an interim zoning ordinance for a portion of that county. Respondents, residents and taxpayers of the county, challenged the ordinance by a writ of certiorari. A subsequent hearing before the Superior Court resulted in the ordinance being held invalid. The Board and the Planning Commission (hereinafter the Commission) appeal.
[1, 2] Initially, appellants urge that respondents lack standing to attack the ordinance. We do not agree. In Pierce v. King County, 62 Wn.2d 324, 382 P.2d 628 (1963), we recognized certiorari as an appropriate remedy to test the reasonableness and validity of a zoning ordinance. We also have held that residents of an area encompassed by a *798 zoning plan have a sufficient "protected interest" to grant them standing. Anderson v. Island County, 81 Wn.2d 312, 501 P.2d 594 (1972). Nevertheless, appellants argue, the application for the writ failed to comply with RCW 7.16.050 in that it was not accompanied by an affidavit from a beneficially interested party. That asserted defect was corrected, however, at the hearing on appellants' motion to quash the writ. Respondents supplied the missing affidavits and the Superior Court ruled that they cured any previous deficiency. It held further, that if leave to amend were necessary he would grant it "in the interest of fundamental fairness." We have reviewed the record, including the affidavits filed by respondents, and agree the trial court was correct in finding that respondents are "citizens, taxpayers, and property owners in Clallam County, whose property might be adversely affected by the zoning ordinance." This finding, in turn, supports the conclusion of law that respondents have standing. Anderson v. Island County, supra.
Appellants also argue that respondents have been guilty of laches and should be denied relief. Although some 20 months elapsed between the original application for a writ of certiorari and the date of hearing, the record reveals that most delays were not unreasonable. There were at least four major causes: (1) difficulty in obtaining the services of visiting judges; (2) an agreement with the prosecutor that the action would be held in abeyance pending the outcome of county elections; (3) difficulty encountered by the county in supplying requested records; and (4) failure of the county promptly to answer propounded interrogatories. Accordingly, there is substantial evidence to support the finding that respondents were not deleterious in their prosecution of the litigation and that appellants were not substantially damaged thereby.
[3] Appellants assign error to the trial court's finding that the records of the proceedings before the Commission and the Board were inadequate. We agree with the finding. The writ ordered appellants "to fully certify and return *799... a true and complete transcript of the entire proceedings in this matter ... including the testimony given at hearings held before you to hold that the same may be reviewed by this court ..." (Italics ours.) The Commission presented minutes of its hearings. The Board presented minute entries together with tapes of some of its public hearings. Appellants admit, however, that some tape recordings of its public hearings are missing. We have reviewed the minutes of the Commission and the Board's minute entries and find them so brief as to be wholly uninformative. For example, the notation that a request was made for a change in the ordinance and that a change was subsequently made is of no value to a reviewing court. We must know, at a minimum, the type of change requested and the reasons given therefor. When a court is confronted with incomplete records after ordering "a true and complete transcript of the entire proceedings" it is proper to vacate the action of the Commission and the Board. Loveless v. Yantis, 82 Wn.2d 754, 513 P.2d 1023 (1973).
In findings of fact 5 and 6 the trial court dealt with specific inadequacies found in the records of both the Commission and the Board. First, the trial court found the Commission had "incorporated no findings of fact or reasons for its action in its motion for approval of the ordinance." Next, it found the Board "made substantial changes in the ordinance" but had failed to make "findings of fact ... or an analysis of the findings [which they] considered to be controlling." Based thereon, the trial court concluded, correctly, that the Commission and the Board failed to satisfy the requirements of RCW 36.70.600[1] and RCW 36.70.630[2] respectively.
*800 Appellants argue in the alternative, however, that the statutes do not apply to "interim zoning" measures, or, if they do, there was substantial compliance. We do not agree with either position.
[4] In Smith v. Skagit County, 75 Wn.2d 715, 453 P.2d 832 (1969), we held that RCW 36.70.380 (adoption of or amendment to comprehensive plans) and RCW 36.70.580 (recommendation of or amendment to an official control) both applied to interim zoning ordinances. As in Smith, the term "interim" is somewhat a misnomer when applied to the Clallam County resolution. The ordinance here involved is actually a detailed zoning code which, according to its title, establishes "the boundaries of areas to be known as zones to which the use classifications are applied, and within which zones the heights of buildings, areas of lots, building sites and yard spaces are regulated ..." It includes 30 pages of detailed zoning regulations. Any so-called "interim zoning" ordinance of such detail, scheduled to be effective for 4 years, must be adopted pursuant to procedural requirements of the Planning Enabling Act of the State of Washington, RCW 36.70.
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529 P.2d 823, 84 Wash. 2d 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byers-v-bd-of-clallam-cy-commrs-wash-1974.