Cannabis Action Council v. City of Kent

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 2015
Docket90204-6
StatusPublished

This text of Cannabis Action Council v. City of Kent (Cannabis Action Council v. City of Kent) 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.

Bluebook
Cannabis Action Council v. City of Kent, (Wash. 2015).

Opinion

/ Fl L E IN CLERICS OFFICE . . . . . . COURT, STAn OF WASH!NtlTON This opinion was flied for record OA7E MAY 2 1 2015 at B 90 AXxJ on t5 91k~~···· JUS I

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

CANNABIS ACTION COALITION, ARTHUR WEST, DAVID HALLIN,

Plaintiffs, NO. 90204-6 STEVE SARICH, JOHN WORTHINGTON, and DERYCK TSANG,

Petitioners, ENBANC

v.

CITY OF KENT, a local municipal MAY 2 1 2015 corporation, KENT CITY COUNCIL, Filed - - ----- KENT MAYOR, STATE OF WASHINGTON,

Respondents.

STEPHENS, J.-Under the Washington State Medical Use of Cannabis Act

(MUCA), chapter 69.51A RCW, qualifying patients may participate in "collective

gardens" to pool resources and grow medical marijuana for their own use. RCW Cannabis Action Coal. v. City ofKent, 90204-6

69.51A.085(1). 1 However, MUCA grants cities and towns the power to zone the

"production, processing, or dispensing" of medical marijuana. RCW

69.51A.l40(1). Given this state law, the city of Kent enacted a zoning ordinance

that prohibits collective gardens within its city limits. City of Kent Ordinance 4036

(June 5, 2012) (codified at KENT CITY CoDE 15.02.074, 15.08.290) (Ordinance).

This case requires us to determine whether MUCA preempts the Ordinance.

We hold it does not and affirm the Court of Appeals. The Ordinance is a valid

exercise of the city of Kent's zoning authority recognized in RCW 69.51A.l40(1)

because the Ordinance merely regulates land use activity.

I. BACKGROUND

A

In 1971, the Washington Legislature enacted the Uniform Controlled

Substances Act, chapter 69.50 RCW. That statute made it a crime to manufacture,

deliver, and possess marijuana. RCW 69.50.401-.445. The same activities are

criminalized under federal law. 21 U.S.C. ch. 13. But Washington has had

subsequent legal developments concerning medical marijuana and recreational

marijuana. In 1998, the people adopted Initiative 692, LAWS OF 1999, ch. 2, to

provide protections for medical marijuana use. And in 2012, the people adopted

Initiative 502, LAWS OF 2013, ch. 3, to create a system for the licensed distribution 1 While this appeal was pending, the legislature enacted comprehensive reform concerning the regulation of medical marijuana in Washington. LAWS OF 2015, ch. 70. That new law repeals the two statutory provisions at issue in this case. See id. § 48 (repealing RCW 69.51A.140), § 49 (repealing RCW 69.51A.085). This opinion concerns the law as it existed prior to the 2015 enactment. All references to statutes in this opinion refer to the statutes as they existed prior to the 2015 enactment.

-2- Cannabis Action Coal. v. City ofKent, 90204-6

of recreational marijuana and to legalize the possession of marijuana in certain

circumstances. See RCW 69.50.4013(3). Initiative 502 is not relevant to this case

because no party seeks to produce marijuana pursuant to a recreational marijuana

producer's license. See RCW 59.50.325(1). This case concerns Washington's

medical marijuana system.

Washington's medical marlJuana system is codified as MUCA, chapter

69.51A RCW. Initially~ the statute provided qualifying medical marijuana users an

affirmative defense to criminal prosecutions. Former RCW 69.51A.040(2)-(3)

(20 10). That defense was satisfied upon compliance with the terms of the chapter,

such as meeting the definition of being a "qualifying patient," having "valid

documentation" from a "health care professional," having the appropriate quantity

of marijuana, and satisfying other conditions. Id.; former RCW 69.51A.010(2)

(2010).

The legislature amended MUCA in 2011. See LAws OF 2011, ch. 181. But

the bill the legislature passed differs significantly from the enacted law because

Governor Gregoire vetoed 36 of the bill's 58 sections. See id. at 13 74-7 6 (governor's

veto message). As passed by the legislature, the bill would have created a

comprehensive regulatory scheme under which all patients, physicians, processors,

producers, and dispensers could be securely and confidentially registered in a

database maintained by the Washington Department of Health. See id. § 901 (later

vetoed). Registration would have been optional. Id. § 901(6) (later vetoed). If a

patient registered, the patient would not be subject to state prosecution or civil

-3- Cannabis Action Coal. v. City of Kent, 90204-6

consequences for marijuana-related offenses. Id. § 401 (codified at RCW

69.51A.040). But if the patient did not register, the patient would be entitled to only

an affirmative defense to marijuana prosecutions. !d. § 402 (codified at RCW

69.51A.043).

In addition to the registration system, the bill authorized collective gardens

and clarified that local jurisdictions retain their zoning power over medical

marijuana activities. Under the bill, qualifying patients could establish collective

gardens for the purpose of growing medical marijuana for personal use. Jd. § 403

(codified at RCW 69.51A.085). Participating in a collective garden involves

"sharing responsibility for acquiring and supplying the resources required to produce

and process cannabis for medical use," such as by providing real estate, equipment,

supplies, or labor for the collective garden. !d. § 403(2) (codified at RCW

69.51A.085(2)). Last, the bill clarified that local governments retain authority to

regulate the production, processing, or dispensing of medical marijuana through

zoning, business licensing, health and safety requirements, and business taxes. !d. §

1102 (codified at RCW 69.51A.140).

After the legislature passed the bill and sent it to Governor Gregoire for her

approval, the United States attorneys for the Eastern and Western Districts of

Washington wrote the governor a letter. It warned that the legislature's bill

authorized conduct illegal under federal law, noted that Washington State employees

who administered the registry would not be immune from federal prosecution, and

threatened such prosecution. Cannabis Action Coal. v. City ofKent, 180 Wn. App.

-4- Cannabis Action Coal. v. City of Kent, 90204-6

455, 464, 322 P.3d 1246 (2014). Governor Gregoire vetoed all of the bill's sections

that could have subjected state employees to federal charges, most importantly the

establishment of the bill's centerpiece, the registration system. She did not veto the

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