Clark v. Sunset Hills Memorial Park, Inc.

273 P.2d 645, 45 Wash. 2d 180, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 394
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1954
Docket32502
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 273 P.2d 645 (Clark v. Sunset Hills Memorial Park, Inc.) 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
Clark v. Sunset Hills Memorial Park, Inc., 273 P.2d 645, 45 Wash. 2d 180, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 394 (Wash. 1954).

Opinion

Finley, J.

Herbert G. Clark and thirteen others, all property owners in King county, Washington, instituted this action to enjoin the operation of a cemetery located in the vicinity of their residences. The principal defendants are Sunset Hills Memorial Park, Inc., a nonprofit cemetery, and the five individuals, members of the corporation. However, the plaintiffs joined as additional defendants the auditor, the assessor, and the prosecuting attorney of King county and, in a separately stated cause of action, sought a writ of mandate to require the auditor and the assessor to remove from their files and records the plat and dedication of a cemetery filed by Sunset Hills Memorial Park, Inc. In the alternative, plaintiffs prayed for a writ of mandate requiring the prosecuting attorney to institute appropriate proceedings to cancel the filing and recording of the cemetery plat.

A demurrer, interposed by the county officials, was sustained by the Honorable Theodore S. Turner, of the King county superior court, and the above-mentioned county officials were dismissed as parties defendant. Thereafter, the lawsuit proceeded to trial on the merits against the principal defendants before the Honorable William J. Wilkins, who, after hearing evidence and argument, entered judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ complaint with prejudice. The plaintiffs have appealed from the order of Judge Turner dismissing the county officials as defendants, and from the judgment entered by Judge William J. Wilkins dismissing their complaint.

Appellants’ thirty-six assignments of error raise three basic questions. First, it is contended by appellants that the *182 county auditor improperly received a plat of the cemetery for filing, because no appropriate county authority had approved it and the dedication of the property for cemetery purposes as required by the general platting laws of the state. Second, appellants contend that the creation and maintenance of the cemetery by the respondents is unlawful in that no valid permit to establish a cemetery exists, as required-by state and county zoning law. The third question is whether the maintenance of the cemetery is a menace to the health of the appellants, or at least creates in their minds a reasonable fear that it is a menace to their health. Appellants contend thát a reasonable basis for fear exists, even if not an actual danger to their health, and that they are therefore entitled to an abatement of the cemetery as a nuisance.

After a Departmental hearing here on the motion of respondent county officials to dismiss the appeal respecting the order dismissing them as parties defendant, the questions of appellate procedure there involved were passed until a determination coüld be reached by us as to the entire appeal on its merits. In the discussion hereinafter, the questions decided adversely to appellants by Judge Turner in dismissing the county officials are considered and determined by us here, adversely to the appellants; and the final judgment of the trial court, dismissing the complaint in this case with prejudice, is affirmed. Consequently, we feel it is unnecessary for us to discuss the motion interposed by the county officials to dismiss the appeal as to them.

A chronological statement of events leading up to the present litigation is essential to a proper understanding and disposition of the matters involved. Prior to 1946, all of the land in the vicinity of the present cemetery, including that now owned or controlled by the several principal respondents, was zoned as agricultural land. In July, 1946, the county commissioners, acting upon the recommendation of the county planning commission, rezoned approximately sixty-six acres of the area from agricultural to third-class *183 residential property. The rezoned property was then owned by Overlake Memorial Cemetery, Inc. Later during the same year, the county commissioners granted a permit allowing the newly rezoned third-class residential property to be used for a cemetery. Thereafter, Overlake cleared and surveyed approximately nine acres of the rezoned land for the purpose of establishing a cemetery. On August 22, 1947, Overlake filed with the county auditor a plat and dedication of the nine acres as a cemetery. The plat bore written endorsements of approval by the county planning commission, the county commissioners, and the county road commissioners.

Overlake commenced to develop the nine-acre tract, but by February, 1949, the corporation had become insolvent. The corporate directors adopted a resolution to sell all of the land owned by the corporation. A sale was negotiated through a real-estate broker, who applied for a policy of title insurance. The title company refused to insure the title as being free from encumbrances because of the dedication of the land for cemetery purposes, as mentioned above. As a result, Overlake corporate directors passed a resolution for the institution of proceedings to vacate the plat and dedication of the property for cemetery purposes. This was done.

On March 13, 1950, Overlake conveyed all of the land owned by it to Modern Home Builders, Inc. The conveyance included the sixty-six acres zoned, R-3 Residential, with permit for a cemetery. In August, 1952, Modern Home Builders, Inc., conveyed five acres of this property to the five individual respondents herein and granted them options to purchase the remaining fifty-one acres. Following acquisition of the five-acre tract, the individual respondents incorporated the respondent, Sunset Hills Memorial Park, Inc., as a nonprofit cemetery' corporation. The five-acre tract was then conveyed to the new corporation, hereinafter referred to as corporate respondent.

In September, 1952, an engineer employed by the corporate respondent, filed a tentative plat of the five acres as *184 a cemetery with the county planning commission for approval. The commission set a date for public hearing and caused notices thereof to be posted. Shortly thereafter, a number of written protests were received by the planning commission relative to approval of the five acres for a cemetery. On October 9th, the attorney for corporate respondent, by letter, requested advice from the board of county commissioners as to the correct procedure to be followed for filing the cemetery plat, which was attached to his letter. The county commissioners obtained a legal opinion from the prosecuting attorney on October 24th. It stated that the land within the proposed cemetery plat was properly zoned, with permit for cemetery use, noting that a permit to establish a cemetery had previously been granted. The opinion further advised that “The statutes for the filing of cemetery plats do not require their submission to either the county commissioners or the county planning commission.” The opinion concluded that the plat should simply be filed with the county auditor.

On October 27, 1952, pursuant to the opinion of the prosecuting attorney, the county commissioners by formal action directed that the proposed cemetery plat be returned to corporate respondent for filing with the county auditor. On the same day, the plat was filed with the auditor. Sometime prior to October 27th, the tentative plat which had been filed with the planning commission was withdrawn. The public hearing to consider the platting of the cemetery was canceled.

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Bluebook (online)
273 P.2d 645, 45 Wash. 2d 180, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-sunset-hills-memorial-park-inc-wash-1954.