Davidson v. Kitsap County

937 P.2d 1309, 86 Wash. App. 673, 1997 Wash. App. LEXIS 917
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 9, 1997
Docket38055-9-I
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 937 P.2d 1309 (Davidson v. Kitsap 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
Davidson v. Kitsap County, 937 P.2d 1309, 86 Wash. App. 673, 1997 Wash. App. LEXIS 917 (Wash. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Cox, J.

Kitsap County appeals an order reversing the denial of an application to provide access to a proposed subdivision from a county road known as Carriage Drive. The County contends that the doctrine of res judicata barred the application and that substantial evidence supports the decision. We agree and reverse the trial court decision.

Mick Davidson owns an undeveloped 46-acre parcel of land in north Kitsap County. In April 1990, he applied to the Kitsap County Board of Commissioners to plat the parcel under the name High Haven. Davidson’s application proposed 18 single-family lots. He initially contemplated providing access to the development from State Route 104, which borders the parcel on the south. Davidson subsequently revised his design to provide access from *676 Carriage Drive, a county road that approaches the proposed plat from the northwest. Carriage Drive bisects Daparwood, a neighboring subdivision, and is separated from Davidson’s parcel by a 10-foot-by-60-foot "street plug.” The drive connects with Hansville Road, which intersects SR 104 to the south.

At the time of Davidson’s application, the residents of Daparwood vigorously opposed the request to use Carriage Drive for access to High Haven. They maintained that the increased traffic would destroy the rural setting of the neighborhood, would be unsafe due to the steep grade of portions of the road, and would require the removal of many old growth trees. Several residents also stated that they had purchased lots in Daparwood after receiving assurances that Carriage Drive would never service adjoining communities. The Daparwood residents also presented evidence that the 1971 Planning commission approved the preliminary plat subject to a number of conditions. One of them was:

4. That a temporary cul de sac be installed at the east end of the northerly [Carriage Drive] roadway; and that a 10 foot street plug be dedicated to the County to assure that no access from the adjacent properties will take place inasmuch as these roads are not to be brought up to minimum standards on the east end of the northerly road [Carriage Drived][ 1 ]

In support of his application, Davidson raised a public safety concern. He testified that the stretch of SR 104 on the south side of High Haven has a higher accident rate than any other section of highway in the state. Thus, providing access to the plat from that point was a safety problem. He further presented evidence that the Washington State Department of Transportation (DOT) had adopted a general policy of directing access to the county road system to improve public safety. Based on this policy, DOT supported providing access to High Haven through Carriage Drive.

*677 In November 1990, the Board of Commissioners approved the proposed plat, subject to the condition that access not be provided by way of Carriage Drive. It also entered its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the relevant portions of which are set forth below. The Board found:

14. The proposed plat and PUD contemplates [s/c] access through Carriage Drive, a gravel road serving the plat of Daparwood. This road is maintained by the residents of Daparwood and incorporates a ten foot "street plug” where it adjoins the northwest corner of the subject property.
15. The Plat of Daparwood, incorporating the street plug, was recorded November 30, 1972. Removal of a street plug requires formal action of [sic] by the Board of County Commissioners pursuant to a public hearing.
16. The street plug was required to limit traffic through Daparwood and gravel-surfaced Carriage Drive that is maintained by the Daparwood owners. Residents and owners of lots in Daparwood have expressed opposition to removal of that street plug.

The Board concluded:

10. . . . that it would be inappropriate to remove the street plug at the west [sic] end of Carriage Drive, due to the intent of its incorporation into the plat of Daparwood and the opposition to the removal by residents/owners in that plat.
11. The Board concludes that approval of the subject plat/PUD with access via Carriage Lane is not necessary for the preservation and enjoyment of the substantial property right of the petitioner and will be materially detrimental to the public welfare and to the property of other persons located in the vicinity.

Davidson did not appeal this decision.

*678 Four years later, Davidson submitted a revised plat application for High Haven. The 1994 revised plat increased density from 18 to 25 lots. But it again contemplated access from Carriage Drive. A letter from DOT stated that it had denied a request to construct a permanent road approach from High Haven to SR 104. Quoting RCW 47.50 and WAC 468-52, DOT noted that Washington law requires that:

"private direct access to the state highway system be permitted only when the property has no other reasonable access to the general system”. This parcel has reasonable access to NE Carriage Drive and the Hansville Road as shown on the plat map. Therefore, the Department is unable to grant direct access to SR 104 at this location.

Both DOT and the Kitsap County Department of Public Works (DPW) testified that they strongly recommended using Carriage Drive to provide access because of the safety concerns surrounding private access to SR 104. DOT admitted that it would be required to allow access if there were no other option available.

As expected, the Daparwood residents again vigorously opposed Davidson’s application. In addition to repeating the arguments they had made in 1990, they argued that Davidson’s application had been denied in 1990. One resident who had purchased his Daparwood property in 1992 stated that he had made the purchase only after research revealed that access to adjoining parcels could not be obtained through Carriage Drive.

The hearing examiner who considered the application recommended approval. But he concluded that the use of Carriage Drive to provide access to the development would have to be determined by the Board of Commissioners. His recommendation included the following condition:

1. In the event that the project ultimately makes use of Carriage Drive for access, the project should be limited to 18 lots as previously approved and in accordance with the zoning and density established for the plat and compatible with the *679 adjacent and impacted Daparwood subdivision. If the Applicant otherwise is successful in providing access to the south, the density request contained in the Application [25 lots] is appropriate and should be granted.

Thereafter, Davidson filed an application to remove the street plug blocking access to Carriage Drive.

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Bluebook (online)
937 P.2d 1309, 86 Wash. App. 673, 1997 Wash. App. LEXIS 917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-kitsap-county-washctapp-1997.