Donald And Kathleen Miller v. City Of Sammamish

447 P.3d 593
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 19, 2019
Docket78528-1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 447 P.3d 593 (Donald And Kathleen Miller v. City Of Sammamish) 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
Donald And Kathleen Miller v. City Of Sammamish, 447 P.3d 593 (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DONALD AND KATHLEEN MILLER, ) No. 78528-1-1 ) Appellants, ) ) DIVISION ONE V. ) ) THE CITY OF SAMMAMISH, a ) PUBLISHED OPINION Washington municipal corporation, ) ) Respondent. ) FILED: August 19, 2019 )

MANN, A.C.J. — After learning that Donald and Kathleen Miller systematically

filled in and destroyed regulated wetlands on their property, the City of Sammamish

(City) commenced a code enforcement action. Over the course of a year, the City

issued a notice to comply, posted a stop work order on the property, and finally issued a

notice and order to abate and imposed a penalty. The Millers appealed to the City's

hearing examiner. The hearing examiner concluded that the Millers violated the

Sammamish Municipal Code (SMC), and the superior court affirmed. The Millers

appeal arguing that the hearing examiner violated their due process rights, that the

penalty order was unconstitutionally vague, and that substantial evidence does not

support the hearing examiner's conclusion that there were wetlands on their property.

We affirm. No. 78528-1-1/2

1.

The Millers own 2.29 acres of residential property located within the Sammamish

City limits. Two of the Millers' predecessors, Donald and Ira Morin purchased the

property in 1975. Donald Morin testified that he purchased the property for his

daughter's horses. He testified that he dug a pond for the horses on the lowest spot on

the property and spread the spoils around the perimeter of the pond. Morin testified that

the area was dry before he dug the pond and that he continually filled the pond with his

garden hose.

The Morins sold the property three years later, in 1978, to Marvin and Vera

Federman. The property was described in the 1978 sale as "residential, bare land."

The Federmans sold the property to Judy Wendl in 1994. Bankers Trust Company of

California foreclosed the property in 1998. The Millers purchased the property in 1999

from Bankers Trust.

In 2005, developer CamWest investigated developing a 38-lot residential

subdivision on several parcels, including the Millers' property. The Millers and

CamWest entered an agreement allowing CamWest to prepare a feasibility study of the

property. CamWest commissioned Talasaea Consultants, Inc. to prepare a sensitive

areas report of the Millers' property and adjacent parcels. The Talasaea report

identified two areas of the Millers' property as class III wetlands—wetlands K and L.

The report identified wetland L as 0.11 acres of palustrine, emergent, saturated wetland

primarily composed of mowed lawn vegetation located on the eastern border of the

Millers' property. To the southwest of wetland L, the report identified wetland K as 0.12

acres of palustrine, scrub shrub, unconsolidated bottom, permanently flooded,

-2- No. 78528-1-1/3

impounded wetland. The report determined that the farm pond excavated by Donald

Morin was included within wetland K.1 The City's former wetland biologist reviewed and

concurred in Talasea's findings in 2006. CamWest did not buy the Millers' property or

proceed with the proposed development.

In 2008, the landowner located to the south of the Millers commissioned Altmann

Oliver Associates, LLC (AOA)to prepare a critical area study of their property in

association with a potential residential development of that parcel. AOA determined

that there were two wetlands present on the southern property. AOA also relied upon

the Talasaea report to determine that there were three additional wetlands on the

properties neighboring the study site, including wetland K on the Millers' property.

Using the state wetland rating form, AOA concluded wetland K was a category III

wetland. AOA advised its client that the wetland K regulatory buffer would extend onto

the client's property. Summit Homes, LLC ultimately developed the property south of

the Millers into a residential subdivision. The subdivision includes a native growth

protection area along its north edge to encompass the portion of wetland K's required

regulatory buffer.

On January 12, 2016, the City's wetland biologist, Kathy Curry, informed the

City's code correction officer, Chris Hankins, that she received a complaint that the

Millers had been filling and grading wetlands on their property. Curry reported "Wetland

K, which encompassed a farm pond, has been entirely filled and that Wetland L, which

included a shallow depression, has been graded and filled."

I The hearing examiner determined that the "pond was not a regulated wetland, but the area surrounding it was, as was Wetland L."

-3- No. 78528-1-1/4

After investigating the complaint, on February 12, 2016, the City informed the

Millers by mail that the City had reason to believe unpermitted filling and grading had

taken place on the Millers' property. Donald Miller contacted Hankins a couple weeks

later and said that over time there has been some filling and clearing activities on his

property. Miller "was very terse in his response, saying that 'There are no wetlands on

my property." Hankins informed Miller that he required permits to continue filling and

clearing on his property and that Hankins could help him get into compliance. Miller did

not obtain such permits.

The City issued a second letter on April 14, 2016. The letter described three

things that, at a minimum, must be done for the Millers to avoid further action against

them:(1) have a certified wetland professional complete a wetland delineation report

and mitigation plan,(2) complete a critical area review and submit it with a clear and

grade permit application, and (3) stop further work until such a permit is issued.

During this time, Summit Homes agreed to purchase the Millers' property.

Summit Homes contacted Hankins to determine what Summit Homes had to do to make

sure the property was in compliance. The City put its enforcement action against the

Millers on hold, under the belief that Summit Homes would get the property into

voluntary compliance. The Summit Homes deal ultimately fell through, however, due to

the Millers' insistence that "he should not have a wetland on his site."

In September 2016, Hankins again attempted to contact the Millers to get the

property into compliance but the Millers refused to comply. Subsequently, in February

2017, the City received another complaint that the Millers were "stockpiling dirt on his

property and continuing to fill and spread dirt throughout the site." At that point, Hankins

-4- No. 78528-1-1/5

visited the property and observed "substantial fill-dirt piles on the property. . .[and]

evidence of tracks and exposed dirt in the areas that [the City was] concerned about

previously."

On February 10, 2017, the City posted a stop work order on the Millers' property

and mailed a letter to the Millers describing the city codes that the Millers were violating

and how to bring their property into compliance. The City also issued the Millers a $500

fine for the stop work order and informed the Millers how they could appeal that

decision.

After receiving the stop work order, "Mr. Miller did not follow through with any

permit applications as required." Therefore, the City issued and recorded a notice and

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