East County Reclamation Co. v. Bjornsen

125 Wash. App. 432
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 25, 2005
DocketNo. 30109-1-II
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 Wash. App. 432 (East County Reclamation Co. v. Bjornsen) 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
East County Reclamation Co. v. Bjornsen, 125 Wash. App. 432 (Wash. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

fl — Nancy Bjornsen and Gene English appeal the superior court’s reversal of a Clark County Land Use Hearing Examiner’s decision that found inadequate the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) filed by East County Reclamation Company (East). East filed the FEIS to assess the impact of their proposal to build a landfill in eastern Clark County over an alluvial aquifer. The superior court reversed the hearing examiner’s decision, finding that he had relied on speculative reasoning and added requirements not provided in the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA), chapter 43.21C RCW.

Quinn-Brintnall, C.J.

¶2 Because the hearing examiner selectively evaluated East’s proposal under regulations from both 1991 and 1994, we remand with directions that the FEIS be evaluated under the regulations in effect at the time East filed its application.

FACTS

¶3 In 1989 and 1991, East applied for a permit to construct a landfill on 98 acres it owned in eastern Clark County. When East filed its application, the 1985 Solid Waste Management Plan (SWMP), as amended in 1988, was in effect. The 1985/88 SWMP prohibited privately-owned, special use/limited-purpose landfills. In 1989 and 1991, Clark County required East to file a FEIS under SEPA. East finalized its SEPA document in June 2001.

[435]*435¶4 The FEIS was a two-volume document that evaluated the impact of the landfill on air, water, noise, land use, aesthetics, transportation, public service, and utilities. Volume 1 analyzed the existing conditions within each area, the impact of the project, any necessary mitigation measures, and unavoidable significant impacts. Volume 2 contained the public comments received and East’s responses. The FEIS also included technical appendices on geotechnical feasibility, groundwater characterization, groundwater monitoring and dilution, air quality impact, noise impact, traffic studies, and a preliminary design and operation.

¶5 Bjornsen and English (collectively “Bjornsen”) challenged the adequacy of East’s FEIS and in November 2001, the hearing examiner conducted a hearing. In February 2002, he issued the 78-page ruling that is the subject of this appeal.

¶6 The ruling addressed the threshold question of which law applied: the 1985/88 SWMP which was in effect when East filed its application, or amendments made to the SWMP in 1994. The hearing examiner ruled that East could waive its vested right to review of the proposal under the law in effect at the time the application was filed so that its application could be evaluated under later-enacted SWMP and statutory amendments. He also ruled that East could exercise this vested rights waiver selectively and avoid compliance with concurrency and critical aquifer recharge area regulations enacted after the application was filed, but in effect at the time of Clark County’s 1994 SWMP amendment.

¶7 Applying the regulations in accord with East’s selective vested rights waivers, the hearing examiner found that the FEIS was inadequate in six areas under SEPA procedural and substantive authority, and denied the conditional use and solid waste permit and the covenant release applications.

¶8 The next month, East appealed to the Board of County Commissioners, which affirmed the hearing exam[436]*436iner’s decision. In April 2002, East appealed to the Clark County Superior Court. The superior court reversed the hearing examiner’s decision, finding that his ruling regarding the adequacy of the FEIS was based on speculative reasoning and requirements not provided in SEPA. Bjornsen appealed that decision to this court.1

ANALYSIS

The Vested Rights Doctrine and Selective Waiver

¶9 We review an appeal from a superior court’s decision on an administrative land use appeal anew from the position of the superior court. Young v. Pierce County, 120 Wn. App. 175, 180-81, 84 P.3d 927 (2004) (citing HJS Dev., Inc. v. Pierce County ex rel. Dep’t of Planning & Land Servs., 148 Wn.2d 451, 468, 61 P.3d 1141 (2003)). We examine questions of law de novo, based on the administrative record. HJS Dev., 148 Wn.2d at 468; City of University Place v. McGuire, 144 Wn.2d 640, 647, 30 P.3d 453 (2001). What law controls a hearing examiner’s evaluation of the adequacy of an applicant’s FEIS is a question of law which we review de novo. Org. to Pres. Agric. Lands (OPAL) v. Adams County, 128 Wn.2d 869, 875, 913 P.2d 793 (1996).

¶10 As below, Bjornsen argues that East’s application must be reviewed under the law in effect at the time the application was filed and that the hearing examiner erred by allowing East to “waive” its vested rights and select which law applied to review the adequacy of its application. Bjornsen contends that allowing this selective waiver of land use regulations results in projects that do not comply with any law, violate the public’s right to a coherent land development system, and add difficulty to an already complex system of land use regulations.

¶11 East asserts that vested rights exist for the benefit of developers and, like other due process rights, they can be [437]*437waived. East argues that common law’s concept of vested rights was intended to protect an applicant’s rights to due process by ensuring review of an application based on the law that existed when the application was filed, thereby preventing the local government from shifting the proverbial goal posts during the application review process.

¶12 We agree that a developer is entitled to rely on the law in effect at the time he files a development application. But the vested rights doctrine does not allow a developer to file an application for an impermissible use and then to selectively waive its vested rights so it can benefit from parts of newly-enacted regulations allowing the use without having to comply with other parts of those same new regulations. Thus, we hold that the hearing examiner erred by accepting East’s selective waivers and by failing to review East’s application under the regulations and law in effect at the time it chose to file its initial application.

¶13 The vested rights doctrine is “based on constitutional principles of fundamental fairness, reflecting an acknowledgement that development rights are valuable and protectable property rights.” Vashon Island Comm. for Self-Gov’t v. Wash. State Boundary Review Bd. for King County, 127 Wn.2d 759, 768, 903 P.2d 953 (1995). Vesting refers to the “notion that a land use application, under the proper conditions, will be considered only under the land use statutes and ordinances in effect at the time of the application’s submission.” Friends of the Law v. King County, 123 Wn.2d 518, 522, 869 P.2d 1056 (1994). The purpose of vesting is to determine and fix the rules that will apply to a land development. Vashon Island Comm., 127 Wn.2d at 768.

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125 Wash. App. 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-county-reclamation-co-v-bjornsen-washctapp-2005.