End The Prison Industrial Complex v. City Of Seattle

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 29, 2018
Docket77212-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of End The Prison Industrial Complex v. City Of Seattle (End The Prison Industrial Complex v. City Of Seattle) 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
End The Prison Industrial Complex v. City Of Seattle, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

END THE PRISON INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX ("EPIC"), DIVISION ONE

Appellant, No. 77212-1-1

YOUTH UNDOING INSTITUTIONAL RACISM, EUROPEAN DISSENT, BLOCK THE BUNKER, COMMUNITY 2 COMMUNITY, ONE AMERICA, UNPUBLISHED OPINION AFRICAN AMERICAN LEADERSHIP FORUM, REV. ANDREW CONLEY- HOLCOM, ARTIFACTS, ARTS CORPS,) AUTONOMOUS ACTIONS AGAINST PRISONS, REV. BETH CHRONISTER, BUDDHIST PEACE FELLOWSHIP, COALITION OF ANTI-RACIST WHITES, SEATTLE CISPES, COMMITTEE ON OPPRESSION AND RACISM IN EDUCATION, COMMUNITY PASSAGEWAYS, EVANS PEOPLE OF COLOR, HIDMO, INCARCERATED MOTHERS ADVOCACY PROJECT, LATINO/A LAW STUDENTS ASSOCIATION, LATINO ADVOCACY, MIGRANT JUSTICE GROUP, NO NEW JIM CROW, NWDC RESISTANCE, PARTNERSHIP FOR COMMUNITY & DIVERSITY, POST-PRISON EDUCATION PROGRAM, RABBI DAVID BASIOR, RACE ACTION COMMITTEE AT EVANS, RB RESTORATIVE JUSTICE, REAL No. 77212-1-1/2

CHANGE, RED NOSES, REV. RICK ) DERKSEN, PROFESSOR ROSE ) ERNST, RACE & CLIMATE JUSTICE, ) RISING TIDE SEATTLE, SEA SOL, ) SEATTLE MENNONITE CHURCH, ) STOP VEOLIA SEATTLE, SURGE, ) TENANTS UNION OF WASHINGTON ) STATE,TRANSIT RIDERS UNION, ) UNIVERSITY UNITARIAN CHURCH, ) WA-BLOC, YOUTH SPEAKS ) SEATTLE, ) ) Petitioners/Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) ) KING COUNTY, BALFOUR BEATTY ) CONSTRUCTION, D/B/A HOWARD ) S. WRIGHT AND PATRICK ) DONNELLY, ) ) Respondents, ) ) CITY OF SEATTLE, ) ) Defendant.t ) ) FILED: May 29, 2018 )

DWYER, J. — End the Prison Industrial Complex(EPIC) appeals from an

order of the King County Superior Court dismissing its Land Use Petition Act

(LUPA)1 petition and its mandamus actions against King County and the City of

Seattle. EPIC contends that the superior court erred by dismissing EPIC's LUPA

t The judgment entered herein did not set forth a case caption identifying all of the parties to this dispute before the superior court. Similarly, the case captions set forth in the appellant's and petitioners'/plaintiffs' superior court petition and complaint did not identify these parties, in violation of CR 10(a)(1)("In the complaint the title of the action shall include the names of all the parties."(emphasis added)). Our rules provide that we utilize the caption as it was set forth in the superior court. RAP 3.4. However, given that the matter was improperly captioned in the superior court, we exercise our authority to correct the error. RAP 3.4. 1 Ch. 36.70C RCW.

2 No. 77212-1-1/3

petition challenging the decisions of the Seattle Department of Construction and

Inspections (SDCI) on the basis that the LUPA petition was untimely filed and by

dismissing EPIC's mandamus actions on the basis that the actions did not satisfy

the statutory requirements for mandamus relief.

Concluding that the superior court did not err by dismissing EPIC's claims,

we affirm.

I

In August 2012, voters in King County approved a levy to fund a proposal

known as the Children and Family Justice Center Project. The Project involves

the demolition of an existing juvenile justice complex located in Seattle known as

the Youth Services Center and the construction of a new complex to be known

as the Children and Family Justice Center. The new complex is to be comprised

of structures including courtrooms, office space, detention housing, a school, and

a parking structure. King County was designated the lead agency for the Project

and is also the owner of the property in question.

King County, in its capacity as lead agency for the Justice Center Project,

initiated and completed a State Environmental Policy Act(SEPA)2 review of the

Project's environmental impact. In 2013, King County issued a Mitigated

Determination of Non-Significance (MDNS), indicating that the Project would not

have a probable significant adverse impact on the environment.

Thereafter, in its capacity as property owner and developer, King County

requested a Master Use Permit(MUP)from SDCI to modify or waive certain

2 Ch. 43.21C RCW.

- 3 No. 77212-1-1/4

building-width and setback development standards that the city code made

applicable to structures categorized as a youth service centers.

On December 22, 2016, SDCI issued a notice of decision that it had

approved King County's permit request. The notice of decision set forth that

SDCI would issue a MUP to King County that would authorize King County to

commence the demolition and construction phase of the Justice Center Project.

Two decisions set forth in SDCI's notice of decision regarding King

County's MUP request are pertinent to this appeal. First, the notice of decision

set forth that SDCI was waiving and modifying the City's structure-width and

setback development standards regarding youth service centers in order to

accommodate the Justice Center Project. Additionally, SDCI's notice of decision

set forth that its approval of King County's MUP request was conditioned on both

King County's acknowledgement and filing of specified management plans

required by the City and King County's compliance with its MDNS, including the

environmental mitigation conditions set forth therein.

As pertinent here, SDCI's notice of decision also set forth a statement that

read: "Appeals of this decision must be received by the Hearing Examiner no

later than 1/5/2017." Prior to January 5, 2017, EPIC filed with the City's Hearing

Examiner an administrative appeal challenging SDCI's decisions regarding the

development standards for youth service centers and the SEPA conditions that

SDCI had imposed. EPIC did not file a LUPA petition in the King County

Superior Court challenging SDCI's decisions at this time.

4 No. 77212-1-1/5

King County and Balfour Beatty Construction, d/b/a Howard S. Wright and

Patrick Donnelly, jointly moved to dismiss EPIC's administrative appeal. On

March 1, 2017, the Hearing Examiner dismissed EPIC's appeal on the basis that

the City's land use code3 did not authorize the Examiner to resolve EPIC's

administrative appeal challenging SDCI's decisions. Specifically, the Examiner

concluded that, pursuant to the City's land use code,"the Department's decision

modifying certain development standards for the Children and Family Justice

Center project" and "the City's decision imposing SEPA conditions on the Family

and Justice Center project" are "not subject to appeal to the Hearing Examiner."

EPIC sought reconsideration of the Examiner's decisions, which was denied on

March 28, 2017.

On April 14, 2017, 21 days after the Hearing Examiner's denial of

reconsideration issued, EPIC filed a LUPA petition in the King County Superior

Court challenging both SDCI's decisions and the Hearing Examiner's ruling that

the Examiner did not have authority to resolve an administrative appeal from the

challenged SDCI decisions. EPIC also filed a complaint alleging that King

County and Balfour Beatty had violated SEPA and that mandamus relief against

the City of Seattle, King County, and Balfour Beatty was warranted.

Balfour Beatty moved to dismiss EPIC's LUPA petition. King County

moved to dismiss EPIC's complaint. They also joined one another's dismissal

3 Ch. 23.76 SMC.

5 No. 77212-1-1/6

motions.4 The superior court granted both motions and dismissed EPIC's LUPA

petition and complaint with prejudice.5

A

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