Enid Duncan v. City Of Edgewood

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 1, 2016
Docket48028-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Enid Duncan v. City Of Edgewood (Enid Duncan v. City Of Edgewood) 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
Enid Duncan v. City Of Edgewood, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

November 1, 2016 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II ENID and EDWARD DUNCAN; ERIC No. 48028-0-II DOCKEN, DOCKEN PROPERTIES, LP; JAMES and PATRICIA SCHMIDT; DARLENE MASTERS; SUELO MARINA, LLC; AKA THE BRICKHOUSE, LLC; 1999 STOKES FAMILY LLC; TINA REMPEL; ELDEAN REMPEL, as Trustee for REVOCABLE TRUST AGREEMENT OF RAY AND ELDEAN B. REMPEL Dated December 12, 2006,

Appellants,

v.

CITY OF EDGEWOOD, Local Improvement District No. 1, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Respondent.

WORSWICK, J. — This is the second appeal of the City of Edgewood’s local improvement

district (LID) assessments for installation of a sewer system. In Hasit, LLC v. City of Edgewood,

179 Wn. App. 917, 320 P.3d 163 (2014), we annulled Edgewood’s LID assessments against the

appealing property owners. Following our decision in Hasit, the City reassessed the affected

properties and the Edgewood City Council held a hearing to address the property owners’

objections to their reassessments. The Council ultimately rejected the property owners’

objections and adopted an ordinance confirming the reassessment roll. Several property owners1

1 The appealing property owners include 1999 Stokes Family LLC (“Stokes”); Eldean Rempel, as Trustee for Revocable Trust Agreement of Ray E. Rempel and Eldean B. Rempel dated No. 48028-0-II

appealed to the superior court, which affirmed the Council’s reassessment decision. The

property owners now appeal the superior court’s order affirming the reassessment decision.

Property owners Stokes and Rempel assert that the reassessment roll must be annulled or

modified2 because the Council’s decision to confirm the reassessment roll was arbitrary and

capricious. Specifically, Stokes and Rempel contend that the Council’s decision was arbitrary

and capricious because the Council incorrectly (1) applied presumptions in favor of the City’s

proposed reassessments, (2) imposed a burden on the property owners to prove the reassessments

were invalid, and (3) confirmed reassessments that were in substantial excess of the special

December 12, 2006, a trust, and Tina Rempel (“Rempel”); Enid and Edward Duncan (“Duncan”); Darlene Masters and James and Patricia Schmidt (“Masters/Schmidt”); AKA the Brickhouse LLC (“Brickhouse”); Suelo Marina LLC; and Eric Docken and Docken Properties LP (“Docken”). 2 It is not clear whether there is statutory authority for this court to modify a LID assessment decision. RCW 35.44.250 provides:

Procedure on appeal—Hearing by superior court. . . . The judgment of the court shall confirm, unless the court shall find from the evidence that such assessment is founded upon a fundamentally wrong basis and/or the decision of the council or other legislative body thereon was arbitrary or capricious; in which event the judgment of the court shall correct, change, modify, or annul the assessment insofar as it affects the property of the appellant.

By its terms, this statute applies to appeals heard by the superior court. In contrast, RCW 35.44.260 is silent about the remedies available on appeal from the superior court’s judgment, stating only:

Procedure on appeal—Appellate review. Appellate review of the judgment of the superior court may be obtained as in other cases if sought within fifteen days after the date of the entry of the judgment in the superior court.

Because we conclude that the appellants are not entitled to any relief from the judgment of the superior court, we do not reach this issue.

2 No. 48028-0-II

benefit to the properties and grossly disproportionate to similarly situated properties within the

LID.

Property owners Duncan, Masters/Schmidt, Brickhouse, Suelo Marina, and Docken3 also

request that the reassessment roll be annulled or modified. They contend that (1) the Council’s

decision to confirm the reassessment roll was arbitrary and capricious or founded on a

fundamentally wrong basis,4 (2) the reassessments deprived them of due process because they

did not receive any special benefits from the LID, (3) the City’s failure to present any rebuttal

evidence following their presentations at the reassessment hearing rendered the Council’s

decision to confirm the reassessment roll invalid, (4) the Council improperly considered property

owners’ statements from a previous 2011 hearing, and (5) the city manager’s attendance in the

LID executive session violated the appearance of fairness doctrine.

We affirm.

FACTS

I. FIRST ASSESSMENT ROLL AND APPEAL

In 2008, the Council created LID No. 1 to finance the construction of a sewer system,

imposing the entire project cost on the owners of 161 parcels in the LID. The sewer system was

3 Duncan, Masters/Schmidt, Brickhouse, Suelo Marina, and Docken are represented by the same counsel and raise several shared arguments in addition to their individual property-specific claims. Hereafter, this opinion will refer to these property owners collectively as the “Docken Petitioners.” 4 The Docken Petitioners raise various arguments, specific to the reassessments against their individual properties, in support of their contention that the Council’s reassessment decision was arbitrary or capricious or founded on a fundamentally wrong basis. These various arguments are addressed in the body of this opinion.

3 No. 48028-0-II

completed in 2011 with an estimated cost of $21,238,268. To estimate the “special benefit”5

attributable to each of the properties within the LID as a result of the sewer system, the City

hired professional appraisal firm Macaulay and Associates Ltd. Administrative Record (AR) at

362. After Macaulay submitted its proposed assessments, the City notified affected property

owners of their right to object to the assessments at a hearing before a hearing examiner.

Following the hearing, the hearing examiner recommended rejecting all of the property owners’

protests, apart from reducing assessments to three properties. The Council thereafter considered

the hearing examiner’s recommendations and heard objections from protesting parties. After

hearing the protesting property owners’ objections, the Council voted to approve an ordinance

that, apart from reducing assessments on two properties, confirmed the assessment roll as

recommended by the hearing examiner.

Nine affected property owners appealed the Council’s assessment decision to the superior

court.6 Hasit, 179 Wn. App. at 932. The superior court concluded that the City’s notice of the

hearing examiner’s proceedings was defective, and it remanded for a de novo hearing. Hasit,

179 Wn. App. at 932. The City appealed the superior court’s decision to this court and the

Docken Petitioners cross-appealed. Hasit, 179 Wn. App. at 932.

5 A “special benefit” is the “increase in fair market value attributable to the local improvements.” Doolittle v. City of Everett, 114 Wn.2d 88, 103, 786 P.2d 253 (1990). 6 One of the nine appealing property owners, Hasit LLC, agreed in a stipulated motion to a voluntary dismissal of its appeal. See Hasit, 179 Wn. App. at 932 n. 5.

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