First Pioneer Trading Co. v. Pierce County

146 Wash. App. 606
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 3, 2008
DocketNo. 31291-3-II
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 146 Wash. App. 606 (First Pioneer Trading Co. v. Pierce 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
First Pioneer Trading Co. v. Pierce County, 146 Wash. App. 606 (Wash. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Hunt, J.

¶1 First Pioneer Trading Company, Inc., appeals the trial court’s affirmance of the Pierce County hearing examiner’s land use decision denying First Pioneer’s claim of a legal, nonconforming use of its property. First Pioneer argues that (1) the hearing examiner erred by finding that it failed to meet its burden of proof that the legal, nonconforming use existed and (2) the hearing exam[609]*609iner improperly applied the burden-shifting framework. We disagree and affirm.

FACTS

Background

A. Land Use

¶2 First Pioneer owns and occupies a 2.94-acre, rectangular parcel of land located at 14505 Old Military Road East in Puyallup (Property). The Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railroad Company owned this land until 1999, when it sold the Property to ANT, LLC. ANT conveyed the Property to First Pioneer Trading Company by quitclaim deed in 2000.

¶3 First Pioneer operates a steel fabrication business on the Property, in two commercial structures. In order to facilitate its steel fabrication business, First Pioneer also maintains various outdoor structures and commercial industrial vehicles on the site.

B. Zoning

¶4 From 1962 to 1988, the Property was subject to a general Pierce County (County) zoning ordinance, which allowed heavy manufacturing uses outright. But in 1988, the County passed an ordinance requiring a conditional use permit to use land in this zone for heavy manufacturing. And in 1995, the County rezoned the area around the Property to a “Rural 5” classification, which required a conditional land use permit for any use other than a one- or two-family home.

¶5 On September 14, 2000, Pierce County issued a notice to First Pioneer that its use of the Property violated the local zoning ordinance based on the existence of industrial uses and structures and the absence of a “record of building permits for any structures on this site.” Administrative Record (AR) at 133.

[610]*610C. Administrative Appeal to County Hearing Examiner

¶6 On January 2, 2002, First Pioneer administratively appealed the violation to the County’s hearing examiner. First Pioneer contended that its steel fabrication business qualified as a prior legal nonconforming use and, as such, was not subject to the local zoning ordinance.

1. Testimony

¶7 First Pioneer and the County appeared before the hearing examiner for a public hearing. First Pioneer asserted that it had operated a steel fabrication business on the Property continuously since before the County enacted the zoning ordinance forbidding such a use. But Mike Carlman, First Pioneer’s owner, could not recall the exact date; instead, he testified that (1) he had established the business on the Property around 1985 or 1986 and (2) in 1989 and 1994, he had built the two commercial structures on the Property to facilitate his business.

¶8 First Pioneer attempted to show that it had operated a steel fabrication business on the Property since the mid-1980s by presenting a series of receipts for material received, as well as invoices, utility bills, and other business records, addressed to 14505 Old Military Road East. Attorney Joseph Quinn testified that (1) he had represented First Pioneer in a suit “eight or nine years ago” and (2) First Pioneer had used the Property for “relatively heavy industrial” work at that time. Audio Transcript (AT) at 20, 23.

¶9 Cross-examining Carlman about the property’s development, the County established that he had failed (1) to obtain building permits, site development permits, and conditional use permits; (2) to comply with environmental assessment requirements; (3) to inform the County that he used the residentially-zoned land for commercial purposes; and (4) to pay taxes on the Property until the mid-1990s.

¶10 Members of the public also testified at the hearing. A former neighbor, Amy Parker, testified that in 1983, “there [611]*611were activities conducted on the [Old] Military site on an adjacent parcel [from the Property] west of the railroad lease land,” not on the property itself. AT at 53 (emphasis added). Parker presented aerial photographs from the County assessor’s office, which the County had taken in 1985, 1991, and 1998. The 1985 photograph depicts no buildings present on the Property. The 1991 photograph shows one residence and one storage unit on the Property. The 1998 photograph depicts the Property as it now appears, with multiple structures and buildings.1

¶11 Loren Combs, a current resident neighboring the Property, submitted a letter stating:

When we purchased our home [in 2001], there was not a commercial steel fabricating business operating at 14505 Old Military Rd. E. contrary to what Mr. Carlman is claiming. When purchasing this home we were assured this was a residential area with no commercial business allowed .... We are . . . continually bothered by his noise, the sandblasting, painting, grinding and fork lift operation that continues in a residential zone ... at all hours of the day. It has truly affected our quality of life.

AR at 9-10.

2. Hearing examiner’s decision

¶12 After entering written findings and conclusions, the hearing examiner denied First Pioneer’s appeal. Because First Pioneer had failed to obtain any building permits or site development review2 for the Property, the hearing examiner determined that First Pioneer had

[612]*612failed to establish that [it] was lawfully using the subject site as a manufacturing site before the Pierce County Code changed in the 1994/1995 time period. [It] has also failed to establish it has been in continuous use each and every year of the time period in question. The quality of evidence necessary to sustain [its] burden of proof has not been met.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 18.

¶13 First Pioneer filed a motion for reconsideration, alleging that the hearing examiner had misinterpreted “fact material” and had improperly admitted exhibits. After allowing interested parties to respond, the hearing examiner denied the motion. First Pioneer appealed the hearing examiner’s decision to the Pierce County Superior Court, under the Land Use Petition Act (LUPA), RCW 36.70C.130(1).

D. LUPA Appeal to Superior Court

¶14 Determining that the “Hearing Examiner’s decision in this case [was] supported by substantial evidence,” the superior court affirmed. The court noted that although

First Pioneer produced some evidence that it was involved in welding and metal fabricating at 14505 Old Military Road East, beginning in the late 1980s, [First Pioneer] relies on [Department of Labor & Industries] claims forms and miscellaneous invoices bearing the Old Military Road East address as evidence, [and] fails to clearly show when use began on the parcel in issue [because] [t]wo adjoining parcels were served by the driveway at the 14505 Old Military Road East.

CP at 28-29. The superior court concluded that First Pioneer’s “claim of continuous manufacturing use of the site prior to June 21, 1998, is ambiguous at best.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 Wash. App. 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-pioneer-trading-co-v-pierce-county-washctapp-2008.