Gerard v. San Juan County

715 P.2d 149, 43 Wash. App. 54
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 3, 1986
Docket13550-3-I
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 715 P.2d 149 (Gerard v. San Juan 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
Gerard v. San Juan County, 715 P.2d 149, 43 Wash. App. 54 (Wash. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Scholfield, C.J.

Donald and Arlene Gerard and David MacBryer appeal the trial court's dismissal with prejudice of their declaratory judgment action, which sought relief from the San Juan County Planning Department's decision to deny development permits for land owned by the Ger-ards and MacBryer.

Facts

Appellants Donald and Arlene Gerard purchased 165 acres of land on Oreas Island from the Crown Zellerbach Foundation in 1974. In September 1980, the Gerards decided to subdivide their land through a series of conveyances from the community to husband or wife separately, and one conveyance to David MacBryer. The Gerards did not apply for plat approval with the San Juan County Planning Department, but rather structured the conveyances attempting to take advantage of exemptions permitted under the County's short plat ordinance (San Juan County Code (SJCC) 16.08.020(e) and (m) 1 and the Coun *56 ty's long plat ordinance (SJCC 16.04.020(2)). 2

The sequence of conveyances was as follows:

A. On September 10, 1980, seven parcels were created that were exempt from platting requirements because they were all over 15 acres. SJCC 16.04.020(2), 16.08.020(e). One of these parcels was conveyed to MacBryer.

B. The northern section (of the seven created) was further divided into three parcels, each over 5 acres, pursuant to the short plat exemption, applicable to a division of land into fewer than five parcels. SJCC 16.08.020(m). This subsection exempts divisions of land where the owner has owned the land for 3 years or longer, if no parcel created is under 5 acres.

C. The last set of transactions on September 10, 1980, was the division of the southwest section into three parcels pursuant to the short plat exemption, SJCC 16.08.020(m).

Thus, on September 10, 1980, 11 parcels were created, 3 of which were retained by the community, 4 held by Donald Gerard, 3 held by Arlene Gerard, and 1 held by MacBryer.

D. On December 3, 1980, the Gerards further subdivided their land. First, they created three parcels out of the southeast parcel under the 15-acre exemption to the platting requirements. SJCC 16.04.020(2), 16.08.020(e).

E. The northern portion of this same southeast parcel was further divided into three parcels, pursuant to the *57 short plat exemption, SJCC 16.08.020(m).

F. Finally, the southern portion of the southeast parcel was divided into four parcels, again pursuant to the short plat exemption. SJCC 16.08.020(m).

Thus, a total of 18 parcels were created, with 4 retained by the community, 6 owned separately by Donald Gerard, 7 owned separately by Arlene Gerard, and 1 owned by Mac-Bryer.

No development was begun on the parcels, nor were any building permits applied for. In addition, Gerard continued to treat the MacBryer parcel as his own, and even included it as an asset in his (Gerard's) subsequent bankruptcy proceedings.

On December 16, 1980, San Juan County amended SJCC 16.08, prohibiting the sequential use of exemptions, and lengthening the prior holding period required for the use of exemptions.

The subdivision came to the attention of the Planning Department through review of assessor's maps. The Department decided that the subdivision was illegal because the overall effect of the transactions was to create an 18-parcel long plat on the property without plat approval.

On April 5, 1982, the Planning Department met with the Gerards and their attorney to discuss the division of the parcel. No resolution was reached at this meeting.

On June 30, 1982, the Planning Department issued a final letter of determination, declaring the subdivision of the parcel to be illegal and informing the Gerards that no development permits would be issued for any portion of the parcel. The Department further suggested that the Gerards either file for plat approval or rescind the land division.

The Gerards appealed to the San Juan County Board of Commissioners. On August 10, 1982, the Board upheld the Planning Department's finding and set forth findings and conclusions.

The Gerards filed an action for declaratory relief, writ of prohibition and damages on September 27, 1982 in San *58 Juan County Superior Court.

The trial court permitted discovery by both parties, and subsequently conducted a fact-finding trial on March 22 to 23, 1983.

On May 6, 1983, the trial court entered findings and conclusions, determining that the Planning Department correctly decided that the exemptions of SJCC 16.08 did not apply to the Gerards' subdivision of their land, that long plat approval would be required, that the conveyances were not valid, and quieting title in the whole parcel in the Gerard marital community.

Scope of Review

Preliminarily, this court must take note of the unusual procedural posture of this case. Following a decision by the San Juan County Board of Commissioners, the Gerards filed a declaratory judgment action and writ of prohibition in the San Juan County Superior Court. Superior court review by writ of review under RCW 7.16.120 is limited to review of the record of action taken by the administrative body and a determination of whether that body's actions were arbitrary, capricious or contrary to law. Bay Indus., Inc. v. Jefferson Cy., 33 Wn. App. 239, 653 P.2d 1355 (1982).

However, San Juan County did not object to the complete trial conducted by the court, nor did the County move to limit the trial court's review to the administrative record. Accordingly, although the trial court erred by failing to sit as an appellate court, the Court of Appeals will review this case on the trial court record.

Serial Use of Short Plat Exemptions

The Gerards contend that their transactions were exempt from platting requirements because they created a series of short plats, all qualifying for exemptions, under either (e) or (m) of SJCC 16.08.020. They argue that once a parcel is conveyed, it becomes a separate entity, not related to the surrounding land.

The County argues that the exemptions contained in the *59 short plat ordinance are inapplicable to any transaction which ultimately involves more than four lots. The County contends that permitting the Gerards to circumvent the platting requirements would undermine the legislative intent to require County approval of subdivisions.

Under SJCC 16.04.020 and 16.08.020(e), any division of land in which the smallest lot created is 15 acres or more is exempt from the provisions of either ordinance. The first seven lots created by the Gerards were all greater than 15 acres, and thus would be exempt from the platting requirements, whether a short plat or a long plat was created.

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715 P.2d 149, 43 Wash. App. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerard-v-san-juan-county-washctapp-1986.