Governors Point Development Co., App./cr-res. v. City Of Bellingham, Res./cr-app.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 3, 2013
Docket68079-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Governors Point Development Co., App./cr-res. v. City Of Bellingham, Res./cr-app. (Governors Point Development Co., App./cr-res. v. City Of Bellingham, Res./cr-app.) 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
Governors Point Development Co., App./cr-res. v. City Of Bellingham, Res./cr-app., (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

STATt OF V/AS!!I-!3T:;-

2013 JUN -3 AH 10." 03

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE

GOVERNORS POINT No. 68079-0-1 DEVELOPMENT COMPANY,

Appellant/Cross Respondent,

v.

CITY OF BELLINGHAM, a Washington municipal corporation, and THOMAS L. ROSENBERG, its Director of Public Works,

Respondents/Cross Appellant,

and

FRIENDS OF CHUCKANUT, a UNPUBLISHED OPINION Washington nonprofit corporation,

Respondent/Cross Appellant. FILED: June 3, 2013

Verellen, J. — In 2009, Governors Point Development Company (GPDC)

requested the City of Bellingham (City) to supply water to it as a water association, so it

could provide water to each of its 141 proposed lots on Governors Point, a peninsula

just south of Bellingham near Chuckanut Drive. The City refused because GPDC's land

was outside of its urban growth area. GPDC sued the City for breach of an implied

contract to provide water and for a declaratory judgment that the City had violated No. 68079-0-1/2

RCW 43.20.260. The trial court granted the City's motions for summary judgment and

dismissed GPDC's case.

A municipality may have an implied contract to provide water: (1) if the

municipality holds itself out as a public utility willing to serve all users; or (2) if, through a

course of dealing and common understanding, the parties show a mutual intent to

contract with each other. The City unequivocally refused to provide water to GPDC at

numerous points during the parties' course of dealing, and the City both granted and

rejected requests for water from other users. Even if such an implied contract existed,

the statute of limitations on GPDC's implied contract cause of action began to run in the

early 1990s, when the City unequivocally refused to provide water to GPDC's proposed

development.

We affirm the trial court's grant of summary judgment on the implied contract

claim. We also affirm dismissal of GPDC's claim based on RCW 43.20.260, which

applies to retail water service contracts and not to bulk water purchasers like GPDC.

FACTS

The parties recount a lengthy history. Governors Point is a forested peninsula

located approximately five miles south of the city of Bellingham. Of the 157 acres that

constitute the peninsula, GPDC owns 125. The land not owned by GPDC is currently

divided into five parcels. The Dahlgren and Hunt parcels are served by City water. The

McCush parcel is served by the GPDC water system.1 The owners of the Gibb parcel

1Until 1988, when the Dahlgren residence on the south end of Governors Point obtained a direct connection to a City water main, the Dahlgren parcel was served by GPDC. From 1988 on, the McCush parcel has been the only property served by the GPDC water system. No. 68079-0-1/3

applied for City water in 2005, but the City denied their application.2 The fifth parcel is a conservation area called the Chuckanut Beaches Association.

The Governors Point property was originally owned by the Larrabee Real Estate

Company and was included in the City's water book in the 1940s. The City used the

water book as a reference for the city engineer and the public because it identified

where the City had extended water and where it intended to provide water.

GPDC was incorporated in 1953 by Eino Usitalo and Lee Simonson, who had

purchased the Governors Point property from Larrabee Real Estate Company in 1949.

GPDC is now owned by Roger Sahlin.3 Mr. Sahlin's father, Carl Sahlin, purchased the land from GPDC in increments in a series of transactions between 1960 and 1969. In

1964, Carl Sahlin purchased GPDC itself, obtaining the remaining acreage that he had

not already bought from the company.

In 1953, before GPDC was under the ownership of the Sahlin family, Mr. Usitalo

requested the City to extend water to Governors Point, and the City thereafter installed

a four-inch tap and meter to serve GPDC. The City system served parcels on the

nearby Pleasant Bay Road as well as the McCush parcel. Thereafter, GPDC

constructed water mains running to the north and sound ends of its own property.

According to Mr. Roger Sahlin, GPDC began regularly paying the City for water in 1954.

Bills from 1967 and 1977 show that the City billed GPDC for the water, and GPDC

2The Gibb property was created from a short plat ofthe Dahlgren parcel, and was not within the City's water service zone at the time of the request for water service. The Gibb property is served by a well. 3The 125 acres of land are jointly owned by GPDC, as well as by three limited liability companies owned by Mr. Sahlin, his wife and his children. Some of the land is also in trust. No. 68079-0-1/4

forwarded the bill to the two homeowners on Governors Point (in that timeframe, the

Dahlgren and McCush residences).4 In 1971, GPDC received preliminary plat approval from Whatcom County

(County) for a 308-lot subdivision of the Governors Point property, known as Pointe

Chuckanut. The County required GPDC to obtain approval from the City to provide the

property with City water. In May 1972, GPDC submitted a formal request to the water

board5 that the City provide water to its Pointe Chuckanut development. The proposal included the establishment of a water association that would purchase water from the

City through "master metering control" and would maintain "all internal systems."6 The proposal included an internal reservoir storage that would be constructed on GPDC

property.

The September 1972 record of proceedings of the board of water commissioners

reveals the water board's decision that the "Water Superintendent proceed with plans to

serve Pointe Chuckanut [GPDC] development on Pleasant Bay Road with the cost to be

either $650 per unit including fire protection or$525 per unit for domestic service only."7 After the water board's decision in September 1972, GPDC built roads and staked the

4 In 1964, the Flint family bought a parcel from GPDC and sought water service from the City. In response, the City referred the Flints to GPDC, stating "the Governor's Point area is supplied with city water through a water district." Clerk's Papers at 967. The Flints never built a home, and Carl Sahlin bought back the Flint parcel. 5 Until 1973, the water board had authority over the City's water system, and that authority included "managing and controlling of waters, water rights and waterworks that are now, or may be hereafter owned by the City of Bellingham." Clerk's Papers at 960.

6 Clerk's Papers at 818. 7Clerk's Papers at 831. No. 68079-0-1/5

lots in preparation for the final recording of the first phase of the plat. GPDC did not

obtain the final plat approval and recording as Mr. Carl Sahlin, the original owner of

GPDC, fell ill in 1973 and died in 1974.

In 1976, the City declared a moratorium on the extension of City water beyond

"municipal boundaries."8 In 1979, the City passed Ordinance 8728 defining areas outside the municipal boundaries in which the City would provide water (and other) services.

Ordinance 8728 lifted the 1976 moratorium and set forth a framework whereby the City

would "designate such areas as Service Zones within which further extensions and Direct

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