Grizzly General Contractors Corp v. Kitsap Public Health District

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Washington
DecidedJanuary 13, 2025
Docket3:24-cv-05583
StatusUnknown

This text of Grizzly General Contractors Corp v. Kitsap Public Health District (Grizzly General Contractors Corp v. Kitsap Public Health District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grizzly General Contractors Corp v. Kitsap Public Health District, (W.D. Wash. 2025).

Opinion

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5 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 6 WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON AT TACOMA 7 GRIZZLY GENERAL CASE NO. CV24-5583 8 CONTRACTORS CORP. et. al., ORDER 9 Plaintiffs, v. 10 KITSAP PUBLIC HEALTH DISTRICT, 11 et. al., 12 Defendants. 13

This matter is before the Court on defendants’ motions to dismiss. Dkts. 22, 23. 14 The case arises from Kitsap Public Health District’s (KPHD’s) system for collecting fees 15 from septic owners for septic inspections. KPHD requires owners to periodically hire a 16 certified septic inspector to inspect and report on their septic system. Owners must also 17 pay a “maintenance contract fee” to KPHD in connection with that report. KPHD adopted 18 a policy (Policy 36) that requires inspectors to collect the fee from owners and submit it 19 along with their report through an online portal called “OnlineRME.” 20 Plaintiffs are Grizzly General Contractors Corp. (a licensed septic system 21 inspector), two of its inspectors – William and Stephanie Gonzales, and a proposed class 22 1 of septic inspectors and septic owners allegedly injured by KPHD’s system for 2 maintenance contract fees. Grizzly alleges that Policy 36 illegally forces it “to act as an

3 unpaid agent” by requiring it to collect and submit the fee. It alleges that when inspectors 4 submit the fee, defendants (it does not specify which) embezzle the funds by “funneling” 5 the fee into companies that defendants Eric Evans and Edwin North privately own: 6 OnlineRME, LLC and E-Onsite LLC. Defendants Evans and North are both employees 7 of KPHD and privately own those software companies which operate the OnlineRME 8 portal. Finally, Grizzly alleges that KPHD and “its officials” (presumably defendants

9 North and Evans) operate a criminal enterprise whereby they use “public office for 10 private profit” by utilizing OnlineRME to embezzle funds. 11 Defendants are KPHD, its employees Eric Evans (assistant Division Director at 12 KPHD and co-owner of Online RME) and Edwin North (Information Technology 13 Manager KPHD and co-owner of OnlineRME), and additional owners of the parent

14 software companies behind the OnlineRME portal – Mike Harmon and Harold Ball, and 15 the companies OnlineRME, LLC, eOnsite LLC, and Orenco Systems Inc. Defendants 16 argue that Grizzly lacks an injury sufficient for standing for itself and that it lacks 17 standing to represent a class of septic owners because it is not itself a septic owner. They 18 additionally argue Rule 12(b)(6) provides independent grounds for dismissal because the

19 claims are implausible and allegations demonstrably false. 20 Because Grizzly lacks standing, the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction and 21 dismisses the case without prejudice. It dismisses the claims without prejudice and 22 1 without leave to amend because Grizzly cannot allege facts to resolve its lack of injury 2 for standing or render its claims plausible under Rule 12(b)(6).

3 I. BACKGROUND 4 Local health departments are authorized by statute to enact local rules and 5 regulations governing onsite sewage systems, RCW § 70.05.060(3), and to establish fee 6 schedules for licenses, permits or other services for sewage. RCW § 70.05.060(7). 7 Consistent with that authority, KPHD requires septic owners to periodically submit 8 maintenance reports and a maintenance contract fee for their sewage systems. See Kitsap

9 County Board of Health Ordinance 2008A, “Onsite Sewage System and General Sewage 10 Sanitation Regulations,” available at www.kitsappublichealth.org/ehdocs/kcboho2008a- 11 01, at § 13:C.15. Septic owners must hire KPHD certified septic inspectors to inspect the 12 septic system and prepare the report. Id. at § 17. KPHD charges the contract fee to 13 owners to cover the costs of enforcing sewage maintenance regulations. Id. at § 21.A.

14 Pursuant to its Policy 36, KPHD requires inspectors to act as the owner’s agent by 15 collecting the fee from owners and submitting it with the report to KPHD. Dkt 1-1, Ex. 1. 16 The district requires inspectors to use the OnlineRME portal to submit the fee and report. 17 Id. If an inspector fails to submit the fee with its report, it is temporarily suspended and 18 “locked out” of OnlineRME. Dkt. 1 at 4.

19 It is difficult to parse out precisely what Grizzly alleges against each defendant, 20 but its core allegations are twofold. First, that KPHD’s Policy 36 illegally forces septic 21 inspectors to act as “unpaid agents” by requiring them to collect the contract fee from 22 customers and submit it to KPHD through OnlineRME. Dkt. 1 at 8. 1 Second, Grizzly alleges that defendants KPHD and “its officials” (presumably 2 defendants North and Evans), are running a criminal enterprise and illegally enriched by

3 KPHD’s use of OnlineRME. Its explanations of which defendants are enriched or how 4 are unclear. They include allegations that defendants (it does not specify which) illegally 5 keep the fees for themselves and/or funnel them “into private entities” owned by 6 defendants North and Evans (OnlineRME, LLC and E-Onsite LLC) instead passing them 7 to KPHD. Dkt. 1 at 3, Dkt. 30 at 8. Grizzly also alleges that OnlineRME charges septic 8 inspectors a “per use fee” for each time it submits a fee. Dkt. 1 at 9. It alleges that North

9 and Evans use their public office for private profit by “pushing” KPHD to use 10 OnlineRME without considering competitors. Id. ¶ 6.9. 11 Grizzly asserts seven claims alleging that defendants violated (1) the U.S. 12 Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1964, et. seq.; 13 (2) The U.S. Civil Rights Act of 1871, 42 U.S.C. §1983, et. seq.; (3) The U.S. Trafficking

14 Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008, 18 U.S.C. §1595 (a); (4) Washington 15 State’s Criminal Profiteering Act, RCW 9a.82; (5) Washington State’s Consumer 16 Protection Act, 19.86, et. seq, and committed (6) Intentional Interference with 17 Prospective Economic Advantage, Inducing Breach of Contract; and (7) Fraudulent 18 Misrepresentation. Dkt. 1.

19 Defendants bring two interrelated motions to dismiss Grizzly’s claims. The first is 20 by KPHD, Eric Evans, and Edwin North, Dkt. 22 (KPHD motion); and the second by 21 defendants Eric Evans, Edwin North, Mike Harmon, E-Onsite LLC, and OnlineRME 22 LLC., Dkt. 23 (OnlineRME motion). They make largely the same arguments, with the 1 key distinction that KPHD’s motion addresses claims alleged against Evans and North in 2 their public capacities, while OnlineRME’s motion addresses those claims made against

3 Evans and North in their private capacities. 4 As a threshold matter, all defendants argue that Grizzly lacks standing because it 5 lacks an injury in fact. They argue that Grizzly fails to allege facts showing that 6 collecting or submitting the fee creates extra expense beyond what Grizzly expends to 7 complete its inspection and report. Dkt. 22 at 6. They also argue Grizzly also lacks 8 standing to represent septic owners’ alleged injuries because it is not a septic owner. Dkt.

9 23 at 10. Defendants additionally argue that Federal Rule of Civil Procedure

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Grizzly General Contractors Corp v. Kitsap Public Health District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grizzly-general-contractors-corp-v-kitsap-public-health-district-wawd-2025.