Holden-mcdaniel Partners v. City Of Arlington

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 31, 2016
Docket73528-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of Holden-mcdaniel Partners v. City Of Arlington (Holden-mcdaniel Partners v. City Of Arlington) 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
Holden-mcdaniel Partners v. City Of Arlington, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

HOLDEN-MCDANIEL PARTNERS, LLC, No. 73528-4- Appellant, DIVISION ONE

CITY OF ARLINGTON, a municipal corporation; WOODLAND RIDGE, a joint venture; KAJIMA DEVELOPMENT CORP., A JOINT VENTURE; ARLINGTON COUNTRY CLUB, INC., a joint venture; BNSF RAILWAY C""'

COMPANY, a Delaware corporation,

Respondents. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

HOMESTREET BANK, formerly known as CONTINENTAL SAVINGS BANK; BANNER CORPORATION, formerly known as FIRST SAVINGS BANK OF WASHINGTON; VINE STREET FUND, LLC; U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, a subsidiary of U.S. BANCORP; SEATTLE MORTGAGE COMPANY; PBW, LLC; GLENEAGLE COUNTRY CLUB ASSOCIATION;

Petitioners FILED: October 31, 2016

Spearman, J. — Appellant Holden McDaniel Partners, LLC (HM) brought

claims against the City of Arlington, Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF) Railway

Company, and the developers of the neighboring property, Gleneagle, for

designing, developing, operating and maintaining a stormwater management No. 73528-4-1/2

system that caused stormwater runoff and flooding on HM's property. The trial court

dismissed HM's claims on summary judgment based on a release agreement

executed by the parties, the statute of limitations, and HM's failure to establish

damages. Because the trial court erred in dismissing HM's claims based on the

release agreement and because there are disputed issues of material fact as to

whether HM established its claimed damages, we reverse the trial court on those

issues. We otherwise affirm.

FACTS

Appellant Holden-McDaniel Partners, LLC ("HM") owns property in Arlington,

Washington, at 18520 67th Avenue North (Property). HM purchased the Property in

1986 and manufactured steel under the company name HCI Steel Products, Inc.

The Property was bordered by a forested hill to the east and by railroad tracks on

the west. There was a culvert on the Property that carried drainage from the

eastern slope across the Property and discharged it into a ditch near a right-of-way

belonging to respondent BNSF. The water then passed through a culvert under the

right-of-way and flowed to the south.

Beginning in the 1980s, the area east of the Property was being developed

into a residential community and golf course known as Gleneagle. In 1989,

respondents Woodland Ridge, Kajima Development Corp., and Arlington Country

Club, Inc. (WRJV) purchased the development rights to Gleneagle. Respondent City

of Arlington (City) and WRJV entered into a rezone contract where WRJV paid the

City to upgrade the downstream stormwater system to accommodate the increased

stormwater runoff from the project. The Property flooded in November 1990, when No. 73528-4-1/3

the stormwater retention pond to the east (W-1) overflowed. The same thing

happened in December 1994, November 1995, and December of 1996.

In 1994, WRJV enlisted Triad Engineering (Triad) to develop a master

drainage plan for Gleneagle. Triad determined that the existing facilities were

insufficient and on February 2, 1995, contacted the City to suggest that an

enhanced system be constructed on HM's property. At that time, HM had submitted

plans for a new manufacturing building. It is unclear from the record whether HM

had agreed to accommodate the runoff from Gleneagle as well as its own

stormwater issues. Eventually HM agreed to move the existing culvert south and

installed it "at a steeper slope and with an inlet configuration which allowed for

greater surcharging at the upstream end. . . ." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 1185. But it

refused to install a larger pipe because it would protrude above ground and make

the area unusable.

The City issued a permit for HM's proposed new building but withheld

authorization to begin construction because HM would not install a pipe with greater

carrying capacity. On May 5, 1995, HM filed suit under Snohomish County Superior

Court cause No. 95-2-03498-3 against the City for damages resulting from the

delay in permitting and withholding of construction (Permit Lawsuit). HM brought

statutory claims under RCW 64.40.020, which allows an action "for damages to

obtain relief from acts of an agency which are arbitrary, capricious, unlawful, or

exceed lawful authority," and under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for denial of substantive due

process. Id. At the same time HM filed the complaint, it also filed a "Claim for

Damages" which alleged that the City negligently approved the stormwater No. 73528-4-1/4

collection, retention, and discharge system for Gleneagle, causing damage to the

Property in the amount of $750,000. CP at 660. The Claim for Damages referenced

a letter to the City dated March 20, 1995, wherein HM informed the City that it "may

very well have liability" for the flooding on HM's property. CP at 663.

A few days later, HM filed suit against WRJV and other developers under

cause No. 95-2-03599-8 for failing to implement an appropriate stormwater

collection, retention, and discharge system and causing surface water to be

discharged onto the Property (Flooding Lawsuit). On July 7, 1995, HM added the

City as a defendant in the Flooding Lawsuit, in which its claims against the City

mirrored those contained in the Claim for Damages. On August 31, 1995, the court

granted the City's motion to consolidate the two lawsuits under cause No. 95-2-

03599-8.

In September 1995, the City granted HM's building permit in exchange for a

prescriptive drainage easement across the Property. On September 26, 1995, HM

executed a hold harmless agreement in favor of the City "to the extent that a 24" x

36" drainpipe is inadequate to handle the flow of surface water legally conveyed to

[HM's] property " CP at 1364. Also in 1995, WRJV enlisted Higa Engineering to

design an additional upstream detention facility known as pond W-2. The pond was

constructed and finished in 1996.

On November 24, 1998, HM and the City reached a settlement in which HM

agreed to release certain of its claims against the City (Release). On motion of the

court clerk, the consolidated lawsuit was dismissed without prejudice for want of

prosecution in 2000. No. 73528-4-1/5

In 1999 the City installed a second culvert under the railroad tracks to

alleviate backwatering. In 2001, the City retained Earth Tech to design a 67th

Avenue improvement project that involved widening the roadway and redirecting

the outflows from W-1. Earth Tech designed a v-notched weir that would limit the

flow to HM, and excess water was rerouted to a new facility north of 188th Street

known as the Triangle pond. As part of the improvements, HM requested that the

City lower the road near the north building in order to better accommodate its

trucks.

HM experienced no flooding at all on its property from 2003 until 2009, when

flooding occurred after a series of storms. Also in that year, HM replaced its onsite

filtration system. In 2007, the business was sold to Bluescope Buildings North

America, Inc. (BBNA). BBNA leased the Property and facilities from HM until 2012

when the parties reached an agreement releasing BBNA from the lease in

exchange for $2.6 million.

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