Justin M. Nelson v. Skamania County, Wa

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 17, 2014
Docket44240-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Justin M. Nelson v. Skamania County, Wa (Justin M. Nelson v. Skamania County, Wa) 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
Justin M. Nelson v. Skamania County, Wa, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

COURTFILED

OF APPEALS V/ SUO II.

ZO I /: JUN 17 f H 8: 36

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

JUSTIN M. NELSON and ALLISA S. No. 44240 -0 -II ADAMS - NELSON,

Appellants,

v.

SKAMANIA COUNTY, WASHINGTON, and UNPUBLISHED OPINION SHANNON FRAME and JANE DOE FRAME, and the community thereof,

Respondents.

LEE, J. — Justin Nelson and Allisa Adams- Nelson sued Skamania County and Shannon

Frame, alleging that the County' s former landfill operation on adjacent property caused debris to

flow onto his property. The County successfully moved for summary judgment arguing that all

of Nelson' s claims were barred by applicable statutes of limitations. Nelson appeals arguing ( 1)

the trespass from migrating debris is both continuing and abatable and the County is liable for

damages until the County removes the debris, ( 2) if the trespass is not abatable, the County is

liable under a theory of inverse condemnation for any takings that have occurred in the 10 years No. 44240 -0 -II

prior to Nelson filing suit, and ( 3) the trial court abused its discretion in failing to exclude

evidence of a code violation Nelson received four years before filing this lawsuit.

We hold that genuine issues of material fact preclude summary judgment on Nelson' s

trespass claim. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court' s dismissal of Nelson' s trespass claim.

We also hold that Nelson is precluded by the subsequent purchaser rule from recovering under

inverse condemnation, and therefore, we affirm the trial court' s dismissal of his inverse

condemnation claim. Finally, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion when, at the

summary judgment stage of proceedings, it refrained from excluding evidence of Nelson' s 2008

code violation. We remand for further proceedings on Nelson' s trespass claim.

FACTS

A. BACKGROUND

In 2005, Dan Huntington, a prior owner of Nelson' s property, filed a complaint with

Skamania County alleging that:

The portion of this property adjacent to County land is directly in the path of a slide that is heavily laden with garbage. The garbage, things like old water tanks,

car parts, scraps of metal, etc., is coming out of an old county landfill that was

converted to the Mt. Pleasant Transfer Site. The garbage is cluttering up the banks of Canyon Creek [ and] interfering with efforts to sell the property.

Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 135. The record does not reflect whether the County addressed

Huntington' s complaint.

In February 2007, Justin Nelson purchased approximately 10 acres of unimproved real

property abutting Canyon Creek in Skamania County. The southern boundary of Nelson' s

property is downslope and contiguous to property owned by the County. From the 1950s until

1978, the County used a portion of its property as a landfill / urn b dump. After ceasing

2 No. 44240 -0 -II

landfill /dump operations in 1978, the County began operating a solid waste transfer station on

the site. The County engaged in extensive clean -up efforts to remove solid waste which had

been on the ground at the site in the 1980s.

1 Although Nelson visited the property on three occasions before purchasing it, he alleges

that he was unaware of the debris because inclement weather hindered his inspection efforts on

two visits, and he did not know where the property boundaries were located on the third visit.

Shortly after purchasing the property, Nelson commissioned a 2007 survey to confirm the

property boundaries, and the surveyor told him that there was " a lot of garbage" on the property.

CPat50.

In October 2008, Nelson showed the property to Washington Department of Fish &

Wildlife ( WDFW) employee, William Weiler. After seeing the property, Weiler relayed the

following to another WDFW employee:

I have not yet contacted Skamania County, but I find it inconceivable that they didn[' t] know about this. Their garbage transfer station was built on the site of their former dump site, and to my understanding, closed in the 1970' s. Clearly, the site was not adequately reclaimed and due to unstable slopes /mass wasting, I was literally walking on cars, car parts, paints, electrical equipment, tires, garbage of all sorts. The area where the garbage originates is a perennial tributary to Canyon [ Creek], which continues to slide into Canyon I observed debris for a good half mile downstream along Canyon Creek, Creek. and if I walked further, there is no doubt that the dump materials would have also been in the Washougal River. In my 18 years with WDFW, this is the largest toxic waste site I' ve ever seen in association with a fishbearing stream. A lot of

folks need to look at this and come up with a restoration plan.

CP at 137.

1 Nelson purchased the property from Shannon Frame, a successor owner to Huntington. No. 44240 -0 -II

In November 2008, Department of Ecology Inspector Derek Rockett visited the site with

Nelson and Weiler. Rockett concurred with much of Weiler' s assessment and noted:

F] irst priority at this site should be the prevention of any further solid waste /land slides, possibly through bank stabilization and /or creating a buffer between the edge of the bank and the solid waste from the landfill. An environmental

assessment may need to be done and potential restoration will be intense. CP at 140. A January 2009 minute entry from the Department of Ecology' s Environmental

Report Tracking System indicates that Ecology would " be following up with the county" on the

issue. CP at 140. The record does not reflect whether any follow up occurred or whether the

County took any action.

Yakama Nation Fisheries Habitat Biologist Greg Morris visited the site on multiple

occasions between 2008 and 2012. Based on his observations, Morris concluded that " it appears

that the garbage strewn throughout Mr. Nelson' s property. and in the creek is of the same source

and continuously migrating down the hill from its origin, the old Skamania County landfill." CP

at 189.

Certified Geologist Warren Krager visited Nelson' s property in 2012. He observed that

large, bulky refuse is largely exposed at and above the ground surface" and that smaller refuse

is " thoroughly mixed with silt soil, basaltic gravel and organic matter from natural, long term

slope transport processes such as soil creep, freeze -thaw cycles, snow slides, erosion by running

water, and sliding and falling aided by gravity." CP at 171. Krager also analyzed aerial

photographs from 1993 to 2011 and concluded that August 2009 photographs showed that " a

light colored debris flow scar is visible from the Skamania County Transfer Station" that was not

present in 2006 photographs. CP at 172.

4 No. 44240 -0 -II

Krager opined that " multiple landfill refuse laden debris flows from [ the County' s

property] have been moving into the lower ravine on [ Nelson' s property] from at least as early as

summer of 2005 and continuing through late summer of 2009." CP at 172 -73. He concluded

that " without massive clean up and environmental restoration ... releases of landfill refuse onto

private land and into public water courses will continue unabated for decades into the future."

CP at 173.

B. PROCEDURE

On March 13, 2012, Nelson filed a complaint in Clark County Superior Court, which he

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