Kitsap County v. Kitsap Rifle And Revolver Club

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 28, 2014
Docket43076-2
StatusPublished

This text of Kitsap County v. Kitsap Rifle And Revolver Club (Kitsap County v. Kitsap Rifle And Revolver Club) 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
Kitsap County v. Kitsap Rifle And Revolver Club, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

COURT alViSie II

2014 OCT 28 RH 10: 03

STtT NGTOt4 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHING BAY"

DIVISION II

KITSAP COUNTY, a political subdivision of Consol. Nos. 43076 -2 -I1 the State of Washington, 43243 -9 -II

Respondent,

v.

PUBLISHED OPINION KITSAP RIFLE AND REVOLVER CLUB, a not -for -profit corporation registered in the State of Washington, and JOHN DOES and JANE DOES I -XX, inclusive,

Appellants.

IN THE MATTER OF THE NUISANCE AND UNPERMITTED CONDITIONS LOCATED AT One 72 -acre parcel identified by Kitsap County Tax Parcel ID No. 362501 -4- 002 -1006 with street address 4900 Seabeck Highway NW, Bremerton, Washington,

Defendant.

MAXA, J. — The Kitsap Rifle and Revolver Club appeals from the trial court' s decision

following a bench trial that the Club engaged in unlawful uses of its shooting range property.

Specifically, the Club challenges the trial court' s determinations that the Club had engaged in an

impermissible expansion of its nonconforming use; that the Club' s site development activities

violated land use permitting requirements; and that excessive noise, unsafe conditions, and

unpermitted development work at the shooting range constituted a public nuisance. The Club Consol. Nos. 43076 -2 -II / 43243 -9 -II

also argues that even if its activities were unlawful, the language of the deed of sale transferring

the property title from Kitsap County to the Club prevents the County from filing suit based on

these activities. Finally, the Club challenges the trial court' s remedies: terminating the Club' s

nonconforming use status and entering a permanent injunction restricting the Club' s use of the

property as a shooting range until it obtains a conditional use permit, restricting the use of certain

firearms at the Club, and limiting the Club' s hours of operation to abate the nuisance.'

We hold that ( 1) the Club' s commercial use of the property and dramatically increased

noise levels since 1993, but not the club' s change in its operating hours, constituted an

impermissible expansion of its nonconforming use; ( 2) the Club' s development work unlawfully

violated various County land use permitting requirements; ( 3) the excessive noise, unsafe

conditions, and unpermitted development work constituted a public nuisance; ( 4) the language in

the property' s deed of sale from the County to the Club did not preclude the County from

challenging the Club' s expansion of use, permit violations, and nuisance activities; and ( 5) the

trial court did not abuse its discretion in entering an injunction restricting the use of certain

firearms at the shooting range and limiting the Club' s operating hours to abate the public

nuisance. We affirm the trial court on these issues except for the trial court' s ruling that the

Club' s change in operating hours constituted an impermissible expansion of its nonconforming

use. We reverse on that issue.

1 The County initially filed a cross appeal. We later granted the County' s motion to dismiss its cross appeal.

2 Consol. Nos. 43076 -241 / 43243 -9 -II

However, we reverse the trial court' s ruling that terminating the Club' s nonconforming

use status as a shooting range is a proper remedy for the Club' s conduct. Instead, we hold that

the appropriate remedy involves specifically addressing the impermissible expansion of the

Club' s nonconforming use and unpermitted development activities while allowing the Club to

operate as a shooting range. Accordingly, we vacate the injunction precluding the Club' s use of

the property as a shooting range and remand for the trial court to fashion an appropriate remedy

for the Club' s unlawful expansion of its nonconforming use and for the permitting violations.

FACTS

The Club has operated a shooting range in its present location in Bremerton since it was

founded for " sport and national defense" in 1926. Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 4054. For decades, the

Club leased a 72 -acre parcel of land from the Washington Department of National Resources

DNR). The two most recent leases stated that the Club was permitted to use eight acres of the

property as a shooting range, with the remaining acreage serving as a buffer and safety zone.

Confirmation ofNonconforming Use

In 1993, the chairman of the Kitsap County Board of Commissioners ( Board) notified the

Club and three other shooting ranges located in Kitsap County that the County considered each

to be lawfully established, nonconforming uses. This notice was prompted by the shooting

ranges' concern over a proposed new ordinance limiting the location of shooting ranges.

Ordinance 50 -B- 1993). The County concedes that as of 1993 the Club' s use of the property as a

shooting range constituted a lawful nonconforming use.

3 Consol. Nos. 43076 -241 / 43243 -9 -II

Property Usage Since 1993

As of 1993, the Club operated a rifle and pistol range, and some of its members

participated in shooting activities in the wooded periphery of the range. Shooting activities at the

range occurred only occasionally —usually on weekends and during the fall " sight -in" season for

hunting —and only during daylight hours. CP at 4059. Rapid -fire shooting, use of automatic

weapons, and the use of cannons occurred infrequently in the early 1990s.

Subsequently, the Club' s property use changed. The Club allowed shooting between

7: 00 AM and 10: 00 PM, seven days a week. The property frequently was used for regularly

scheduled shooting practices and practical shooting competitions where participants used

multiple shooting bays for rapid -fire shooting in multiple directions. Loud rapid -fire shooting

often began as early as 7: 00 AM and could last as late as 10: 00 PM. Fully automatic weapons

were regularly used at the Club, and the Club also allowed use of exploding targets and cannons.

Commercial use of the Club also increased, including private for -profit companies using the

Club for a variety of firearms courses and small arms training exercises for military personnel.

The U.S. Navy also hosted firearms exercises at the Club once in November 2009.

The expanded hours, commercial use, use of explosive devices and higher caliber

weaponry, and practical shooting competitions increased the noise level of the Club' s activities

beginning in approximately 2005 or 2006. Shooting sounds changed from " occasional and

background in nature, to clearly audible in the down range neighborhoods, and frequently loud, disruptive, pervasive, and long in duration." CP at 4073. The noise from the Club disrupted

neighboring residents' indoor and outdoor activities.

4 Consol. Nos. 43076 -2 -II / 43243 -9 -II

The shooting range' s increased use also generated safety concerns. The Club operated a

blue sky" range with no overhead baffles to stop the escape of accidentally or negligently

discharged bullets. CP at 4070. There were allegations that bullets had impacted nearby

residential developments.

Range Development Since 1996

From approximately 1996 to 2010, the Club engaged in extensive shooting range

development within the eight acres of historical use, including: ( 1) extensive clearing, grading,

and excavating wooded or semi -wooded areas to create " shooting bays," which were flanked by

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