Maytown Sand And Gravel, Resp/cross-app v. Thurston County, App/cross-resp

395 P.3d 149, 198 Wash. App. 560
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 4, 2017
Docket46895-6-II
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 395 P.3d 149 (Maytown Sand And Gravel, Resp/cross-app v. Thurston County, App/cross-resp) 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
Maytown Sand And Gravel, Resp/cross-app v. Thurston County, App/cross-resp, 395 P.3d 149, 198 Wash. App. 560 (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

*566 Melnick, J.

¶1 Thurston County (County) appeals the trial court’s orders denying its motions for summary judgment, judgment as a matter of law, and for a new trial, and the jury’s verdict in favor of Maytown Sand and Gravel, LLC (MSG) and the Port of Tacoma (the Port). 1 Maytown’s lawsuit against the County involved claims for tortious interference, negligence, negligent misrepresentation, and a violation of substantive due process 2 arising out of the County’s interference with MSG’s ability to begin gravel mining on property MSG had purchased from the Port. We conclude that the trial court did not err because neither the Land Use Petition Act (LUPA) 3 nor collateral estoppel barred the tortious interference claim, and MSG presented sufficient evidence of a substantive due process violation to avoid judgment as a matter of law. 4

¶2 Maytown cross appeals the trial court’s order granting the County’s motion in limine to exclude evidence of attorney fees as damages. Because the “American rule,” which generally precludes a prevailing party from recovering attorney fees, does not apply to attorney fees incurred in a different proceeding that are claimed as damages, the trial court erred by granting the motion.

*567 ¶3 We affirm the jury’s finding of liability and award of damages for the tortious interference claim, but remand solely on the issue of attorney fees as damages on May-town’s tortious interference claim.

FACTS

I. Factual Background

A. Gravel Mine Property

¶4 The Port owned property in Thurston County. The property had a final, vested special use permit (SUP) that the County had issued to the Port in January 2006. The SUP allowed gravel mining on the property if certain conditions were satisfied. The SUP had a 20 year duration from the date mining began and included a mandatory review by a hearing examiner every 5 years.

¶5 The SUP included explicit preconditions before mining could begin. In particular, condition 6 required the permittee to adhere to the “Maytown Aggregates Groundwater Monitoring Plan.” Condition 6A required field verification of off-site supply wells within a year of the SUP issuing. Condition 6C required installation of 17 monitoring wells to check on water levels, water temperature, and water quality. The monitoring was to begin within 60 days of the SUP’s issuance. The Port did not comply with these deadlines.

B. Discussions before Purchase

¶6 In 2009, MSG became interested in purchasing the property from the Port. MSG wanted to develop and operate a gravel mine on the property.

¶7 In October, the owners of MSG and their attorney, John Hempelmann, met with Mike Kain, the County’s Resource Stewardship Department planning manager. Kain told MSG that the SUP was valid, and that “minor *568 staff approvals and things . . . needed to be done.” 5 10 Report of Proceedings (RP) at 2148. He further stated that after MSG filed an application for amendments, the staff would handle them administratively. According to MSG, Kain stated that the SUP had no “skeletons in the closet,” and it could be mining within 30-60 days. 10 RP at 2227. Kain denied making this statement.

¶8 After this meeting, MSG and the Port entered into a purchase and sale agreement on the property. MSG agreed to pay $17 million to purchase the property.

¶9 In December, Kain e-mailed MSG and informed it of its lack of compliance with the conditions of the SUP. The e-mail stated that staff could approve minor amendments to the SUP, but major amendments would need approval by a Thurston County hearing examiner.

¶10 On February 16, 2010, Kain sent Maytown a memorandum outlining its compliance status with each of the SUP’s conditions. When referencing a condition that required a minor timeline change, Kain stated it “may be approved by staff upon submittal of an application for amendment.” Ex. 62, at 5. The document provided that “it is the staff assessment that the applicant is substantially in compliance with the conditions of SEPA [the State Environmental Policy Act of 1971, ch. 43.21C RCWJ and the SUP at this time.” Ex. 62, at 22.

¶11 On April 1, MSG and the Port closed on the purchase and sale agreement for the property. MSG made a $1 million down payment to the Port.

C. Request for SUP Amendments

¶12 In late April, MSG requested eight amendments to the SUP, including condition 6. 6 Specifically, MSG re *569 quested an amendment of the missed deadlines in conditions 6A and 6C and the elimination of the background testing required in condition 6C. 7 Because it only asked for minor amendments, MSG asked the County to process the amendments administratively.

¶13 Kain wrote to Maytown’s lawyers that after county staff reviewed the application for amendments, they determined the amendments were major and required hearing examiner approval. County staff also planned to require SEPA review of the already issued “Mitigated Determination of Non-Significance” (MDNS) for the SUP. MSG appealed the County’s decision to a hearing examiner and challenged the need to conduct a SEPA review.

¶ 14 MSG withdrew some of the proposed amendments in an effort to have the remaining amendments classified as minor. It did not withdraw the amendments to conditions 6A and 6C, which Kain had labeled in his February memorandum as minor timeline changes to be approved upon application for amendments.

¶15 On June 17, Kain informed Maytown that the requested amendments could not be addressed at the administrative level and would be deemed major, which meant that they would be referred to a hearing examiner for a decision. Hempelmann said that Kain told him that the attorney for the Thurston County Board of County Commissioners (BOCC) directed Kain to label MSG’s requested amendments as major.

¶16 In April 2011, the hearing examiner issued a decision on the SUP amendment requests. 8 The hearing examiner approved the SUP amendment application, which the *570 County supported, and adopted MSG’s water monitoring plan to replace the 2005 groundwater monitoring plan and conditions 6A and 6C. The hearing examiner did not approve any other amendments.

D. Five Year Review Hearing

¶17 In 2010, the County’s Resource Stewardship Department issued a summary report on MSG’s pending five year review.

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Related

State Of Washington v. Layne E. Huber
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2019
Maytown Sand & Gravel, LLC v. Thurston County
423 P.3d 223 (Washington Supreme Court, 2018)

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Bluebook (online)
395 P.3d 149, 198 Wash. App. 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maytown-sand-and-gravel-respcross-app-v-thurston-county-appcross-resp-washctapp-2017.