Miller v. City of Bainbridge Island

111 Wash. App. 152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 12, 2002
DocketNo. 26367-0-II
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 111 Wash. App. 152 (Miller v. City of Bainbridge Island) 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
Miller v. City of Bainbridge Island, 111 Wash. App. 152 (Wash. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Quinn-Brintnall, A.C.J.

Business owners Earl and Linda Miller sought a permit to rebuild their business and pier after fire destroyed the structures. The property was zoned residential, but Miller claimed that the property enjoyed a legal nonconforming use at the time of the fire. The City of Bainbridge Island denied the permit, claiming the original nonconforming use (concrete casting and supply) had lapsed. The Millers and Eagle Harbor Alliance (EHA) appealed, and the land use examiner affirmed. The Millers and EHA then appealed to superior court. The superior court reversed the land use examiner’s decision, and the City and EHA now appeal. Because Miller has not demonstrated that his use at the time of the fire was a lawful nonconforming use, we reinstate the examiner’s decision.

FACTS

On January 9, 1997, Miller’s large commercial building and pier located on Eagle Harbor on Bainbridge Island were totally destroyed by fire. The very large building was [156]*156built partially over the water and originally housed a strawberry processing plant, owned and operated by first and second generation Japanese in the 1930s and early 1940s until the owners and workers were interned. The building has been known ever since as the Strawberry Plant.

Strawberry Plant’s Use History

The record shows that the Strawberry Plant changed ownership and housed various tenants over the decades. From around the end of the second world war until 1968, Weaver’s Concrete Supply operated in the building. From 1964 to early- to mid-1973, the building was also home to a prestressed concrete casting business operated by the building’s then owner, J. A. Park.

The City of Winslow annexed the property in 1963 and enacted a zoning code. But the Strawberry Plant was not included in that zoning plan.1 In 1969, Winslow enacted a new zoning code that included the Strawberry Plant property and zoned the property as residential. At that time, the only use of the building was Park’s concrete supply business.

Zoning Law of 1969

In 1969, Winslow passed a zoning code that for the first time included the Strawberry Plant. The property was designated single family residential. The zoning code allowed the continuance of nonconforming uses, but a use could not be resumed if discontinued for either 6 consecutive months or 18 total months in three years. A legal nonconforming use could be changed to another use if approved by the Board of Adjustment:

A non-conforming use of a structure may be continued, provided that: a) The structure is not enlarged .... b) It may be changed to another non-conforming use by the Board of Adjust[157]*157ment if the proposed use is not less appropriate. ... d) If it is discontinued for a period of six consecutive months or for 18 months in any three year period; it may not thereafter be resumed.

Clerk’s Papers at 503.

The Strawberry Plant clearly did not qualify as residential; therefore, in 1969, the Strawberry Plant’s then-current uses became legal nonconforming uses.

Land Use Hearing

The hearing examiner found that Park’s prestressed concrete casting business was an on-going commercial business on the subject property at the time of the adoption of the 1969 Code. She also found that the concrete business was a legal nonconforming use of the Strawberry Plant under the 1969 zoning code, but the concrete business use was discontinued in 1973 and never resumed. Miller assigned error to this finding in his petition to the superior court, stating:

The Hearing Examiner erred in making Finding of Fact No. 17 because there is no evidence in the record to support this finding. Miller agrees that J. A. Park[ ] ceased operation of his business in approximately 19 [7] 3, however, there is no evidence that the nonconforming use was discontinued in 1973 in light of the fact that other operations continued in the building after J. A. Park[ ] ceased his operations.

Clerk’s Papers at 1162.

James Phillips testified that he owned the property from 1975 to 1995. His company (Washington Acoustical) used it as an office, warehouse, and for development planning. Phillips rented the rest of the space to various tenants, who used it for office, storage, workplaces, and shops.

In 1982, neighbors brought a nuisance action against one of the Strawberry Plant’s tenants, Joe Haley, a helicopter-flying rockery contractor who owned Island Marine Construction. Phillips owned the Strawberry Plant at the time and intervened in the nuisance action. The City ordered Island Marine to cease its illegal use of the property [158]*158(namely, the helicopter flying and heavy construction), and the hearing examiner affirmed, concluding that Island Marine’s use was not a legal nonconforming use. The hearing examiner did not address the legality of the other tenants’ various uses specifically, but did conclude that

There has been no showing that any commercial or industrial use of the property existing in June, 1979,[2] was itself a valid non-conforming use under the prior zoning ordinance . . . which also zoned the property for residential use, and hence no use has been proven capable of transferring non-conforming status.

Clerk’s Papers at 439. At the hearing in this case, the EHA argued the decision in the nuisance action had preclusive effect on Miller’s case, but the hearing examiner refused to apply the 1982 decision to this action.

Phillips testified that during his 20 years of owning the Strawberry Plant, the City issued business licenses, building permits, and so forth to his tenants. Within a year or so of the Island Marine case, Phillips overhauled the roof with the City’s permission. But the City never discussed the uses Phillips and his tenants were making of the property before the fire, except in the context of the Island Marine nuisance case.

Miller purchased the Strawberry Plant property in April 1996, after extensive discussion with the City about his plans for the property. At that time, the building housed a mix of warehouse, commercial, light manufacturing, and office uses.2 3 At the time of the fire, the Strawberry Plant’s rent roll listed 27 tenants.

[159]*159City’s Representations Regarding Use

In addition to the City’s order requiring Island Marine to discontinue its illegal use, Miller claims that the City made various representations regarding the feasibility of his upgrading the property about the time Miller was considering purchasing the building. In correspondence dated May 30,1995, to the City’s planning director, Miller’s agent, William Palmer, referenced a meeting Miller had recently had with the mayor to discuss Miller’s “concept for improving the large building found on the site as well as the grounds around it.” Clerk’s Papers at 809. According to Miller’s letter, the mayor’s response to this plan “was positive.” Clerk’s Papers at 809. The purpose of the letter was to request a meeting to discuss further clarification of the uses allowed on the Strawberry Plant property. The record does not include the director’s reply to this letter, if any.

Approximately two months later, planner George Johnston wrote Miller to discuss the preapplication process for a permit to renovate the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 Wash. App. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-city-of-bainbridge-island-washctapp-2002.