Protect the Peninsula's Future v. Clallam County

833 P.2d 406, 66 Wash. App. 671, 1992 Wash. App. LEXIS 325
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 27, 1992
Docket14931-1-II
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 833 P.2d 406 (Protect the Peninsula's Future v. Clallam County) 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
Protect the Peninsula's Future v. Clallam County, 833 P.2d 406, 66 Wash. App. 671, 1992 Wash. App. LEXIS 325 (Wash. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Alexander, J.

Protect the Peninsula's Future (PPF), a Washington nonprofit corporation, appeals the Clallam County Superior Court's denial of its request for (1) an order enjoining the Clallam County Commissioners from committing future violations of Washington's Open Public Meetings Act of 1971; and (2) attorney's fees and costs. We affirm the Superior Court's denial of PPF's request for injunctive relief, but we reverse its order denying its request for attorney's fees.

In 1989, the City of Sequim applied to the Clallam County Commissioners for a substantial development permit to enable it to extend its sewer outfall fine farther out into the waters of the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The permit application was initially reviewed by Clallam County's Shoreline Advisory Board. PPF participated extensively in the permit review process and in the hearing held on the matter before the advisory committee. That committee was unable to reach a decision on the application, three members of the committee approving the application and three disapprov *673 ing. The decision to approve or deny the permit application eventually fell to the Clallam County Board of Commissioners.

The county commissioners conducted a public hearing on Sequim's application on August 10, 1989. Grant Beck, a county planner responsible for processing Sequim's permit application, had earlier provided the three commissioners with an informational packet regarding the issue. It included a draft permit approval, which contained conditions, entitled "findings and conclusions". Following the public hearing, the Board indicated that it would render its decision on the application on August 22, 1989.

On August 15, 1989, the Board met for its regularly scheduled "work session". The three county commissioners, Beck, and a deputy prosecutor, Christopher Melly, attended that meeting. The work session was open to the public until the Board, on the motion of county commissioner David Cameron, agreed to go into executive (closed) session. This executive session included only the three county commissioners, Beck and Melly. Cameron later testified that he asked for the executive session in order to take up discussion of the "shortfalls of the mitigating conditions" that were included in the draft permit and to discuss "pending" or "potential" litigation.

During the executive session, commissioner Cameron brought up the subject of the shoreline permit application because he realized that the conditions in the draft permit did not adequately address concerns raised by the public at the August 10 hearing. Beck responded by distributing a revised draft permit that he felt addressed the issues raised by Cameron. Beck testified that he had made the changes to the draft permit before the executive session, based on his own evaluation of the public testimony at the hearings.

After Beck passed out the revised draft permit, he gave a brief presentation of the content of those changes. Cameron and Beck then briefly discussed the proposed revisions. *674 Cameron expressed the view that two of the revised conditions, which had been set out as alternatives, would better address the public concerns if each was set out as a separate condition. Although the other two commissioners later admitted to glancing through the document handed out by Beck, neither of them participated in the discussion. Cameron conceded at trial that litigation was never discussed during the executive session because he felt that the revised set of conditions took care of the inadequacies in the draft permit.

After the August 15 meeting, Beck redrafted the conditions into final form and sent them to the Board for approval on August 22. The differences between the draft Beck distributed at the executive session and the final draft were consistent with Cameron's comments at the executive session.

On August 22, 1989, at an open meeting of the county commission, Beck presented the permit in its revised form. Cameron then made the following comments:

The Comity thought it was very important to add these conditions to the permit. We thought that they would address the concerns of the parties involved.

Following these comments, a motion was made and seconded to approve the permit with the revised conditions. The commissioners voted unanimously to approve the permit, subject to the revised conditions.

On September 11, 1989, PPF filed a complaint in Jefferson County Superior Court against Clallam County and the City of Sequim for injunctive and declaratory relief, alleging violations of the open public meetings act. PPF also requested damages against the individual members of the Clallam County Commission, but the latter request was subsequently withdrawn. All parties filed motions for summary judgment and after oral argument, the trial court granted summary judgment dismissing the City of Sequim. The cross motions for summary judgment by PPF and Clallam County were denied.

*675 A trial was held, after which the trial court concluded that "the limited discussion and review of the draft which occurred at the executive session constituted an 'action' as that term is defined in RCW 42.30.020(3) and constituted a violation of the Open Public Meetings Act." It concluded, however, that PPF was not entitled to any relief for this violation because (1) it withdrew its request for damages against the individual Board members, (2) the Board did not take any "final action" on the permit application until the open meeting on August 22, and (3) the subsequent vote was an independent untainted action from the private action, which "cured" the problem. The trial court also denied PPF's request for attorney's fees.

On appeal, in accordance with a settlement agreement in a related federal lawsuit, 1 PPF limits its request for relief to (1) a declaration that the executive session of the Board on August 15, 1989, was held in violation of the open public meetings act, (2) an order enjoining the County from violating the act in the future, and (3) an award of attorney's fees and costs pursuant to RCW 42.30.120(2) and CR 37(c).

Applicability of Open Public Meetings Act

The Comity claims, at the outset, that the actions of the commissioners were quasi judicial and were, therefore, not subject to the open public meetings act. We disagree.

RCW 42.30.140(2), a portion of Washington's Open Public Meetings Act of 1971, provides that "this chapter shall not apply to . . . [t]hat portion of a meeting of a quasi-judicial body which relates to a quasi-judicial matter between named parties as distinguished from a matter having general effect on the public or on a class or group". Although the Board of County Commissioners can, on occasion, be considered a quasi-judicial body, Lejeune v. Clallam Cy., 64 Wn. App. 257, 823 P.2d 1144,

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Bluebook (online)
833 P.2d 406, 66 Wash. App. 671, 1992 Wash. App. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/protect-the-peninsulas-future-v-clallam-county-washctapp-1992.