Rmg Worldwide Llc., Et Ano v. Pierce County

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 18, 2017
Docket75401-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rmg Worldwide Llc., Et Ano v. Pierce County (Rmg Worldwide Llc., Et Ano v. Pierce 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
Rmg Worldwide Llc., Et Ano v. Pierce County, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTO cx--)4c, 5 r11"7-i RMG WORLDWIDE LLC, ) No. 75401-7-1 c)c) MICHAEL H. MOORE, its Manager, ) co ) .1.7

Appellant, ) 9? z.1--- ) DIVISION ONE v. ) C3 C3--- .Z'

PIERCE COUNTY, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Respondent. ) FILED: December 18, 2017 )

MANN, J. — RMG Worldwide LLC(RMG)appeals two land use decisions of the

Pierce County hearing examiner. In the first decision, the examiner found that RMG

could not subdivide its existing golf course for residential development under the

General Use zoning that was in effect in 1990, and that RMG must instead submit

applications consistent with the current development regulations. In the second

decision, the examiner held that RMG could not revive and proceed under a 1990

application for a Planned Development District(PDD)/Rezone approval because the

PDD/Rezone application was abandoned. RMG appealed both decisions to the

superior court under the Land Use Petition Act(LUPA), chapter 36.70C RCW. The

superior court affirmed both decisions of the hearing examiner. We also affirm. No. 75401-7-1/2

FACTS

The Property

This case concerns a 157 acre parcel of property located in the southeast

quadrant of the intersection of 208th Street East and 46th Avenue East in the Graham

area of unincorporated Pierce County. In the mid-1980s, the property owners, Harold

LeMay Enterprises, Inc. and Otaka, Inc. (collectively LeMay), began exploring the

possibility of developing a golf course on the land and consulted with experts and the

County. Following its consultations, LeMay decided to improve a portion of the property

with a golf course, single family residential dwellings, and a small commercial area. The

County advised LeMay that it could construct the golf course by obtaining a grading and

filling permit. At the time, the property was zoned General Use, a Pierce County zoning

classification which allowed multiple and varied uses. In February 1989, the County

issued a grading and filling permit for construction of a golf course on the central portion

of the property, approximately 125 acres of the 157 acre parcel. LeMay then began

construction of the golf course.

Development of the Property

On May 18, 1990, LeMay filed an application for the "Classic Estates, a PDD."1

The application requested a PDD, a rezone, and a preliminary subdivision. The detailed

description of the request was for "Creation of 96 single family lots, an 18-hole

championship public golf course and commercial reserve on a 157.6 acre parcel of

1 Under the Pierce County Code (PCC) 18.10.610 (A), a Planned Development District or PDD is "intended to be a flexible zoning concept. . .. The uses within the PDD depend on the uses in the underlying zone or the Potential Zone. The residential densities within the PDD may vary depending upon how the land is developed with general aesthetics, natural areas, and open space being an incentive."

-2- No. 75401-7-1/3

vacant land. Property will be served by public water, private roads and individual on-

site septic systems." The application identified that 120.6 acres would be left in open-

space with 30 acres left in natural vegetation.

Shortly after LeMay submitted the PDD application, the Pierce County

Department of Planning and Natural Resource Management(Department) contacted

LeMay's agent and advised him that, under the General Use zone, a golf course was

listed as an "unclassified use" and would need an unclassified use permit(UP) before it

could operate. The Department subsequently met with representatives from LeMay to

discuss options for proceeding. The meeting was summarized in a June 26, 1990, letter

from Robert Hansen, the Department's principal planner:

I wish to summarize our meeting last Tuesday in regard to the Classic Golf Course and what was necessary in order for the course to open.

I first presented you last year anfdl at this meeting with two options. The course's construction could open with the approval of either a Planned Development District(PDD) or with an Unclassified Use Permit(UP), both requiring a public hearing before a Hearing Examiner. A PDD was suggested if uses other than the golf course were to be proposed. However, a PDD was likely to take more time to complete since more factors will be examined in a multiple use project. Therefore, it was determined by your group to have an Unclassified Use Permit requesting only the golf course with land set aside for future development. It was understood that a Major Amendment to the Unclassified Use Permit could be requested in the future and would be necessary if further land development is to take place.

It was my determination that the earliest the matter could be brought before the Hearing Examiner is Tuesday, August 2, 1990, if a site plan, application and filing fees were filed by Tuesday, June 25, 1990. . . . Decision upon the Unclassified User Permit for the golf course would occur within two to four weeks depending upon the schedule of the Hearing Examiner and we will emphasize to the Examiner that we would like a decision on this matter as soon as possible.121

2(Emphasis added.)

-3- No. 75401-7-1/4

That same day, June 26, 1990, Lemay submitted an application for a UP permit

for the golf course. The application requested "an Unclassified Use Permit be issued to

allow construction of an 18-hole golf course with clubhouse, parking and related

facilities . . . Portions of the site along the west boundary and at the northeast corner will

be retained for future development."

Consistent with the Department's letter to LeMay, on August 2, 1990, a public

hearing was held before the Pierce County hearing examiner to consider the UP

application. On October 2, 1990, the hearing examiner issued a decision approving the

UP for the golf course(U P9-90). The UP9-90 decision was not appealed. On June 20,

1991, LeMay recorded a memorandum of agreement and covenant setting forth the

conditions and requirements for the operation and maintenance of the golf course

approved by UP9-90.

On September 11, 1990, prior to the hearing examiner's decision, LeMay

submitted a letter formally requesting to "reactivate" the Classic Estates preliminary

plat/PDD. The Department responded on January 10, 1991, by notifying LeMay's

project engineer that it would treat the request for the 96 lot residential subdivision as a

major amendment to the UP:

As we discussed in our January 10, 1991, telephone conversation, I will be processing the residential portion of this proposal as a Major Amendment to the already adopted and approved Classic Golf Course Unclassified Use Permit, UP9-90. In this way, the potential for the establishment of a water tower to provide potable and fire fighting flows for the residential subdivision and the golf course building can be addressed.

On February 14, 1991, the Department issued a staff report for the "Preliminary

Plat: Classic Estates Unclassified Use Permit: UP9-90, Classic Golf Course (Major

-4- No. 75401-7-1/5

Amendment)." The proposal was described by staff as a request for "a major

amendment to a previously approved Unclassified Use Permit to establish a 96 lot

single-family residential subdivision and a single 8 ft. high water tower." The staff report

set out the pertinent policies and regulations that the hearing examiner was required to

address, including the existing comprehensive plan, zoning code, and the required

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