Stephen And Sandra Klineburger, Apps v. King County Dept Of Permitting

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 12, 2019
Docket79028-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of Stephen And Sandra Klineburger, Apps v. King County Dept Of Permitting (Stephen And Sandra Klineburger, Apps v. King County Dept Of Permitting) 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
Stephen And Sandra Klineburger, Apps v. King County Dept Of Permitting, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

SANDRA KLINEBURGER and ) No. 79028-5-I STEPHEN KLINEBURGER, ) husband and wife, ) DIVISION ONE

Appellants, ) v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION KING COUNTY DEPARTMENT ) OF PERMITTING AND ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW, ) Respondent. ) FILED: November 12, 2019

SCHINDLER, J. — Stephen and Sandra Klineburger appeal the superior court

order dismissing with prejudice the Land Use Petition Act, chapter 36.7CC RCW, appeal

they filed that challenges the decision of the King County hearing examiner affirming

code enforcement violations. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

FACTS

Stephen and Sandra Klineburger own property located approximately 800 feet

south of the middle fork of the Snoqualmie River near North Bend. The Federal

Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) designated the entire property as a

“floodway.” A “floodway” is an area “where the flood hazard is generally highest, i.e.,

where water depths and velocities are the greatest.” 44 C.F.R. § 9.4. King County No. 79028-5-1/2

designated the property as a “conservancy shoreline” and a “channel migration zone.”

A “channel migration zone” is “the area along a river channel within which the channel

can be reasonably predicted . . . to migrate over time as a result of natural and normally

occurring hydrological and related processes when considered with the characteristics

of the river and its surroundings.” King County Code (KCC) 21A.06.182.

The majority of the property is designated as a “moderate hazard” area within the

channel migration zone. The area designated as a moderate hazard channel migration

zone “lies between the severe channel migration hazard area and the outer boundaries

of the channel migration zone.” KCC 21A.06.181E.

King County designated the southeast portion of the property as a “buffer”

“aquatic area.” An “aquatic area” is a “nonwetland water feature,” including “[a]ll

shorelines of the state, rivers, streams, marine waters and bodies of open water, such

as lakes, ponds and reservoirs.” KCC 21A.06.072C.A.1. A “buffer” is “a designated

area contiguous to and intended to protect and be an integral part of an aquatic area or

wetland.” KCC 21A.06.122.

In Klineburger v. King County Department of Development & Environmental

Services, Building & Fire Services Division, Code Enforcement Section, 189 Wn. App.

153, 158-59, 356 P.3d 223 (2015), we affirmed the decision of the King County hearing

examiner that the county did not have the authority to address the decision of the

Department of Ecology that the Klineburgers were prohibited from engaging in

construction in the designated floodway.

In 2012, the Klineburgers placed a 400-square-foot “cargo container” on the

southeast portion of the property that FEMA designated as a floodway and King County

2 No. 79028-5-1/3

designated as a conservancy shoreline area, a channel migration zone, and the aquatic

buffer. The Klineburgers planned to use the cargo container as a “storage shed.”

Between 2013 and 2017, the Klineburgers spread mulch, stacked “cords” and

“rounds” of firewood, and removed blackberries and other vegetation on the southeast

portion of the property. In 2017, the Klineburgers constructed a gravel driveway in the

designated floodway area, conservancy shoreline area, and aquatic buffer.

On October 16, 2017, the King County Department of Permitting and

Environmental Review (DPER) issued a “Notice of King County Code Violation” and an

“Abatement Order” (Notice and Order). The Notice and Order cited the Klineburgers for

violations of the KCC. The Notice and Order asserts the Klineburgers spread mulch,

stacked firewood, removed blackberries and other vegetation, and constructed a gravel

driveway without a “[c]learing and/or grading” permit in an area designated as a

“Floodway, Aquatic, Channel Migration, [and] Shoreline and/or their buffers” and placed

the cargo container “within environmentally critical areas and/or their buffers.”

The Klineburgers appealed the Notice and Order to the King County hearing

examiner. The Klineburgers argued the KCC did not require permits for agricultural

uses such as spreading “mulch over a garden and around newly planted trees” or for

removing “invasive species and revegetation.” The Klineburgers argued the cargo

container “is either not in violation of the Code or was ‘approved’ during the 2016 site

inspection.” The Klineburgers also asserted DPER “is selectively enforcing” the KCC.

A number of witnesses testified at the hearing and the hearing examiner admitted

into evidence more than 30 exhibits. The Klineburgers submitted the declaration of

expert witness Douglas Weber to support their argument that FEMA and King County

3 No. 79028-5-114

improperly designated and mapped the property as a floodway, conservancy shoreline

area, and hazardous channel migration zone.

The hearing examiner entered a decision and extensive findings of fact and

conclusions of law. The hearing examiner denied the appeal of the code enforcement

citations for “[c]learing and/or grading (fill)” without a permit and “[pjlacement of a cargo

container” without a permit. The hearing examiner granted the appeal as to the citation

for removing grasses without a permit.

The Klineburgers timely filed a Land Use Petition Act (LU PA), chapter 36.70C

ROW, appeal of the hearing examiner decision. The Klineburgers alleged the hearing

examiner erred in interpreting the KCC, substantial evidence did not support the

decision, and the decision was a clearly erroneous application of the law to the facts.

King County filed a motion to dismiss the LUPA appeal. King County argued the

court lacked jurisdiction to review the FEMA floodway hazard designation, the

Klineburgers failed to exhaust administrative remedies, and the LUPA appeal was

barred by the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel.

The superior court entered an order dismissing the LUPA appeal with prejudice.

The court concluded it lacked jurisdiction “to review the federal flood hazard

management designations and mapping”; the Klineburgers did not “exhaust available

administrative remedies, specifically to change the federal special flood hazard

management designations and mapping and county critical areas designations and

mapping”; and the Klineburgers were precluded by the doctrines of res judicata and

collateral estoppel from “re-litigation of the issues of the federal special flood hazard

4 No. 79028-5-1/5

management designations and mapping and county critical areas designations and

mapping.”

The court did not address the merits of the LUPA appeal challenging the decision

of the hearing examiner to affirm the code enforcement violations. In the order

dismissing the LUPA appeal with prejudice, the court struck the proposed findings that

address whether the hearing examiner erroneously interpreted and applied the law and

whether the findings of fact and conclusions of law are supported by substantial

evidence.

ANALYSIS

The Kllneburgers contend the superior court erred in dismissing the LUPA appeal

with prejudice.

Judicial review of land use decisions is governed by LUPA. Abbey Rd. Grp., LLC

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Stephen And Sandra Klineburger, Apps v. King County Dept Of Permitting, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephen-and-sandra-klineburger-apps-v-king-county-dept-of-permitting-washctapp-2019.