Palmer D. Strand, et ux v. Bd. of Tax Appeals ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                         FILED
    JANUARY 15, 2019
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    PALMER D. STRAND and                          )
    PATRICIA N. STRAND,                           )         No. 35597-7-III
    )
    Appellants,              )
    )
    v.                                     )
    )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    STATE OF WASHINGTON BOARD OF                  )
    TAX APPEALS, SPOKANE COUNTY,                  )
    and SPOKANE COUNTY ASSESSOR,                  )
    )
    Respondents.             )
    SIDDOWAY, J. — Principles of res judicata prevent a party from relitigating a
    matter already decided between the parties, even if the passage of time provides a losing
    party with better evidence in support of its position. The doctrine of exhaustion of
    remedies also prevents a party from seeking a legal remedy where it has not pursued
    available administrative remedies. The Administrative Procedure Act (APA), chapter
    34.05 RCW, limits the issues that can be raised in a petition for judicial review.
    Palmer and Patricia Strand seek to reopen the Spokane County assessor’s past
    assessed valuations of their residential real property and recover what they claim are
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    overpaid taxes, but the trial court correctly concluded that the history of their appeals
    presented these bars to the remedy they seek. We affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Palmer and Patricia Strand have had a longstanding dispute with the county of
    Spokane, its board of equalization (county board) and the Washington State Board of Tax
    Appeals (BTA) over the assessed value of the single-family residential property they own
    in Nine Mile Falls. Some of the background is detailed in this court’s earlier decision in
    Strand v. Spokane County Assessor,1 which dealt with their challenge to the 2009
    assessed value of their property.
    In the years leading up to the Strands’ challenge of the 2013 assessed value of
    their property—the valuation triggering this lawsuit—the Strands had frequently
    challenged the county’s assessed value of their property before the county board, had
    frequently appealed county board decisions to the BTA, and had frequently sought
    judicial review of BTA decisions. Among their contentions were that the assessor
    mischaracterized their walkout basement and erred selecting and adjusting comparable
    sales. The following table summarizes the history of the Strands’ appeals between 2008
    and 2012:
    1
    No. 31340-9-III (Wash. Ct. App. Nov. 26, 2013) (unpublished), http://www
    .courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/313409.unp.pdf.
    2
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    Year         Appeal to county        Appeal to BTA        Judicial appeal
    board of
    equalization
    20082            Appealed               Appealed        Appealed to superior
    unsuccessfully3        unsuccessfully4   court but dismissed for
    failure to serve BTA.5
    20096            Appealed               Appealed       Appealed to superior
    unsuccessfully7        unsuccessfully;   court unsuccessfully;
    petition for          appealed
    reconsideration   unsuccessfully to this
    denied8              court.9
    201010            Appealed               Appealed        Appealed to superior
    unsuccessfully11       unsuccessfully;   court but dismissed for
    petition for    failure to serve BTA.13
    reconsideration
    denied.12
    2011, 2012         No appeal14
    2
    Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 704.
    3
    CP at 704-08.
    4
    CP at 710-20.
    5
    CP at 721-22.
    6
    CP at 724.
    7
    CP at 724-29.
    8
    CP at 730-54.
    9
    CP at 756-57; Strand, No. 31340-9-III.
    10
    CP at 771.
    11
    CP at 771-76.
    12
    CP at 777-84.
    13
    CP at 786-87.
    14
    CP at 688.
    3
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    In 2013, the county assessor valued the Strands’ property at $383,700. The
    Strands appealed the assessed value to the county board, contending their property should
    be valued at only $325,000. The county board denied the appeal, and the Strands
    appealed to the BTA. In the several years their appeal of the 2013 assessed value was
    pending, the Strands acted or chose not to act on subsequent valuations as follows:
    Year          Appeal to county         Appeal to BTA          Appeal to superior
    board of                                         court
    equalization
    2014              No appeal15
    2015              Appealed            Appealed; appeal
    unsuccessfully16     pending at the time of
    proceedings below17
    2016              Appealed                No appeal19
    unsuccessfully18
    The appeal to the BTA of the Strands’ 2013 assessed value was heard by
    telephone in January 2016. Having received no decision by late July 2016, Ms. Strand
    sent electronic mail to the BTA, asking why no decision had yet been made. A BTA
    employee responded that the decision “is set to be issued in the next few days.” CP at 21.
    15
    CP at 688.
    16
    CP at 688.
    17
    CP at 688, 649.
    18
    CP at 688.
    19
    CP at 688, 647.
    4
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    When the BTA still had not issued a decision by November 2016, the Strands sent a letter
    of complaint to the BTA, the governor, the attorney general, the county and the county
    assessor.
    Having still received no decision, on April 18, 2017, the Strands, proceeding pro
    se, filed the lawsuit below, requesting judicial review of the BTA’s “Formal Docket 13-
    179 proceeding.” CP at 1. Their petition explained they petitioned the court “because
    the BTA has failed in its duty (RCW 42.20.100) to provide the Strands a complete
    administrative real property appeal pursuant to RCW 84.08.130 by failing to issue a
    Decision on Docket 13-179.” CP at 2.
    The Strands’ action was clearly one for judicial review under the APA. See, e.g.,
    CP 1, 6 (citing RCW 34.05.514 and .570(4)(b) as the basis for the action, and citing
    RCW 34.05.574 in identifying the relief requested). The superior court evidently
    perceived theirs as a routine petition for review of an agency decision because it
    immediately set deadlines for filing the administrative record and briefs and set oral
    argument for June 30.
    Shortly thereafter, and before any court hearing could take place, the BTA issued
    its initial decision. The decision, issued on May 9, was in the Strands’ favor, concluding
    that for 2013, the county assessor “1) overstates the value of its basement space, 2) fails
    to account for valuable waterfront improvements to the Assessor’s comparable sales, and
    3) improperly omits from her analysis a sale of a similar property also located on the
    5
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    Spokane River.” Administrative Record (AR) at 3. The decision set aside the county’s
    property value determination and ordered that the county assessor list the value at
    $325,000. The initial decision was not appealed and became final. The Strands
    acknowledge receiving a refund of taxes paid based on the 2013 assessed value.
    At the time set for the June 30 hearing in superior court, the Strands appeared pro
    se. A deputy prosecutor appeared on behalf of the county and its assessor and an
    assistant attorney general later joined the hearing by telephone on behalf of the BTA.
    After the trial court briefly introduced the matter, it asked Ms. Strand to help the court
    understand “what it is you’re requesting the Court to consider and the decision you’re
    requesting the Court to make,” noting that the BTA decision “was in your favor,
    apparently.” Report of Proceedings (RP) at 5. Ms. Strand contended that the BTA ruling
    showed that the county’s property tax assessments had been incorrect going back to 2008.
    With the help of clarifying questions from the court, Ms. Strand said she was requesting
    “disgorgement of taxes already paid” “based upon ten years of erroneous assessment[s].”
    RP at 13-14.
    The county argued the Strands were barred by res judicata and collateral estoppel
    from reopening values assessed in 2008, 2009, and 2010 because they had litigated each
    of those values based on the same issues and facts raised by the current petition. For the
    2011, 2012, and 2014 assessment years, the county argued that the Strands filed no
    appeals, and for the 2016 assessment year, it argued that the Strands appealed to the
    6
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    county board but failed to appeal its decision to the BTA. For those years, the county
    argued, “the Strands failed to exhaust their administrative remedies.” RP at 21.
    The county acknowledged that the Strands had appealed the 2015 assessed value
    to both the county board and the BTA, and the appeal to the BTA was still pending. It
    acknowledged that the Strands could present the BTA decision on the 2013 valuation as
    evidence in their favor in the pending appeal of the 2015 assessed value. It
    acknowledged that if unhappy with the BTA decision, the Strands could seek judicial
    review from the superior court.
    When it was the BTA’s turn to argue, the assistant attorney general contended that
    the only issue raised by the Strands’ petition—the BTA’s failure to perform its statutory
    duty—was moot, since the decision had been filed. The assistant attorney general argued
    that none of the other tax assessment years were before the court because they were not
    addressed by the Strands’ petition. He also noted that the time for review of many of the
    assessed values had passed, and that the 2015 property tax appeal had “not yet run [its]
    administrative course and [was] not yet ripe for review.” RP at 33.
    The court orally ruled, agreeing with the lawyers for the county and the BTA. It
    underscored that the Strands could henceforth cite the BTA’s decision on the 2013
    assessment as evidence in their favor. It later entered an order dismissing the Strands’
    petition on multiple grounds: the limited scope of the agency action under review; res
    7
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    judicata; failure to exhaust administrative remedies; and the BTA’s substantial, albeit
    untimely, fulfillment of its duty to review the 2013 assessed value. The Strands appeal.
    ANALYSIS
    The Strands proceed pro se in appealing the trial court’s order dismissing their
    petition. The remedy they seek, as summarized in their reply brief, is recovery of taxes
    they contend were overpaid based on five assessed values: those for 2008, 2009, 2010,
    2014, and 2016. Appellant Reply Br. at 1.
    They make the following assignments of error:
    Is the trial court abetting the Assessor in its long-term and systemic
    violations of the U.S. and WA. Constitutions and Titles 84 and 458 by not
    reviewing the record under Title 34 (bad acts)?
    . . . Is the trial court abetting the BTA in violating standards of review in
    appeals of the Assessor’s values by permitting a presumption of correctness
    knowing the Assessor’s systemic violations of the U.S. and Washington
    Constitutions and Titles 84 and 458 (bad acts)?
    . . . Did this trial court render Title 34 superfluous by its policy to not
    review the record of bad acts of the Assessor and BTA?
    Br. of Appellant at 9 (boldface omitted) (footnote omitted). The answer to their
    assignments of error is in each case, no. The trial court’s dismissal of the petition was
    based on its correct application of the law.
    I.     PROPERTY VALUATION AND TIME LIMITS ON APPEALS
    We begin with a recap of the processes and time limits that apply to the type of
    appeals of assessed values that the Strands filed over the years.
    8
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    Each year, the assessor determines the value as of January 1 of all of the locally
    assessed taxable real property in the county. RCW 84.40.020. The assessed value
    becomes the basis for the taxes that will become payable in the following year.
    A taxpayer dissatisfied with the value as determined by the assessor may appeal
    the assessed value to the county board of equalization. RCW 84.40.038; RCW
    84.48.065, .150; WAC 458-14-056. A taxpayer wishing to appeal an assessed value must
    generally file a written notice with the county board by July 1 of the assessment year. 
    Id. If dissatisfied
    with the result of the appeal to the county board, the taxpayer may
    appeal to the BTA. RCW 82.03.130(2). The appeal must be filed with the BTA within
    30 days after the county board’s decision. RCW 84.08.130; RCW 82.03.130(1)(c).
    The losing party in a formal hearing before the BTA may seek judicial review
    under the APA. RCW 34.05.534. The appeal to the courts is based on the record made at
    the BTA. RCW 82.03.180. The appeal must be filed within 30 days of service of the
    BTA’s final order. RCW 34.05.542(2).20
    20
    As an alternative to these administrative avenues, a party who has paid a tax
    under written protest and has not elected a formal hearing before the BTA may file a
    refund suit in court. RCW 84.68.020. The action for recovery of taxes paid under protest
    must be commenced by June 30 of the year following the year in which the taxes became
    payable. RCW 84.68.060. An appeal to the BTA does not toll the statute of limitations.
    Transamerica Title Ins. Co. v. Hoppe, 
    26 Wash. App. 149
    , 154, 
    611 P.2d 1361
    (1980).
    For the first time in their reply brief, the Strands state that they paid their property
    taxes for all years at issue under protest, and are seeking recovery of overpaid taxes under
    RCW 84.68.020. Appellant Reply Br. at 1. Nowhere in their petition, or for that matter
    anywhere in the clerk’s papers, do they cite the refund action statute or claim to have paid
    9
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    II.    THE TRIAL COURT CORRECTLY FOUND THAT ONLY THE 2013 ASSESSED VALUE WAS
    AT ISSUE IN BTA DOCKET NO. 13-179
    By its express terms, the Strands’ petition filed in the action below was a request
    under the APA for judicial review of the BTA’s action (or more precisely, its inaction) in
    BTA docket no. 13-179. The Strands’ notice of appeal filed in BTA docket no. 13-179
    appealed the county board’s decision “pertaining to Assessment Year 2013 for taxes
    payable in [the] (following year).” AR at 545.
    The BTA’s jurisdiction in the Strands’ appeal is provided by RCW
    82.03.130(1)(b), which authorizes the BTA to hear appeals from a county board pursuant
    to RCW 84.08.130. The order of the BTA in such an appeal “has effect up to the end of
    the assessment cycle used by the assessor.” RCW 84.08.130(2). The trial court’s order
    dismissing the Strands’ petition made the unchallenged finding that “Spokane County
    uses an annual assessment cycle meaning that property is revalued every year,” and
    concluded that, “Therefore, the BTA properly determined the assessed value of the
    Strands property for only the 2013 assessment year.” CP at 647, 649. The BTA’s initial
    decision, which became final when not appealed, established the “valuation for the 2013
    the taxes under written protest. We will not entertain the Strands’ characterization of
    their petition as a refund action for the first time in a reply brief. See, e.g., Cowiche
    Canyon Conservancy v. Bosley, 
    118 Wash. 2d 801
    , 809, 
    828 P.2d 549
    (1992) (declining to
    address an argument raised for the first time in a reply brief).
    10
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    assessment year” as $150,000 for land and $175,000 for improvements, for a total value
    of $325,000. AR at 1 (capitalization omitted).
    The Strands’ petition for judicial review under the APA could not address a claim
    for money damages that the BTA did not have the authority to determine. See RCW
    34.05.510(1). The trial court correctly concluded that the relief requested by the Strands
    was outside the scope of BTA docket no. 13-179 and outside the scope of its review.
    III.   THE TRIAL COURT CORRECTLY FOUND THAT RES JUDICATA BARS ANY CURRENT
    CHALLENGE TO THE 2008, 2009 AND 2010 VALUATIONS
    The trial court dismissed the Strands’ challenges to the county’s 2008, 2009 and
    2010 assessed values on the additional ground of res judicata. Res judicata, or claim
    preclusion, is an affirmative defense that bars relitigation of claims and issues that were
    litigated, or could have been litigated, in a prior action. Loveridge v. Fred Meyer, Inc.,
    
    125 Wash. 2d 759
    , 763, 
    887 P.2d 898
    (1995). The purpose of the doctrine is “to prevent
    piecemeal litigation and ensure the finality of judgments.” Spokane Research & Def.
    Fund v. City of Spokane, 
    155 Wash. 2d 89
    , 99, 
    117 P.3d 1117
    (2005).
    For res judicata to apply, there must have been a final judgment on the merits in a
    prior action. Pederson v. Potter, 
    103 Wash. App. 62
    , 67, 
    11 P.3d 833
    (2000). The
    subsequent action must also be identical with the first action with respect to “(1) persons
    and parties, (2) cause of action, (3) subject matter, and (4) the quality of the persons for
    or against whom the claim is made.” Spokane Research & Def. 
    Fund, 155 Wash. 2d at 99
    .
    11
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    Whether res judicata bars a claim for relief is an issue of law that we review de novo.
    Berschauer Phillips Const. Co. v. Mut. of Enumclaw Ins. Co., 
    175 Wash. App. 222
    , 227,
    
    308 P.3d 681
    (2013).
    All of the required elements of res judicata are present, and bar any current
    challenge by the Strands to the 2008, 2009, and 2010 assessed values of their property.
    Final orders exist in all of the valuation appeals. Any current challenge to the correctness
    or lawfulness of those assessed values sets the Strands in conflict with Spokane County
    and its assessor, as did their prior appeals. Any challenge to those assessed values
    implicates the same subject matters at issue in the prior appeals, as Ms. Strand freely
    admitted in the June 2017 hearing. At that time, she told the court,
    We’ve appealed continuously since assessment year 2008. We’ve appealed
    consistently since 2008 under the exact same issues.
    RP at 7, and
    [A]ll of the evidence cited in the initial decision [in Docket 13-179] is from
    appeals from prior years, an amazing thing.
    RP at 8, and
    I appealed this all the way back in 2008. You can’t, in 2013, use facts that
    you had in 2008 and say that I’m not going to be really angry for not
    getting the decision in my favor in 2008 and 2009 and 2010, yes, because
    the facts haven’t changed.
    RP at 14.
    12
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    Any current challenge to the 2008, 2009 and 2010 assessed values sets the Strands
    in conflict with the county and its assessor in the same capacities: the Strands, as
    taxpayers affected by an assessed valuation, complaining to the agent and agency that
    arrived at the valuation.
    In determining whether there is identity of causes of action, res judicata applies to
    what might or should have been litigated as well as what was litigated. Hadley v. Cowan,
    
    60 Wash. App. 433
    , 440-41, 
    804 P.2d 1271
    (1991). In order to determine that several
    causes of action are the same, the court considers
    “(1) [W]hether rights or interests established in the prior judgment would
    be destroyed or impaired by prosecution of the second action; (2) whether
    substantially the same evidence is presented in the two actions; (3) whether
    the two suits involve infringement of the same right; and (4) whether the
    two suits arise out of the same transactional nucleus of facts.”
    Rains v. State, 
    100 Wash. 2d 660
    , 664, 
    674 P.2d 165
    (1983) (alteration in original) (quoting
    Costantini v. Trans World Airlines, Inc., 
    681 F.2d 1199
    , 1201-02 (9th Cir. 1982).
    All of the factors indicating identical causes of action are present. Any current
    challenge, like the prior appeals, arises out of the same assessments of value, implicates
    the same evidence, involves alleged infringement of the same right (the right to an
    accurate assessed value), and would destroy or impair the county’s successful defense of
    its assessed values in the earlier appeals.
    Because any current challenge to the 2008, 2009, and 2010 assessed valuations
    would be identical to the Strands’ prior appeals with respect to parties, causes of action,
    13
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    subject matter, and the quality of the persons against whom the claim is made, the trial
    court correctly ruled that res judicata bars relitigation.
    III.   THE TRIAL COURT CORRECTLY FOUND THAT JUDICIAL REVIEW OF THE 2014 AND
    2016 VALUATIONS UNDER CHAPTER 34.05 RCW IS BARRED BY THE STRANDS’
    FAILURE TO EXHAUST ADMINISTRATIVE REMEDIES
    Before petitioning for judicial review under the APA, a person must first
    “exhaust[ ] all administrative remedies available within the agency whose action is being
    challenged, or available within any other agency authorized to exercise administrative
    review.” RCW 34.05.534. While the statute provides for some exceptions, none of the
    exceptions applies to the Strands’ petition for judicial review.
    The exhaustion requirement gives proper deference to an agency that possesses
    special expertise in an area. Smith v. Bates Tech. Coll., 
    139 Wash. 2d 793
    , 808, 
    991 P.2d 1135
    (2000). The exhaustion requirement also
    (1) prevents premature interruption of the administrative process; (2) allows
    the agency to develop the factual background on which to base a decision;
    (3) allows the exercise of agency expertise; (4) provides a more efficient
    process and allows the agency to correct its own mistake; and (5) insures
    that individuals are not encouraged to ignore administrative procedures by
    resort to the courts.
    Citizens for Clean Air v. City of Spokane, 
    114 Wash. 2d 20
    , 30, 
    785 P.2d 447
    (1990). This
    court reviews de novo a trial court’s dismissal for failure to exhaust administrative
    remedies. Cost Mgmt. Servs., Inc. v. City of Lakewood, 
    178 Wash. 2d 635
    , 641, 
    310 P.3d 804
    (2013).
    14
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    The Strands did not appeal the 2014 assessed value of their property to the county
    board. While they did appeal the 2016 assessed value to the county board, they did not
    appeal the county board’s decision to the BTA.
    The Strands respond to the defense that they have failed to exhaust their
    administrative remedies by contending that “new evidence” reveals that the BTA was
    “hibernat[ing]” and misapplying the law during earlier reviews. Appellant Reply Br. at
    18. But possessing new evidence is not a basis for avoiding the exhaustion requirement.
    The Strands also cite City of Arlington v. Central Puget Sound Growth Management
    Hearings Board, 
    164 Wash. 2d 768
    , 779, 
    193 P.3d 1077
    (2008), which they misconstrue as
    holding that the exhaustion requirement does not apply if an agency is alleged to have
    engaged in unlawful procedure or misapplied the law. The language from City of
    Arlington on which the Strands rely provides only that unlawful procedure and
    misapplication of the law are errors that can be raised in a timely and otherwise
    compliant petition for judicial review of the specific agency action being appealed. It
    does not hold that a party who timely appeals one agency action can use the appeal as a
    forum for complaining about other agency actions it failed to appeal.
    The trial court correctly dismissed the Strands’ current challenge to the 2014 and
    2016 assessed values for failure to exhaust administrative remedies.
    IV.    THE STRANDS’ CONTINUING OBJECTION TO THE BTA’S DELAY IN DOCKET
    NO. 13-179 PRESENTS A MOOT ISSUE
    15
    No. 35597-7-III
    Strand v. Bd. of Tax Appeals, et al.
    Insofar as the Strands continue to complain about the untimeliness of the BTA's
    decision in docket no. 13-179, the superior court acknowledged their complaint as
    legitimate, concluding in its order that "the hearing and the decision in BTA Docket No.
    13-179 were not undertaken in a timely fashion." CP at 649. It also concluded, however,
    that "[t]he BTA has substantially fulfilled its duty to render a decision in Docket No. 13-
    179 through the issuance of its Initial Decision in Docket No. 13-179." 
    Id. A case
    is moot if a court can no longer provide effective relief. Orwick v. City of
    Seattle, 103 Wn.2d 249,253, 
    692 P.2d 793
    (1984). The untimeliness of the BTA's
    decision presents an issue that is moot.
    Affirmed.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    O)~lV
    oway, J.             ~,J',
    WE CONCUR:
    ~               ;r--
    Fearin~l
    16