Kitsap County v. Kitsap Rifle And Revolver Club ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                                              Filed
    Washington State
    Court of Appeals
    Division Two
    December 29, 2020
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    KITSAP COUNTY, a political subdivision of                         No. 53668-4-II
    the State of Washington,
    Respondent,
    v.
    KITSAP RIFLE AND REVOLVER CLUB, a                           UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    not-for-profit corporation registered in the State
    of Washington, and JOHN DOES and JANE
    ROES I-XX, inclusive,
    Appellants,
    and,
    IN THE MATTER OF NUISANCE AND
    UNPERMITTED CONDITIONS LOCATED
    at One 72-acre parcel identified by Kitsap
    County Tax Parcel ID No. 362501-4-002-1006
    with street address 4900 Seabeck Highway
    NW, Bremerton, Washington.
    MAXA, P.J. – The Kitsap Rifle and Revolver Club (Club) appeals the trial court’s June
    2019 amended contempt order. The contempt sanction in the amended order precluded the Club
    from operating its shooting range, but stated that the Club could purge the sanction by submitting
    a complete site development activity permit (SDAP) application for the shooting range property
    to Kitsap County.
    No. 53668-4-II
    The Club argues that the trial court erred in entering the amended contempt order because
    the order failed to specify the type of SDAP application required to satisfy the purge condition
    for the contempt sanction. We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in failing to
    specify the type of SDAP application required. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s 2019
    amended contempt order.
    FACTS
    Background
    The Club is a nonprofit corporation that has operated a shooting range in Bremerton since
    its founding in 1926. In 1993, the Club’s use of the shooting range was a lawfully established
    nonconforming use.
    In the 1990s, the Club began developing the property on which its shooting range was
    located. The Club’s development work included clearing and excavating wooded or semi-
    wooded areas, removing vegetation, replacing a water course that ran through a wetland buffer
    with two 475-foot culverts, and excavating and moving soil. The Club did not obtain permits for
    any of this work.
    In 2011, the County filed a complaint for an injunction, declaratory judgment, and
    nuisance abatement against the Club. The County argued that the Club’s development activities
    were unlawful because it lacked the necessary permits required under the Kitsap County Code
    (KCC).
    After a bench trial, the trial court concluded that the Club’s development activities
    without permits constituted illegal uses of the Club’s property. The court ruled that these illegal
    uses terminated the nonconforming use of the Club’s property as a shooting range. The court
    2
    No. 53668-4-II
    issued a permanent injunction prohibiting the Club from operating as a shooting range until the
    County issued conditional use permits for the Club’s property.
    Kitsap Rifle I (2014)
    The Club appealed the trial court’s ruling that the Club’s development activities violated
    land use permitting requirements and that these activities terminated the Club’s legal
    nonconforming use of the property. Kitsap County v. Kitsap Rifle & Revolver Club, 
    184 Wn. App. 252
    , 261, 
    337 P.3d 328
     (2014) (Kitsap Rifle I). This court noted that “there is no dispute
    that the Club’s unpermitted development work on the property constituted unlawful uses.” 
    Id. at 275
    . The court affirmed the trial court’s ruling that the Club’s development work violated
    County land use permitting requirements. 
    Id. at 297-301
    . However, the court concluded that
    termination of the nonconforming use was not the proper remedy. 
    Id. at 300-01
    . As a result, the
    court vacated the trial court’s injunction prohibiting the Club from operating as a shooting range.
    
    Id. at 301
    . We remanded for the trial court to determine the proper remedies for the Club’s
    permitting violations under the KCC. 
    Id.
    Remand from Kitsap Rifle I
    On remand, the trial court issued an Order Supplementing Judgment on Remand.           The
    order stated in pertinent part:
    A permanent, mandatory injunction is hereby issued further requiring Defendant to
    apply for and obtain site development activity permitting to cure violations of KCC
    Titles 12 and 19 found to exist on the Property in the original Judgment.
    Defendant’s application for permitting shall be submitted to Kitsap County within
    180 days of the entry of this final order.
    Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 45.
    The Club did not submit an SDAP application by the deadline or within an additional 90
    days allowed by the trial court. As a result, the court entered an order finding the Club in
    3
    No. 53668-4-II
    contempt. As a sanction, the court enjoined the Club from operating its shooting facility “until
    such time that [the Club] obtains permitting in compliance with KCC Titles 12 and 19.” CP at
    289.
    Kitsap Rifle III (2018)1
    The Club appealed the trial court’s contempt order to this court. The Club argued, among
    other things, that the trial court erred in ruling that the Club was required to obtain an SDAP.
    This court affirmed the trial court’s contempt order. Kitsap County v. Kitsap Rifle, No.
    50011-6-II, slip op. at 2, 22 (Wash. Ct. App. Jan. 30, 2018) (unpublished),
    http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/D2%2050011-6-II%20Unpublished%20Opinion.pdf
    (Kitsap Rifle III). However, the court held that “the trial court erred in ruling that the Club was
    required to obtain an SDAP (rather than apply for one) in order to purge the contempt because
    actually obtaining a permit is beyond the Club’s control.” Id. at 2. We remanded for the trial
    court to address the imposition of a proper purge condition. Id. at 22.
    The Club’s Efforts to Submit an SDAP Application
    The Club hired Soundview Consultants to generate an estimate and scope of work for
    submitting a complete SDAP application. In July 2018, the County’s Department of Community
    Development (DCD) met with Soundview to discuss the Club’s unpermitted site work and plans
    for the property. The purpose of the meeting was for the Club to receive DCD guidance on the
    type of permitting and documentation required to cure its permitting violations. Based on the
    information Soundview presented at the meeting, DCD determined that an SDAP-Commercial
    1
    Kitsap Rifle II was an appeal of the trial court’s prohibition of certain activities at the shooting
    range on remand from Kitsap Rifle I. Kitsap County v. Kitsap Rifle, No. 48781-1-II (Wash. Ct.
    App. Nov. 21, 2017) (unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/D2%2048781-1-
    II%20Order%20Amending.pdf (Kitsap Rifle II).
    4
    No. 53668-4-II
    would be required. Soundview memorialized this determination in a July 2018 email to the
    Club, which stated, “Required Application: Commercial Site Development Activity Permit
    (SDAP) - Full Drainage Review.” CP at 447-48.
    In January 2019, the Club attempted to submit an application for an SDAP-Grading 2.
    Notwithstanding the email sent after the DCD’s meeting with the Club’s consultant, the Club
    decided that an SDAP-Grading 2 application was appropriate based on its reading of the 2012
    judgment and other facts. The County cancelled the Club’s SDAP-Grading 2 submission. The
    County stated that an application for an SDAP-Commercial permit was required.
    Motion to Revise the 2016 Contempt Order
    In May, the County filed a motion to revise the trial court’s 2016 contempt order on
    remand. The County indicated that it could not come to an agreement with the Club regarding a
    revised contempt order. The County later filed a proposed order amending the contempt order.
    The Club challenged the County’s proposed order on two grounds. First, the Club argued
    that the purge condition should specify the type of SDAP application the Club must submit. The
    Club claimed that without specification, the County would retain too much control over the
    purge condition.
    Second, the Club argued that the type of SDAP application it must submit was for an
    SDAP-Grading 2. The Club submitted a document from the County identifying several types of
    permits. The SDAP-Grading 2 was for grading greater than 500 but less than 5,000 cubic yards.
    The Club claimed that this SDAP was appropriate because the violations described in the trial
    court’s 2012 judgment involved earth movement less than an aggregate total of 5,000 cubic
    yards.
    In an oral ruling, the court rejected the Club’s arguments. The court reasoned:
    5
    No. 53668-4-II
    I appreciate your arguments that you would like it to be very specific as to the type
    of permit that is issued – or applied for I should say; but you’re looking at a
    layperson in that context. I don’t know how I would make that decision. I think it
    needs to be fairly simplistic; that the Club just needs to apply for a permit, whatever
    the Club believes is appropriate; and then the County says this doesn’t comply, or
    it does, and you go through the process.
    ....
    I don’t believe that I can identify what kind of a permit it needs to be.
    RP at 5, 12.
    In June, the trial court entered the County’s proposed order. The court’s Order
    Amending December 2, 2016 Contempt Order states:
    2. Defendant [the Club] is enjoined from operating a shooting facility until such
    time that: (a) [The Club] submits a complete site development activity permit
    (“SDAP”) application to Kitsap County for permitting to cure violations of KCC
    Titles 12 and 19 found to exist on the Property in the original Judgment (hereafter
    “Purge Condition”);
    ....
    For purposes of this order, to submit a “complete” SDAP application means to
    transmit through the County’s online portal an SDAP application that contains
    each and every one of the items listed in KCC § 21.04.160(B).2
    CP at 454-55.
    The Club appeals the trial court’s 2019 amended contempt order.3
    ANALYSIS
    The Club argues that the trial court erred by failing to specify the type of SDAP
    application required to satisfy the purge condition in the 2019 amended contempt order because,
    2
    KCC § 21.04.160(B) provides that a project permit application includes, among other things, a
    “completed original project application form” and “[p]ermit-specific information required by
    submittal checklists distributed by the department in accordance with this section, or other
    relevant sections of Kitsap County Code.”
    3
    The Club also filed a motion to terminate the contempt sanction, which the trial court denied.
    The motion to terminate is the subject of a separate appeal.
    6
    No. 53668-4-II
    without that specification, (1) the Club is unable to comply with the purge condition because
    compliance depends on the County’s discretion to decide what application is required, and (2)
    the purge condition is not reasonably related to the cause or nature of the contempt. We
    disagree.
    A.     REMEDIAL CONTEMPT SANCTIONS
    Chapter 7.21 RCW provides courts with the authority to impose sanctions on a person for
    contempt of court. Contempt of court includes the “intentional . . . [d]isobedience of any lawful
    judgment, decree, order, or process of the court.” RCW 7.21.010(1)(b). The person subject to
    contempt is referred to as the “contemnor.”
    The contempt statutes distinguish between remedial (or civil) sanctions and punitive (or
    criminal) sanctions for contempt of court. In re Interest of Silva, 
    166 Wn.2d 133
    , 141, 
    206 P.3d 1240
     (2009). Remedial sanctions are “imposed for the purpose of coercing performance when
    the contempt consists of the omission or refusal to perform an act that is yet in the person’s
    power to perform.” RCW 7.21.010(3). Punitive sanctions are imposed to punish past contempt
    of court to uphold the court’s authority. RCW 7.21.010(2).
    Under RCW 7.21.030(2)4, a court may find a person in contempt of court and impose a
    remedial sanction “[i]f the court finds that the person has failed or refused to perform an act that
    is yet within the person’s power to perform.” The court may impose one or more of several
    listed sanctions, including “[a]n order designed to ensure compliance with a prior order of the
    court.” RCW 7.21.030(2)(c). A sanction in a civil contempt proceeding that is punitive rather
    than coercive is invalid. In re Det. of Faga, 8 Wn. App. 2d 896, 900, 
    437 P.3d 741
     (2019).
    4
    RCW 7.21.030 has been amended since the events of this case transpired. Because these
    amendments do not impact the statutory language relied on by this court, we refer to the current
    statute.
    7
    No. 53668-4-II
    To qualify as remedial, a contempt sanction must satisfy three requirements. First, a
    contempt order must contain a purge condition allowing the contemnor to purge the contempt by
    committing an affirmative act. 
    Id.
     The existence of a purge condition shows that the sanction
    has a coercive effect. Silva, 
    166 Wn.2d at 142
    .
    Second, the contemnor must have the ability to satisfy the purge condition. Faga, 8 Wn.
    App. 2d at 900-01. A sanction becomes punitive when the contemnor cannot purge the
    contempt. In re Rapid Settlements, Ltd., 
    189 Wn. App. 584
    , 613, 
    359 P.3d 823
     (2015). “When a
    contemnor cannot control whether to purge the contempt because purging the contempt is
    dependent on the actions of third parties, outside of the contemnor’s control, the purge condition
    is inappropriate.” Faga, 8 Wn. App. 2d at 902.
    Third, if the purge condition involves something other than complying with the original
    order that the contemnor violated, the condition must be “ ‘reasonably related to the cause or
    nature’ ” of the contempt. Rapid Settlements, 189 Wn. App. at 614 (quoting In re Interest of
    M.B., 
    101 Wn. App. 425
    , 450, 
    3 P.3d 780
     (2000)).
    We review for abuse of discretion the trial court’s fashioning of a purge condition. See
    Faga, 8 Wn. App. 2d at 900; see also M.B., 101 Wn. App. at 4554. An abuse of discretion is
    present only if there is a clear showing that the court’s exercise of discretion was manifestly
    unreasonable or based on untenable grounds or reasons. Id.
    B.     VALIDITY OF PURGE CONDITION
    1.   Ability to Satisfy Purge Condition
    The Club relies on the general rule, stated above, that a purge condition is inappropriate
    “[w]hen a contemnor cannot control whether to purge the contempt because purging the
    contempt is dependent on the actions of third parties, outside of the contemnor’s control.” Faga,
    8
    No. 53668-4-II
    8 Wn. App. 2d at 902. The Club argues that because the trial court failed to specify the type of
    SDAP application required to satisfy the purge condition, the County has unchecked discretion to
    decide what application is required. Therefore, purging the contempt is outside the Club’s
    control. We disagree.
    The County does have the authority to determine the type of permit the Club is required
    to submit. KCC 12.10.010 states, “All proposed site development activities shall be reviewed by
    the Kitsap County department of community development to determine the permits required.”
    But this fact does not mean that the Club is unable to satisfy the purge condition.
    First, the County apparently made an administrative determination in July 2018 that the
    required application is for an SDAP-Commercial. Therefore, the Club’s ability to comply with
    the purge condition no longer depends on the County’s discretion; the Club can satisfy the purge
    condition by submitting an application for an SDAP-Commercial. The fact that the Club chose
    instead to submit a SDAP-Grading 2 application does not render the purge condition invalid.
    Second, the Club is not without a remedy for what it believes is the County’s erroneous
    determination that a commercial SDAP is required. The Club is free to resubmit an application
    for a SDAP-Grading 2. If the County again rejects that application, the Club may be able to file
    an administrative appeal of that decision.5 Alternatively, as the County points out, the Club
    could file a motion with the trial court to terminate the contempt sanction on the grounds that it
    submitted the appropriate application. The Club could argue that it had submitted a “complete”
    5
    The Club claims that a rejection of a SDAP-Grading 2 application would not be an appealable
    final decision. On the other hand, the County states that the Club could appeal a denial of its
    application to the Hearings Examiner. Whether an appeal would be possible is beyond the scope
    of this appeal.
    9
    No. 53668-4-II
    SDAP application as required in the 2019 amended order. The trial court then would be in a
    position to address what application was required.
    2.    Trial Court Authority to Specify Type of Permit
    The Club assumes that the trial court had the authority to specify the type of SDAP
    application required to satisfy the purge condition. But the Club presents no argument and cites
    no authority to support this assumption. The trial court was not necessarily in a position to
    dictate the County’s exercise of its administrative authority. Under the KCC, the County – not
    the trial court – determines what permit is needed. KCC 12.10.010.
    3.    Factual Basis for Trial Court to Specify Type of Permit
    The Club argues that the trial court was able to specify the type of SDAP application
    required to satisfy the purge condition based on the existing record. We disagree.
    Even if the trial court had the authority to determine what permit was required, the
    evidence available to the court was insufficient to make this determination. The Club argues that
    an SDAP Grading-2 was appropriate because (1) the trial court found in the 2012 judgment that
    it had moved more than 500 but less than 5,000 feet of earth; and (2) the County’s documents
    describing various permits stated that the SDAP-Grading 2 was for grading greater than 500 but
    less than 5,000 cubic yards.
    However, the trial court’s findings in the 2012 judgment were based on the minimum
    amounts of earth movement needed to trigger permitting requirements. The court made no
    findings regarding the actual amount of earth moved. Instead, the court found that the Club
    moved far more than certain amounts totaling well over 500 cubic yards. The 2012 findings did
    not provide a basis for the trial court to determine the type of permit required.
    10
    No. 53668-4-II
    In addition, the Club’s violation of permitting requirements was not limited to earth
    movement. In the 2012 judgment, the trial court also found that the Club’s unpermitted
    installation of two culverts that emptied into a wetland and the Club’s earth movement within a
    wetland buffer were illegal uses of the Club’s property. The evidence does not indicate whether
    these activities triggered the need for an SDAP-Commercial.
    In addition, the County’s position is that its determination that an SDAP-Commercial was
    required was based on information that the Club’s consultant provided. But the information the
    consultant provided is not in the record.
    4.   Summary
    The standard of review for the trial court’s fashioning of a purge condition is abuse of
    discretion. See Faga, 8 Wn. App. 2d at 900. Based on the considerations discussed above, we
    conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by failing to specify the type of SDAP
    application required to satisfy the purge condition in the 2019 amended contempt order.
    C.     RELATIONSHIP OF PURGE CONDITION TO THE CONTEMPT
    The Club argues that because the trial court failed to specify that an SDAP-Grading 2
    application was required, the purge condition was not reasonably related to the cause or nature of
    the Club’s contempt. We disagree.
    The Club relies on the general rule, stated above, that if the purge condition involves
    something other than complying with the original order that the contemnor violated, the
    condition must be “ ‘reasonably related to the cause or nature’ ” of the contempt. Rapid
    Settlements, 189 Wn. App. at 614 (quoting M.B., 101 Wn. App. at 450). The Club claims that
    the purge condition with an unspecified type of application involves something other than
    complying with the order that the Club violated.
    11
    No. 53668-4-II
    The trial court found the Club in contempt in 2016 for failing to submit an SDAP
    application within the court’s deadline. As a sanction, the 2019 amended order enjoined the
    Club from operating its shooting facility until the Club submitted a complete SDAP application
    “for permitting to cure violations of KCC Titles 12 and 19 found to exist on the Property in the
    original Judgment.” CP at 454.
    The trial court’s purge condition was directly related to the Club’s contempt. The
    contempt involved the failure to file an SDAP application, and the purge condition required the
    submission of an SDAP application. Therefore, the general rule upon which the Club relies does
    not apply here and we reject the Club’s argument.
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the trial court’s 2019 amended contempt order.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
    2.06.040, it is so ordered.
    MAXA, P.J.
    We concur:
    MELNICK, J.
    CRUSER, J.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 53668-4

Filed Date: 12/29/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/30/2020