Duston Thompson, V. Mason County Sheriff's Department ( 2023 )


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  •                                                                                                Filed
    Washington State
    Court of Appeals
    Division Two
    November 14, 2023
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    DUSTON THOMPSON,                                                    No. 57580-9-II
    Petitioner,
    v.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    MASON COUNTY SHERIFF DEPARTMENT,
    Respondent.
    PRICE, J. — In 2021, Duston Thompson was living in his car. One day, Thompson was
    driving away from a friend’s house when he ran out of gas. He left his car partially on the roadway
    and began a long walk to the nearest gas station. A towing company was in the process of towing
    the car when Thompson returned with more fuel. But the car was towed anyway, and towing and
    storage fees began to accrue. Thompson requested an impound hearing. The district court
    determined the impoundment was lawful, and the superior court affirmed.
    Thompson argues the district court’s conclusions of law were not adequately supported by
    its findings of fact. Thompson also argues impounding the car was an unconstitutional seizure and
    the impound fees constitute excessive fines under the federal and state constitutions.
    We hold the district court’s findings of fact do not support its conclusions of law. Thus,
    we reverse and remand to the district court for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do
    not reach Thompson’s constitutional issues.
    No. 57580-9-II
    FACTS
    I. BACKGROUND
    In 2021, Thompson was unemployed and living in his car. On the morning of August 31,
    Thompson ran out of gas. Thompson pushed his car as far to the side of the road as possible, but
    he was unable to contact anyone to bring him more fuel due to having poor phone service. Most
    of the car was off the road, but the car’s left tires remained partially on the roadway.
    The owner of a nearby house approached, and Thompson explained that he ran out of gas.
    Thompson described the homeowner as “dismissive” of him. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 102.
    Thompson then set out on foot for the nearest gas station, 3.5 miles away.
    After Thompson left, the homeowner called the Mason County Sheriff’s Office and
    reported Thompson’s car as a suspicious vehicle. The homeowner also reported they spoke to
    Thompson, who said the car was out of gas.
    The Sheriff’s Office dispatched Deputy Limper to the call.        The deputy noted that
    Thompson’s car was “partially in the roadway” and about 25 feet from an intersection. CP at 63.
    The deputy pulled Thompson’s information by running his car’s vehicle identification number and
    called his phone number, but she was unable to reach him. The deputy then arranged for a towing
    company to tow the car. A tow record completed by the deputy cited three potential statutes as
    authority for the tow, including RCW 46.55.113, which relates to law enforcement’s ability to
    authorize towing vehicles. A tow truck arrived and began the process of towing and impounding
    the car.
    Soon, Thompson returned from his long walk with more fuel for his car and saw the tow
    truck. He told those at the scene that he now had gas and was able to drive his car away, but he
    2
    No. 57580-9-II
    was unsuccessful in stopping the impoundment. Thompson contends the deputy told him that if
    he had returned 10 minutes earlier, he would have been able to drive his car away. But instead,
    Thomson’s car was impounded.
    Because Thompson lived in his car, he found himself without housing and unable to pay
    the towing and storage fees. Each day his car remained impounded, more fees accrued. Thompson
    requested a hearing at the district court to challenge the validity of the impoundment, which was
    set over three weeks after the impoundment. Thompson’s vehicle remained impounded until the
    hearing and was scheduled to be auctioned the next day.
    II. DISTRICT COURT PROCEEDINGS
    At the hearing before the district court, Thompson argued that because he was living in his
    car, his homestead rights prevented the assessment of fees to retrieve his car. Thompson also
    asserted that the impoundment was illegal.
    Deputy Limper testified at the hearing. She reiterated that she called for a tow “[d]ue to
    the vehicle being in the roadway and approximately 25 feet from an intersection” and being
    abandoned. Verbatim Rep. of Proc. (VRP) at 8. The deputy also confirmed that the call notes
    included the nearby homeowner’s report that Thompson explained he ran out of gas.
    The district court upheld the validity of the impoundment. The district court’s findings of
    fact were on a preprinted form with checkboxes for different optional findings. Thompson’s form
    order included a checkmark in the box indicating that the car “was impeding or likely to impede
    the normal flow of vehicular or pedestrian traffic.” CP at 50. The form also included hand-written
    additions that the car had “wheels on [the] roadway, near stop sign” and “Deputy did not have any
    reason to believe [the] car was used as a home; car appeared abandoned based on known
    3
    No. 57580-9-II
    information.” CP at 50-51. A different box indicating the optional finding of “posing an
    immediate danger to public safety” was not checked by the district court. CP at 50. The district
    court additionally found that Thompson accrued $240 for the towing charge and $1,525 in storage
    charges.
    The district court’s conclusions of law included that the “subject impound,” “towing
    charges,” and “storage charges” were all proper. CP at 51. The district court concluded Thompson
    owed a civil penalty of $1,765 and entered judgment against Thompson. The district court did not
    indicate which statute it relied on to justify the impoundment.
    The same day, Thompson filed a RALJ appeal to the superior court.1 As a result, the district
    court stayed its order, thereby preventing any forced sale of Thompson’s car during the pendency
    of Thompson’s appeal.
    III. RALJ APPEAL TO SUPERIOR COURT
    At the superior court, Thompson filed an ex parte motion for relief requesting his car, as
    his homestead, be returned to him. The superior court heard the matter on September 30 and, one
    week later, ordered the towing company to release the car to Thompson as his homestead.
    Notwithstanding the return of the car, the superior court held a hearing on the validity of
    the impoundment. Thompson first contended that the district court’s findings of fact were
    insufficient because the applicable provision, RCW 46.55.113(2)(b), permits an impoundment
    only when the car “ ‘constitutes an obstruction to traffic or jeopardizes public safety.’ ” CP at 128
    (quoting, RCW 46.55.113(2)(b)). Because the district court’s findings of fact only included a
    1
    RALJ 9.1 (“Rules for Appeal of Decisions of Courts of Limited Jurisdiction”).
    4
    No. 57580-9-II
    checked box that the car “impeded or was likely to impede traffic,” (and did not use the word
    “obstruction”) and because the box regarding “public safety” was not checked, Thompson
    contended the findings were insufficient under the statute to authorize the impoundment. CP
    at 128.
    Thompson next argued that the district court erred by failing to make a determination that
    Thompson’s car was his homestead. He further argued that the towing and storage fees were
    excessive fines under article I, section 14 of the Washington Constitution and the Eighth
    Amendment of the United States Constitution. Finally, Thompson contended in his reply brief
    that the impoundment violated article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution and the Fourth
    Amendment of the United States Constitution because it was an unreasonable seizure.
    The superior court affirmed the district court. The superior court determined the district
    court had erroneously labelled conclusions of law as findings of fact. Specifically, the superior
    court decided that the district court’s findings that the car was “impeding or likely to impede”
    traffic and that the deputy did not have a reason to believe the car was being used as a home should
    have been conclusions of law. The only remaining finding of fact, according to the superior court,
    was the handwritten notation that there were wheels on the road and Thompson’s car was near a
    stop sign. But the superior court affirmed the validity of the impoundment, stating,
    This [c]ourt affirms the District Court’s ultimate conclusion that the subject
    impound was proper. Mr. Thompson’s vehicle was unattended upon a highway
    and constituted an obstruction because two of the wheels were on the roadway and
    was a traffic hazard because it obstructed a public highway within 25 feet of a stop
    sign/intersection. This court concludes that the District Court’s conclusion was
    proper because, given the circumstances, Law Enforcement was authorized to cause
    the immediate impoundment of Mr. Thompson’s vehicle.
    5
    No. 57580-9-II
    CP at 184. The superior court allowed additional briefing on the issue of whether the impound
    fees constituted excessive fines. But it did not substantively address Thompson’s homestead
    argument, asserting its October 6 order for the release of Thompson’s car sufficiently addressed
    the issue.
    Following the submission of additional briefing, the superior court concluded that the
    impound fees did not implicate the prohibition on excessive fines. The superior court explained
    that the charges were valid to reimburse the towing company for its costs.2 The superior court
    again affirmed the district court’s order.
    Thompson timely filed a motion for discretionary review, which was granted by a
    commissioner of this court.3
    ANALYSIS
    Thompson presents three main arguments. First, he argues the district court’s findings of
    fact were insufficient to conclude that the impoundment of his vehicle was valid. Second,
    Thompson argues the impoundment was an unconstitutional seizure because there were reasonable
    alternatives to impounding his car. Third, he argues the impound fees were excessive fines under
    the state and federal constitutions. We hold the findings of fact did not support the conclusion of
    a valid tow and reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We
    decline to address Thompson’s constitutional arguments.
    2
    The superior court did not further address Thompson’s argument that the impoundment was an
    unlawful seizure, presumably because it was raised for the first time in Thompson’s reply brief.
    3
    The commissioner granted review of several issues, including whether the impoundment was an
    unconstitutional seizure under the Washington State and United States Constitutions.
    6
    No. 57580-9-II
    DISTRICT COURT’S FINDINGS OF FACT DO NOT SUPPORT VALID TOW CONCLUSION
    Thompson argues that the district court’s limited findings of fact are insufficient to support
    the conclusion that the tow of his car was valid. Thompson argues that the district court’s finding
    that the car “impede[d]” traffic is insufficient to show that the car “constitute[d] an obstruction to
    traffic or jeopardize[d] public safety” as required under the applicable statute. Br. of Appellant at
    34. The Sheriff’s Office responds that the finding that the car impeded traffic necessarily
    incorporates the concept of obstructing traffic, and was therefore sufficient to support the
    impoundment. We determine the findings of fact do not support the conclusion of law that the tow
    was valid.
    On RALJ appeal, we sit in the same position as the superior court to review the district
    court’s decision.4 City of Seattle v. Wiggins, 23 Wn. App. 2d 401, 406, 
    515 P.3d 1029
     (2022).
    “ ‘We review the record before the district court, reviewing factual issues for substantial evidence
    and legal issues de novo.’ ” Id. at 407 (quoting State v. Rosalez, 
    159 Wn. App. 173
    , 178, 
    246 P.3d 219
     (2010)). Unchallenged findings of fact are treated as verities on appeal. 
    Id.
    4
    Thompson also argues the superior court erred when it reviewed the record for facts outside the
    district court’s findings of fact to support is conclusions of law. Although our review is limited to
    the decision of the district court, we agree the superior court relied on facts outside of the district
    court’s findings when it stated, “Mr. Thompson’s vehicle was unattended upon a highway and
    constituted an obstruction because two of the wheels were on the roadway and was a traffic hazard
    because it obstructed a public highway within 25 feet of a stop sign/intersection.” CP at 184
    (emphasis added). This conclusion suggests the superior court erred by conducting an
    independent, de novo review of the record that was outside the proper scope of a RALJ appeal.
    RALJ 9.1(a) (“The superior court shall review the decision of the court of limited jurisdiction to
    determine whether that court has committed any errors of law.”); City of Seattle v. Wiggins,
    23 Wn. App. 2d 401, 406-07, 
    515 P.3d 1029
     (2022) (it is not within the superior court’s scope of
    review in a RALJ appeal to examine the evidence de novo).
    7
    No. 57580-9-II
    Here, the deputy’s tow report included three potential statutes for authorizing a tow. The
    Sheriff’s Office concedes that the only applicable statute of the three cited by Deputy Limper
    which the district court could have used to support the tow was RCW 46.55.113(2)(b).5 That
    statute authorizes a police officer to order a tow when a vehicle obstructs traffic or jeopardizes
    public safety:
    [A] police officer may take custody of a vehicle, at his or her discretion, and provide
    for its prompt removal to a place of safety under any of the following
    circumstances:
    ....
    (b) Whenever a police officer finds a vehicle unattended upon a highway where
    the vehicle constitutes an obstruction to traffic or jeopardizes public safety[.]
    RCW 46.55.113(2) (emphasis added).
    In this case, the district court made limited findings of fact related to whether the
    requirements of the statute were fulfilled. The only relevant findings of fact were “wheels on [the]
    roadway” and a checked box on a preprinted form which stated Thompson’s car was “impeding
    5
    RCW 46.55.085 allows towing vehicles that have had a notification sticker on them for at least
    24 hours, and RCW 9A.88.140 involves impounding cars when the driver has been involved in
    various criminal activities. Neither statute is even arguably applicable here.
    The Sheriff’s Office also argues that the findings of fact support affirming the impoundment based
    on RCW 46.55.080, a statute not considered by the district court or mentioned in the deputy’s tow
    report, because it contends the district court’s judgment can be affirmed on any theory established
    by the pleadings and supported by proof. However, as noted above, our review of the district
    court’s order is limited to the preexisting findings of fact and conclusions of law, see Wiggins,
    23 Wn. App. 2d at 406-07, and the Sheriff’s Office does not cite any persuasive authority
    supporting our ability to essentially make new conclusions of law in the context of a RALJ appeal.
    We, therefore, do not consider this argument. See Cowiche Canyon Conservancy v. Bosley,
    
    118 Wn.2d 801
    , 809, 
    828 P.2d 549
     (1992) (we will not consider issues that are unsupported by
    legal authority).
    8
    No. 57580-9-II
    or likely to impede” traffic, whether “vehicular or pedestrian.” CP at 50 (emphasis added). The
    crux of Thompson’s argument is that this language does not fulfill the statute’s requirement that
    there be an obstruction to traffic or that public safety was jeopardized. We agree.
    On its face, the district court’s finding of fact fails to satisfy the statute. “Wheels on [the]
    roadway,” without more, does little to inform about whether an actual obstruction existed. More
    importantly, regardless of whether the district court’s word “impede” is the equivalent to the
    statute’s word “obstruct,” RCW 46.55.113 requires that “[a] vehicle constitutes an obstruction to
    traffic,” not just that an obstruction was likely. The district court’s principal finding (“impeding
    or likely to impede” traffic) falls short of finding an actual obstruction necessary to justify towing
    Thompson’s car under the statute.6 CP at 50 (emphasis added).
    Because the findings of fact do not support that there was an obstruction to traffic or
    jeopardization to public safety, they do not support that the tow of Thompson’s car was valid.
    Thus, the district court’s conclusion of law determining the tow was proper must be reversed.7
    CONCLUSION
    We hold the district court’s findings of fact did not support its conclusions of law validating
    the tow of Thompson’s car. We reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this
    6
    The other component of the statute, the jeopardization of public safety, is clearly not implicated
    by the district court’s findings. The district court’s preprinted form had an easy checkbox option
    finding that public safety was in immediate danger, but the district court left the box unchecked.
    7
    We recognize the district court’s error was largely rooted in its use of a preprinted form which
    included language inconsistent with the statute.
    9
    No. 57580-9-II
    opinion. Because the underlying district court order was in error, we do not reach the constitutional
    issues raised by Thompson.8
    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.
    PRICE, J.
    I concur:
    VELJACIC, J.
    8
    The failure of the findings of fact to support the district court’s conclusion of law is dispositive.
    Otherwise, we would agree with the concurrence’s analysis that the impoundment violated
    Thomson’s right to be free of unreasonable seizures.
    10
    No. 57580-9-II
    CRUSER, A.C.J. (concurring)—I concur with the Majority’s holding. I write separately
    because I would hold that the impoundment of Thompson’s car was an unconstitutional seizure
    under article I, section 7 of the Washington State Constitution. I agree with Thompson that the
    deputy did not consider reasonable alternatives to impounding his car prior to having it towed,
    such as allowing Thompson to drive the car away and thereby remove any obstruction of the
    roadway.
    The impounding of a vehicle is a seizure and implicates article I, section 7 of the
    Washington Constitution. City of Seattle v. Long, 
    198 Wn.2d 136
    , 156, 
    493 P.3d 94
     (2021). That
    section provides, “No person shall be disturbed in his private affairs, or his home invaded, without
    authority of law.” CONST. art. I, § 7. We use a two-step analysis to determine whether this provision
    has been violated. Long, 198 Wn.2d at 156. “First, we determine whether the action complained
    of disturbs one’s private affairs.” Id. “If so, we look to the second inquiry: whether authority of
    law justifies the intrusion.” Id. “ ‘[W]arrantless seizures are per se unreasonable, and the State
    bears the burden of demonstrating that a warrantless seizure falls into a narrow exception to the
    rule.’ ” Id. (alteration in original) (quoting State v. Doughty, 
    170 Wn.2d 57
    , 61, 
    239 P.3d 573
    (2010)).
    Impounding a car is a seizure. 
    Id.
     But a vehicle may be lawfully impounded in the course
    of enforcing traffic regulations for which the legislature has expressly authorized impoundment.
    
    Id.
     “Reasonableness of a search or seizure is decided in light of the facts of the case, and a police
    officer must consider reasonable alternatives.” Id. at 157. Thus, an impoundment is lawful “only
    if, in the judgment of the impounding officer, it is reasonable under the circumstances and there
    are no reasonable alternatives.” Id. (emphasis added).
    11
    No. 57580-9-II
    Here, even assuming the tow was authorized under RCW 46.55.113(2)(b), the deputy was
    required to consider reasonable alternatives to impoundment and did not do so. Unlike in Long,
    where our supreme court held that no reasonable alternative to the tow existed because Long’s car
    was broken down and unable to run,9 here there was at least one reasonable alternative to
    impounding the car—letting Thompson gas up his car and drive away. Although the towing
    company had arrived before Thompson returned with fuel, Thompson was able and available to
    move the car before the tow was completed. Clearly, once Thompson returned, the deputy had a
    reasonable alternative to towing Thompson’s car away to stop the traffic obstruction. Failure to
    utilize this alternative was unreasonable and deprived Thompson of his car (and his home). Under
    Long, this failure converted an otherwise permissible impoundment into an unconstitutional
    seizure.10
    For the reasons set forth above, I would hold that the impoundment in this case violated
    article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution because a reasonable alternative to the tow
    existed.
    CRUSER, A.C.J.
    9
    Long, 198 Wn.2d at 156-57.
    10
    To the extent the Sheriff’s Office suggested, at oral argument to this court, that once the tow
    company arrived on scene the Sheriff’s Office no longer had the ability to cancel the tow under its
    contract with the tow company, that private contract issue is not germane to our constitutional
    analysis.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 57580-9

Filed Date: 11/14/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/14/2023