Robert Kanany v. City Of Bonney Lake ( 2015 )


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    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    ROBERT KANANY,                                                                    No. 46340 -7 -II
    Appellant,
    V.
    CITY       OF      BONNEY        LAKE,       a   municipal
    corporation; STEPHEN, K. CAUSSEAUX, JR.,
    as Bonney Lake Hearing Examiner; and JOHN
    P. VODOPICH, as City of Bonney Lake
    Community Development Director/Building
    Official,
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    LEE, J. -    Robert Kanany appeals the superior court' s denial of his appeal under the Land
    Use Petition Act ( LUPA),           chapter      36. 70C RCW.          The superior court affirmed the hearing
    examiner' s determination that the Bonney Lake Municipal Code ( BLMC) does not permit an
    accessory       dwelling   unit ( ADU) on    the   same   lot   as a   duplex. Because the plain language of the
    BLMC clearly prohibits ADUs in conjunction with any duplex, we affirm and grant the City' s .
    request   for   appellate   attorney fees   and costs.
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    FACTS
    Kanany        owns   two    duplex   properties   in the city   of   Bonney Lake ( City).   Both properties are
    in the    City' s   medium -    density     residential district, the R-2        zone.    In addition to a duplex, each
    property has        a   two- story,   detached   garage.    A construction permit for one of the duplexes stated
    that per code, the detached garage could not be converted to living space.
    In 2009, the City received a complaint about Kanany allowing tenants to live in the space
    above one of his garages. The City investigated and determined that he was maintaining an illegal
    ADU on the same property as his duplex. The City issued a notice of violation and imposed daily
    fines,    and    eventually filed      a   lawsuit for   monies owed.          The trial court entered judgment in the
    City' s   favor,    and    Kanany     appealed   that judgment to this court.            City of Bonney Lake v. Kanany,
    
    185 Wn. App. 309
    , 
    340 P. 3d 965
     ( 2014) ( published in part). In apart -published opinion, we upheld
    the judgment in the face of Kanany' s due process challenge. 
    Id.
     at 319- 20.
    While that appeal was pending, Kanany sought an interpretation of BLMC 18. 22. 090( C)( 1)
    from the        City Community        Development Director ( Director). That code provision states:
    C. Requirements.    The creation of an accessory dwelling unit shall be subject to
    the following requirements, which shall not be subject to waiver or variance:
    1.    Number.        One accessory unit shall be allowed per legal building lot as a
    subordinate use in conjunction with any single- family residence; no ADU will be
    permitted in conjunction with any duplex or multiple -family dwelling units.
    BLMC 18. 22. 090( C)( 1).             The Director interpreted that provision to mean that ."no ADU will be
    permitted anywhere on the same legal lot with any duplex or multiple -family dwelling units."
    Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 20. The Director concluded that the BLMC unambiguously prohibits ADUs
    and duplexes on the same lot.
    2
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    On October 4, 2013, Kanany appealed the Director' s decision to the city hearing examiner.
    CP 35. He       asked   the   hearing examiner to " narrowly              construe ...      BLMC 18. 22. 090( C)( 1) to apply
    only to   an   ADU that is      conjoined or     physically        attached   to   a   duplex   unit   in the R-2     zone."   CP at
    33.   The City responded with a report that outlined the history of its ADU dispute with Kanany
    and the parties' conflicting interpretations of the code.
    Kanany also asked for the rules relevant to the pending hearing and for access " to the tools
    and procedural mechanisms I may require in order to develop a full and adequate record for review,
    including      any   appropriate   discovery from City             officials and staff."        CP     at   34.   Kanany noted his
    intent to represent himself during the hearing with the assistance of Fred Brown, a building
    designer and land use consultant. When Brown inquired about the appeal procedures, the Director
    cited BLMC 14. 120. 020.
    On November 5,           2013,    Kanany sought a continuance of the hearing scheduled for
    November -15.          He   requested at    least   a " couple weeks"             so that he could better prepare for the
    hearing   and contact possible witnesses.              CP     at   126.    One of those witnesses was a neighbor who
    also owned a duplex. The City opposed the continuance and the hearing examiner denied it after
    reviewing      Kanany' s request for the        code   interpretation       and    the   other appeal materials. "      The appeal
    concerns    the interpretation      of   1- 2   sections of        the [ BLMC].          Both the appellant' s and the City' s
    positions on these interpretations are well set forth in the code interpretation and in the appeal.
    The Examiner         sees no reason   to   continue     the   hearing."       CP at 128.
    At the November 15 hearing, 'Kanany represented himself and presented two witnesses:
    Fred Brown and Connie Brown, director of the Tacoma/Pierce County Affordable Housing
    Consortium.          After the hearing examiner explained the hearing' s procedure, the City' s attorney
    3
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    presented argument and Kanany read a lengthy statement that outlined the history of his ADU
    dispute with the City.
    Kanany then complained that he had not received a copy of the rules for the hearing and
    that the denial        of a continuance        had   prevented      him from obtaining             additional witnesses..         The
    hearing examiner replied that the City did not have any hearing examiner rules, explained that " we
    are   handling       this    hearing   the same way as we do every                   hearing,"       and added that the code
    interpretation at issue was a legal rather than factual question. CP at 200- 01.
    Fred Brown then presented his interpretation of BLMC 18. 22.090 and accused the City of
    unfair    tactics.    When the hearing examiner asked him to focus on the appeal, Brown presented
    further   argument and complained of             the   City' s "   constant      deception." CP at 206. Both Brown and
    Kanany submitted written statements to the hearing examiner.
    Connie Brown asked to speak about affordable housing and how it relates to density. The
    hearing examiner explained that such testimony was irrelevant to the question presented and asked
    whether she had any information to present about the code section at issue. When she did not, the
    hearing examiner did not allow her to testify but did allow her to put written material into the
    record.
    The hearing examiner denied Kanany' s appeal and upheld the Director' s code
    interpretation.        The     hearing   examiner      concluded       that "[   s] ection   18. 22. 090( C)( 1) BLMC is not
    ambiguous and          is    clear   from the ordinary meaning          of   its language         and   its   context,"   and that the
    code "    clearly    prohibits       ADUs in   conjunction with         any duplex."          CP    at   241.     After the hearing
    examiner      denied        reconsideration,   Kanany     filed    a   LUPA      petition    in   superior court.         The superior
    court affirmed the hearing examiner' s decision, and Kanany appealed to this court.
    M
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    ANALYSIS
    A.         STANDARD OF REVIEW
    LUPA is the exclusive means for judicial review of land use decisions with a few
    exceptions.           RCW 36. 70C. 030( 1);        Twin Bridge Marine Park, LLC v. Dep' t ofEcology, 
    162 Wn.2d 825
    , 854, 
    175 P. 3d 1050
     ( 2008).                 Under LUPA, this court reviews the hearing examiner' s decision
    on the basis of the administrative record rather than the superior court' s decision and record.
    Milestone Homes, Inc.               v.   City   ofBonney Lake, 
    145 Wn. App. 118
    , 125, 
    186 P. 3d 357
     ( 2008). The
    party seeking relief from a land use decisionmust establish one of the errors set forth in RCW
    36. 70C. 130( 1):
    a)        The body or officer that made the land use decision engaged in
    unlawful procedure or failed to follow a prescribed process, unless the error was
    harmless;
    b)        The land use decision is an erroneous interpretation of the law, after
    allowing for such deference as is due the construction of a law by a local jurisdiction
    with expertise;
    c)        The land use decision is not supported by evidence that is substantial
    when viewed in light of the whole record before the court;
    d)        The land use decision is a clearly erroneous application of the law
    to the facts;
    The land use decision is outside the authority or jurisdiction of the
    e)
    body or officer making the decision; or
    f)     The land use decision violates the constitutional rights of the party
    seeking relief.
    This burden. to          prove error rests with      the petitioning party       on appeal.      Tahoma Audubon
    Soc' y    v.    Park Junction Partners, 
    128 Wn. App. 671
    , 681, 
    116 P. 3d 1046
     ( 2005).                Kanany' s
    arguments            focus   on claims of error     that implicate    subsections ( a), (   b), and ( f).1 These subsections
    Kanany cites the other subsections in RCW 36.70C. 130 without providing any supporting
    argument, so we               do   not consider     the   standards   in RCW 36. 70C. 130( 1)(      c), (   d),   and ( e).   RAP
    10. 3(   a)(   6);   Bale v. Allison, 
    173 Wn. App. 435
    , 451, 
    294 P. 3d 789
     ( 2013).
    5
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    present questions of law that we review de novo. Cingular Wireless, LLC v. Thurston County, 
    131 Wn. App. 756
    , 768, 
    129 P. 3d 300
     ( 2006).
    B.          RCW 36. 70C. 130( 1)( b):      Interpretation of BLMC 18. 22. 090( C)( 1)
    At issue is the      hearing   examiner' s     interpretation     of   BLMC 18. 22. 090( C)( 1).             Courts
    interpret local     ordinances        the same   as   statutes.       Milestone Homes, 145 Wn.         App.      at   126.   An
    unambiguous statute will be applied according to its plain meaning, while only ambiguous statutes
    will   be   construed.   State   v.   J.P., 
    149 Wn.2d 444
    , 450, 
    69 P. 3d 318
     ( 2003); Milestone Homes, 145
    Wn. App. at 126. In addition to considering the ordinary meaning of the language used, the plain
    meaning of a statute may be discerned from all that the legislature body has said in it and from
    related statutes that disclose legislative intent about the provision in question. Dep' t ofEcology v.
    Campbell &         Gwinn, LLC, 
    146 Wn.2d 1
    ,              11, 
    43 P. 3d 4
     ( 2002).        Individual subsections are not
    addressed in isolation from the other sections of the statute, especially where to do so undermines
    the overall statutory purpose. In re the Matter of the Pers. Restraint ofAdams, 
    178 Wn.2d 417
    ,
    424, 
    309 P. 3d 451
     ( 2013).
    BLMC 18. 22. 090          governs   ADU    regulations       and consists   of   three   sections.        Section A
    explains the intent behind .ADUs, which includes adding affordable housing and increasing
    housing density.       BLMC 18. 22. 090( A)(2), ( 6). This section also explains that ADUs are intended
    to   protect   the " single- family    residential appearance."         BLMC 18. 22. 090( A)( 5).      Section B explains
    the procedures by which a property owner may obtain an ADU permit. Section C sets forth eight
    separate requirements for creating ADUs and adds that they " shall not be subject to waiver or
    variance."      BLMC 18. 22. 090( C).
    C
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    At issue here is the first requirement in Section C. That requirement sets forth the number
    of   ADUs     permitted with           single-   family    residences and         duplexes: "        One accessory unit, shall be
    allowed per legal building lot as a subordinate use in conjunction with any single- family residence;
    no ADU will be permitted in conjunction with any duplex or multiple -family dwelling units."
    BLMC 18. 22. 090( 0)( 1).               An additional requirement provides that ADUs must be designed to
    maintain     the   appearance " of          the existing single- family          residence."       RCW 18. 22. 090( C)( 5).
    Both the Director and the hearing examiner found that the language in BLMC
    18. 22. 090( C)( 1) plainly prohibits the construction of an ADU on property containing a duplex.
    The Director reasoned as follows:
    The phrase     "   in   conjunction,"    as applied in the context of BLMC 18. 22. 090, conveys
    the   notion    of a      primary    use     and. a    subordinate   A property
    use     of a   property.
    developed with a duplex or multi -family dwelling units cannot have an ADU as a
    subordinate        use.    The BLMC is unambiguous in its prohibition of ADUs and
    duplexes      on   the    same   legal lot. The stated intent of this section of the BLMC to
    increase      density      in   order   to    better    utilize     existing infrastructure, community
    resources, and support public transit, and neighborhood retail and commercial
    services is met by allowing one ADU per legal building lot as a subordinate use .in
    conjunction with any single- family residence.
    CP at 20.
    The    hearing      examiner       agreed with         this interpretation.        The hearing examiner, cited to
    BLMC 18. 04. 010,              which    defines     an   ADU      as "   a second dwelling unit either in or added to an
    existing single- family detached dwelling, or in a separate structure on the same lot as the primary
    dwelling." CP        at   241. When this definition is              read with      BLMC 18. 22. 090( C)( 1), the two sections
    clearly     allow either an attached or            detached ADU             on a single-   family   residential   building   lot." CP
    at   241.    This conclusion finds support in the other provisions of BLMC 18. 22. 090 that refer to
    ADUs solely in the             context of single-        family   dwellings. BLMC 18. 22. 090( A)(5), ( C)( 5).
    h
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    But Kanany maintains that the hearing examiner' s interpretation is inconsistent with the
    City' s land use matrix and other provisions of the BLMC that permit ADUs in the R-2 zones in
    which        his duplexes     are   located.   While it is true that the City' s land use matrix covering all land
    uses in all zones within the City provides that ADUs and duplexes are permitted in the R-2 zone,
    the       matrix   contains    a    footnote explaining that "[      n] o accessory dwelling units are allowed in
    conjunction with a          duplex." BLMC 18. 08. 020.
    Kanany argues that the hearing examiner' s interpretation is inconsistent with former
    BLMC 18. 16. 020 ( 1997), which was entitled " Uses permitted outright" and allowed ADUs in the
    R-2 zone. CP at 94. This ordinance was in effect when he built his duplexes. CP 12. We rejected
    this argument.in his previous appeal:
    Contrary to Kanany' s argument, these two subsections are not in conflict.
    Rather, former BLMC 18. 16. 020 allows ADUs in medium density residential
    districts, subject to other provisions and exceptions set forth in the City' s
    development       code.      BLMC       18. 22. 090( C)( 1)   is   one such provision in the
    development code that limits ADUs. Thus, these provisions are wholly consistent.
    Kanany, No. 42988 -8 -II, slip op. (unpublished portion) at 15. 2
    Kanany   also    argues     that any reading      of   BLMC 18. 22. 090( C)( 1)   that would prohibit
    duplexes and ADUs on the same property is inconsistent with the City' s comprehensive plana and
    its      stated goal of   increasing     affordable   housing by     allowing ADUs in     all residential zones.   We
    also rejected this argument in Kanany' s earlier appeal:
    2
    1
    The decision on Kanany' s earlier appeal concerned only the monetary judgment, but we
    addressed Kanany' s additional arguments in the unpublished part of our opinion.
    3
    Kanany cites a former plan, but the policy of allowing ADUs in all residential zones has remained
    unchanged.
    8
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    Although comprehensive plan policy 3- 7a states the policy of allowing ADUs in all
    residential zones, the plan does not suggest that ADUs must be allowed in every
    location and every situation in those zones. Nor does the reasonable regulation of
    ADUs, including their prohibition in conjunction with duplexes, jeopardize the
    policy of allowing them in all residential zones. That prohibition is not inconsistent
    with the Bonney Lake Comprehensive Plan.
    Kanany,      No. 42988 -8 -II, slip op. (        unpublished          portion)         at   15.   Moreover, even if there are
    inconsistencies,       a specific      zoning   ordinance prevails over a comprehensive plan.                           Citizens for
    Mount Vernon v. City ofMount Vernon, 
    133 Wn.2d 861
    , 873, 
    947 P. 2d 1208
     ( 1997).
    Kanany argues further that his interpretation of "in conjunction with" as prohibiting only
    ADUs that         are attached    to   duplexes is    consistent with            the   common      meaning   of   the   phrase.   As
    support,     he   cites a case   stating that the    phrase "   in   conjunction with" means "            conjointly."      Orange
    Unified Sch. Dist. v. Rancho Santiago Cmty. Coll. Dist., 
    54 Cal. App. 4th 750
    , 763, 
    62 Cal. Rptr. 2d 778
     ( 1997).       The California court also interpreted the phrase as meaning " in association, or in
    unison."      Orange Unified Sch., 54 Cal.           App.   4th      at   763.    The City responds that the definition of
    in   conjunction with"
    refers to the co -existence of objects and supports the hearing officer' s
    interpretation prohibiting ADUs and duplexes on the same lot. Br. of Resp' ts at 24.
    Other Bonney Lake ordinances addressing ADUs reinforce the City' s reading of " in
    conjunction with."        BLMC 18. 22. 090 does not distinguish between attached and unattached ADUs
    in stating    where    they   are permissible and where              they    are not.         And there is no such distinction
    elsewhere     in the   code, as    the definition     of   ADU       makes clear: "[          ADU] is a second dwelling unit
    either in or added to an existing single- family detached dwelling, or in a separate structure on the
    same   lot   as   the primary    dwelling."     BLMC 18. 04. 010. Because this definition allows ADUs to be
    9
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    separate or attached structures, it would be contrary to statutory construction to conclude that the
    phrase " in conjunction with" in BLMC 18. 22. 090( C)( 1) refers only to physically attached ADUs.
    Kanany' s        interpretation       also would require         the   phrase "   in   conjunction with,"   used twice in
    BLMC 18. 22. 090( C)( 1),         to have one meaning with regard to single- family residences and another
    with regard to duplexes. As the hearing examiner observed,
    Accepting appellant' s interpretation would render different meanings to the term
    in     conjunction"      as used. within         the   same    ordinance        section.... [     A]ppellant' s
    definition of " in conjunction" would have one meaning for a single- family
    residential lot (allowing both an attached and detached ADU) and another meaning
    for      a    duplex lot ( only        a   detached ADU).               Such is a strained and illogical
    interpretation and " undermines the overall statutory purpose."
    CP at 243.
    Kanany' s        reading   of   BLMC 18. 22. 090( C) ( 1) appears to thwart the overall intent of the
    code   concerning ADUs,           which       is to   prohibit   their   presence    in lots containing duplexes. Whether
    viewed in isolation or in relation to other ordinances addressing ADUs, both the language and
    purpose     of   BLMC 18. 22. 090( C) ( 1)             seem clear.       BLMC 18. 22. 090( C)( 1)         plainly prohibits the
    construction of an ADU on property containing a duplex.
    C.      RCW 36. 70C. 130( 1)(           a):    CHALLENGE TO PROCEDURE
    Kanany argues that error under RCW 36.70C. 130( 1)( a) occurred when the hearing officer
    failed to   provide       him    with rules        that   would    govern      the   hearing.      As support, he cites RCW
    35A. 63. 170,        which authorizes    the adoption of the         hearing examiner system and provides that "[ t]he
    legislative      body    shall   prescribe       procedures       to be followed           by . a hearing   examiner."      RCW
    35A.63. 170( 1)( c).
    10
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    During the hearing, the hearing examiner explained to Kanany that there were no specific
    rules   for the   hearing   and   that   it   was   being   handled in the   usual manner.        Kanany asserts that the
    absence of such rules allowed the hearing examiner to proceed in an ad hoc manner that resulted
    in the examiner asking the City attorney leading questions and allowing that attorney to offer
    materials that were prejudicial, irrelevant, and immaterial. Kanany also argues that the absence of
    written rules meant       that his   objection      to the   denial   of a continuance "   fell   on   deaf ears"; that there
    were no standards for conducting prehearing procedures, including discovery, the exchange of
    witnesses and evidence, briefing schedules, and continuances; and that there were no standards for
    implementing        posthearing    procedures such as a request            for   reconsideration or an appeal.        Br. of
    Appellant at 13.
    When Brown, in assisting Kanany, inquired about the City' s appeal requirements and
    procedures, the Director responded by citing BLMC 14. 120. 020 and set forth the ordinance in his
    email.    This ordinance describes the decisions and determinations that may be appealed to the
    hearing examiner, how to appeal, the required contents of an appeal, the time for filing an appeal,
    the effect of an appeal on a City decision, the requirement that the appellant be sent notice of the
    date, time, and place for the hearing ( including the deadline for submission of written comments),
    the requirement that the hearing be under oath and recorded, and it provides notification that the
    examiner' s       decision is final      unless appealed       to a court.    At the hearing' s outset, the examiner
    described the order in which the parties would testify, the fact that their testimony would be
    recorded, and the manner in which the final decision would be issued and distributed.
    RCW 35A.63. 170 does not require legislative bodies to prescribe procedures to be
    followed during the hearings themselves. It does require, however, that
    11
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    e] ach final decision of a hearing examiner shall be in writing and shall include
    findings and        conclusions,   based   on   the   record,   to   support   the decision.   Such
    findings and conclusions shall also set forth the manner in which the decision would
    carry out and conform to the city' s comprehensive plan and the city' s development
    regulations.
    RCW 35A. 63. 170( 3).       The hearing examiner fully complied with these requirements. His
    decision was in writing, included findings and conclusions based on the record, discussed the
    relationship of the decision to the City' s comprehensive plan and development regulations, and
    upheld   the Director'   s   interpretation.   In addition, the hearing' examiner informed Kanany of the
    procedures to follow in seeking reconsideration or in appealing his decision.
    The hearing examiner responded to Kanany' s criticisms concerning the hearing' s
    procedure in his decision denying reconsideration:
    Appellant asserts that the Examiner allowed the City to present testimony without
    interruption regarding his reasons for bringing the request for code interpretation,
    but would not allow he [ sic] and his witness, Mr. Fred Brown, to discuss the City' s
    motives for harassing him. The transcript of the proceedings speaks for itself. The
    Examiner did interrupt Mr. Kanany' s testimony because it strayed well beyond the
    appeal of a BLMC code section. Much of the appellant' s issues and presentation
    exceeded the Examiner' s authority and are within the jurisdiction of the legislative
    process and the City Council.     Even so, the Examiner allowed Mr. Kanany to
    provide irrelevant testimony before the interruption, and it also allowed the City the
    opportunity to make a short response. In addition, the Examiner admitted both Mr.
    Kanany' s and Mr. Brown' s full written statements into the record as Exhibits, and
    said documents are available for consideration by a reviewing court.
    CP at 250. The examiner added that the City had adopted no rules of procedure for hearings before
    a hearing examiner.4
    4
    Bonney Lake has since adopted an ordinance outlining rules of procedure with which the
    hearing examiner complied. BLMC 14. 60. 030 ( Ord. 1505 § 6 ( 2015)).
    12
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    The fact that Kanany' s requests for a continuance and for reconsideration were denied on
    the merits does not demonstrate that the City and the hearing examiner inadequately informed him
    of   the   procedures   involved in making            those   requests.
    Nor does the handling of Kanany' s
    witnesses, or his inability to obtain additional witnesses, establish improper procedure. The issue
    before the hearing examiner was one of code interpretation, and the manner in which the examiner
    conducted      the   hearing,     which followed BLMC              14. 120. 020, was appropriate to that issue.
    Additional procedures were not required under RCW 35A.63. 170. Thus, the hearing examiner did
    not engage in improper procedure during the hearing or in reaching his decision.
    D.         RCW 36. 70C. 130( 1)( f): CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
    Kanany makes the related argument that the hearing examiner violated his right to due
    process before, during, and after the hearing. We disagree.
    Procedural due process refers to the procedures that the government must follow before it
    deprives a person of life, liberty, or property. Dellen Wood Prods., Inc. v. Wash. State Dep' t of
    Labor & Indus.,      
    179 Wn. App. 601
    , 626-27, 
    319 P. 3d 847
    , review denied, 
    180 Wn.2d 1023
     ( 2014).
    When a state seeks to deprive a person of a protected interest, procedural due process requires
    that an individual receive notice of the deprivation and an opportunity to be heard to guard against
    erroneous     deprivation."'      Speelman     v.   Bellinghamlglhatcom    County    Hous. Auths.,   
    167 Wn. App. 624
    , 631, 
    273 P. 3d 1035
     ( 2012) (         quoting Amunrud v. Bd. ofAppeals, 
    158 Wn.2d 208
    , 216, 
    143 P. 3d 571
     ( 2006),    cert.    denied, 
    549 U. S. 1282
     ( 2007)).      To determine whether existing procedures
    are adequate    to   protect   the interest   at stake, courts consider   three   factors: the private interest that
    will be affected by the action; the risk of an erroneous deprivation of that interest through the
    procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute safeguards; and the
    13
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    Government' s interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens
    that additional or substitute procedural requirements would entail. Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U. S. 319
    , 333, 
    96 S. Ct. 893
    , 
    47 L. Ed. 2d 18
     ( 1976);           Kanany, 185 Wn. App. at 315.
    Here, the private interest affected was Kanany' s ability to use his property as desired. The
    City' s interest was to protect public safety and property values and to prevent declining
    neighborhoods. Kanany, 185 Wn. App. at 318.
    Kanany sought to protect his interest by seeking a code interpretation that would support
    the presence of an ADU on his property. This presented a legal issue, and the hearing procedures
    employed did not risk an erroneous interpretation or an erroneous deprivation of Kanany' s interest.
    Because hearing examiner hearings are administrative in nature, due process does not require all
    the formal procedures or rules of evidence of a trial in court. 17 WILLIAM B. STOEBUCK AND JOHN
    W. WEAVER, WASHINGTON PRACTICE: REAL ESTATE: PROPERTY LAW § 4. 7, at 185 ( 2d ed. 2004);
    see   Shoemaker    v.   City ofBremerton,      
    109 Wn.2d 504
    , 511, 
    745 P. 2d 858
     ( 1987) ( rules   of evidence
    generally do   not      apply   during   administrative   hearings).   The procedures outlined in the existing
    ordinances and statutes, with which the hearing examiner fully complied, provided Kanany with
    notice of each opportunity for review and with the opportunity to be heard at each level of review.
    Given that the only issue before the hearing examiner involved a purely legal one of code
    interpretation, the hearing examiner did not violate Kanany' s due process rights.
    Kanany argues in passing that the hearing examiner' s decision resulted in an
    unconstitutional taking of his property. This argument fails.
    14
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    A   mere regulation on       the    use of   land does     not constitute a "   taking." Robinson v. City of
    Seattle, 
    119 Wn.2d 34
    , 56, 
    830 P. 2d 318
    ,               cert.   denied, 
    506 U. S. 1028
     ( 1992). " In the exercise of
    the police power regarding property use, such as in zoning and building permit requirements,
    government may legitimately impose many types of restrictions or development conditions on a
    landowner."       Robinson, 
    119 Wn.2d at 56
    . We reject Kanany' s claims of error based on unlawful
    process or constitutional violations.
    E.        APPELLATE ATTORNEY FEES AND COSTS
    The City seeks attorney fees and costs on appeal under RCW 4. 84. 370, which provides that
    reasonable fees and costs shall be awarded to the prevailing party on appeal " of a decision by a
    county, city, or town to issue, condition, or deny a development permit involving a site- specific
    rezone,   zoning ...      or similar   land   use approval or        decision." RCW 4. 84.370( 1).
    The county, city, or town whose decision is on appeal is considered a prevailing party if its
    decision is     upheld at superior court and on appeal.                RCW 4. 84. 370( 2); see also Durland v. San
    Juan   County,    
    182 Wn.2d 55
    , 77, 
    340 P. 3d 191
     ( 2014) ( under RCW 4. 84. 370( 2), public entity will
    receive   attorney fees if its decision is         upheld       in two   courts). "[    P] arties challenging a land use
    decision get one opportunity to do so free of the risk of having to pay other parties' attorney fees
    and costs     if they   are unsuccessful      before the   superior court."
    Habitat Watch v. Skagit County, 
    155 Wn.2d 397
    , 413, 
    120 P. 3d 56
     ( 2005).
    The   City    prevailed   in the   superior court and prevails        here.    Therefore, we grant the City' s
    request for fees and costs on appeal subject to its compliance with RAP 18. 1.
    15
    No. 46340 -7 -II
    We affirm the hearing examiner and award the City appellate attorney fees and costs.
    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.
    Lee, J.
    We concur:
    r3; orgen, A.C. J.
    utt n, J.
    16