New Cingular Wireless v. City Of Clyde Hill ( 2015 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    NEW CINGULAR WIRELESS PCS,
    LLC, a Delaware limited liability                   No. 71626-3-1
    company,
    DIVISION ONE
    Appellant,
    v.
    PUBLISHED OPINION
    THE CITY OF CLYDE HILL,
    WASHINGTON,                                         FILED: April 20, 2015
    Respondent.
    Becker, J. — A complaint for declaratory judgment invokes the superior
    court's trial jurisdiction, while a petition for certiorari invokes the superior court's
    appellate jurisdiction. Either avenue is available as a means of contesting the
    legality of a municipal fine in superior court, so long as any administrative remedy
    is first exhausted.
    In this appeal, the party contesting the legality of a municipal fine is
    appellant New Cingular Wireless PCS LLC. For years, New Cingular paid a
    utility tax to the City of Clyde Hill on wireless data services provided to Clyde Hill
    residents. New Cingular was eventually named as a defendant in a nation-wide
    class action lawsuit alleging that such taxes are preempted by federal law and
    wireless companies were improperly billing their customers for them. As part of a
    No. 71626-3-1/2
    settlement agreement, New Cingular agreed to seek recovery of the disputed
    customer charges from the local taxing jurisdictions. Accordingly, New Cingular
    filed a claim with Clyde Hill in November 2010, asking the city to refund
    $22,053.38 in utility taxes.1
    This appeal is not about whether Clyde Hill is obligated to refund the utility
    tax payments. This appeal concerns a municipal fine of $293,121 that Clyde Hill
    imposed on New Cingular on July 6, 2012. According to the notice of violation
    issued by Clyde Hill, New Cingular violated the municipal code by making "false"
    statements or misrepresentations in utility tax returns.2 The notice of violation
    asserted that the company's tax returns were false because they did not inform
    the city that the tax payments were for services that should not have been taxed:
    By its own admission, New Cingular as far back as November,
    2005, unilaterally decided to collect monies from its customers that
    it was not entitled to collect under federal law nor required to collect
    by any order or demand of the City. New Cingular included such
    monies in the amount of utility tax it reported was due the City
    without identifying to the City that the amount reported on its
    returns included monies billed its customers through September 7,
    2010, for tax payments on services exempt from taxation under
    federal law. . . . New Cingular by its conduct seeks in bad faith to
    transfer the financial consequences of its illegal actions upon the
    City and other local jurisdictions unaware of New Cingular's illegal
    collections and reporting by seeking refunds of its tax payments,
    interest and attorney fees and costs from the City.
    Notice of Violation (July 6, 2012). Clyde Hill notified New Cingular that it would
    also be liable for the city's attorney fees and costs.
    1The Clyde Hill Municipal Code allows a taxpayer to request a refund for
    overpayment. CHMC § 3.28.090A.
    2SeeCHMC§3.28.130B.
    No. 71626-3-1/3
    Clyde Hill's municipal code provides that a fine may be protested by an
    appeal to the mayor. CHMC 1.08.030. New Cingular filed a timely written
    protest, asserting that the fine could not be imposed absent evidence that the tax
    returns were intentionally misleading. The city administrator offered New
    Cingular the choice of an "informal hearing" or a decision based on its written
    protest alone. New Cingular requested an informal hearing.
    In advance of the hearing, New Cingular received a letter from the city
    attorney for Clyde Hill offering to cancel the fine if New Cingular withdrew its
    refund claim. New Cingular did not accept this offer.
    The hearing consisted of a five-minute telephone call between New
    Cingular's attorney and Clyde Hill Mayor George Martin. Mayor Martin issued a
    written "Final Decision" on January 22, 2013, denying and dismissing New
    Cingular's protest.
    New Cingular filed this lawsuit in superior court on April 10, 2013,
    requesting a declaratory judgment that the fine was invalid. Clyde Hill answered
    and counterclaimed, seeking judgment on the fine plus interest and attorney
    fees. Clyde Hill then moved for summary judgment on the ground that New
    Cingular had 30 days to file a "judicial appeal" of the mayor's decision and had
    missed that deadline:
    New Cingular had 30 days in which to file a judicial appeal of the
    Mayor's Final Decision by application for a statutory writ of
    review pursuant to Ch. 7.17 RCW. New Cingular did not timely
    appeal. Thus, the Mayor's Final Decision is final and binding, and
    the superior court is without jurisdiction to entertain either (1) an
    untimely judicial appeal of the Mayor's Final Decision, or (2) an
    "original trial action" challenging the validity of the Notice of
    No. 71626-3-1/4
    Violation and attempting to collaterally attack the Mayor's Final
    Decision affirming the Notice of Violation.
    Clyde Hill thus took the position that New Cingular's only avenue of relief from
    the fine was a statutory writ of review of the mayor's decision.
    The superior court agreed that New Cingular "should have sought review
    by petition for a writ of review." The court dismissed New Cingular's complaint
    without ruling on New Cingular's motion, granted summary judgment to Clyde
    Hill, and awarded Clyde Hill its attorney fees incurred in enforcing the fine. New
    Cingular appeals.
    Summary judgment is appropriate where there is no genuine issue of
    material fact and the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.
    CR 56(c). When reviewing an order for summary judgment, an appellate court
    engages in the same inquiry as the trial court. Denaxas v. Sandstone Court of
    Bellevue. LLC. 
    148 Wash. 2d 654
    , 662, 
    63 P.3d 125
    (2003).
    The state constitution vests superior courts in Washington with original
    jurisdiction in cases involving the legality of a municipal fine.
    The superior court shall have original jurisdiction in all cases at law
    which involve the title or possession of real property, or the legality
    of any tax, impost, assessment, toll, or municipal fine.
    Wash. Const, art. IV, § 6; RCW 2.08.010. Article IV, section 6 "pertains to both
    original trial jurisdiction and original appellate jurisdiction." James v. County of
    Kitsap. 
    154 Wash. 2d 574
    , 588, 
    115 P.3d 286
    (2005).
    New Cingular's objective in filing a complaint for declaratory judgment was
    to invoke the superior court's original trialjurisdiction. Clyde Hill contends that
    No. 71626-3-1/5
    once the mayor reviewed the fine and produced a decision affirming it, the
    superior court was limited to its appellate or review jurisdiction.
    Clyde Hill's code provides that the determination by the mayor "shall be
    final, binding, and conclusive unless a judicial appeal is appropriately filed with
    the King County superior court." CHMC 1.08.030. Below, Clyde Hill asserted
    this code provision as a basis for arguing that the only way New Cingular could
    get into superior court was by invoking the court's appellate jurisdiction. On
    appeal, Clyde Hill has correctly abandoned that argument. A municipality cannot
    limit the jurisdiction of the superior courts or prescribe the manner in which they
    operate. City of Spokane v. J-R Distributors. Inc., 
    90 Wash. 2d 722
    , 727-29, 
    585 P.2d 784
    (1978). Accordingly, the reference in the Clyde Hill code to the mayor's
    decision being "final" unless a "judicial appeal" is filed is not relevant to our
    analysis. Clyde Hill cannot use its municipal code to limit the superior court to its
    appellate jurisdiction.
    The central issue, then, is whether the legislature has established any
    specific procedures by which a party must challenge the legality of a municipal
    fine. The constitutional power to hear a particular type of controversy "does not
    obviate procedural requirements established by the legislature." 
    James. 154 Wash. 2d at 588
    . It is well established that "where statutes prescribe procedures for
    the resolution of a particular type of dispute, state courts have required
    No. 71626-3-1/6
    substantial compliance or satisfaction of the spirit of the procedural requirements
    before they will exercise jurisdiction over the matter." 
    James. 154 Wash. 2d at 588
    .3
    Clyde Hill tries to shoehorn the mayor's affirmance of the fine into the
    same mold as land use decisions and administrative agency decisions. But the
    delegated power of municipalities to make land use decisions is constrained in
    Title 35 RCW and Title 36 RCW by a network of procedural statutes designed to
    assure basic fairness. And the Land Use Petition Act, chapter 36.70C RCW,
    comprehensively regulates the procedures that must be followed to challenge a
    land use decision in superior court. 
    James. 154 Wash. 2d at 582-83
    . Administrative
    agencies are likewise statutory creatures. Their decisions typically reach the
    superior court through the Administrative Procedure Act, chapter 34.05 RCW.
    No statute articulates specific procedures for getting into superior court with a
    challenge to the legality of a municipal fine.
    Clyde Hill offers the writ of review statute, RCW 7.16, as the source of
    procedural requirements that New Cingular was required to follow:
    A writ of review shall be granted by any court, except a municipal or
    district court, when an inferior tribunal, board or officer, exercising
    judicial functions, has exceeded the jurisdiction of such tribunal,
    3A superior court may have subject matter jurisdiction in a particular type
    of case, and yet still properly dismiss such a case on procedural grounds. See
    
    James. 154 Wash. 2d at 588
    (statutory procedural requirements do not abrogate
    judicial power vested in the courts by the constitution, but may control the
    circumstances under which a court will exercise its jurisdiction); Dougherty v.
    Dep't of Labor & Indus.. 150Wn.2d 310, 316, 
    76 P.3d 1183
    (2003) (If the type of
    controversy is within the subject matter jurisdiction, then all other defects or
    errors go to something other than subject matter jurisdiction). Any procedural
    defect in the means used to invoke the court's jurisdiction is not a jurisdictional
    error that can be raised for the first time on appeal under RAP 2.5(a)(1). There is
    no doubt that the superior court has subject matter jurisdiction in this case. The
    controversy is about procedure.
    No. 71626-3-1/7
    board or officer, or one acting illegally, or to correct any erroneous
    or void proceeding, or a proceeding not according to the course of
    the common law, and there is no appeal, nor in the judgment of the
    court, any plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law.
    RCW 7.16.040.
    The writ statute does provide a means of invoking the superior court's
    original appellate jurisdiction, and it explains the circumstances under which a
    writ of review should be granted. But it does not say that a writ of review is the
    exclusive means of resolving a dispute over the validity of a municipal fine;
    indeed, it makes no provision specific to fines. Thus, its procedural requirements
    do not circumscribe New Cingular's ability to invoke the superior court's original
    trialjurisdiction.
    A superior court's original jurisdiction over a claim does not relieve it of its
    responsibility to consider whether the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative
    remedies should apply to the claim. Cost Mgmt. Srvs.. Inc. v. City of Lakewood.
    
    178 Wash. 2d 635
    , 648, 
    310 P.3d 804
    (2013). Here, as Clyde Hill concedes, New
    Cingular did exhaust its administrative remedies. New Cingular filed a written
    protest of the notice of violation and obtained a review by the mayor. Having
    exhausted its administrative remedies, New Cingular had a choice that is not
    available to a party who wishes to challenge a land use decision or an
    administrative agency decision and is subject to statutory procedural
    requirements in doing so. New Cingular could invoke the superior court's original
    jurisdiction over municipal fines either by filing for a writ of review under RCW
    7.16.040 (appellate jurisdiction) or by filing a complaint (trial jurisdiction). See
    City of Tacoma v. Mary Kay. Inc.. 117Wn. App. 111, 115-16, 
    70 P.3d 144
    No. 71626-3-1/8
    (2003). New Cingular chose to invoke the superior court's original trial
    jurisdiction by filing a complaint.
    Clyde Hill contends that allowing New Cingular to proceed by way of a
    complaint rather than by filing for a writ of review renders the hearing before the
    mayor a "superfluous" proceeding. We disagree. New Cingular's protest allowed
    the mayor an opportunity to correct any errors Clyde Hill may have made in
    imposing the fine. Providing an opportunity to correct error before resort to the
    courts is one of the purposes served by the doctrine of exhaustion of remedies.
    IGlRes.. Inc. v. City of Pasco. 
    180 Wash. App. 638
    , 642, 
    325 P.3d 275
    (2014).
    Clyde Hill makes a fleeting suggestion that New Cingular was collaterally
    estopped from attacking the notice of violation once the mayor affirmed it and no
    appeal was taken, citing Shoemaker v. City of Bremerton. 
    109 Wash. 2d 504
    , 
    745 P.2d 858
    (1987). Shoemaker involved a police officer who, after dropping a civil
    service appeal filed under RCW 41.12.090, sued in federal court alleging his
    demotion was retaliatory. The court held that a finding made in the prior
    adjudication before the civil service commission, an administrative body,
    collaterally estopped the officer from relitigating the basis for his demotion in
    court. Clyde Hill does not brief how the elements of collateral estoppel are
    satisfied in this case. The appellant in Shoemaker was subject to a statute that
    prescribes an administrative procedure for challenging an adverse employment
    action. The statutory procedure permits a limited appeal to the superior court on
    the record developed before the civil service commission. RCW 41.12.090. As
    8
    No. 71626-3-1/9
    discussed above, Clyde Hill does not identify an analogous statute setting up an
    administrative procedure for contesting a municipal fine.
    Finally, Clyde Hill contends that New Cingular's right to obtain a writ of
    review under RCW 7.16.040 precludes the granting of a declaratory judgment.
    Clyde Hill relies on Reeder v. King County. 
    57 Wash. 2d 563
    , 
    358 P.2d 810
    (1961).
    Reeder held that a declaratory judgment action was not available to property
    owners involved in a rezone dispute with King County because "the writ of
    certiorari was available to them and would have afforded them all relief to which
    they may be entitled in this case." 
    Reeder. 57 Wash. 2d at 564
    . New Cingular's
    reply brief points out that the bar erected by Reeder is no longer absolute after
    the adoption in 1967 of CR 57,4 as recognized by Ronken v. Board of
    Commissioners of Snohomish County. 
    89 Wash. 2d 304
    , 310, 
    572 P.2d 1
    (1977).5
    Ronken does direct courts to be "circumspect" in granting declaratory
    relief if an alternative remedy is available. 
    Ronken. 89 Wash. 2d at 310
    .
    Declaratory relief is often held to be unavailable when it is sought as a means of
    avoiding the strict statutory procedural rules and short time limits that typically
    apply to land use decisions and administrative agency decisions. See, e.g..
    Evergreen Wash. Healthcare Frontier LLC v. Dep't of Soc. & Health Servs.. 
    171 Wash. App. 431
    , 452, 
    287 P.3d 40
    (2012) (a declaratory judgment is not available if
    4 CR 57 states in part, "The existence of another adequate remedy does
    not preclude a judgment for declaratory relief in cases where it is appropriate."
    5 Clyde Hill has filed a motion to strike the portion of New Cingular's reply
    brief that argues Ronken in opposition to Reeder. Clyde Hill contends that if New
    Cingular wanted to rely on Ronken. the case should have been cited in the
    opening brief of appellant. We deny the motion. Explaining why a respondent's
    argument is incorrect is a proper subject for a reply brief.
    No. 71626-3-1/10
    courts can review the challenged agency action under the Administrative
    Procedure Act), review denied. 
    176 Wash. 2d 1028
    (2013); Grandmaster Sheng-
    Yen Lu v. King County. 
    110 Wash. App. 92
    , 106, 
    38 P.3d 1040
    (2002) (because the
    Land Use Procedure Act provides an adequate alternative means of review,
    declaratory relief is not proper). But Clyde Hill has identified no statute
    establishing strict procedural rules and short time limits in connection with a
    mayor's decision that his city has issued a valid fine. Under these
    circumstances, we conclude the superior court is free to exercise its trial
    jurisdiction by hearing New Cingular's complaint for a declaratory judgment.
    Clyde Hill contends the dismissal of New Cingular's declaratory judgment
    action can be affirmed on the alternative ground of untimeliness. A declaratory
    judgment action must be brought within a reasonable time, determined by
    analogy to the limitation period for a similar suit. Schreiner Farms. Inc. v. Am.
    Tower. Inc.. 
    173 Wash. App. 154
    , 163, 
    293 P.3d 407
    (2013). New Cingular filed its
    complaint more than two months after the mayor's decision. Clyde Hill argues
    that the proper analogy is to the 30-day deadline typical of appeals. New
    Cingular replies that the most analogous time limit is the three-year limitations
    period applicable to tax or municipal fee refunds. RCW 4.16.080(3); Carrillo v.
    City of Ocean Shores. 
    122 Wash. App. 592
    , 610, 
    94 P.3d 961
    (2004).6
    6 Clyde Hill has moved to strike this portion of New Cingular's brief, along
    with the Reeder/Ronken discussion, on the basis that it is a new argument
    improperly raised in the reply brief. We deny the motion. The issue of
    untimeliness as an alternative ground for affirmance was raised in Clyde Hill's
    brief of respondent, and New Cingular is entitled to reply to it.
    10
    No. 71626-3-1/11
    The trial court dismissed New Cingular's complaint solely on the ground
    that relief should have been sought by means of a petition for a writ of certiorari.
    The court did not reach the question of what time limit applies to a declaratory
    judgment action contesting the legality of a municipal fine. We leave that issue to
    the trial court on remand, holding only that it is inappropriate to apply a 30-day
    time limit by analogy to an appellate proceeding. The order of dismissal will not
    be affirmed on that alternative ground.
    To summarize, New Cingular's complaint for declaratory judgment
    properly invoked the superior court's original trial jurisdiction to adjudicate this
    dispute involving the legality of a municipal fine. In hearing New Cingular's
    complaint for declaratory judgment, the superior court is to consider the legality
    of the fine de novo and will not be limited to the facts and arguments in the
    record developed in the hearing before the mayor.
    Judgment for Clyde Hill is reversed, and the case is remanded for further
    proceedings, including consideration of New Cingular's motion for summary
    judgment. The award of attorney fees to Clyde Hill is also reversed.
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    WE CONCUR:
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    11