v.
THE BOARD OF CLALLAM COUNTY COMMISSIONERS et al., Appellants.
S. Brooke Taylor, Prosecuting Attorney, and Craig A. Ritchie, Deputy, for appellants.
Niichel & Cossel, P.S., and Richard J. Niichel, for respondents.
Smith Troy, Prosecuting Attorney, by Thomas J. Taylor, Jr., Deputy, and John C. Merkel, Prosecuting Attorney, amici curiae.
STAFFORD, J.
On March 2, 1972, the Board of County Commissioners for Clallam County (hereinafter the Board) passed an interim zoning ordinance for a portion of that county. Respondents, residents and taxpayers of the county, challenged the ordinance by a writ of certiorari. A subsequent hearing before the Superior Court resulted in the ordinance being held invalid. The Board and the Planning Commission (hereinafter the Commission) appeal.
[1, 2] Initially, appellants urge that respondents lack standing to attack the ordinance. We do not agree. In Pierce v. King County, 62 Wn.2d 324, 382 P.2d 628 (1963), we recognized certiorari as an appropriate remedy to test the reasonableness and validity of a zoning ordinance. We also have held that residents of an area encompassed by a[*798] zoning plan have a sufficient "protected interest" to grant them standing. Anderson v. Island County, 81 Wn.2d 312, 501 P.2d 594 (1972). Nevertheless, appellants argue, the application for the writ failed to comply with RCW 7.16.050 in that it was not accompanied by an affidavit from a beneficially interested party. That asserted defect was corrected, however, at the hearing on appellants' motion to quash the writ. Respondents supplied the missing affidavits and the Superior Court ruled that they cured any previous deficiency. It held further, that if leave to amend were necessary he would grant it "in the interest of fundamental fairness." We have reviewed the record, including the affidavits filed by respondents, and agree the trial court was correct in finding that respondents are "citizens, taxpayers, and property owners in Clallam County, whose property might be adversely affected by the zoning ordinance." This finding, in turn, supports the conclusion of law that respondents have standing. Anderson v. Island County, supra.
Appellants also argue that respondents have been guilty of laches and should be denied relief. Although some 20 months elapsed between the original application for a writ of certiorari and the date of hearing, the record reveals that most delays were not unreasonable. There were at least four major causes: (1) difficulty in obtaining the services of visiting judges; (2) an agreement with the prosecutor that the action would be held in abeyance pending the outcome of county elections; (3) difficulty encountered by the county in supplying requested records; and (4) failure of the county promptly to answer propounded interrogatories. Accordingly, there is substantial evidence to support the finding that respondents were not deleterious in their prosecution of the litigation and that appellants were not substantially damaged thereby.
In findings of fact 5 and 6 the trial court dealt with specific inadequacies found in the records of both the Commission and the Board. First, the trial court found the Commission had "incorporated no findings of fact or reasons for its action in its motion for approval of the ordinance." Next, it found the Board "made substantial changes in the ordinance" but had failed to make "findings of fact ... or an analysis of the findings [which they] considered to be controlling." Based thereon, the trial court concluded, correctly, that the Commission and the Board failed to satisfy the requirements of RCW 36.70.600[1] and RCW 36.70.630[2] respectively.
[*800] Appellants argue in the alternative, however, that the statutes do not apply to "interim zoning" measures, or, if they do, there was substantial compliance. We do not agree with either position.
Insofar as appellants' contention that the Commission substantially complied with the requirements of RCW 36.70.600, it is only necessary to comment that the Commission failed to follow a specific statutory mandate. It did not incorporate in its motion of approval "the findings of fact of the commission and the reasons for its actions." The purpose of such a requirement, obviously, is to assist the Board in its consideration of the ordinance. A motion for approval of the ordinance which neither sets forth findings of fact nor reasons for the Commission's action, cannot be said to substantially comply with the statute.
No one argues that the Board's changes in the Commission's recommendations were not in fact substantial. The Board is authorized to make such changes in the Commission's recommendations as it deems necessary. But changes may not be made until the Board first "adopt[s] its own findings of fact and statement setting forth the factors considered ... and its own analysis of findings considered by it to be controlling." RCW 36.70.630. The Board did not comply with this requirement. The argument of substantial compliance is without merit.
With but few possible exceptions, not important here, the process of initially adopting a zoning code (as differentiated from amending a zoning code or reclassifying previously zoned land) is legislative in nature. Fleming v. Tacoma, 81 Wn.2d 292, 298-99, 502 P.2d 327 (1972). Additionally, adoption of a zoning ordinance is a "major action" in that it is discretionary and nonduplicative. Loveless v. Yantis, 82 Wn.2d 754, 513 P.2d 1023 (1973). Thus, the only question remaining is whether the ordinance will significantly affect the environment.
Appellants assign error to the trial court's conclusion that the meetings of the Commission violated the "appearance of fairness doctrine." The conclusion is based on findings that two members of the Commission owned property within a "reasonable proximity to the zoned area." The record does not support the conclusion.
We are aware that Buell dealt with the rezone of a small area whereas this case is concerned with the initial interim zoning of a substantial segment of the county. Thus far, all cases to which we have applied the "appearance of fairness doctrine" have involved the rezoning of land or the amendment of existing zoning codes. As we pointed out in Fleming v. Tacoma, supra, adopting a zoning ordinance is a policy-making function, whereas amending an ordinance, or reclassifying land thereunder, involves adjudication between the rights of the proponents and opponents of the change. Nevertheless, we do not indicate, by the instant case, that the doctrine is necessarily inapplicable in all cases concerned with an initial adoption of zoning ordinances. Rather, we hold only that the issue is not before us because no violation of the doctrine has been demonstrated. To this extent the conclusion of the trial court is not supportable.
With the minor exception just noted, the order of the Superior Court declaring Clallam County Interim Zoning Ordinance 41 invalid is affirmed.
HALE, C.J., and FINLEY, ROSELLINI, HUNTER, HAMILTON, WRIGHT, UTTER, and BRACHTENBACH, JJ., concur.