Bay Industry, Inc., appeals a judgment of the Jefferson County Superior Court which affirmed a decision by the Board of County Commissioners vacating a county road. The vacation proceedings were initiated by a petition to the Board purportedly signed by 10 freeholders. Appellant contends that the petition had insufficient freeholder signatures, that the Board's action was arbitrary and capricious and that Board-imposed conditions for vacating the road violated appellant's constitutional right to equal protection of the law. We reverse, holding that one of the Board's conditions for vacating the road did violate appellant's right to equal protection.
On March 20, 1979, five married couples, whose land abuts the Lone Star Ranch Road, a county road, petitioned the Board to vacate it. Appellant, another abutting landowner, 1 opposed the petition. After a hearing, the Board voted to vacate the road on condition that petitioners grant easements along the road to the power company, the fire department, and each other. Petitioners were not required to grant appellant an easement. Appellant appealed to superior court by writ of certiorari.
Because superior court review was by writ of certio
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rari, RCW 7.16.120, the court was limited to review of the record before the Board and to a determination of whether the Board's action was arbitrary and capricious or contrary to law.
Andrew v. King Cy.,
RCW 36.87.020 requires a road vacation petition to be signed by 10 freeholders residing in the vicinity of the road. Appellant contends that only 5 freeholders signed the petition, because each married couple constitutes only 1 freeholder. We disagree. A freeholder is one who holds either legal or equitable title to real estate.
Daniels v. Fossas,
RCW 36.87.060 provides:
If the . . . road is found useful as a part of_ the county road system it shall not be vacated, but if it is not useful and the public will be benefited by the vacation, the board may vacate the road . . .
(Italics ours.) Appellant contends that, because of a ravine crossing its property, the road provides the only feasible access to 30 of its 40 acres; thus, the Board was arbitrary and capricious in finding that the road is not useful. We disagree. The road was only one-half mile long, had not been maintained by the county since the 1950's and did not comply with county width standards. It was used only by the abutting landowners. Vacating the road did not land-lock appellant because it had access, albeit difficult, by another county road. The statutory test is not whether the road is of use to anyone, but whether it is useful as part of the county system. The public to be benefited included all taxpayers of the county, who deserve to be relieved of the *242 burden of maintaining a road of such limited utility. Under the circumstances, we cannot say that the Board's determination to vacate this road was arbitrary and capricious.
Finally, appellant contends that the Board's conditions for vacating the road violated its right to equal protection of the law because it was treated differently from all others in what should have been the same class—the abutting landowners. 2 We agree.
The rational relation test applies to the Board's action here.
3
Under that test, in the context presented here, conditions imposed by the Board must meet two requirements: (1) they must apply alike to all members within the designated class; and (2) a reasonable ground must exist for distinguishing between those within the class and those outside it.
Standing v. Department of Labor & Indus.,
Reversed.
Reed, C.J., and Petrich, J., concur.
Notes
Respondent claims that appellant is not an abutting landowner because the Lone Star Ranch Road terminates at appellant's property line. We disagree. Property abuts a street when there is no intervening land between it and the street.
Kemp v. Seattle,
Appellant also argues that the conditions violated due process. This argument misconstrues the basic nature of due process. While it is, in a sense, protection against arbitrary action by the State, the essential elements of procedural due process are notice and an opportunity to be heard or defend before a competent tribunal.
See Senior Citizens League v. Department of Social Sec.,
Two tests are used to measure classifications alleged to violate equal protection: the strict scrutiny test and the rational relation test.
State v. Smith,
