In this action by the plaintiffs Donald Coffin and Meadowdale Neighborhood Committee (hereinafter Meadowdale), challenging approval by the City of Edmonds of a Planned Residential Development (PRD), the principal issue is whether service of process on the secretary to the mayor complies with RCW 4.28.080(2). 1 For the reasons that follow, we hold it does not.
Application for approval of the PRD was made on May 3, 1978. Listed as applicant and designer was respondent David Kinderfather. The property owner was shown to be Sierra West Construction Company. An environmental checklist was submitted with the application. This document named Sierra West Construction Company as proponent of the project.
After hearings before the planning commission and Amenities Design Board, the application came to the city council which granted approval on August 1, 1978. Meadowdale filed suit in Superior Court on August 31, 1978, the last day within which an appeal could be taken from the council's decision. 2 The action was designated a petition for writ of certiorari and/or declaratory relief. Named as defendants were Kinderfather and the City of Edmonds. The summons, petition, and motion and order directing the defendants to show cause why the writ should not be granted were served on Kinderfather, the city clerk, and the secretary to the mayor. 3 The owner of the property, Sierra West, was not named in the suit or served with process.
The show cause hearing was held September 15, 1978. Prior to the hearing, the City served on counsel for Meadowdale copies of the City's answer and affirmative defenses and its brief. The affirmative defenses raised included failure to join a necessary party (Sierra West) and insufficient service of process. At the hearing, however, the only ground argued by the City for quashing the writ was
The writ subsequently issued, but on December 12, 1978, the City moved to dismiss the action for insufficient service of process. The court initially denied the motion on the ground the defense had been waived because it had not been joined with the City's previously raised defense of failure to join a necessary party. However, the court again reconsidered, determined that insufficient service had not been waived, and dismissed the action because the time limit for appeal had run. The sufficiency of service is thus the threshold issue.
Meadowdale acknowledges the general rule: When a statute designates a particular person or officer upon whom service of process is to be made in an action against a municipality, no other person or officer may be substituted. 56 Am. Jur. 2d
Municipal Corporations, Counties, and Other Political Subdivisions
§ 854 (2d ed. 1971); 64 C.J.S.
Municipal Corporations
§ 2205(c)(3) (1950). However, the argument is made that service on the mayor's secretary was, in essence, service on the mayor himself. Reliance is placed upon this court's decision in
Thayer v. Edmonds,
Regarding the factual distinctions, we note that in
Thayer
the person upon whom process was to be served
Likewise, this case is distinguishable from the earlier case of
Lee v. Barnes,
Here, the process server never spoke with the mayor to make arrangements for a mutually agreed upon manner of delivery. Moreover, the record, in the form of an affidavit by the mayor, makes clear that no one had been appointed or delegated by the mayor to accept service for the City. For these reasons, this case falls outside either the Thayer or Lee analysis.
In addition to finding Meadowdale's cited authority factually dissimilar, we think there is a more fundamental reason for holding that under the circumstances here presented service on the mayor's secretary was insufficient. The general rule is that strict compliance is required with statutes naming particular persons upon whom service of process is to be made in actions against municipalities. 17 E. McQuillin,
Municipal Corporations
§ 49.32 (3d rev. ed. 1968). Application of the rule of strict compliance in other jurisdictions has yielded cases with results contrary to the
The New York court's observations in Fillyow v. County of Westchester, supra, are particularly relevant because of the factual similarity between that case and the case at bar. In Fillyow, the governing section of the civil practice act provided that in actions against the county, service was to be made on the county attorney and, in addition, on either the chairman or clerk of the board of supervisors, the county clerk, or the county treasurer. Service was duly made on the county attorney and on an employee of t,he clerk of the board of supervisors who stamped an acknowledgment of service on the summons. The court stated: f
The service of the summons on an employee in the oAk .... of the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors did not comp]" with the statute . . ., unless by some action of the Clerk service on an employee in her office was directed by her and recognized as valid . . .
In this case, however, it does not appear that the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors had directed service of process to be made on the employee, or had authorized the employee to accept service. No more is asserted than that a stamp admitting service was placed on the summons by the employee. The gratuitous and unilateral act of the employee can scarcely bind the Clerk or the county.
(Citations omitted.)
Fillyow,
at 502.
See also Tuft v. Allen,
There are public policy reasons for our decision. To hold otherwise under the factual circumstances here presented would open the door to a host of problems which would inevitably arise in similar situations. Courts would be called upon to decide, for example, whether delivery of the summons to a deputy mayor is sufficient, or to a mayor's administrative assistant, or to the secretary to an administrative assistant, and so on. Confusion and uncertainty can be avoided by interpreting the statute according to its plain terms. 4
We recognize Meadowdale's contention that although the mayor was not served, he did in fact receive actual notice of service and the pending litigation. However,
A corollary issue to the question of sufficiency of service is Meadowdale's claim that the trial court erred in limiting discovery such that the secretary could not be deposed to determine whether an agency relationship existed, and, if so, whether the secretary was authorized as agent to accept service. The contention lacks merit. Meadowdale never sought to take the secretary's deposition. The trial court did not commit error by failing to rule on a question never presented to it.
Hamilton v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
Even though service of process was insufficient, Meadowdale argues the City waived the defense by failing to join it with the motion to dismiss for failure to join a necessary party. Waiver is governed by CR 12(g) and (h).
6
Our reading of these provisions is that certain defenses,
The City argues in its cross appeal that the trial court erred in allowing the addition of Sierra West Construction Company as a party to relate back to the date of the original filing of the petition for certiorari. Because the City of Edmonds was not properly served, we need not discuss the relation-back issue except to note that in the absence of proper service within the applicable time limit, there is nothing to which the amendment naming Sierra West could relate back. Therefore, Sierra West was not served within the time allowed for appeal.
James, A.C.J., and Ringold, J., concur.
Notes
RCW 4.28.080 reads in pertinent part:
"The summons shall be served by delivering a copy thereof, as follows:
"(2) If against any town or incorporated city in the state, to the mayor thereof."
Edmonds City Code § 12.10.190 Appeals provides:
"Any final decision for which no other direct appeal is specifically provided in this chapter approving or disapproving any subdivision, plat, short subdivision, short plat or lot line adjustment, and for which all other appeals specifically authorized have been timely exhausted, shall be reviewable for unlawful, arbitrary, capricious or corrupt action or nonaction by writ of review before the Superior Court of Snohomish County. The action may be brought by any property owner in the city, who deems himself aggrieved thereby; provided, that application for a writ of review shall be made to the court within thirty days from any decision so to be reviewed. The cost of transcription of all records ordered certified by the court for such review shall be borne by the appellant.” (Ordinance No. 1703 § 19 (1974)).
The employee served was, in fact, not the mayor's regular secretary but was working temporarily while the regular secretary was on vacation.
In addition to the requirement of strict compliance, there may be an additional reason for holding that service on the mayor's secretary was insufficient. Although the issue was not raised on appeal, it is fundamental that municipal corporations, being creatures of the state, derive their authority, powers, and duties from the legislature.
Campbell v. Saunders,
In its reply brief, Meadowdale takes a slightly different tack by pointing out that the deposition of the mayor himself regarding service of process was sought, but the court's protective order prohibited inquiry by deposition into the sufficiency of service. However, it remains that the heart of Meadowdale's claim is that an agency relationship, deducible from facts and circumstances, even if not existing by virtue of a specific authorization, may have existed as between the mayor and the secretary. It does not appear from the record that this theory was presented to the trial court. As an appellate court, we will not consider theories not presented to the trial court.
McCord v. Tielsch,
"(g) . . .A party who makes a motion under this rule may join with it any other motions herein provided for and then available to him. If a party makes a
"(h) . . .
"(1) A defense of lack of jurisdiction over the person, improper venue, insufficiency of process, or insufficiency of service of process is waived (A) if omitted from a motion in the circumstances described in subdivision (g), or (B) if it is neither made by motion under this rule nor included in a responsive pleading or an amendment thereof permitted by Rule 15(a) to be made as a matter of course." CR 12(g) and (h)(1).
It should also be noted that no contention is made that by appearing at the show cause hearing the City waived its right to challenge sufficiency of service. See CR 4(d)(5).
