This opinion was
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I PATE ^£P 1 2.2019 Susan L. Carlson
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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
In the Matter of the Recall Petition of NO. 97305-9
JILLRITTER, EN BANC
Respondent.
Filed SEP 1 ? 2019
STEPHENS, J.—^Two voters in the city of Tonasket, Washington, filed a
recall petition, seeking to remove respondent Jill Ritter from her position on the
Tonasket City Council. As detailed below, the Okanogan County Superior Court
determined all six of the allegations in the petition were insufficient to warrant a
recall election. One ofthe two petitioners, appellant Brenda Jones, sought review in
this court. We affirm the superior court's dismissal of all six charges.
BACKGROUND
The recall petition alleges that Councilwoman Ritter committed the following
acts of misconduct warranting her recall:
1. Attempted influence over a Tonasket Police Officer's investigation ofher
relative's son;
In re Recall ofRitter (Jill), 97305-9
2. Improperly questioning the Chief of Police about the same Tonasket
Police Officer's investigation under the guise of a budget meeting;
3. Improperly obtaining a key to and entering the Tonasket Police
Department with the Mayor to obtain and review Personnel Files and to
install cameras within the Police Department;
4. Falsely and publicly claiming a Tonasket Police Officer was on a Brad)f^
list; and lying about verifying this claim;
5. Conspiring to disband the Tonasket Police Department in favor of a
contract for police services with the Okanogan Coimty Sheriff; and
compromising the integrity ofinvestigative materials and evidence in the
process; and
6. Improperly withholding public records.
Clerk's Papers(CP)at 16.
In addition to the recall petition, the trial court considered several declarations
submitted by petitioner Jones, Diane MacGregor-Foreman, Jose Perez, John Cruz,
Darin Odegaard, and Brittany Wilson. It also considered declarations from
respondent Ritter, as well as from Michael Howe and Alice Attwood. After a
hearing, the trial court dismissed all six charges, finding them factually and legally
insufficient to sustain further action. Jones sought review in this court, assigning
error to the trial court's rulings on every charge. Appellant's Br.(App. Br.) at 1.
ANALYSIS
A voter who seeks to recall an elected official must charge that the official
"committed an act or acts of malfeasance, or an act or acts of misfeasance while in
'Brady v. Maryland,373 U.S. 83, 83 S. Ct. 1194, 10 L. Ed. 2d 215 (1963).
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office, or has violated the oath of office." RCW 29A.56.110. The statute defines
these terms:
(1) "Misfeasance" or "malfeasance" in office means any wrongful
conduct that affects, interrupts, or interferes with the performance of official
duty;
(a) Additionally,"misfeasance" in office means the performance of
a duty in an improper marmer; and
(b) Additionally, "malfeasance" in office means the commission of
an unlawful act;
(2) "Violation of the oath of office" means the neglect or knowing
failure by an elective public officer to perform faithfully a duty imposed by
law.
Id.
Before the sponsors of a recall may seek supporting signatures, the superior
court ofthe county in which the officer subject to recall resides must determine that
the petition is both factually and legally sufficient. RCW 29A.56.130(2), .140,
.150(2); In re Recall ofPepper, 189 Wn.2d 546, 553, 403 P.3d 839 (2017)(citing
Chandler v. Otto, 103 Wn.2d 268, 274,693 P.2d 71 (1984)).
"A recall petition is legally sufficient ifit "'state[s] with specificity substantial
conduct clearly amounting to misfeasance, malfeasance or violation of the oath of
office'" and there is no legal justification for the challenged conduct." Recall of
Pepper, 189 Wn.2d at 554 (alteration in original)(quoting/« re Recall ofBoldt, 187
Wn.2d 542,549,386 P.3d 1104(2017)(quoting Chandler, 103 Wn.2d at 274)). The
petition must "identify the '"standard, law, or rule that would make the officer's
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conduct wrongful,improper, or unlawful.'"" Id. at 555(quoting/« re Recall ofBolt,
111 Wn.2d 168, 181, 298 P.3d 710 (2013)(quoting In re Recall ofAckerson, 143
Wn.2d 366, 377, 20 P.3d 930 (2001))).
A petition is factually sufficient if it alleges acts or failures to act that, without
justification, would constitute misfeasance, malfeasance, or a violation of the oath
of office. Id. If the petition alleges that the subject committed an unlawful act, it is
factually sufficient only if it also alleges '"facts indicating the official had
knowledge of and intent to commit an unlawful act.'" Id.(quoting Recall ofBoldt,
187 Wn.2d at 549 (citing In re Recall ofTelford, 166 Wn.2d 148, 158, 206 P.3d
1248 (2009))). A petitioner need not have firsthand knowledge of the facts
supporting a petition but must present some evidence beyond mere belief or
speculation that the charges are true. Id. "The purpose of requiring factual
sufficiency is to ensure that charges, 'although adequate on their face, do not
constitute grounds for recall unless supported by identifiable facts.'" In re Recall of
Wade, 115 Wn.2d 544,549,799P.2d 1179(1990){quoim^Teafordv. Howard, 104
Wn.2d 580, 585, 707 P.2d 1327(1985)).
The sufficiency of a recall petition is reviewed de novo. Recall ofBoldt, 187
Wn.2d at 549.
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In re Recall ofRitter (Jill), 97305-9
A. Instead of Identifying Any Specific Error in the Trial Court's Rulings,
Jones Argues Broadly That the Court Erred by Considering Any of the
Respondents' Factual Pleadings
The trial court ruled that the petition was both factually and legally insufficient
with respect to every charge. In her briefing in this court, Jones does not specifically
identify any single error in the trial court's rulings (with one exception, discussed
below). Instead, Jones argues generally that a respondent to a recall petition may
file only legal pleadings in the trial court, not factual ones. App. Br. at 6-7. Jones
contends that the trial court therefore erred by even considering the respondents'
factual pleadings and that this means our "review must be nearly entirely de novo"
App. Br. at 7. As noted, this is always the standard of review in a recall petition.
Under the umbrella ofthat general argument, Jones "stands on the factual allegations
in the initial Recall Petition and the arguments ofcounsel at the sufficiency hearing."
App. Br. at 7(citation omitted).
Jones is correct that the trial court does not determine the truth ofthe charges
when it rules on sufficiency. RCW 29A.56.140(at a sufficiency hearing,"[t]he court
shall not consider the truth of the charges, but only their sufficiency"). Contrary to
her argument, however, a trial court does not err by considering evidence submitted
in response to a recall petition; such evidence is admissible "for the purpose of
determining whether there is any factual basis for the charges." In re Recall of
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Beasley, 128 Wn.2d 419, 427, 908 P.2d 878 (1996); see, e.g., Recall of Wade, 115
Wn.2d at 549-51 (allegations that male candidate was ranked ahead of female
candidate "sometime in the selection process," combined with the fact that female
candidate was later selected, were not factually or legally sufficient to sustain a
charge that school board members violated the law against gender discrimination; in
reaching that conclusion, the court could consider the existence of affidavits by
school board members attesting to the reasons underlying their decision).
As detailed below, none of the trial court's sufficiency rulings rested on a
weighing of conflicting evidence or a determination of credibility. Jones therefore
fails to identify any grounds for reversing the trial court's rulings on factual
sufficiency. Additionally, Jones fails to challenge any ofthe trial court's rulings on
legal sufficiency, all independent, adequate bases for dismissing each charge. The
following section examines each charge and ruling and explains why the trial court
properly dismissed it.
B. We Affirm the Trial Court's Dismissal of Every Charge
In support of charges 1 ("[ajttempted influence over a Tonasket Police
Officer's investigation of her relative's son," CP at 16) and 2 ("[i]mproperly
questioning the Chief of Police about the same Tonasket Police Officer's
investigation under the guise of a budget meeting," id.), Jones alleged that, after
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Tonasket Reserve Officer John Cruz(R.O. Cruz)stopped a relative of Ritter's (Josh
McDaniel)and issued him citations for traffic infractions and failure to obey a police
officer, Josh McDaniel's father (Bob McDaniel) told Ritter, R.O. Cruz, and two
others present at a meeting that he intended to investigate R.O. Cruz's background
and report back to Ritter. Id. at 17. Jones also alleged that, about two weeks after
this meeting. Mayor Dennis Brown summoned Police Chief Darin Odegaard to a
"putative budget meeting," where Ritter was also in attendance. Id. at 17-18. Jones
contended that Ritter used the meeting to inquire into R.O. Cruz's background,
admittedly at the request of Bob McDaniel, and that Chief Odegaard objected to the
investigation and refused to answer any questions. Jones argued that this violated
RCW 35A.12.100, which vests "general supervision of the administration of
government and city interests" in the mayor. Id. at 18. Jones also claimed it was a
violation of Ritter's oath to impartially perform her duties. Id.
The trial court found both of these charges to be factually and legally
insufficient. With respect to charge 1, it noted that Ritter filed a declaration attesting
that Josh McDaniel was not related to her by blood or marriage, while Jones offered
no evidence that the two were related. Without evidence of a familial relationship,
there was nothing to sustain the inference ofimpartiality. The court also concluded
that the evidence submitted by Jones in support of charge 1 (notes from the meeting
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with Bob McDaniel)failed to indicate any statements by Ritter relating to R.O. Cruz,
much less an attempt to influence an investigation. Id. at 5. With respect to charge
2, the court noted that, according to the petition, the mayor was present for all ofthe
allegedly inappropriate questioning. Id. at 6. Because the mayor has hiring and
firing authority and did not object to any of the questioning and because Ritter
allegedly stopped all questioning as soon as Chief Odegaard objected, the court
concluded that the petition did not demonstrate any intent to violate the law(RCW
35A.12.100).
At the outset, it should be noted that the allegations in the petition are
ambiguous as to which McDaniel is actually Ritter's "relative." The enumerated
allegation states that Ritter interfered in the investigation of"her relative's son," CP
at 16, while the narrative allegation states that this investigation arose from "a traffic
stop on Josh McDaniel, a relative ofCouncilwoman Ritter's," id. at 17. Presumably,
ifone McDaniel is Ritter's relative, then the other is as well. In any event,the record
before this court contains no sworn statements relating to this factual question, only
the allegations in the petition itself. The report of proceedings (RP), however,
indicates that at some point, the trial court also considered a declaration by Ritter
attesting that "there is no relationship, marriage, blood relation at all to . . . Mr.
McDaniel." RP at 42. In her brief in this court, Jones takes issue with the trial
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court's consideration ofthis evidence: "It may well be that the Petitioner is incorrect
about a familial relationship between Ms. Ritter and Mr. McDaniel . . . [b]ut this
rebuttal should not be raised to the Superior Court." App. Br. at 6. The brief does
not otherwise raise any specific objection to the trial court's rulings on charges 1 and
2.
The trial court did not err. A superior court must consider the evidence
underlying an allegation, in order to determine the factual sufficiency of a recall
petition. Recall ofBeasley, 128 Wn.2d at 427. With respect to charge 1, the trial
court properly found that allegations that Ritter interfered on behalf of a relative
were factually insufficient where the only admissible evidence showed Ritter was
not related to the person (or persons) in question. This was not an impermissible
weighing of evidence; it was a proper determination that the allegations were
speculative. See Recall ofBoldt, 187 Wn.2d at 549. With respect to charge 2, Jones
asserts Ritter's questions about R.O. Cruz were improper because only the mayor
has authority to hire and fire police officers. CP at 18. The trial court properly found
that the record contained no evidence that Ritter sought to supersede the mayor's
authority in this area.
We affirm the trial court's dismissal of charges 1 and 2.
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In support of charge 3 ("[ijmproperly obtaining a key to and entering the
Tonasket Police Department with the Mayor to obtain and review Personnel Files
and to install cameras within the Police Department," id. at 16), Jones alleged that
on December 21, 2018, Mayor Brown directed the clerk and administrator of the
Tonasket Police Department to provide him with keys to the police department. Id.
at 18. Jones asserted that the next day Officer Jose Perez observed Ritter, Mayor
Brown,and a third person use the keys to enter the police department to install video
surveillance equipment. Id. at 19. According to Jones, when the clerk and
administrator (MacGregor-Foreman) returned from her Christmas vacation she
found that she could not situate her desk so as to prevent the new surveillance camera
from recording her computer screen. Id. MacGregor-Foreman then contacted the
sheriffs office and the city prosecutor's office to express concerns that the camera
placement violated privacy laws, and the sheriffs office responded by sending a
deputy to retrieve the surveillance equipment. Id. Jones alleged that this violated
"Chapter 35A.12 or 35A.11 [RCW]," which do not vest the city council with "the
authority to regulate the internal affairs of the Police Department, an executive
office." Id. Jones also claimed it violated chapter 10.97 RCW,the Washington State
Criminal Records Privacy Act.
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The superior court determined this charge to be factually and legally
insufficient. The court found it was undisputed that, after Mayor Brown fired Chief
Odegaard and R.O. Cruz, city Clerk Alice Attwood and Councilmember Marylou
Kriner contacted the city attorney about installing cameras in the police department
for security purposes. The court found that the installation was temporary and was
removed immediately after officials were notified about privacy concerns. It
therefore concluded that the petition did not demonstrate any attempt to violate the
law or engage in willful criminal conduct. Id. at 6.
The trial court did not err. With respect to this charge, Jones did not even
allege any intent to violate a law, let alone support such an allegation with evidence.
The petition alleges, at most, a mistake that Ritter and Mayor Brown made together
and then corrected as soon as it was brought to their attention. Those allegations do
not indicate a knowing and intentional violation of any privacy law, nor do they
suggest any attempt to usurp the mayor's authority. They are therefore legally
insufficient to sustain the petition. See Recall ofBoldt, 187 Wn.2d at 549.
We affirm the dismissal of charge 3.
In support of charge 4 ("[f]alsely and publicly claiming a Tonasket Police
Officer was on a Brady list; and lying about verifying this claim," CP at 16), Jones
alleged that Bob McDaniel attended a Tonasket City Council meeting on or about
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January 2, 2019, where he "implied that Ofc. Perez was on a Brady list in Spokane
County." Id. at 20. Jones asserted that Ritter stated she verified this through a phone
call to the Spokane County Prosecutor's Office. Id. Jones further alleged that on or
about January 15, 2019,"such a list was obtained from Spokane County," which did
not contain Perez's name, and that after Ritter was told of this fact, at a January 22,
2019 city council meeting, she claimed she had "found the information on the
internet." Id. According to Jones, this proves that Ritter made at least one false
statement and also invaded the mayor's authority to supervise and administer
government and city interests. Id.
The superior court determined this charge to be factually and legally
insufficient. It found that no minutes or other recording of either city council
meeting was provided but that, according to the evidence submitted by Jones,several
individuals made statements about Perez at the January 2 meeting. The court also
concluded that, since all ofthis alleged lying took place after the city council passed
Ordinance 798 (discussed below), which disbanded the police department on
conditions, the evidence did not suggest that Ritter violated any law or intended to
violate her duties as a councilmember. Id. at 7. In other words,the court determined
that the evidence suggested, at most, that several people might have made critical
remarks about a former Tonasket police officer at a January 2, 2019 public meeting.
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The trial court's ruling is correct. The record before this court contains a
declaration by MacGregor-Foreman attesting that Ritter publicly stated, on January
2,2019, that she had "made a call and confirmed" that Perez was on a Brady list, id.
at 56, and then later publicly stated, on January 22, 2019, that "she had found the
information on the internet," id. at 57. Contrary to Jones's allegations, this does not
prove that Ritter made a false statement. The lack of context provided makes it
impossible to determine whether these two statements are, in fact, mutually
exclusive, and this allegation is therefore insufficient to sustain the petition. See
Recall ofAckerson, 143 Wn.2d at 373 (petitioner's sworn statement that she heard
respondent admit to pocketing campaign contributions was factually insufficient to
sustain a charge of violating campaign finance laws where alleged admission was
too vague and lacking in context to indicate what actual conduct occurred).
We affirm the trial court's dismissal of charge 4.
In support of charge 5 ("[cjonspiring to disband the Tonasket Police
Department in favor of a contract for police services with the Okanogan County
Sheriff; and compromising the integrity of investigative materials and evidence in
the process," CP at 16), Jones alleged that Ritter "violated her oath to faithfully and
diligently perform her duties of office" when she and other councilmembers voted
to adopt Ordinance 798, which temporarily suspended the operations ofthe Tonasket
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Police Department. Id. at 21. Jones acknowledged that cities need not maintain their
own police departments and may instead provide police services through contracts
with counties. Jones contended, however, that the manner in which Ordinance 798
was adopted was too hasty to constitute good governance, as it forced police
department employees to "scramble" to store and delete files in time for the
transition. Id.
The superior court found this charge factually and legally insufficient. It
concluded that the city council adopted Ordinance 798 only after Mayor Brown fired
the chief of police and another officer and the city was therefore "without a viable
police force." Id. at 8. The court found this was a proper exercise of the city
council's authority, which Ritter initiated only after consulting with the city attorney.
This ruling is correct. The exercise of discretionary authority cannot be
grounds for recall unless it is "unreasonable." In re Recall ofKast, 144 Wn.2d 807,
817-18, 31 P.3d 677(2001). Jones alleged the city council adopted Ordinance 798
too quickly, but the trial court found the undisputed facts established a reasonable
basis for the city council's action. Under that circumstance, the petition is legally
insufficient. See id. (where responsive pleadings showed officials had legal
justification for ejecting an individual from a public meeting; petition based on that
ejection was legally insufficient).
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We affirm the dismissal of charge 5.
In support of charge 6("[ijmproperly withholding public records," CP at 16),
Jones alleged that she made two public record requests to Tonasket city agencies:
one for "copies of any public records pertaining to the camera installation in the
Tonasket Police Department"^ and one for "all cell phone records, to include calls,
te[x]ts, Facebook Messenger threads, and other communications with city officials
related to city business contained on Councilwoman Ritter's phone(s)."^ Id. at 21.
Jones acknowledged that some records were produced in response to these requests
but alleged that others must have been withheld. She asserted that some of the text
^ Jones's written request for camera-related records read, in relevant part:
I am requesting an opportunity to inspect or obtain copies of public records
that pertain to the information regarding the breach of the security of the
Police Department. Who authorized the placement of the cameras and who
paid for the cameras and the installation. Did the placement of the cameras
violate the privacy of the public and/or violate the agreement to Spillman?
Who had access to the footage ofthe camera system. Who had keys and who
breached the police department other than the Police officers themselves and
the Police Clerk. Who authorized the disbursement of the keys to those
individuals.
CP at 27.
^ Jones's request for cell phone records read, in relevant part:
I am requesting an opportunity to inspect or obtain copies of public records
that pertain to city business ALL CELL PHONE RECORDS,INCLUDING
CALLS, TEXT MESSAGES, FACEBOOK MESSENGER MESSAGES
MADE TO AND FROM CITY OFFICIALS AND ALL CITY BUSINESS
CONDUCTED OR DISCUSSED ON YOUR PERSONAL OR FORREST
SERVICE WORK CELL PHONES WITHIN THE DATES OF DEC. 17™
THROUGH TO Dec. 30^^
CP at 29.
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and Messenger threads produced in response to the first request were incomplete,
that no call logs at all were produced, and that no receipts or contracts related to
equipment or installation were produced in response to the second request. Jones
claimed this violated the Public Records Act, chapter 42.56 RCW. CP at 22.
The superior court found this charge factually and legally insufficient because
it was based only on "speculative statements and ... unwarranted conclusions." Id.
at 9.
This ruling is correct. Neither the original petition nor Jones's brief in this
court explains the basis for the inference that some responsive records must have
been withheld, and there are several readily apparent problems with Jones's theory.
For example, Jones complained that no call logs were produced, id. at 21, but she
failed to request any such logs, id. at 29. Jones also complained about the response
to the camera-related request, id. at 21-22, but that request was made to the Tonasket
Police Department, id. at 27. There is no indication that Ritter is the custodian of
records for that agency.
We affirm the dismissal of charge 6.
CONCLUSION
The trial court correctly held that Jones's recall petition is factually and legally
insufficient. The court did not improperly engage in fact-finding, and there is no
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prohibition against considering factual pleadings by the respondent to a recall
petition. We affirm the trial court's ruling in its entirety and dismiss the petition.
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In re Recall ofRitter (Jill), 97305-9
WE CONCUR:
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