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      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

PACIFIC RIM PAVING,
                                                 DIVISION ONE
                     Appellant,
                                                 No. 69808-7-1

                                                 UNPUBLISHED OPINION
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND
INDUSTRIES,
                     Respondent.                 FILED: June 2, 2014


       Dwyer, J. - The Department of Labor and Industries rejected as untimely

Pacific Rim Paving's appeal of an infraction for a violation of the contractor
registration act, chapter 18.27 RCW. Pacific Rim now appeals the superior
court's order dismissing its appeal of the Department's decision. Because Pacific
Rim fails to establish error, we affirm.



       On May 4, 2010, the Department of Labor and Industries mailed a notice
of infraction and assessment of a $1,000 penalty for a violation of the contractor

registration act to Pacific Rim Paving. The cover letter directed the recipient to
do one of the following: (1) register as a contractor within 10 days for a reduced
penalty of $500; (2) pay the $1,000 fine within 20 days; or (3) file an appeal. The
letter includes the following paragraph regarding the third choice:
No. 69808-7-1/2



      3. File an appeal: Per RCW 18.27.250, you may appeal your
      infraction in writing.
      a. A statement with your specific reason for appealing, AND
      b. A $200 CASHIERS CHECK (required) for each infraction, AND
      c. Both must be received by this office within 20 days from the date
      of this letter (that date is located in the upper left hand corner). If
      you do not submit both your statement and the $200 certified
      check, it will not be considered an appeal, and your request
      will not be processed and will be denied.



      The infraction form includes the following paragraph:

      You may contest this infraction at a hearing conducted pursuant to
      RCW 34.05. To contest (appeal) this infraction a written request
      specifying the grounds for the appeal and a certified check in the
      amount of two hundred dollars ($200) must be received within
      twenty (20) days of the mailing of this infraction. Appeals should
      include the infraction number(s) and be mailed to the Department of
      Labor and Industries at the address at the top of this infraction.
      Unless contested, the determination of the violation shall be final
      and penalty immediately due. If you are an unregistered contractor
      you bear the burden of proof that this infraction did not occur. If the
      infraction is against a registered contractor the burden of proofwill
      be the responsibility of the Department. The hearing allows for all
      parties to subpoena witnesses, including the compliance officer
      who issued this infraction.

      United States Postal Service records indicate that James Hanson, Pacific

Rim's registered agent, provided a signature and accepted delivery of the

Department's letter on May 20, 2010. On May 26, the Department received a
document signed by Hanson on behalf of Pacific Rim and stating the following:
"This notice is in protest of your infraction (#NSUMJ00457). L&Iwas unjustified
in suspension of contractor's license. Infraction was not justified, so is mute. L&
I continues to be in violation of the federal court order." Pacific Rim paid a $200

appeal bond on June 9.
No. 69808-7-1/3



      On June 9, 2010, the Department sent a letter to Pacific Rim denying its

appeal. Citing RCW 18.27.250, the letter provides the following reason:

      Appeal was not received within 20 days of service of the infraction.
      The infraction was placed in US mail on May 4, 2010. The appeal
      request and $200 appeal bond had to have been received on or
      before the close of business of May 24, 2010 to be accepted as
      timely.

       Pacific Rim appealed the decision to the Skagit County Superior Court.

After briefing and argument, the court granted the Department's motion to

dismiss the case based on Pacific Rim's failure to perfect its appeal of the

infraction to the Department pursuant to RCW 18.27.250.

       Pacific Rim appeals.

                                         II


       Washington's Administrative Procedure Act (APA), chapter 34.05 RCW,
governs judicial review of administrative agency decisions. RCW 34.05.510. We
apply the standards of RCW 34.05 directly to the record before the Department,
sitting in the same position as the superior court. Tapper v. Emp't Sec. Dep't,
122Wn.2d 397, 402, 858 P.2d 494 (1993). We review the Department's legal
conclusions de novo, giving substantial weight to the Department's interpretation
of the statute it administers. Citv of Redmond v. Cent. Puaet Sound Growth

Mamt. Hearings Bd.. 136 Wn.2d 38, 46, 959 P.2d 1091 (1998).

       Pacific Rim bears the burden of demonstrating the invalidity of the

Department's rejection of its request for an appeal as untimely. RCW
34.05.570(1 )(a). Without specifying statutory grounds for relief, Pacific Rim
contends that the Department's action was based on an erroneous interpretation
No. 69808-7-1/4



of the contractor registration act and violated the APA and due process. To

prevail, Pacific Rim must demonstrate that the Department's action was

unconstitutional or arbitrary and capricious. See RCW 34.05.570(4)(c)(i), (iii).

An agency's decision is arbitrary and capricious if it is the result of willful and

unreasoning disregard of the facts and circumstances. Overlake Hosp. Ass'n v.

Dep't of Health, 170 Wn.2d 43, 50, 239 P.3d 1095 (2010).

        Pacific Rim first contends that the 20-day period allowed for challenging

an infraction does not begin until the contractor receives actual notice of the

infraction, either by personal service or by mail, as demonstrated by a returned

receipt. We disagree.

        The legislature has directed the Department to strictly enforce the

contractor registration act. RCW 18.27.005 provides:

        This chapter shall be strictly enforced. Therefore, the doctrine of
        substantial compliance shall not be used by the department in the
        application and construction of this chapter. Anyone engaged in the
        activities of a contractor is presumed to know the requirements of
        this chapter.

At the time the Department mailed the notice in May 2010, former RCW

18.27.230 (Laws of 2007, ch. 436, § 12) provided in part:

        The department may issue a notice of infraction ifthe department
        reasonably believes that the contractor has committed an infraction
        under this chapter. A notice of infraction issued under this section
        shall be personally served on the contractor named in the notice by
        the department's compliance inspectors or service can be made by
        certified mail directed to the contractor named in the notice of
        infraction at the contractor's last known address of record.

And former RCW 18.27.250 (Laws of 2007, ch. 436, § 14) provided in pertinent

part:
No. 69808-7-1/5



      If a party desires to contest the notice of infraction, the party shall
      file a notice of appeal with the department specifying the grounds of
      the appeal within twenty days of service of the infraction in a
      manner provided by this chapter. The appeal must be accompanied
      by a certified check for two hundred dollars ....

According to RCW 18.27.010(11),

      "Service," except as otherwise provided in RCW 18.27.225 and
      18.27.370, means posting in the United States mail, properly
      addressed, postage prepaid, return receipt requested, or personal
      service. Service by mail is complete upon deposit in the United
      States mail to the last known address provided to the department.

       Without any explanation or authority, Pacific Rim relies on language in the

current version of RCW 18.27.370 to support its claim that service by mail is not

complete until proved by a returned receipt. See former RCW 18.27.370 (Laws
of 2011, ch. 301, § 3, ch. 15, § 3). But in May 2010, former RCW 18.27.370
included provisions for serving notices of assessments and warrants for payment
defaults, procedures not relevant here, and did not refer to service of a notice of
infraction. See former RCW 18.27.370 (Laws of 2001, ch. 159, § 6). Nothing in

that section contradicts the application of the rule that service is "complete upon

deposit in the United States mail," when the Department chooses service by mail
to serve a contractor with a notice of infraction. Former RCW 18.27.250; RCW

18.27.010(11).

       Similarly, Pacific Rim offers no support for its bald claim that the APA
prohibits consideration of the date of mailing as the date of service in RCW
34.05.413(3). RCW 34.05.413(3) provides only:

       An agency may provide forms for and, by rule, may provide
       procedures for filing an application for an adjudicative proceeding.
       An agency may require by rule that an application be in writing and
       that it be filed at a specific address, in a specified manner, and
No. 69808-7-1/6



      within specified time limits. The agency shall allow at least twenty
      days to apply for an adjudicative proceeding from the time notice is
      given of the opportunity to file such an application.

Nothing in this section prohibits consideration of the "time notice is given" as the

day that service by mail is complete, as contemplated by RCW 18.27.010(11)

and former RCW 18.27.250.


       Moreover, Pacific Rim's claim of a due process violation is nothing more

than a complaint of unfairness. Obviously, Pacific Rim would prefer a rule

requiring the Department to provide actual notice to a contractor, followed by at

least 20 days to apply for an adjudicative proceeding. Such policy concerns are

better addressed to the legislature. Appellate courts do not rewrite statutes or

create policy. See Sedlacek v. Hillis. 145 Wn.2d 379, 390, 36 P.3d 1014 (2001).

       Pacific Rim also claims that the Department failed to properly address the

envelope in which it mailed the notice of infraction, as required by RCW

18.27.010(11), by using the wrong name for the holder of the contractor's license.

Pacific Rim claims that the correct name is "Pacific Rim Paving Inc." But the

Department produced a record from its contractor registration website on

October 31, 2011, showing the registered contractor for license number

"PACIFRP930JC," as "PACIFIC RIM PAVING" with a parent company listed as

"PACIFIC RIM CONSTRUCTION INC." The infraction form lists the business

name as "Pacific Rim Paving" with license number "PACIFRP930JC." Pacific

Rim fails to establish error in this regard.

       In sum, Pacific Rim fails to demonstrate that the Department's decision to

deny as untimely its application for an appeal of the notice of infraction was
No. 69808-7-1/7



unconstitutional or arbitrary and capricious. The Department completed service

by mail on May 4, 2010 and did not receive a written statement with reasons for

an appeal and a $200 cashier's check for an appeal bond within 20 days thereof.

Pacific Rim fails to demonstrate error in the Department's rejection of the letter

filed May 26 and the bond filed June 9. The superior court did not err in granting

the Department's motion to dismiss.

       Affirmed.                                                 1



We concur:
