Administrative Procedures Act. The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) sets the process state agencies must follow when an agency takes administrative action. Individuals appealing agency actions must exhaust their administrative remedies with the agency prior to judicial review. Agencies offer administrative hearings that are quasi-judicial to hear appeals of agency actions. Administrative hearings adjudicate appeals by interpreting agency policy and regulations. Adjudication resembles what a court does, but it is less formal. Adjudicative proceedings determine legal rights, duties, or privileges when a hearing is required by law or by the Constitution.
Direct Appeals to the Court of Appeals. Under the APA, the final decision of an administrative agency in an adjudicative proceeding may be directly reviewed by the court of appeals either:
For direct review upon certification by the superior court, an application for direct review must be filed with the superior court within 30 days of the filing of the petition for review in superior court. The superior court may certify a case for direct review only if the judicial review is limited to the record of the agency proceeding and the court finds that:
Procedures for certification are established by court rule.
For direct review of final decisions of environmental boards, a party may file an application with the superior court and serve the appropriate environmental board and all parties of record within 30 days after filing the petition for review with the superior court. The application shall request the environmental board to file a certificate of appealability. An environmental board may issue a certificate of appealability if it finds that delay in obtaining a final and prompt determination of the issues would be detrimental to any party or the public interest and either:
Environmental boards include the Pollution Control Hearings Board, the Shorelines Hearings Board, and the Growth Management Hearings Board.
Land Use Petition Act. With limited exceptions, the Land Use Petition Act (LUPA) is the exclusive means of judicial review of land use decisions. The term "land use decision" is defined and means a final determination by a county, city, or incorporated town's body or officer with the highest level of authority, including those with authority to hear appeals, to make a determination on:
A petition for review under the LUPA is commenced with the timely filing of a petition in superior court within 21 days of the date the land use decision is issued. Superior courts provide expedited review of land use decisions appealed under LUPA, and must set matters for hearing within sixty days of the deadline for a local jurisdiction's record submission. The superior court may affirm or reverse a land use decision, or remand it for modification or further proceedings by the local jurisdiction.
Appeal From a Superior Court Decision. The Washington State Supreme Court adopts rules of appellate procedure (RAPs), which establish judicial review processes for the Supreme Court and courts of appeals. RAPs establish several logistical deadlines for court proceedings, including:
RAP 2.3 grants that a party may seek discretionary review of any act of the superior court that may not be appealed as a matter of right.
Administrative Procedure Act. The final decision of an administrative agency in an adjudicative proceeding may be directly reviewed by the court of appeals upon certification by the superior court. Transfer of cases does not require the filing of a motion for discretionary review with the court of appeals. The superior court may certify cases for transfer to the court of appeals upon finding that:
If the superior court certifies a final decision of an administrative agency in an adjudicative proceeding, the superior court shall transfer the matter to the court of appeals as a direct appeal. A party contesting a superior court decision granting or denying certification for direct review may file a motion for discretionary review with the court of appeals.
Land Use Petition Act. The superior court may transfer the judicial review of a land use decision to the court of appeals upon finding that all parties have consented to the transfer to the court of appeals and agreed that the judicial review can occur based upon an existing record. Transfer of cases does not require the filing of a motion for discretionary review with the court of appeals.
The provisions creating a direct appeal process expire on July 1, 2026.
PRO: Thurston County gets the bulk of administrative agency appeals in Thurston County Superior Court. It helps parties that help courts quickly address their cases. There is a significant backlog of criminal cases. There are hundreds of administrative cases each year. They should be transferred directly to the court of appeals which has the capacity to take these cases. It frees up superior courts to work on the backlog of criminal cases. It simplifies the current convoluted process for direct appeals to the court of appeals. It has a five year sunset clause and an emergency clause to go into effect right away. The court of appeals and all of its three divisions has agreed to share this new workload.