How to Petition for Superior Court Review
by: Northwest Justice Project
When should I use this packet?
This information relates to DSHS cases like TANF, Medicaid
(including long term care), Food Assistance, licensing, and child care.
Use this packet if you already had a fair hearing with an
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). If you disagree with something DSHS
does and have NOT yet had a fair hearing, use our publication called Representing
Yourself at a Fair Hearing. It is available from our web site, www.washingtonlawhelp.org,
or from CLEAR at 1-888-201-1014 or from your local legal services
office.
Introduction
If you disagree with the final administrative decision, you may
appeal your case to Superior Court. The appeal is called a "Petition
for Review of an Administrative Order." You may file your appeal in
either the Superior Court of the county where you live or in Thurston
County Superior Court in Olympia.
This packet explains when and how to petition the Superior Court for
review. This is not an easy process. Do not get discouraged. You may
need to read this several times or ask someone about it. You can find
the laws regarding petitions for judicial review in RCW
34.05.510 through .598.
This packet includes forms you can use for Petition for Review of an
Administrative Order and Declaration of Service.
Do I have to use the administrative
process first?
Yes. Before you file a Petition for Review in Superior Court, you must
finish the administrative appeals process. If you do not, the Superior
Court cannot hear your case. There are two steps in the administrative
process:
- a fair hearing with an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) from the
Office of Administrative Hearings, and
- a Board of Appeals (BOA) Review. If the ALJ's decision is called
a "Final Order," skip this step.
If the ALJ's written decision is called an "Initial Order", you must
appeal to the BOA before you can file in Superior Court. This is
confusing, but it is very important. For more information, see WAC
388-02-0217 and 388-02-0600.
What is the deadline for filing a Petition
for Review?
You must file and serve a
Petition for Review within thirty
(30) days of the final administrative order. The 30 days starts
from the date on the decision, not the
date you got it. The instructions below explain what the Petition must
say, how and where to file it, who must get copies of the petition
(service), and how to serve it.
What are the general rules about
Petitions?
As a general rule, you can only raise issues and
arguments in your petition that you raised at the fair hearing. There
are a few exceptions to this rule, including:
- new facts that you could
not have discovered before, if you are challenging a DSHS rule (WAC)
- if you were not notified of the fair hearing.
For more information
about raising new issues, see RCW
34.05.554.
Also, you cannot put new evidence (facts) into the
record except
in very limited circumstances. Generally, the Judge reviews only
testimony and documents filed in the administrative process. You can
sometimes add new facts if you could not have discovered them earlier,
or if the judge or DSHS improperly kept the facts out of the record. If
important facts are missing, the court can "remand" (send back) the
case to get those facts. For more information on new evidence, see RCW
34.05.562.
If you are arguing that a DSHS rule is invalid,
you must prove specific reasons for that. See RCW
34.05.570 (2).
The burden is on you to prove your case. The court will change the
decision for limited reasons only. Those reasons are listed in section
6 of the attached Petition for Review form and in RCW
34.05.570 (3).
What is in the
Petition?
The Petition must have the following information. If at all
possible, you should type your petition. If not, print neatly. We
included some of this information on the attached Petition form:
-
Your name and mailing address;
-
The name and mailing address of the agency whose decision
you disagree with (already printed on the attached form);
-
A statement identifying the decision you are appealing by
agency (DSHS), type (usually "Final Order"), issuing agency ("Board of
Appeals" or "Office of Administrative Hearings"), the date it was
issued, and the docket number (the number on the upper right-hand side
of the first page of the order).
-
Identification of the parties in the fair hearing (usually
you and DSHS);
-
A statement that the petition is timely filed with the
proper court, that you have exhausted the administrative remedies, and
that you are the person who is aggrieved by the decision that you are
appealing (already printed on the attached form).
-
The reasons you think the decision is wrong. Use the blank
lines on the form. If you need more room, write "see attached" in these
lines. Then attach an extra sheet titled "Petition, Paragraph 6".
-
What you are asking the court to do. Examples of
specific relief are:
- "I ask the court to reverse the administrative decision
and grant me TANF benefits without a sanction back to the date DSHS
sanctioned me;" or
- "I ask the court to reverse the administrative decision
and reinstate my TANF benefits back to January 1, 2009;" or
- "I ask the court to change the administrative decision
and stop DSHS from collecting the overpayment."
-
Attach a copy of your fair hearing decision. If that
decision is an "Initial Order," also attach your Final Order from the
BOA.
How do I file the Petition?
Make three copies of your Petition for Review and attachments.
File the original with the Superior Court Clerk. You may file
it either in your own county or in Thurston County. The Clerk will
stamp it with a number. Put that number on the three copies, too. Most
clerks also have a date stamp you can use on your copies to show when
you filed them. There is no charge for filing the petition. RCW
74.08.080(3)
How do I serve the Petition?
In addition to filing your petition for review with the court,
you must serve copies of your petition on DSHS, the Office of the
Attorney General, and any other parties. To serve DSHS, you must
deliver a copy of the petition to the DSHS Board of Appeals (BOA). You
may hand-deliver the petition or send it by mail that gives proof of
receipt. The physical location of the BOA is: Blake Office Bldg.
East, 2nd Floor, 4500 10th Ave. SE, Lacey, WA 98503. The phone numbers
are (360) 664-6100 or toll free, 1-877-351-0002, or TTY (360) 664-6178.
The mailing address of the BOA is: DSHS Board of Appeals, PO Box 45803,
Olympia, WA 98504-5803.
To serve the Office of the Attorney General and any other
parties, you may send a copy of the Petition for Review by regular
mail. You may serve the Office of the Attorney General by hand delivery
to: Office of the Attorney General, 7141 Cleanwater Dr SW, Tumwater, WA
98504. The mailing address is: Office of the Attorney General, P.O. Box
40124, Olympia WA 98504-0124.
Keep the Post Office's proof that you mailed the envelope.
You must file and serve your Petition for
Review of an Administrative Order within thirty (30) days of the date
on the final administrative order. Whether you serve in person
or by mail, DSHS and the Attorney General must get
the petition by the deadline.
Keep the final copy of the Petition for yourself.
How do I prove that the Petition was
served?
Save the post office receipt(s) showing delivery for proof of
any documents you serve by mail. For any hand-delivered documents, you
must have the person who served them sign a "Declaration of
Service". Use the form at the end of this packet.
What happens after I have filed the
Petition?
-
The Record - In about a month, you will receive a
copy of the documents and decisions from your fair hearing and BOA
review (if any). There should be information about how to get a copy of
a written transcript (a typed-out version of the hearing itself,
including testimony of witnesses). You should get the
transcript if you think the facts are not correctly written in the
decision. You may not need it if you agree with the facts as
written. If you are low-income, you will not have to pay for the
transcript.
-
The State's Representative - An Assistant Attorney
General (AAG) will represent DSHS. The AAG will send you a "Notice of
Appearance" with his/her name, address, and phone number. After you get
this notice of appearance, you must send a copy of any further
papers that you file with the court to this AAG. This is your first
chance to try and settle the case with the state's lawyer (the AAG.)
Call her/him and talk about why you think the administrative
decision is wrong. The AAG might contact you as well. The AAG
represents DSHS. S/he cannot give you legal advice.
-
Setting Your Case for Trial - Next, you will need to set
your case for a hearing in the Superior Court so a judge can hear and
decide the case. Every county does this differently. Contact the
Clerk's Office of the Superior Court where you filed your case. Ask how
to set a Petition for Review case for trial. The paper you need to fill
out will probably be called a "Note (or Notice) for Trial Setting." The
Clerk will have the right form. You need to fill out the form and make
two copies. File the original with
the Court Clerk. Send a copy to the AAG (and any other
parties).Keep a copy for yourself.
-
Settlement Negotiations - You may contact the AAG
to try to settle your case before or after setting it for trial. If you
get a settlement you are satisfied with, be sure the agreement is in
writing, signed by you, the AAG, and any other parties, and filed in
the court file. The written agreement should state that the matter is
resolved and that your case should be dismissed.
-
The Trial: Proceeding if Settlement Fails - If you
are unable to settle your case, it will go to trial unless you decide
not to go forward and dismiss it. You need to go to the court on the
scheduled date and tell the judge why you think you should get the
relief you have asked for. (See "What is in the Petition?", # 7
for examples of relief). The burden is on you to prove DSHS was wrong.
If you can, review the laws that apply to your case, especially RCW
34.05.570 (1) and (3). Tell the judge why you believe the law
and/or rules support your claim. You will not be able to bring
witnesses or introduce new evidence. The judge will base the decision
on the evidence presented at the fair hearing by both you and DSHS and
the reasons that you've given the judge as to why you believe you
should win.
How can I get help?
CLEAR is Washington's toll-free, statewide intake, advice and
referral service for low-income people looking for free legal help with
civil legal problems.
-
Outside King County: Call 1-888-201-1014 weekdays from 9:10 a.m.
until 12:25 p.m. CLEAR works with a language line to provide free
interpreters as needed. If you are deaf or hard of hearing, call
1-888-201-1014 using your preferred TTY or Video relay service.
-
King County: Call 211 for information and referral to a legal
services provider Monday through Friday from 8:00 am ? 6:00 pm. Or call
(206) 461-3200, or the toll-free number1-877-211-WASH (9274). 211 works
with a language line to provide free interpreters as needed. If you are
deaf or hard of hearing, call 1-800-833-6384 or 711. You will be
connected to a relay operator at no cost, who will then connect you
with 211. You may also find information on King County legal service
providers on 211's website: www.resourcehouse.com/win211/.
-
If you are age 60 or Over: Call CLEAR*Sr. at 1-888-387-7111,
regardless of your income.
Also, some lawyers offer a free consultation and advertise this in
the yellow pages of your local phone book. Sometimes lawyers will take
these types of cases because if they win the case they can get
attorneys' fees from the losing party (the State).
Blank Forms in MS Word Format
If you do not have Microsoft Word, you can download the pdf
version of this publication and print the forms.
7917EN
This
publication provides general information concerning your rights and
responsibilities. It is not intended as a substitute for specific legal
advice.
This information is current as of the date of its printing,
February 2012.
© 2012 Northwest Justice Project.
1-888-201-1014.
(Permission for copying and distribution granted to the Alliance for
Equal Justice and individuals for non-commercial use only.)
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