Anaheim Hills Planned Com. Assn. v. Chen CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 2, 2015
DocketG046408
StatusUnpublished

This text of Anaheim Hills Planned Com. Assn. v. Chen CA4/3 (Anaheim Hills Planned Com. Assn. v. Chen CA4/3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anaheim Hills Planned Com. Assn. v. Chen CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 4/2/15 Anaheim Hills Planned Com. Assn. v. Chen CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

ANAHEIM HILLS PLANNED COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION, G046408, G047582 Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 30-2009-00292597) v. OPINION KANG-SHEN CHEN et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

Appeals from judgments and orders of the Superior Court of Orange County, Franz E. Miller, Judge. The appeal in case No. G046408 is dismissed. In case No. G047582, the second amended judgment is affirmed as modified and the orders are affirmed. Kang-Shen Chen and Shu-Jen Chen, in pro. per.; Morris & Stone and Aaron P. Morris for Defendants and Appellants. Gordon & Rees, Jeffrey A. Swedo, Tara L. Martin, Stephanie P. Alexander and Nathaniel J. Tarvin for Plaintiff and Respondent. * * * Plaintiff and respondent Anaheim Hills Planned Community Association (Association) commenced litigation against defendants and appellants Kang-Shen Chen and Shu-Jen Chen in connection with a plethora of purported violations of the covenants, conditions and restrictions (CC&R’s) affecting their residential real property. An oral settlement was reached on the record, for the Chens to take certain actions to remediate the violations. The court subsequently entered a stipulated judgment encapsulating the terms of the settlement, ordering an injunction, finding that the Chens already were in default of the injunction, and providing that the Association was entitled to an expedited trial on damages. Before the trial took place, the Chens filed a notice of appeal, in case No. G046408 (First Appeal). While the First Appeal was pending, the trial on damages went forward. The court, in a second amended judgment, awarded the Association $508,589.46 in damages. The Chens filed a second notice of appeal, from the damages award and from two attorney fees awards, in case No. G047582 (Second Appeal). We conclude the First Appeal was taken from a nonappealable judgment. The judgment appealed from was an interlocutory decree, inasmuch as it specifically contemplated a trial on damages in order to fully resolve the dispute between the parties. Given that, this court has no jurisdiction to hear the First Appeal and it is hereby dismissed. In the Second Appeal, we decline to review the Chens’ argument that the Association’s consent to the settlement agreement was defective, inasmuch as they failed to make an objection below, so the trial court and the Association could have corrected any deficiency. Furthermore, we reject the Chens’ contention that the settlement agreement is unenforceable due to a lack of meeting of the minds. However, we agree that the court overstepped its bounds in finding that the Chens were in violation of an injunction that had never been issued and in creating terms for the parties. On remand, the second amended judgment shall be modified to reflect that the Chens were in default

2 of the settlement agreement, as opposed to the injunction, to delete the damages award, and to reflect that the Association is entitled to an expedited trial on damages only after it has performed remediation work. We affirm the second amended judgment as so modified and affirm the attorney fees awards. In addition, we deny the Association’s request for judicial notice and for the making of evidentiary findings on appeal. I FACTS A. Presettlement Litigation: The Association filed a lawsuit against the Chens for nuisance, breach of contract (CC&R’s), injunctive relief and declaratory relief. The Association alleged, inter alia, that the Chens had failed to comply with various provisions of the CC&R’s affecting their residential real property. They alleged, for example, that the Chens had built various outbuildings on their property without Association approval, some of which were either abandoned or only partially constructed, that the Chens had used unapproved fencing materials including barbed wire, that they had left their swimming pool either empty or partially filled with stagnant water, that they had stored on the property unsightly debris, trash, and construction materials including barbed wire, and that they had discharged waste water into a natural stream emanating from a spring. With trial set for June 20, 2011, the Association, on May 5, 2011, filed an ex parte application for an order compelling the Chens to permit a site inspection of their property. The Association represented that the Chens had said they would remedy claimed violations if provided with a list of them, but that they repeatedly had refused to cooperate in the activities necessary for the Association to prepare a list. Purportedly, Association representatives met with Kang-Shen Chen and the Chens’ architect on the property on September 16, 2010, and the architect agreed to prepare a site plan documenting each improvement on the property. The intention was to use the site plan as a basis for the discussion of the various violations. However, the Association later

3 learned that the architect had been discharged and no site plan was forthcoming. The Association further represented that, thereafter, it retained its own architectural expert to perform a site inspection and, on March 23, 2011, noticed an April 29, 2011 site inspection. However, when the date and time for the site inspection arrived, the Chens refused to permit access to the property. Consequently, the Association requested the court order compelling the Chens to permit a site inspection. The court granted the request for an order compelling a site inspection, to take place on May 24, 2011. It further ordered the Chens to pay $2,250 in sanctions to the Association.

B. Settlement Agreement: On June 24, 2011, the Association filed a memorandum of settlement, in which it represented that the Chens had agreed to a stipulated judgment on the terms stated therein. It also filed a joint list of exhibits to the settlement agreement. One of those exhibits was a five-page matrix of violations. The terms of the settlement were read into the record at a hearing that same date. As stated verbally on the record, the parties agreed to a stipulated judgment including an injunction requiring the Chens to remediate or remove any and all violations specified in the matrix, in a manner that complied with the Association’s CC&R’s and architectural standards, as well as the subassociation’s CC&R’s. The Chens agreed to hire a licensed architect to prepare a comprehensive removal and remediation plan addressing each point identified in the matrix. The comprehensive plan would be submitted to both the Association and the subassociation for approval and the Chens would undertake no work before obtaining those approvals. The Chens further agreed that they would submit their first comprehensive plan no later than 60 days after June 24, 2011. The Association’s architectural review committee would approve or reject the plan within 45 days. If the plan was rejected, up

4 to two more 60-day-submission/45-day-review periods would follow. The Chens would have one year from the date of approval to complete the work. The stipulated judgment was to contain a mandatory injunction requiring the Chens to perform in the above described manner. It was to further provide: “If there’s a default . . . [the Association] will have the right to an expedited court . . . trial to prove up the costs to [the Association] of having to demolish and remediate things on the property that are in violation of the CC&R’s. . . .

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