ARTEMIS EXPL. CO. VS. RUBY LAKE ESTATES HOA

2019 NV 48
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 2019
Docket75323
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 NV 48 (ARTEMIS EXPL. CO. VS. RUBY LAKE ESTATES HOA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ARTEMIS EXPL. CO. VS. RUBY LAKE ESTATES HOA, 2019 NV 48 (Neb. 2019).

Opinion

135 Nev., Advance Opinion 46 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

ARTEMIS EXPLORATION COMPANY, No. 75323 A NEVADA CORPORATION; HAROLD WYATT; AND MARY WYATT, FILED Appellants, vs. OCT 0 3 20E RUBY LAKE ESTATES ETF! HOMEOWNEWS ASSOCIATION, Respondent.

Appeal from a final judgment in a real property action. Fourth Judicial District Court, Elko County; Alvin R. Kacin, Judge. Affirmed.

Gerber Law Offices, LLP, and Travis W. Gerber and Zachary A. Gerber, Elko, for Appellants.

Leach Kern Gruchow Anderson Song and Karen M. Ayarbe, Reno, for Respondent.

BEFORE PICKERING, PARRAGUIRRE and CADISH, JJ.

OPINION

By the Court, CADISH, J.: In 1991, the Nevada Legislature adopted the Uniform Common- Interest Ownership Act, as codified in NRS Chapter 116. See 1991 Nev.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA

10) I947A 40, 01 - 4( MI- Stat., ch. 245, §§ 1-128, at 535-79; NRS 116.001. NRS Chapter 116 defines what constitutes a "common-interest community," see NRS 116.021, and also authorizes the creation of a "unit-owners association" to govern the common-interest community, see NRS 116.011; NRS 116.3101. As relevant to this appeal, a unit-owners' association is authorized to impose assessments on unit owners for the unit owners' association to maintain "common elements," which, generally speaking, comprise real estate within the common-interest community that is owned by the unit-owners' association but that benefits all unit owners. See NRS 116.017. Appellants own property in Ruby Lake Estates (RLE), a neighborhood which was created in 1989. In the underlying declaratory relief action, they challenged respondent Ruby Lake Estates Homeowner's Association's (RLEHOA) authority to impose assessments on them. In particular, appellants argued that RLE was not a validly created "common- interest community" because the recorded Declaration that created RLE did not expressly state that RLE's residents would be responsible for paying assessments for the maintenance of common elements or other real estate aside from their individual units, which appellants contend is required under NRS 116.021. Alternatively, appellants contended that RLEHOA was not a validly created "unit-owners' association" because it was not organized until 2006, while NRS 116.3101 requires a unit-owners' association to be created before the first lot in the common-interest community is conveyed. The district court granted summary judgment for RLEHOA, thereby affirming RLEHOA's authority to impose assessments on appellants.

SUPREME COURT OF NE/ADA 2 (0) 1947A <44k1c- We agree with the district courfs determination that RLEHOA is authorized to impose assessments. First, we conclude that RLE is a common-interest community within the meaning of NRS 116.021 because RLE's Declaration contained an implied payment obligation for the common elements and other real estate that appellants had notice of by virtue of the Declaration when they purchased their lots. Second, we conclude that NRS 116.3101(1) does not apply to common-interest communities formed before 1992 and that, consequently, RLEHOA did not need to be organized before the first lot in RLE was conveyed. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY RLE is a rural subdivision in Elko County, Nevada. Developers Stephen and Mavis Wright (the Wrights) filed an official Plat Map for the community on September 15, 1989. The first sheet of the Plat Map reads in relevant part: At a regularly held meeting at the Board of Commissioners of Elko County, State of Nevada, held on the 5th day of July 1989, this Plat was approved as a Final Plat pursuant to NRS 278.380. The Board does hereby reject on behalf of the public all streets or roadways for maintenance purposes and does hereby accept all streets and easements therein offered for utility, drainage, and access purposes only as dedicated for public use. (Emphasis added.) Subsequently, the Wrights recorded the Declaration for the community on October 25, 1989.1 As relevant here, the Declaration provided this:

1NRS 116.037 defines "Declaration" as "any instruments, however denominated, that create a common-interest community, including any amendments to those instruments." The term is frequently used SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA

3 (0) I947A 484. The real property affected hereby is subjected to the imposition of the covenants, conditions, restrictions and reservations specified herein to provide for the development and maintenance of an aesthetically pleasing and harmonious community of residential dwellings for the purpose of preserving a high quality of use and appearance and maintaining the value of each and every lot and parcel of said property. (Emphasis added.) The Declaration further provided for the creation of an Architectural Review Committee (ARC) for the general purpose of providing for the maintenance of a high standard of architectural design, color and landscaping harmony and to preserve and enhance aesthetic qualities and high standards of construction in the development and maintenance of the subdivision. (Emphases added.) The Plat Map was also attached to the recorded Declaration. On December 15, 1989, the first lots in RLE were conveyed. Appellant Artemis Exploration Company acquired two lots in RLE, one in 1994 and one in 2010. Elizabeth Essington was the sole officer and director for Artemis Exploration Company. Mrs. Essington and her husband built their residential home on one of the lots Artemis Exploration Company owned in RLE. Appellants Harold and Mary Wyatt took title to a lot in RLE in 2001.

interchangeably with "Covenants, Conditions & Restrictions," or "CC&Rs." Nationstar Mortg., LLC v. Saticoy Bay LLC Series 2227 Shadow Canyon, 133 Nev. 740, 753, 405 P.3d 641, 651 (2017). SUPREME COURT OF NevADA

(C19 1947A s4a8.1p 4 From 1997, after the last lot was sold by the developer, until 2006, an informal Ruby Lake Estates Landowners Association existed, and regularly levied and collected assessments from lot owners within RLE to maintain the roadways, fences, culverts, cattle guards, and entrance sign, and perform weed abatement within the community. Mr. Essington prepared a draft letter dated August 22, 2005, to the RLE lot owners, which he sent to Mr. Lee Perks as President of the Landowners Association to review. In the letter, Mr. Essington wrote of "the need to revitalize the Ruby Lakes Estates property owners association," which could include "assurfingj the aesthetic qualities of the subdivision" and "periodic road maintenance." He specifically wrote that he was "appealing to all of the property owners to take the time and interest now to help to revitalize the association and assist in making it function as it was intended," specifically seeking to organize the election of association officers. RLEHOA was officially formed as an association in early 2006, 17 years after the first lot was conveyed.

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Bluebook (online)
2019 NV 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/artemis-expl-co-vs-ruby-lake-estates-hoa-nev-2019.