Bear Creek Master Ass'n v. Edwards

31 Cal. Rptr. 3d 337, 130 Cal. App. 4th 1470, 2005 Daily Journal DAR 8432, 2005 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6187, 2005 Cal. App. LEXIS 1093
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 13, 2005
DocketE034859, E035284
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 31 Cal. Rptr. 3d 337 (Bear Creek Master Ass'n v. Edwards) 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
Bear Creek Master Ass'n v. Edwards, 31 Cal. Rptr. 3d 337, 130 Cal. App. 4th 1470, 2005 Daily Journal DAR 8432, 2005 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6187, 2005 Cal. App. LEXIS 1093 (Cal. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Opinion

WARD, J.

Defendants and appellants Parlan L. Edwards and Gloria Renico Edwards, as trustees of the Parlan L. Edwards and Gloria Renico Edwards Family Trust (the Trust), appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff and respondent Bear Creek Master Association (Bear Creek), on Bear Creek’s action for breach of contract and foreclosure. Although both Edwardses are named trustees of the trust, the primary actor throughout has been Parlan L. Edwards; for convenience, therefore, we refer to Edwards in the singular, as the representative of the Trust and as the person who performed most of the salient acts on defendants’ behalf.

Edwards and the Trust also appeal postjudgment orders for attorney fees and requiring them to post additional security pending appeal.

The key issue in the appeal is whether a homeowners’ association may charge homeowners’ association dues or assessments for unbuilt property within a planned and partially built homeowners’ association development. The Trust’s parcel was planned for eight condominium units, out of a phase of 16, but none of the units on the Trust’s portion of the property had actually been constructed. This dispute arose because the Trust failed to pay homeowners’ association assessments; indeed, it refused to do so on the theory that assessments are chargeable only to a condominium unit, but that there were no built-out units on the Trust’s property.

As we shall explain below, we affirm the judgment and the postjudgment orders.

*1473 FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Bear Creek is the master homeowners’ association for the master Bear Creek development. Country Club Villas (CCV) is the homeowners’ association, or subassociation, within the Bear Creek master development. The property at issue is located within the CCV subassociation area within the Bear Creek master development. The property comprises what is described as units 9 through 16 of phase IV of the CCV subassociation. Units 9 through 16 were eight unbuilt condominium units within CCV phase IV. Sixteen condominiums were originally designed for CCV phase IV; eight condominiums were built in “pods” of two units each, but the remaining eight units, comprising units 9 through 16, were never constructed.

A company called Watt Bear Creek had owned units 9 through 16 of CCV phase IV, but lost title to that property through foreclosure. The property was acquired by Bear Creek Limited, which was owned by Bill Johnson. Edwards apparently lent a sum of money to Johnson, which Johnson failed to repay.

At the time that Edwards lent the funds to Johnson, he did not further investigate the status of Johnson’s property; he simply relied on Johnson’s representation that the property was worth twice the amount borrowed. He did no research in the Riverside County Assessor’s Office, he did not research recorder’s office records regarding the property, and he never read the Bear Creek covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&R’s) applicable to the property. Edwards testified that he had purchased numerous properties in the past and that he was familiar with title reports, but that he did not review any title report on the property before lending to Johnson.

Johnson defaulted on the Edwards loan, and Edwards foreclosed. Again, before foreclosing and taking title to the property, Edwards did not check the assessor’s records, did not check the recorder’s records, and did not obtain a title report. Edwards foreclosed on the property and took title for the Trust in approximately December 1997. Edwards’s attorney, Lucila Enriquez, telephoned the Bear Creek property manager in January 1998 to explain that Edwards was now the owner of units 9 through 16 of CCV phase IV. Attorney Enriquez told the property manager that she was representing Edwards in connection with his ownership of the lots, and advised that she and Edwards had had some difficulty accessing the property. She followed up the telephone conversation with a copy of the title document showing the transfer from Johnson to Edwards.

The deed giving title to Edwards, on behalf of the Trust, listed Attorney Enriquez’s address as the address to which the recorded deed was to be mailed. It was to Attorney Enriquez’s address, therefore, that Bear Creek sent various notices to Edwards, as owner of units 9 through 16 of CCV phase IV.

*1474 Among other things, Bear Creek mailed homeowners’ association ballots and notices of association assessments to Edwards, always to Attorney Enriquez’s address. As already noted, Attorney Enriquez herself had telephoned Bear Creek’s property manager in January of 1998 to inform Bear Creek that the Trust had acquired ownership of the property. The homeowners’ ballots for each of the Trust’s units were voted and returned. The ballots included a space to write in the owner’s address; except in two instances in which the address space was left blank, the voted ballots that Edwards returned all gave Attorney Enriquez’s address as the owner’s address.

Bear Creek also sent notices of delinquent homeowners’ association assessments for the units, and notices of intent to file a lien. These notices were sent both by first class mail and by certified mail with return receipt requested, to the Trust at Attorney Enriquez’s address. The certified mail envelopes were returned unclaimed, but the first class mail was not returned by the post office.

Before Bear Creek filed the instant suit, no one had ever informed Bear Creek that Attorney Enriquez was not authorized to receive communications from Bear Creek at her address. Normally, if a property owner wishes to change its address of record with Bear Creek, the owner notifies the property manager in writing. The property manager never received such a notification with respect to units 9 through 16 of CCV phase IV.

Bear Creek adduced evidence that it had charged association assessments to prior owners of units 9 through 16, even though those eight units were unbuilt. Bear Creek also charged assessments to other unbuilt units within the Bear Creek master development. The triggering event is when one unit in a phase is sold; after that, assessments are charged to each unit in the phase. Bear Creek consistently charged such assessments against every unit in a phase which had sold one property, and had done so regardless of whether the unit consisted of a house, townhouse, condominium, or unbuilt structure.

Edwards testified that he believed the assessments, under the CC&R’s, applied only to “condominiums.” Inasmuch as there were no condominium buildings on his property, he took the view that he had no duty to pay the assessments. He further testified that he also believed that he had no right, as he owned no “units” or “condominiums,” to vote in homeowners’ association elections. He claimed that Bear Creek had erred in sending him any homeowners’ association ballots, but that he had voted the ballots only to “protect” himself. The day following this testimony, however, Edwards executed a proxy with respect to the Bear Creek election for three members of the board of directors, and cast 24 ballots (three for each unit of his property) in that *1475 election.

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31 Cal. Rptr. 3d 337, 130 Cal. App. 4th 1470, 2005 Daily Journal DAR 8432, 2005 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6187, 2005 Cal. App. LEXIS 1093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bear-creek-master-assn-v-edwards-calctapp-2005.