Cynthia Hebert & James D. Hebert v. Spring Creek Easement Owners Association

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 23, 2021
Docket37215-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cynthia Hebert & James D. Hebert v. Spring Creek Easement Owners Association (Cynthia Hebert & James D. Hebert v. Spring Creek Easement Owners Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cynthia Hebert & James D. Hebert v. Spring Creek Easement Owners Association, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED MARCH 23, 2021 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

CYNTHIA HEBERT AND JAMES D. ) HEBERT, husband and wife, ) No. 37215-4-III ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION SPRING CREEK EASEMENT OWNERS ) ASSOCIATION, (RMA) BOARD OF ) TRUSTEES, ) ) Respondent.

FEARING, J. — Cynthia and James Hebert appeal summary judgment rulings

granted a homeowners association to which they belonged. The association, Spring

Creek Easement Owners Association, removed boulders and a gate placed by the Heberts

in a road easement. In turn, the association charged the Heberts for the costs of the

removal. When the Heberts failed to pay the assessment and regular assessments, Spring

Creek sued to foreclose on the assessments lien, and the Heberts sued for damage to their

gate and boulders. We affirm the superior court’s dismissal of the Heberts’ suit and the

superior court’s foreclosure of the assessments lien.

FACTS

In 2003, Sapphire Skies, LLC created Spring Creek, an eight-parcel development

in pristine Kittitas County. Two roads, Thunder Road and Ridge Crest Road, serve the No. 37215-4-III Hebert v. Spring Creek Easement Owners Association

development. At least one road traverses each of the eight plots. The developer recorded

easements for the two roads.

In addition to recording road easements, Sapphire Skies recorded covenants,

conditions, and restrictions (covenants) to create a homeowners association to maintain

the two roads and to impose duties on the lot owners within the association. In 2018, the

association adopted the name Spring Creek Easement Owners Association. We refer to

the association simply as Spring Creek. A three-member board of directors, consisting of

a president, a secretary, and a treasurer, manages Spring Creek. All parcel owners are

members of the homeowners association and hold nonexclusive easements for access,

ingress, and access along the two roads.

Cynthia and James Hebert own Parcel 7 of Spring Creek, where Ridge Crest Road

eventually ends. The appeal concerns boulders placed and a gate installed by the Heberts

along and across Ridge Crest Road. James Hebert is the former president of Spring

Creek, having resigned on February 23, 2017.

Many provisions of the recorded covenants pertain to the dispute on appeal.

Paragraph 1.2 of the covenants broadly states Spring Creek’s powers and duties:

The duties and powers of the Association are those set forth in this Declaration, the Articles and Bylaws adopted by the Association, together with its general and implied powers of a nonprofit corporation, generally to do any and all things that a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Washington may lawfully do which are necessary or proper in operating for the peace, health, comfort, safety and general welfare of its Members, subject only to the limitations upon the exercise of such powers

2 No. 37215-4-III Hebert v. Spring Creek Easement Owners Association

as are expressly set forth in this Declaration, the Articles and Bylaws. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the primary functions of the Association shall be enforcement of the covenants, the maintenance, operation and repair and insurance of the entry statement, private road easements over and across the Property for the purpose of ingress and egress to the Lots.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 315. The last sentence omits an “and” somewhere. Paragraph

1.10 limits the owners’ ability to build or improve on their lot without approval by the

Architectural Control Committee (ACC), which, per paragraph 1.9, is a three-member

committee designated by the board. The paragraph reads:

Subject to the exemption of Declarant hereunder, no structure, improvement, or alteration of any kind which will be visible from other Dwellings, private roadways serving the Property or any public right of way shall be commenced, erected, painted or maintained upon the Property, until the same has been approved in writing by the ACC.

CP at 64.

Paragraph 3.2 of the Spring Creek covenants requires Spring Creek to maintain the

easements in the HOA:

The Association shall maintain and repair the Easements, or shall contract for such maintenance and repair to assure maintenance of the Easements in good condition.

CP at 304. Paragraph 4.1 governs the homeowners association owners’ obligation to pay

assessments to Spring Creek. The paragraph declares in part:

each Owner of any Lot by acceptance of a deed or contract therefore, whether or not it shall be so expressed in such deed or contract, is deemed to covenant and agree to pay to the Association the following Assessments,

3 No. 37215-4-III Hebert v. Spring Creek Easement Owners Association

which shall be established and collected as provided herein and in the bylaws of the Association: —Regular Assessments; —Extraordinary Assessments; and —Special Assessments

CP at 318.

Paragraph 5.1 of the covenants expresses the declarant’s authority to install gates

and forbids the owners from infringing on other owners’ right of access to the easements.

The paragraph declares, in relevant part:

Declarant expressly reserves for the benefit of the Owners reciprocal, nonexclusive easements for access, ingress and egress, over and under all of the Easements. Declarant expressly reserves the right to install entry gates and move the location of the road and therefore the easement. . . . In addition, in the Easements, the Owners of the Lots may install utilities, including but not limited to: sanitary sewer, water, electric, gas, television receiving, or telephone lines or connections, provided, however such use of the Easements shall be reasonably necessary for use and enjoyment of a Lot in the Property and such use shall not infringe on any Lot Owner’s use of the Easement for access, ingress and egress.

CP at 306.

Paragraph 10.1 grants the homeowners association board or an owner the right to

enforce the covenants. The paragraph also governs an award of attorney fees in any

lawsuit to enforce the covenants:

The Board, any Owner, and any governmental or quasi- governmental agency or municipality having jurisdiction over the Property shall have the right to enforce, by any proceedings at law or in equity, all restrictions, conditions, covenants, reservations, liens, and charges now or hereafter imposed by this Declaration, and in such action shall be entitled to recover costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees as are ordered by the Court.

4 No. 37215-4-III Hebert v. Spring Creek Easement Owners Association

Failure by any such person or entity to enforce any such provision shall in no event be deemed a waiver of the right to do so thereafter.

CP at 320.

We move to the facts that give rise to the appeal. In 2004, Cynthia and James

Hebert erected a chain fence across Ridge Crest Road as the road traverses their land.

The Heberts had already installed a separate gate in front of their home along their

driveway outside Ridge Crest Road.

In January 2005, the Spring Creek board of directors convened a meeting. The

meeting minutes indicate that Spring Creek discussed potentially erecting a permanent

gate across Ridge Creek Road and on the Heberts’ parcel:

Following all the discussion above, the topic of gates were [sic] raised again. Jim and Cynthia Hebert had placed a chain across the easement on the property line between Lot 7 and Lot 8.

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Cynthia Hebert & James D. Hebert v. Spring Creek Easement Owners Association, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cynthia-hebert-james-d-hebert-v-spring-creek-easement-owners-washctapp-2021.