Dr. Saung Zin Park v. Escalera Ranch Owners' Association, Inc. and Rostrata Builders, Inc.

457 S.W.3d 571, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 1486, 2015 WL 737424
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 2015
DocketNO. 03-12-00314-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 457 S.W.3d 571 (Dr. Saung Zin Park v. Escalera Ranch Owners' Association, Inc. and Rostrata Builders, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dr. Saung Zin Park v. Escalera Ranch Owners' Association, Inc. and Rostrata Builders, Inc., 457 S.W.3d 571, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 1486, 2015 WL 737424 (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

David Puryear, Justice

This appeal arises from a suit by Escal-era Ranch Owners’ Association, Inc. to enforce its restrictive covenants. Dr. Saung Zin Park appeals from the trial court’s final judgment awarding injunctive relief to the Association, awarding the Association attorneys’ fees, and dismissing Park’s claims against Rostrata Builders, Inc. with prejudice. In its suit, the Association alleged that Park installed windows in his house that differ from the windows that he had agreed to install and that the Association’s design committee had approved after Park submitted his construction plans, as required by the restrictive covenants governing Park’s use of the property. Park filed a third-party complaint against Rostrata Builders, asserting breach of his construction contract with Rostrata. After Rostrata filed special exceptions, the trial court dismissed Park’s claims with prejudice. After a two-day bench trial on the remaining claims, the trial court ruled in the Association’s favor and denied Park’s counterclaims.

Many of Park’s issues on appeal concern the Association’s failure to provide him with statutorily required presuit notice of his right to request a hearing before the Association to discuss the violation. Park asserts that the failure to provide presuit notice as required by the Property Code deprived the trial court of jurisdiction, which is a matter of first impression. We conclude that the notice requirement is mandatory, but not jurisdictional. We also conclude that Park has not shown reversible error based on the Association’s failure to provide presuit notice. In addition to this jurisdictional issue, Park raises other issues, including whether the Association performed all conditions precedent to suit, whether he should have prevailed on his breach-of-contract counterclaim against *578 the Association and been awarded attorneys’ fees, whether he substantially breached the restrictive covenants by installing windows that did not conform to the approved plans, whether the parties’ agreement about the type of windows to be installed in his house was ambiguous, whether the Association’s conduct supported Park’s affirmative defenses, whether the Association’s decision to sue him was arbitrary and capricious, and whether the equities supporting the injunctive relief weigh in the Association’s favor. For the reasons discussed below, wé conclude that the trial court did not err by granting the injunctive relief requiring Park to install windows that comply with the approved plans and will affirm the portion of the judgment in favor of the Association.

Park also appeals the trial court’s dismissal with prejudice of his third-party claims against Rostrata. Although the trial court did not abuse its discretion by granting Rostrata’s special exceptions, the court should have granted Park leave to amend his complaint. Consequently, we will reverse the portion of the judgment dismissing the claims with prejudice and will remand to the trial court to allow Park to replead to cure the defects in the complaint.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Park purchased a lot in the Escalera Ranch subdivision in Williamson County on which he built a new home. His property, like the other lots in the subdivision, is subject to the Amended Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, Easements and Restrictions of Planned Unit Development of Escalera Ranch. The Declaration was recorded in the real property records of Williamson County at the time Park purchased the property.

The Declaration established the Escal-era Ranch Owners’ Association to administer and enforce the provisions of the Declaration, including covenants and restrictions related to all construction in the subdivision. Each property owner in the subdivision is a member of the Association. The Declaration also established a Master Design Committee, which created Master Design Guidelines “to create a harmonious residential community.” Before any construction (either new or an exterior addition or change) can begin on any lot in the subdivision, the Declaration purports to require that detailed plans and specifications must be submitted to the Master Design Committee, which is “the sole authority for determining whether proposed structures [and] landscape elements ... are in harmony of design with other existing structures and the overall development plan for the Subdivision” and for approving plans.

The Declaration states that:
The Master' Design Committee shall have the express authority to perform fact finding functions hereunder and shall have the power to construe and interpret any covenant herein that may be vague, indefinite, uncertain or capable of more than one interpretation. The goal of the Committee is to encourage the construction of dwellings of architectural design, quality and size compatible with Declarant’s conceptual plan for the Subdivision. Dwellings should be planned and designed with particular attention to the design and aesthetic appearance of the exterior and the use of such materials, which in the sole judgement [sic] of the Committee, create an attractive and harmonious blend with existing and proposed dwellings in the immediate area and the natural surroundings. The Committee may disapprove the construction or design of a home on purely aesthetic grounds, when, in its sole judgement [sic], such *579 disapproval is required to protect the continuity of design or values of the neighborhood or to preserve the serenity and natural beauty of the surroundings.

(Emphasis added.) In addition, the Declaration states that “[a]ll decisions of the Master Design Committee shall be final and binding” and that “[tjhere shall be no review of any action of the Committee except by procedures for injunctive relief when such action is patently arbitrary and capricious.” The Declaration further provides that any owner, the Association, the Declarant, or the Committee may seek to enjoin construction or threatened construction in violation of the Declaration or may seek other relief, provided that the offending owner or builder is first given “written notice of the perceived violation and the opportunity to remedy the violation prior to the filing of suit.”

A copy of the Master Design Guidelines were provided to Park when he purchased his lot. The Guidelines (a 45-page document) state that the objectives of the Es-calera Ranch planning process include “the subtle blending of the built environment into a harmonious and aesthetically pleasing community” with the “unifying visual theme” of preservation of the natural environment. The Guidelines set forth site-development guidelines, architectural-design guidelines, landscape guidelines (with an approved plant list attached to the Guidelines), and construction guidelines. Each of these sections discusses design features and includes detailed requirements for many of these features, including driveways, fencing, exterior lighting, building height, minimum square footage, exterior colors, roof pitch and materials, exterior-surface building materials, and landscaping.

The Guidelines also elaborate on the review and approval processes that were provided for in the Declaration. The design-review process is divided into five phases:

(1) a pre-design meeting with the owner and/or his architect;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
457 S.W.3d 571, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 1486, 2015 WL 737424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dr-saung-zin-park-v-escalera-ranch-owners-association-inc-and-rostrata-texapp-2015.