Ekstrom v. Marquesa at Monarch Beach Homeowners Assn.

168 Cal. App. 4th 1111, 86 Cal. Rptr. 3d 145, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 2371
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 3, 2008
DocketG038537
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 168 Cal. App. 4th 1111 (Ekstrom v. Marquesa at Monarch Beach Homeowners Assn.) 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
Ekstrom v. Marquesa at Monarch Beach Homeowners Assn., 168 Cal. App. 4th 1111, 86 Cal. Rptr. 3d 145, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 2371 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion

O’LEARY, J.

Marquesa at Monarch Beach (Marquesa) is a common interest development governed by the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act (Civ. Code, § 1350 et seq.). It is comprised of single-family homes in the Monarch Beach development of Dana Point, many of which have ocean and golf course views. The community is managed by the Marquesa at Monarch Beach Homeowners Association (the Association), which is governed by a board of directors (the Board), and is subject to a recorded declaration of conditions, covenants, and restrictions (CC&R’s).

Plaintiffs are individual homeowners within Marquesa whose views have been blocked by many palm trees in the development (some planted by the original developer, and some planted by homeowners), which have grown to heights exceeding the height of rooftops. 1 Because trimming a palm tree would effectively require its removal, the Association has taken the position over the *1114 years that the CC&R’s express requirement “[a]ll trees” on a lot be trimmed so as to not exceed the roof of the house on the lot, unless the tree does not obstruct views from other lots, does not apply to palm trees. Accordingly, it denied Plaintiffs’ demands that it enforce the CC&R’s and require offending palm trees be trimmed, topped, or removed.

The trial court granted Plaintiffs’ request for declaratory relief and mandamus to compel the Association to enforce its CC&R’s. The Association appeals contending (1) the business judgment rule precludes judicial intervention in this matter; (2) the judgment is overbroad and void for vagueness; and (3) the judgment is void because Plaintiffs did not join as defendants the individual homeowners whose trees might be affected by the judgment. We reject the contentions and affirm the judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURE

CC&R’s

The Marquesa CC&R’s, recorded in 1989, provide for approval of all exterior improvements by the Association’s Architectural Review Committee (ARC). Section 7.13 of the CC&R’s requires the owner of each lot to submit an exterior landscaping plan to the ARC for approval and “[ejach Owner shall properly maintain and periodically replace when necessary all trees, plants, grass, vegetation and other landscaping improvements located on the Owner’s lot. ... If any Owner fails to install or maintain landscaping in conformance with architectural rules ... the [ARC] . . . shall have the right either to seek any remedies at law or in equity which it may have or to correct such condition and to enter upon such Owner’s property for the purpose of doing so, and such Owner shall promptly reimburse the [ARC] for the cost thereof . . . .”

Section 7.10 of the CC&R’s provides: “View Impairment. Each Owner, by accepting a deed to a Lot, acknowledges that grading of, construction on or installation of improvements on other property within [the development] and surrounding real property may impair the view of such Owner, and consents to such impairment.”

Section 7.18 of the CC&R’s, pertaining to plantings, provides: “Trees. All trees, hedges and other plant materials shall be trimmed by the Owner of the Lot upon which they are located so that they shall not exceed the height of the house on the Lot; provided, however, that where trees do not obstruct the view from any of the other Lots in the Properties, which determination shall be within the sole judgment of the [ARC], they shall not be required to be so *1115 trimmed. Before planting any trees, the proposed location of such trees shall be approved in writing by the [ARC] which approval shall consider the effect on views from other lots.”

Section 13.1 of the CC&R’s, regarding their enforcement, provides: “The Association, Declarant and any Owner shall have the right to enforce, by any proceedings at law or in equity, all restrictions, conditions, covenants and reservations now or hereafter imposed by the [CC&R’s]. Failure by the Association, Declarant or any Owner to enforce any covenants or restrictions contained in the [CC&R’s] shall [not] be deemed a waiver of the right to do so thereafter.” 2

Plaintiffs Buy View Homes

When each of the Plaintiffs purchased their homes in Marquesa, their homes had ocean and/or golf course views for which they paid a premium. Many of those views are now blocked by palm trees, which have been allowed to grow far above the height of the houses on the lots on which they are situated.

Plaintiff John Schoeffel testified that when he moved into his house in 1997, he had a full ocean view that was not blocked by any trees. By 2002, he noticed palm trees growing into his view and by the time of trial, his home’s view was about 40 percent blocked by 15 to 20 palm trees.

When Plaintiff Robert Ekstrom bought his home in 1999, it had a full ocean view. At that time, no palm trees in the community exceeded the height of the rooftops. Ekstrom’s downhill neighbor, Davis Christakes—a member of the Board—had about 20 palm trees growing on his property. Ekstrom reviewed the CC&R’s before his purchase and was satisfied section 7.18 would require Christakes’s trees be trimmed or removed if they grew above the roofline and blocked Ekstrom’s view.

Plaintiff Steve Kron bought his house with a full ocean view in 2001. Concerned that palm trees might grow to interfere with that view, Kron *1116 reviewed the CC&R’s prior to closing escrow and understood that section 7.18 would protect his view from the trees.

There was evidence the Association routinely enforced section 7.18 of the CC&R’s as to other tree species, ordering homeowners to trim their trees when they exceeded the height of the house. There was also evidence that when approving an individual homeowner’s landscape plans in 1991, the ARC specifically did so on the condition that if any approved tree grew to a height where it became a view obstruction, the owner would be required to have the tree topped, trimmed, or removed. And on at least one occasion in 1992, the ARC advised a homeowner that palm trees (apparently planted without ARC approval), had become a view obstruction from adjoining lots and must be removed or relocated to an area where they would not interfere with neighbors’ views.

Christakes, who served on the Board for many years, owned a property on which over 20 palm trees are planted, several of which are among those now blocking Plaintiffs’ views. He participated over the years in Board actions concerning the enforcement of section 7.18 of the CC&R’s, consistently taking the position that section 7.18 could not be enforced as to palm trees. When a resident suggested Christakes had a conflict of interest as to the applicability of section 7.18 to palm trees, Christakes told her that since he had lost his own ocean view due to construction outside the development, he did not care if she lost hers as well, and if she did not like the Board’s decision to exclude palm trees completely from enforcement under section 7.18, she could file a legal action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 Cal. App. 4th 1111, 86 Cal. Rptr. 3d 145, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 2371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ekstrom-v-marquesa-at-monarch-beach-homeowners-assn-calctapp-2008.