Golden Rain Foundation v. Franz

163 Cal. App. 4th 1141, 78 Cal. Rptr. 3d 226, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 860
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 10, 2008
DocketG038758
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 163 Cal. App. 4th 1141 (Golden Rain Foundation v. Franz) 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
Golden Rain Foundation v. Franz, 163 Cal. App. 4th 1141, 78 Cal. Rptr. 3d 226, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 860 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion

IKOLA, J.

— Plaintiff Golden Rain Foundation (GRF) appeals from a judgment for defendants Carol Franz, Richard Braun, Edmund Brian Marineau, Clara M. Vanderzee-Bos, Edmund Loritz, Jacklyn E. Shaw, and David Lyon. The court found that GRF is an “association” subject to the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act (Civ. Code, § 1350 et seq.) (the Davis-Stirling Act). 1 We agree, and affirm.

FACTS

GRF and Leisure World

GRF is a California nonprofit corporation formed in 1961. Its articles of incorporation state that it was formed “[t]o engage primarily and specifically in providing services and furnishing community facilities to housing operated on a cooperative or other basis and to the occupants thereof.” To that end, GRF sponsored and formed 16 entities known as Seal Beach Mutual Nos. One through Seventeen (the Mutuals) — there is no Mutual No. Thirteen. Mutuals Nos. One through Sixteen are California corporations formed as stock cooperatives. Mutual No. Seventeen is a California nonprofit mutual benefit corporation formed as a condominium project. GRF sold parcels of property in Seal Beach to the Mutuals, which built multiunit residential buildings and associated common areas on them.

GRF is the trustee of the Golden Rain Foundation Trust, created by a declaration of trust recorded in 1962. The declaration provides, “[GRF’s] present and proposed operations include (but are not limited to); [¶] (1) Sponsorship of TRUSTOR and other corporations formed primarily to provide cooperative apartment housing within the area of 540 acres more or less now known as Rossmoor Leisure World in Seal Beach, California . . . .” The original trustor and beneficiary is Seal Beach Mutual No. One. The declaration contemplates that each other Mutual may “become an additional trustor and beneficiary hereunder by . . . adopting and agreeing to the terms *1145 of this instrument.” Every Mutual has since adopted the terms of the declaration of trust and is bound by it.

Pursuant to the declaration of trust, GRF retains title as trustee to “common facilities” for the benefit of the Mutuals. The common facilities include the streets needed to access the residential buildings, administration buildings, utility lines, a golf course, a clubhouse, and other property. GRF maintains the common facilities, as required by the declaration, and makes them available to the Mutuals’ residents. GRF also owns nontrust property including a library and other facilities made available to the residents.

Collectively, the property owned by the Mutuals, the property to which GRF holds title as trustee, and the nontrust property owned by GRF, is commonly known as Leisure World Seal Beach, or simply Leisure World. 2 Leisure World is a prominent senior citizen community. A person wishing to live in Leisure World must buy a share of Mutual stock (or a condominium unit in Mutual No. Seventeen) and join GRF. Residents enter into written occupancy agreements with their Mutuals.

While the Mutuals are contractually responsible for maintaining their residential buildings and common areas, they rely upon GRF to perform management and maintenance services. The declaration of trust provides, “[GRF] shall perform for the benefit of all [the Mutuals] and their members all duties imposed upon [GRF] under separate written Agreement with . . . Mutual No. One and under any other written agreements of similar nature hereinafter entered into by [GRF] with other [Mutuals].” The management agreement with Mutual No. One requires GRF to, among other things, oversee final construction of the residential buildings, pay the mortgages, maintain the Mutual’s buildings and grounds, contract for utilities and “other necessary services,” maintain insurance, comply with requests by governmental authorities, coordinate each resident’s relocation, inspect each unit, handle the residents’ service requests, collect the residents’ monthly assessments, allocate the collected funds to specified reserve and expense accounts, pay all operating and maintenance expenses, maintain the Mutual’s records and books, submit accountings to the Mutual, prepare the Mutual’s operating budgets, and otherwise “operate and maintain the Project according to the highest standards achievable . . . .” Long-standing management agreements require GRF to provide a host of similar services to the other Mutuals. GRF stated in its 2003 Annual Report, “[t]he sole purpose for the existence of *1146 [GRF] is to provide management, accounting and maintenance services to the sixteen mutual corporations and to care for the community facilities.”

The declaration of trust and the written management agreements allow GRF to charge the Mutuals for its management services, at cost and for no profit, and similarly to charge the residents for costs incurred maintaining the common facilities. GRF incorporates these charges into a monthly assessment. The residents pay their monthly assessment directly to GRF.

Each November, GRF sends an annual letter to each resident. The letter contains GRF’s budget, the budget for the recipient’s Mutual, legal disclosures, alternative dispute resolution provisions, and other information. GRF acknowledges in the letters that it is required to send them by the Davis-Stirling Act. In at least one letter, GRF refers to the residents as “owner[s] in a Common Interest Development under [the Davis-Stirling] Act” and states, “Leisure World Seal Beach, [GRF], and the [Mutuals] are subject to a California law known as the ‘Common Interest Development Law,’ also known as the ‘Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act.’ ”

The letters instruct residents contemplating legal action against GRF to comply with the Davis-Stirling Act’s alternative dispute resolution provisions. GRF states in the letters, in reference to those provisions, “[t]he association herein referred to relates to[,] as to the Mutual Corporations, the Mutual, and as [to] the Golden Rain Foundation, the Foundation.”

The Litigation

Defendants are among the 9,000 residents of Leisure World and members of GRF. They sought various documents from GRF pursuant to the Davis-Stirling Act and other statutes. GRF refused the document requests. Defendants initiated small claims actions, in which the courts found GRF wrongly withheld the documents and awarded damages to defendants. The Superior Court affirmed these decisions.

GRF, undeterred, filed this action to obtain a declaration it is not subject to penalties pursuant to the Davis-Stirling Act for failing to produce the requested documents. Though GRF produced the documents before trial, the parties continued to seek a declaration whether GRF is an “association” pursuant to the Davis-Stirling Act. The court conducted a bench trial, received lengthy stipulations of fact and over 150 stipulated exhibits, and heard live testimony. It issued a 20-page statement of decision, finding that GRF is an “association” governed by the Davis-Stirling Act. It entered judgment accordingly.

*1147 DISCUSSION

GRF contends the court wrongly found it is an association subject to the Davis-Stirling Act.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 Cal. App. 4th 1141, 78 Cal. Rptr. 3d 226, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-rain-foundation-v-franz-calctapp-2008.