Good v. BEAR CANYON RANCH ASS'N, INC.
This text of 160 P.3d 251 (Good v. BEAR CANYON RANCH ASS'N, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Timothy D. GOOD, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
BEAR CANYON RANCH ASSOCIATION, INC., Terry and Cami L. Klein, Jerry and Lindsay Walls, John and Barbara Lawrence, Gulrez Malik, Robert Schooley, Michael and Betty Daunt, Louis and Rebecca Egebrecht, Michael and Susan K. Healy, Wesley Piwarczyk, Lyle and Beverly Breshears, Roger and Angela E. Norris, Parvez and Sohail Malik, Gerald M. and Michelle A. Cook, Tod and Rita Schadler, Robert P. and Karen L. Campbell, Scott and Heidi Ward, James V. and Georgia A. Koch, Nadeem N. Malik, Joseph and Pat Stephenson, William W. and Linda M. Airy, Rick and Pamela Sue Rolph, Steven T. Engman, Kirk E. and Donna K. Huffstater, Robert West, Deanne Bender, Paul Y. and Carol N. Iwata, Darryl Andrews, Scott and Lissa Oelkers, William B. and Kimberly S. White, David and Geula Resnick, Thomas and Annette Mulholland, Paul D. and Sheryl L. Easley, Tim J. McDonald, Natalie J. Hunter, Mark W. and Sandra L. Teets, Andrew F. and Gay Czopek, Rich and Cheryl Monroe, Jeffrey Stuffings, Ezzedin M. and Peggy R. Fitouri, Lester and Roslyn Colodny, John and Patricia S. Collins, George C. and Linda A. Moore, Kenneth L. and Judy Medlin, Daniel Duane Haltom, John and Marlene Accola, Robert L. and Nancy A. Pacheo, David and Margaret Richter, Dave and Monica Morales, Keith M. Callender, David J. Waltzman, Caroline Brower, and Cornwall Living Trust, Defendants-Appellees.
Colorado Court of Appeals, Div. III.
*253 Good & Good, P.C., Robert G. Good, Centennial, Colorado; Ann Whalen Gill, L.L.C., Anne Whalen Gill, Castle Rock, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Ray Lego & Associates, Derrick D. Cornejo, Greenwood Village, Colorado, for Defendants-Appellees.
Opinion by Judge GRAHAM.
In this declaratory judgment action, plaintiff, Timothy D. Good, appeals the trial court's partial summary judgment in favor of defendants, Bear Canyon Ranch Association, Inc., and the owners of fifty-two individual homes in his subdivision. We affirm.
Bear Canyon Ranch is a residential housing development in Douglas County subject to certain restrictive covenants as set forth in the Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions (the Declaration), which was originally recorded in 1995. Plaintiff purchased a lot in Bear Canyon Ranch with notice of the Declaration.
Section 8.8 of the original Declaration permitted "a Single Family Residence and as an accessory use, either a Caretaker Residence or Guest House (but not both)." In 2002, the homeowners amended Section 8.8 to prohibit, with the exception of certain specified parcels, the building of a guest house or caretaker residence.
Plaintiff sought a declaratory judgment that the amendment was invalid because, pursuant to the Declaration, amendments could not be made within the initial fifty-year period. The Association filed a motion for summary judgment, seeking a determination as a matter of law that the amendment was valid under the terms of the Declaration. The trial court granted the Association's motion, holding that the amendment was valid because the Declaration could be amended by the homeowners within the initial fifty-year period and that the requisite sixty-to-seventy percent of the homeowners had approved the amendment.
This appeal followed.
I.
Plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in concluding that the homeowners could amend the original Declaration during the initial fifty-year term. We disagree.
Construction of a covenant is a question of law that is reviewed de novo. Evergreen Highlands Ass'n v. West, 73 P.3d 1 (Colo.2003). Where the written language is definite, a reviewing court must follow the dictates of plain English in interpreting a covenant, and a covenant that is clear on its face will be enforced as written. Double D Manor, Inc. v. Evergreen Meadows Homeowners' Ass'n, 773 P.2d 1046 (Colo.1989). Covenants are construed as a whole, keeping in mind their underlying purpose. Buick v. Highland Meadow Estates at Castle Peak Ranch, Inc., 21 P.3d 860 (Colo.2001); Quinn v. Castle Park Ranch Prop. Owners Ass'n, 77 P.3d 823 (Colo.App.2003). Any doubt relative *254 to the meaning and application of the covenant must be resolved in favor of the unrestricted use of property. Dunne v. Shenandoah Homeowners Ass'n, 12 P.3d 340 (Colo.App.2000).
Article 12 pertains to duration, amendments, and termination of the Declaration. Specifically, Section 12.1 provides:
Term: This Declaration and any amendments or supplements to it shall remain in effect from the date of recordation for a period of fifty (50) years. Thereafter, these Covenants shall be automatically extended for five (5) successive periods of ten (10) years each, unless otherwise terminated or modified as provided in this Article.
(Emphasis added.)
Focusing on the term "thereafter," plaintiff asserts that this covenant must be construed as prohibiting amendments until after the initial fifty-year period. Plaintiff contends that to conclude otherwise would render the reference to the fifty-year term meaningless. In support of such a construction, plaintiff argues that the covenant is "virtually identical" to the covenants in Mauldin v. Panella, 17 P.3d 837 (Colo.App.2000), and Johnson v. Howells, 682 P.2d 504 (Colo.App.1984). There, divisions of this court construed the phrase "after which time" as prohibiting amendments to the original declarations until after the expiration of the initial term. Plaintiff's reliance on Mauldin v. Panella and Johnson v. Howells is misplaced.
In Johnson v. Howells, the agreement provided:
These covenants are to run with the land and shall be binding on all parties and all persons claiming under them for a period of twenty (20) years from the date hereof after which time said covenants shall be automatically extended for a successive period of 20 years unless an instrument signed by sixty percent of the then owners of the property has been recorded, agreeing to change said covenants in whole or in part.
Johnson v. Howells, supra, 682 P.2d at 505.
A division of this court held that the plain meaning of the paragraph was that "the covenants will be binding for twenty years, after which time they are automatically extended unless sixty percent of the property owners agree to change them and record an instrument to that effect." Johnson v. Howells, supra, 682 P.2d at 505. The division further stated that if the owners had intended to allow amendments at any time, they would have had no need to include reference to a twenty-year period in the first place. Johnson v. Howells, supra; see also Mauldin v. Panella, supra (the court, interpreting a covenant very similar to the one at issue in Johnson v.
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160 P.3d 251, 2007 WL 64452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/good-v-bear-canyon-ranch-assn-inc-coloctapp-2007.