Ridley v. Rancho Palma Grande Homeowners Assn.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 29, 2025
DocketH052560
StatusPublished

This text of Ridley v. Rancho Palma Grande Homeowners Assn. (Ridley v. Rancho Palma Grande 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
Ridley v. Rancho Palma Grande Homeowners Assn., (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 8/28/25; Modified & Certified for Publication 9/29/25 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DOUG RIDLEY et al., H052560 (Santa Clara County Plaintiffs and Respondents, Super. Ct. No. 19CV349909)

v.

RANCHO PALMA GRANDE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

This appeal is from an injunction requiring supplemental repairs to a condominium. The underlying suit arises out of flooding in the crawlspace beneath the condominium owned by Doug Ridley and Sherry Shen. Because this crawlspace is a common area controlled by the homeowners’ association, Rancho Palma Grade Homeowners Association (HOA), the HOA rather than the homeowners was responsible for investigating and remedying the water intrusion. The HOA took more than 19 months to remove the water and begin making meaningful repairs, and in the interim the homeowners’ unit suffered severe damage. Accordingly, the homeowners sued the HOA and its now-former president, Steve Moritz. After an unusually long bench trial lasting more than 60 court days, the trial court found in favor of the homeowners on all their claims. While many repairs were subsequently performed, others were not, and the trial court issued an injunction requiring the HOA to perform the remaining repairs and compensate the homeowners for lost rent and other expenses. The HOA and Moritz appeal, arguing that the trial court erred in finding in the homeowners’ favor on any of their claims. We need address only one claim: that the HOA breached its duties under the condominium complex’s covenants and conditions. As explained below, we conclude that the trial court properly found in the homeowners’ favor on this claim. Because this claim supports the injunction being appealed, we affirm. I. BACKGROUND A. The CCRs Rancho Palma Grande is a condominium complex in Santa Clara with over 100 units. In 1981, the complex’s developers executed a Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions (the CCRs) dividing the development into condominiums and establishing a “Home-Owners Association” to manage the complex. The CCRs grant the HOA a number of powers and duties. One set concerns the maintenance and repair of common areas: The CCRs grant the HOA the power and the duty “[t]o manage, operate, maintain, repair, paint, landscape, care for and preserve the Common Area, and all its facilities, improvements, and landscaping . . . to the standard of maintenance prevalent in the neighborhood . . . .” The CCRs contain an exculpation clause limiting the HOA’s liability. Under the clause, the HOA generally is not liable for property damage or personal injury “caused by the elements” or “resulting from electricity, water, rain, dust, or sand which may leak or flow from outside or from any parts of the buildings.” However, this limitation on liability does not apply to damage or injury “caused by gross negligence of the Association.”

2 In 1991, Doug Ridley, who is now 85 years old, purchased a unit in Rancho Palma Grande located at 2006 Stone Pine Court (the homeowners’ unit). Ridley later married Sherry Shen, and the two lived in the homeowners’ unit for a decade before they moved out and began renting the unit for retirement income. In 2017, Steve Moritz became president of the HOA. B. The Undestroyed Well 1. The April 2018 Flooding In April 2018, tenants in the homeowners’ unit reported flooding in the crawlspace underneath the unit. The homeowners and the HOA initially thought that the water was from a leaky pipe, which is an owner responsibility. However, a plumber hired by the homeowners did not see anything wrong with the plumbing and concluded that the water came from an underground well or spring. In addition, a plumber hired by the HOA learned from the City of Santa Clara (City) that the water was likely caused by an abandoned but undestroyed well. Because the crawl space is a common area, the HOA accepted responsibility for remedying the water that intruded into it from outside the homeowners’ unit. However, the HOA permitted the homeowners to finish installing a sump pump to remove some of the water. 2. Initial Opinions and Recommended Actions In May 2018, hoping to get the City or the Santa Clara Valley Water District to pay for remediating water in the crawlspace, the HOA hired a law firm. The firm contacted the Water District, which reported that it, too, believed that the water was from “an unknown, unregistered well.” The Water District also gave the firm a map showing where there likely was an abandoned but undestroyed well from a farm previously on the land where Rancho Palma Grande is now located. In addition to giving the map to the HOA, the law firm advised the HOA to take “all steps . . . to avoid further damages from the water flow under the unit” because of the “exponential costs involved if not properly addressed.” 3 In early June, a water restoration consultant, the Anderson Group, recommended that the HOA dry out the crawlspace to reduce the risk of mold developing in the homeowners’ unit. The Anderson Group proposed to use air movers, scrubbers, and filtration devices at a total cost of a little over $7,000. The HOA rejected the proposal. The HOA also received a report finding high moisture levels and mold in the homeowners’ unit and recommending remediation measures. However, the HOA did not implement the recommendations. A series of drilling contractors confirmed to the HOA that there was likely an undestroyed well underneath or near the homeowners’ unit. In early July, the Pitcher Well Drilling Company informed the HOA that there appeared to be a well either under or close to the rear foundation of the homeowners’ unit. However, Pitcher’s excavator was so large that it could not be used to dig for the well without causing major damage to the homeowners’ unit. Later in July, a second drilling contractor, Dan Lynch, estimated that it would cost $7,500 to open the floor of the homeowners’ unit with a mini-excavator, dig into the crawlspace, and expose the suspected wellhead. The HOA rejected this proposal. In August, Lynch examined the crawlspace and discovered a hole full of water with bubbles coming up, a sign of a well, which Lynch believed was either under the crawlspace or just outside the rear foundation. Lynch advised the HOA that the hole could continue to grow and sink, and the HOA should move quickly to avoid any further deterioration. Lynch offered, at a cost of $150 per hour, to research historical documents and attempt to triangulate the location of the suspected well, to use a metal detector to look for the well, and to install a fan in the crawlspace. The HOA rejected these proposals as well. In November, the HOA consulted a third driller, Randy Dougherty. Dougherty noted several possible sources of the water in the crawlspace—an improperly capped well, an underground spring, or a high water table—but advised that an undestroyed well was “probable” and that the well was likely near the rear foundation or close by. 4 Dougherty suggested that the HOA use a magnetometer or ground penetrating radar to search for the well. The HOA did not do so. 3. The HOA’s Change of Course Consistent with the opinions of the City, the Water District, and the drilling contractors, Moritz initially believed that water in the crawlspace was from a well, and the HOA took the position that there was likely an undestroyed well underneath the crawlspace. For example, the HOA told the Anderson Group that there was such a well, drafted a letter to the City demanding immediate action to deal with the suspected well, and formed a “well” committee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Ridley v. Rancho Palma Grande Homeowners Assn., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ridley-v-rancho-palma-grande-homeowners-assn-calctapp-2025.