Saunders v. Meyers

306 P.3d 978, 175 Wash. App. 427
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 28, 2013
DocketNo. 68249-1-I
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 306 P.3d 978 (Saunders v. Meyers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saunders v. Meyers, 306 P.3d 978, 175 Wash. App. 427 (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Appelwick, J.

¶1 The Somerset Covenants Review Committee decided the Meyerses’ mature maple tree violated a restrictive covenant protecting views and required that the tree be trimmed or removed. The trial court granted summary judgment enforcing that decision. However, the CRC’s decision was based upon an incorrect interpretation of the covenant and was not enforceable. We void the decision of the CRC, reverse the order of the trial court, and remand for award of costs to the Meyerses and dismissal of the action.

FACTS

¶2 This appeal arises from a single mature maple tree on Vernon and Virginia Meyerses’ property that partially obscures the views of their uphill neighbors. The tree is approximately 70 feet tall and 60 feet wide, with a trunk nearly four feet in diameter.

¶3 In 1962, Evergreen Land Developers Inc. subdivided and platted the Somerset neighborhood of Bellevue, Washington. Somerset is situated on a hillside with westerly views of Seattle, Mercer Island, Lake Washington, and the Olympic Mountains. Evergreen created the Somerset Building Committee (Building Committee) and put it in charge of reviewing building plans and enforcing Somerset’s restrictive covenants (covenants or CCRs). In 2001, by covenant amendment, the Covenants Review Committee (CRC) replaced the Building Committee, assuming its rights, powers, and authorities. The primary subject of this appeal is CCR ¶ 10:

[432]*43210. FENCES AND HEDGES.... No trees of any type, other than those existing at the time these restrictive covenants of Somerset, Division No. 2, Somerset, Division No. 4 and Somerset, Division No. 6 are filed, shall be allowed to grow more than twenty (20) feet in height, provided they do not unnecessarily interfere with the view of another residence. The Building Committee shall be the sole judge in deciding whether there has been such interference. In case of violation, the Building Committee shall be the sole judge in deciding whether there has been such interference. In case of violation, the Building Committee shall have enforcement powers as set forth in Paragraph 1 of GENERAL PROVISION.

The CRC interpreted this provision, applied it to the Meyerses’ maple tree, and ordered them to trim the tree as directed or remove it.

¶4 In 1970, the Meyerses purchased unimproved lot 117, which included the maple tree, then measuring around 70 feet tall and 30 feet wide. The Building Committee approved the Meyerses’ building plans, and their home was constructed shortly thereafter.

¶5 Three years later, in 1973, Peter and Elizabeth Saunders built their home uphill from the Meyerses’ existing home. In the late 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, they asked the Meyerses to trim the maple tree. The Saunderses recalled that the Meyerses “liked their tree, it was the reason they bought their house, and as far as the covenants were concerned, the tree was grandfathered.”

¶6 Michael and Marcy O’Brien purchased their home uphill from the Meyerses in 1997.1 Soon after, the O’Briens asked the Meyerses to prune minimal portions of the maple tree’s lower limbs to enhance their view. The Meyerses’ arborists routinely maintained the health of the tree and reduced its height from 70 feet to 63 feet in the 1990s and 2000s.

¶7 In 2006, the CRC met with Gerald Harkleroad to clarify ambiguities in the tree height covenant. Harkleroad [433]*433worked as a project manager for Evergreen from 1967 to 1974.2 During that time, he reviewed house plans and mediated homeowner disputes about interpretation and enforcement of the restrictive covenants.

¶8 Based on its meeting with Harkleroad, the CRC issued a view guideline but did not amend the covenants. The CRC wrote that the spirit of the guideline was to preserve homeowner views the way they were when the house was built. It explained, “[T]his Guideline will not be applied in a way that would force a downhill Owner to expand or enlarge the View that existed when the relevant Main Floor Living Space was Built. The guideline also addressed CCR ¶ 10:

The 20' provision means two things. First, “new” trees shall not be allowed to grow more than twenty (20) feet. Second, the twenty (20) foot height restriction does not apply to Grandfathered Trees, provided they do not unnecessarily interfere with the view of another residence. If either tree unnecessarily interferes with the view of another residence it must be trimmed to a lower height so the resulting view restoration is sufficient to prevent the tree from “unnecessarily interfering with the view of another residence.”

(Quoting CCR ¶ 10.)

¶9 After receiving 11 formal complaints about the maple tree, the CRC investigated whether it unnecessarily interfered with views. On May 28, 2009, the CRC sent the Meyerses a letter directing them to trim the tree’s canopy to 30 feet wide. The CRC wrote that the tree was approximately 70 feet tall in 1964 but was only 30 feet wide at the time. Since then, the tree’s width doubled to over 60 feet wide, which the CRC concluded unnecessarily interfered with neighbors’ views. The CRC explained:

Original large trees that were already tall enough so that a neighbor did not have a particular view over the tree at the [434]*434time of the covenants could continue to grow higher as long as it did not block other existing views. There would be no taking of a view since there was no pre-existing view to be taken. However, this does not allow a tree to take away an existing view by spreading out in the horizontal plane. This is what has happened with your tree. A tree’s width can have as much impact on a neighbor’s view as the tree’s height.

The CRC noted that if trimming the tree to 30 feet wide would adversely affect the tree’s health, then it should be removed.

¶10 On April 27, 2010, the CRC sent the Meyerses another decision letter requiring them to trim the height of the tree to the actual level it had been in 1967. The CRC explained that it did not address tree height in its first decision, because it did not have verifiable information regarding the height of the tree. But, based on new evidence, the CRC concluded that there used to be a view of the Olympics over the tree. The CRC’s decision letter included a photo with a red line designating the height at which the tree must be trimmed.

¶11 When the Meyerses did not comply with the CRC’s decisions, the Saunderses and O’Briens3 sued for breach of covenant and injunctive relief in April 2011. They requested that the Meyerses be ordered to trim or remove the maple tree, pursuant to the CRC’s decisions.

¶12 Both parties made cross motions for summary judgment, disputing the interpretation of CCR ¶ 10. The Meyerses also moved to strike evidence, which the trial court denied. The court subsequently granted the Saunderses’ motion and denied the Meyerses’ motion for summary judgment. The court ordered the Meyerses to comply with the CRC’s May 28, 2009, and April 27, 2010, decisions.

¶13 The trial court later denied the Meyerses’ motion for reconsideration requesting dismissal of the Saunderses’ [435]*435claims for failure to join the Somerset Homeowners Association and the CRC as necessary parties under CR 17 and CR 19. The Meyerses appealed.

DISCUSSION

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Bluebook (online)
306 P.3d 978, 175 Wash. App. 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-meyers-washctapp-2013.