Travis Settlement Home-Owners' Association v. 71 Warehouse, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 22, 2024
Docket03-23-00108-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Travis Settlement Home-Owners' Association v. 71 Warehouse, LLC (Travis Settlement Home-Owners' Association v. 71 Warehouse, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travis Settlement Home-Owners' Association v. 71 Warehouse, LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-23-00108-CV

Travis Settlement Home-Owners’ Association, Appellant

v.

71 Warehouse, LLC, Appellee

FROM THE 53RD DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-GN-20-001001, THE HONORABLE JESSICA MANGRUM, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The Travis Settlement Home-Owners’ Association (“Association”) appeals from a

take nothing judgment in its suit against 71 Warehouse, LLC to enforce certain restrictive

covenants. The Association argues that the district court erred by denying the Association’s

motion for a continuance and by concluding the Association failed to prove its claim. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Travis Settlement is a mixed-use community located in Travis County off

Highway 71. The subdivision is subject to the Restated Declaration of Easements, Covenants

and Restrictions (Declaration). The Declaration includes several restrictive covenants pertaining

to land use, four of which are relevant here. First, no one in the subdivision may use any part of

their property “in a manner that adversely affects adjoining property owners or creates an

annoyance or nuisance to other property owners. This shall include noise pollution such as barking dogs.” Second, “commercial kennels” may not operate anywhere in the subdivision.

And, on the lots designated for commercial use, the Declaration prohibits any business that “does

not conduct all of the activities of the business on the inside of an enclosed building” or “that in

the sole discretion of the Board could create any dangerous, injurious, noxious, or otherwise

objectionable noise . . . or other form of air pollution . . . as to affect any use within the

vicinity.” To ensure compliance with these restrictions, the Declaration prohibits constructing

any improvements unless the Association’s Architectural Control Committee (ACC) approves

the plans in writing. The ACC may also grant variances from the Declaration’s restrictions.

In 2014, 71 Warehouse purchased two commercial lots located between Highway

71 and a residential street. Two years later, 71 Warehouse requested a variance on behalf of a

potential tenant, Camp Bow Wow, which wanted to open a “dog grooming/boarding center” with

“a small outdoor, fenced and sound-controlled area to walk dogs in.” Plans submitted with the

request indicated that there could be up to one hundred dogs in the facility at a time. The ACC

subsequently informed 71 Warehouse by letter that it had “reviewed and APPROVED your

submittal for the Variance Request per the plans submitted based on the following condition: dog

grooming/boarding center to have a small outdoor, fenced and sound-controlled area for use as a

dog walk.” By separate communication, the ACC informed 71 Warehouse that the variance

could “be rescinded if excessive noise (barking, fighting/playing, human voices, etc.), bad

smells, sanitation concerns, etc. occur.”

Construction began soon afterwards, and Camp Bow Wow opened in 2017.

Gary Bahl, a member of the Association’s board at the time, later testified that complaints began

almost immediately. On November 16, 2018, the Association’s property management company

sent a “Friendly Reminder Notice” to Warehouse 71 stating that “Excessive dog barking noise

2 has been reported by several owners in Travis Settlement HOA coming from this address daily”

and asking 71 Warehouse “to minimize or eliminate the dog barking noise with[in] 14 days.” If

the noise problem was not resolved by November 30, 2018, the Association would fine

71 Warehouse $100 per day, retroactive to the date of the letter. Two weeks later, the

Association sent 71 Warehouse another letter issuing the promised fines. On October 11, 2019,

the Association sent another letter to 71 Warehouse reiterating the complaint about “excessive

dog barking noise.” Two days later, the Association sent another letter stating the board had met

and decided that 71 Warehouse had “two options” to cure the violations: require Camp Bow

Wow to “operate their entire business inside and therefore not use the dog run” or “fully enclose

the dog run.” The four letters each cited the Declaration’s prohibition on operating a business

that, in the “sole discretion” of the Association, generated excessive noise.

The Association sued 71 Warehouse in February 2020 for breach of restrictive

covenants, alleging that Camp Bow Wow “has continuously created excessive noise due to

barking dogs and [71 Warehouse] has taken no action to reduce the amount of noise being

cause[d] by the business.” The Association sought injunctive relief, statutory damages, and

attorney’s fees. 1

In June of 2022, the case was set for a three-day bench trial beginning

December 19, 2022. The parties disagreed over whether the case would be tried in person or

through video conferencing. The Travis County civil and family courts’ emergency order in

effect at the time provided:

1 The Association later amended its petition to purse claims regarding issues with the septic system on one of Warehouse 71’s lots. The district court rendered judgment for 71 Warehouse, and the Association does not challenge that ruling here. 3 In-person and remote hearings and bench trials are being held during jury and non-jury weeks. Most proceedings (other than jury trials) are being held remotely, but for long docket settings, if all counsel and self-represented litigants agree to an in-person setting, they may so indicate on their announcement form, and the court to which the setting is assigned will notify them if an in-person hearing or trial is feasible.

Travis County Clerk, Fifth Amended Emergency Order in the

Travis County Civil and Family Courts, https://countyclerk.traviscountytx.gov/wp-

content/uploads/covid/FifthAmendedEmergencyOrderRegardingCovid19.pdf (last visited

Feb. 16, 2024). No announcement form appears in the record.

On December 16 (the Friday before the Monday trial setting) the district court’s

executive assistant notified the parties by email that the “hearing on the Monday Long Docket

has been assigned to Judge Mangrum and will begin at 9:00 a.m. The hearing will be conducted

through Zoom Meetings.” Early on December 19, the Association filed a motion to continue the

trial “until a time when this case can be tried in person.” The district court heard arguments on

the motion and denied it.

The parties tried the case to the bench over two days. The Association presented

testimony from Marcus Federman, a member of the Association’s board of directors; Bahl; and

the Association’s expert, Arno Bommer. 71 Warehouse presented testimony from Kimberly

Elliot, the owner of the Camp Bow Wow franchise, and 71 Warehouse’s general counsel,

Benjamin Williams. The district court subsequently signed a take-nothing judgment in favor of

71 Warehouse and filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. The district court concluded

that the Association failed in its evidentiary burden “to establish breach of the restrictive

covenants at issue” and, as an alternative ground, that “the Association waived the

complained-of noise violations” by granting a variance. This appeal followed.

4 DISCUSSION

The Association argues in two issues that the district court erred by denying its

motion for a continuance and in rendering judgment for 71 Warehouse.

Continuance

We start with the Association’s challenge to the denial of its motion for a

continuance.

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