Village Park Community Ass'n v. Nishimura

122 P.3d 267, 108 Haw. 487
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 14, 2005
Docket26061
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 122 P.3d 267 (Village Park Community Ass'n v. Nishimura) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Village Park Community Ass'n v. Nishimura, 122 P.3d 267, 108 Haw. 487 (hawapp 2005).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

BURNS, C.J.

Plaintiff-Appellee and Cross-Appellant Village Park Community Association (the Association) is a Hawai'i nonprofit corporation whose members are the owners of residential properties at the Village Park Community, a planned residential community. Defendants-Appellants and Cross-Appellees Steven Nishimura and Elizabeth Nishimura (Defendants or the Nishimuras) are co-owners of a house and lot within the Village Park Community.

The Nishimuras appeal, and the Association cross-appeals, from the Final Judgment entered by Judge Sabrina S. McKenna on September 3, 2003 in the Circuit Court of the First Circuit. This Final Judgment states, in relevant part, as follows:

In Count Two, requesting injunctive relief, judgment is entered in favor of [the Association] and against [the Nishimuras} for this:
(1) mandatory injunction requiring [the Nishimuras] to remove the deck, ..., with [the Nishimuras] having 60 days from the effective date of this Final Judgment to complete such removal and, if [the Nishi-muras] fail to do so by that date, the [Association] is authorized to enter the Property to effectuate such removal, and thereafter move the court for an award of costs and expenses incurred, including attorneys’ fees, with supplemental judgment to enter for approved amounts;
(2) mandatory injunction requiring [the Nishimuras] to repaint the iron railings on the retaining wall and the fence posts for the 30 inch wall parallel to the back boundary of the Property in a color complementary to their main dwelling unit, with the color to be designated in writing by [the Association] within 45 days of the effective date of this Final Judgment, with [the Nishimuras] having 30 days therefrom to complete said repainting and, if [the Nishi-muras] fail to do so, the [Association] is authorized to enter the Property to effectuate such repainting, and thereafter move the court for an award of costs and expenses incurred, including attorneys’ fees, with supplemental judgment to enter for approved amounts.
Judgment shall enter in favor of [the Nishimuras] and against [the Association] with respect to the remaining requests for mandatory injunctive relief in Count Two.
Judgment is also entered in favor of [the Association] and against [the Nishimuras] for $17,280 in reasonable attorneys’ fees.
We affirm.

The March 13, 1979 Declaration of Protective Covenants for Village Park Community (the Declaration) states, in Section 4.02, in relevant part,

(a) No construction or reconstruction of any improvement, alteration, repair or refinishing of any part of the exterior of an existing improvement or any other exterior work, which has a cost exceeding $1,000.00 shall be commenced or continued upon any lot unless the Owner thereof first obtains the approval of the Design Committee....
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(c) Upon the completion of any construction, reconstruction, refinishing, alteration, repair or other work for which approved plans and specifications are required pursuant to this section, the Owner shall give written notice thereof to the Design Committee ....
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(h) In the event of any violation of the provisions of this section, the Association may take any and all reasonable steps to restore the lot upon which such violation [489]*489has occurred to its existing condition prior to the violation and may assess the Owner of such lot for all eosts and expenses incurred in connection therewith. .

The Declaration states, in Section 7.05, in relevant part,

(a) Except as otherwise expressly provided herein, the Association shall have the right to enforce any and all of the limitations, restrictions, covenants, conditions, obligations, liens and charges now or hereafter imposed by or pursuant to this Declaration upon the Owner or upon any property within Village Park; and the cost of enforcement, including court costs and attorney’s fees, shall be paid by any Owner who violated any such limitation, restriction, covenant or condition or failed to pay or satisfy when due any such lien or charge....
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(e) The failure in any case to enforce any limitation, restriction, covenant, condition, obligation, lien or charge now or hereafter imposed by or pursuant to this Declaration of Protective Covenants shall not constitute a waiver of any right to enforce the same in another case against or with respect to the same Owner or lot or any other Owner or lot.

Article X(r) of the Association’s Design Committee Rules and Regulations (the Rules and Regulations) defines “Retaining Wall” as follows: “Retaining wall shall mean any structure constructed for the purpose of containing or supporting any embankment, fill or other earthen form.”

Article XIII(d) of the Rules and Regulations states:

Retaining Walls: Homeowners with sloping grades within their Lots may make these areas unable [sic] by installing retaining walls, provided that the walls do not exceed the allowance height for the location of the wall according to the laws and regulations of the City and County of Honolulu. It is the Owner’s responsibility to ensure that all retaining walls are designed and constructed using sound engineering principles.

When the Nishimuras purchased their house and lot, the back area of their lot had a steep slope that was not completely covered with vegetation, and was eroding and unusable. Rain would cause run-off of red dirt and mud. As described by the court in its July 30, 2003 Memorandum of Decision (the Decision), sometime after April 23, 1998, the Nishimuras

began building a three-level lava rock series of walls with steps leading to the upper level in their back lot.... [T]he wall ended up consisting of three tiers, and with black iron railings being placed on top.
Soon after commencement of construction, [the Nishimuras] received verbal complaints from one or more representatives of the Association regarding the lack of Design Committee approval for this work.
... [A]t the time [the Nishimuras] began constructing the three-tiered wall, they not only had constructive notice of the Covenants, but were also at least aware of the possibility that the Association would have to approve improvements to the property, but consciously chose to disregard that possibility.

(Footnote omitted.)

On August 12, 1998, the Nishimuras requested approval from the Design Committee for the construction of a trellis “on hill side center of second wall[.]” Without saying anything about the existence of a “second wall”, the Design Committee approved this request on or about August 23, 1998. The trellis, however, was not constructed at this location. It was constructed on the ground level adjacent to the house.

On September 14, 1998, the Nishimuras requested the Design Committee’s approval for construction of a fence not to exceed six feet in height on the “hillside”. The Design Committee disapproved this request because there was “no plan and drawing provided.”

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Bluebook (online)
122 P.3d 267, 108 Haw. 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-park-community-assn-v-nishimura-hawapp-2005.