Wilkinson v. Chiwawa Cmtys. Ass'n

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 2014
Docket86870-1
StatusPublished

This text of Wilkinson v. Chiwawa Cmtys. Ass'n (Wilkinson v. Chiwawa Cmtys. Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkinson v. Chiwawa Cmtys. Ass'n, (Wash. 2014).

Opinion

Fl LE IN CU!RI

1ft~~9· IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

ROSS WILKINSON and CINDY WILKINSON; MONTE KARNES and KIMBERLY KARNES; DAVID BETHEL and JEANIE BETHEL; DARRELL McLEAN; JIM PAULUS and KATHY PAULUS; JUSTIN NO. 86870-1 HARGIS and TABITHA HARGIS, JOE HARGIS and LINDA HARGIS; DANIEL MaciNDOE and !SIDRA MaciNDOE; DAVID SPICER and MARTHA SPICER, TED ENBANC TREPANIER and RUBY AKINS- TREPANIER,

Respondents, Filed APR 11 2014 v.

CHIWAWA COMMUNITIES ASSOCIATION, a Washington Non-Profit corporation,

Appellant.

STEPHENS, J.-Chiwawa Communities Association (Association) appeals

the trial court's grant of summary judgment to owners of homes in the Chiwawa

River Pines community. Respondents Ross and Cindy Wilkinson et al. asked the

trial court to invalidate a 2011 amendment to the community covenants prohibiting Wilkinson, et ux., et al. v. Chiwawa Cmtys. Ass 'n, 86870-1

rental of their homes for less than 30 days. We must decide if short-term vacation

rentals conflict with the covenants in place prior to 2011, if the Association validly

amended the covenants to prohibit them, and if the trial court erred by striking

portions of the offered evidence. We hold short-term rentals do not violate the

covenants barring commercial use of the property or restricting lots to single-family

residential use. We also hold the Association exceeded its power to amend the

covenants when it prohibited short-term vacation rentals in 2011, and the trial court

did not err by granting in part motions brought by the Wilkinsons to strike evidence.

Accordingly, we affirm the trial court. 1

FACTS

Chiwawa River Pines (Chiwawa) is a planned residential community located

in Chelan County. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 54-55. The community comprises of a

mix of permanent and vacation residents. CP at 134.

As developer Pope & Talbot Inc. completed each of the development's six

phases, it recorded a separate set of covenants that purported to establish a "general

1 The dissent complains that by affinning the trial court as to the limited decisions the Association asked us to review we have somehow affirmed the trial court's order in its entirety. Dissent (Gordon McCloud, J.) at 2-3. This is simply not true. Although the Association assigned error to the trial court's order granting summary judgment to the respondent homeowners, the Association did not take issue with every ruling made therein. Br. of Appellant at 3-4. Rather, the Association asked us to consider whether short-term vacation rentals are consistent with the governing restrictive covenants of the Chiwawa River Pines community, whether a majority of Chiwawa homeowners could amend the governing restrictive covenants to prohibit short-term vacation rentals, and whether the testimony of certain Chiwawa homeowners and the comments of other homeowners in response to a 2007 survey were admissible evidence. See id. Our holding is consequently limited to these issues and the trial court's corresponding decisions. RAP 12.1(a) ("[T]he appellate court will decide a case only on the basis of issues set forth by the parties in their briefs.").

-2- Wilkinson, et ux., et al. v. Chiwawa Cmtys. Ass 'n, 86870-1

plan of development" for the community. See, e.g., CP at 55. Under the Pope &

Talbot covenants, ownership of the property in Chiwawa automatically carries a

right of membership in the Association. CP at 63, 67, 72, 75, 78. In 1988, a majority

of the Association's members voted to consolidate the Pope & Talbot covenants into

a single set of covenants governing all six phases of the development (1988

covenants). CP at 178, 186. The 1988 covenants preserved much from the earlier

Pope & Talbot covenants, including the right of membership in the Association for

all landowners, CP at 84, and the power "to change these protective restrictions and

covenants in whole or in part" by majority vote, CP at 83. The 1988 covenants also

carried over earlier restrictions on construction and land use from phases three

through six, CP at 55-57, and restrictions on signage from phase two, compare CP

at 63-64, with CP at 82. In 1992, the Association voted to eliminate the clause

permitting construction of "one guest cottage" on Chiwawa lots, compare CP at 81,

with CP at 85, but made no other material amendments. Thus, the resultant

1988/1992 covenants provide in pertinent part:

4. LANDUSE. Lots shall be utilized solely for single family residential use consisting of single residential dwelling and such out-buildings (garage, patio structure), as consistent with permanent or recreational residence. All habitable structures must be located not nearer than 20 feet to the front lot line. Structures shall be of new construction and shall not be commenced until building permit of appropriate public body is obtained.... 5. NUISANCE OR OFFENSIVE USE. No nuisance or offensive use shall be conducted or suffered as to lots subject hereto, nor shall any lot be utilized for industrial or commercial use (excepting only appropriate real estate sale signs in sale of lots, grantor further reserving to itself, its successors and assigns, the right to operate a conventional real estate sales or agency office upon an unsold lot within such plat), nor as a dump, nor shall there be kept animals or stock of any kind

-3- Wilkinson, et ux., et al. v. Chiwawa Cmtys. Ass 'n, 86870-1

other than conventional, domestic pets with the exception of horses, etc. stabled on the lot for short-term recreational activities complying with non- road usage in Chiwawa River Pines, except for entrance and exit. Lot owners retaining animals must confine their animals from wandering off the lot and must maintain cleanliness of grounds to eliminate animal offensive wastes, odors, flies, etc. at all times .... 6. TRASH DISPOSAL. ... No sign of any kind shall be displayed to the public view on any lot, tract or subdivision thereof in the plat, except one sign of not more than 3 feet square giving the names of the occupants of the lot, tract, or approved subdivision thereof, and one sign of not more than 6 square feet advertising the property for sale or rent.

CP at 85-86 (emphasis added). The 1988/1992 covenants remained unchanged until

the Association sought to amend them in 2008 and again in 2011 to prohibit short-

term rentals.

Chiwawa residents have rented their homes to unrelated persons on a short-

term, for-profit basis for decades without controversy. 2 CP at 59. However, as the

number of homes available for short-term rental and the frequency of rentals

increased, the Association noted rising concerns among members about vacation

rentals. CP at 655, 689.

In response to member complaints, in 2007 the Association distributed a

survey to gauge interest in barring what it characterized as "nightly rentals." CP at

135. A majority favored such a prohibition and, in September 2008, voted to bar all

rentals of less than six months as prohibited commercial uses. CP at 135-36.

In a predecessor case, Ross and Cindy Wilkinson and other homeowners

(collectively Wilkinsons) successfully challenged the 2008 amendment in superior

2 The court notes that there were instances when the Association sought to terminate "lodging facilities and transient nightly rentals," Br. of Appellant at 6, but not weekend, weekly, or monthly rentals.

-4- Wilkinson, et ux., et al. v. Chiwawa Cmtys. Ass 'n, 86870-1

court. Wilkinson v. Chiwawa Cmtys. Ass 'n, noted at 162 Wn. App.

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