White v. Dorfman

White v. Dorfman

116 Cal.App.3d 892 (1981)

Summary by Mary M. Howell, Esq.:

Facts

Plaintiffs and Defendants owned homes adjacent to each other in a Beverly Hills terraced development. At the time Defendants purchased their property, it was a vacant lot. Defendants commenced construction of a single family residence in April 1977 and Plaintiffs filed suit to enjoin the construction shortly thereafter claiming the construction would obstruct their view. The declaration of restrictions for the subdivision included provisions that prohibited the construction of any structure that exceeded 22 feet in height and further proscribed the planting or erection of any hedge, fence or structure that unreasonably obstructed the view from any other lot. Defendants’ home was completed in February 1979 and was built to a height of 17 feet, well within the 22-foot height restriction. Nevertheless, Plaintiffs sought injunctive relief based on the fact that Defendants’ structure blocked Plaintiffs’ panoramic city view.

Held

For the Defendants. In reaching its decision, the appellate court strained to distinguish the ruling reached in Seligman, and held that while a homeowner can be enjoined from expanding his existing residence that will unreasonably obstruct an adjoining view, a landowner cannot be denied the right to develop vacant residential lot that would prevent the owner from building any structure whatsoever on the property.

*** End Summary ***

White v. Dorfman

116 Cal.App.3d 892 (1981)

894*894 COUNSEL

Daniel C. Padnick and Michael P. Rubin for Plaintiffs and Appellants.

Kinkle, Rodiger & Spriggs and Guillermo W. Schnaider for Defendants and Appellants.

OPINION

HASTINGS, J.

Appellants (White et al.) are the owners of property commonly known as 1131 Wallace Ridge Drive in Beverly Hills, which they purchased as a single family residence in 1975. Respondents (Dorfman et al.) are the owners of real property commonly known as 1120 Wallace Ridge Drive, which is located across the street and down hill from appellants’ property. Respondents purchased their property as a vacant lot for development as a single family residence and began construction in April 1977.

895*895 On October 24, 1977, appellants sought a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction to stop construction, claiming respondents had violated certain covenants in the declarations of restrictions (CC & Rs) by building a house which would block appellants’ view. The preliminary injunction was denied and appellant filed an amended complaint for injunctive relief and damages on March 13, 1978. The matter proceeded to trial in September 1979, and judgment was entered for respondents with costs and attorneys’ fees as provided for in the CC & Rs. Thereafter appellants filed a motion for a new trial and a motion to tax costs. On November 26, the court denied appellants’ motion for a new trial; on January 14, 1980, the trial court reduced the attorneys’ fees awarded respondents. This appeal followed: appellants appeal from the judgment entered in favor of respondents and from the denial of a motion for a new trial; respondents cross-appeal from the order reducing attorneys’ fees.

The properties involved in this dispute are located in the area known as Trousdale Estates. At all relevant times this area was governed by CC & Rs which had been recorded in 1955. Paragraph XII of the CC & Rs provided for an architectural committee to oversee the development of the property for the first 12 years, and such a committee did operate until it went out of existence in 1967. The original members of the committee were Paul Trousdale, Willard Lewis and Charles Church. Mr. Trousdale and Mr. Church were also signers of the original CC & Rs. Mr. Church resigned from the committee sometime before it went out of existence.

The center of this dispute turns on an interpretation of two provisions of the CC & Rs. The first provision is paragraph III(b) which reads: “No building, structure or improvement shall be constructed, erected, altered, placed or permitted to remain on any of said lots or any building site on said property exceeding twenty-two (22) feet in height above the ground level, except with the prior written consent and approval of the Architectural Committee.” The second provision, paragraph IV, reads: “No hedge or hedgerow, or wall or fence or other structure shall be planted, erected, located or maintained upon any lot in such location or in such height as to unreasonably obstruct the view from any other lot or lots on said Tract.”

Respondents’ house was completed in February 1979, and was built to a height of 17 feet above the original grade level, well within the 22-foot restriction in paragraph III(b) but clearly blocking appellants’ 896*896 panoramic view of the city. Appellants maintain that even though the house complies with paragraph III(b), it is subject to the further restrictions of paragraph IV and cannot unreasonably obstruct the view from another lot.

Appellants argue that both paragraphs III(b) and IV apply to a dwelling house and garage; but that paragraph IV is the only “view” provision and it supercedes paragraph III so as to further restrict the height of houses if they interfere with anyone’s view.

Respondents argue that both paragraphs are “view” provisions; paragraph III(b) is to apply to a dwelling house and garage and paragraph IV is to apply to hedges or hedgerows, walls, fences and “other structures,” meaning structures similar to those listed.

Over the objection of respondents, the trial court allowed testimony from Mr. Donald Lewis, son of one of the original members of the architectural committee and signers of the CC & Rs. Mr. Lewis was active in the sale and development of Trousdale Estates from its inception. He testified that while the architectural committee was in existence certain houses were limited to less than the 22-foot limitation because they unreasonably obstructed the view from other lots. The purpose of the offered testimony was to show that the signers of the document interpreted paragraph IV as applying to dwelling houses. However, the trial court disregarded the testimony since the architectural committee had almost unlimited power under paragraph XII(f) to approve or disapprove building plans, including the proposed height of the building.[1]

897*897 (1a) The trial court then ruled that paragraph IV of the CC & Rs does not govern or apply to the height limitation or location of a dwelling house or garage, and that respondents did not violate the restrictions. We agree with the trial court.

(2) In resolving this issue we must independently interpret the provisions of the document. (Welch v. Kai (1970) 4 Cal. App.3d 374, 378 [84 Cal. Rptr. 619]; Faus v.City of Los Angeles (1967) 67 Cal.2d 350, 360 [62 Cal. Rptr. 193, 431 P.2d 849].) It is a general rule that restrictive covenants are construed strictly against the person seeking to enforce them, and any doubt will be resolved in favor of the free use of land. But it is also true that the “`intent of the parties and the object of the deed or restriction should govern, giving the instrument a just and fair interpretation.'” (Ezer v.Fuchsloch (1979) 99 Cal. App.3d 849, 861 [160 Cal. Rptr. 486]; Lincoln Sav. & Loan Assn. v. Riviera Estates Assn. (1970) 7 Cal. App.3d 449, 463 [87 Cal. Rptr. 150].) The intention of the parties is to be determined from the document as a whole, and if possible still give effect to every part. (Welch v. Kai, supra, 4 Cal. App.3d 374; Civ. Code, § 1641.)

(1b) We believe a fair interpretation of the document and the plain meaning of its language indicate that paragraph III(b) imposes a specific height limit of 22 feet for buildings, structures or improvements, unless the architectural committee gave their prior written consent to build higher. Whether paragraph III(b) is for the purpose of protecting views or not need not be decided here. Paragraph IV by its own terms is a view provision and applies to things other than dwelling houses and garages.

This interpretation of paragraph IV is strengthened by the rule of constructionejusdem generis, which means that when general words follow the enumeration of particular classes of persons or things, the general words will be construed as applicable only to persons or things of the same general nature or class as those enumerated. (Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. San Diego Dist. Council of Carpenters(1979) 25 Cal.3d 317, 330, 331 [158 Cal. Rptr. 370, 599 P.2d 676]; see also Civ. Code, § 3534, “Particular words qualify those which are general.”) This rule is also applicable to the construction of deeds. (Bader v. Coale (1941) 48 Cal. App.2d 276, 279 [119 P.2d 763].) In paragraph IV the specific words “no hedge or hedgerow, or wall or fence” are followed by the general term, “or other structure.” A dwelling house or garage is not of the same nature or class as a hedge, hedgerow, wall or fence.

898*898 This construction is also required by the content and the proximity of paragraphs III and IV. Paragraph III consists of ten subparagraphs, seven of which specifically call out and restrict buildings (the remaining three deal with streets and access). Immediately following paragraph III is the view provision, paragraph IV. Grammatically, the words “other structure” as used in paragraph IV function to pick up items overlooked in the specific enumeration of “hedge, hedgerow or wall or fence.” Given the potential of a house or building to affect views, compared to a hedge, fence or wall, and given the emphasis placed on buildings in the prior paragraph which specifically limits their height, it is not logical to further restrict buildings by the catchall phrase “other structures” in a paragraph devoted to hedges, walls and fences.

Appellants argue that the words “other structure” must apply to buildings because throughout the document “structure” and “building” are used interchangeably. We disagree. The word “structure” as used in the CC & Rs has various meanings depending upon the context in which it is used.

Appellants place too much importance on the testimony of Mr. Lewis. Respondents’ objections to the testimony were well taken. The CC & Rs disbanded the architectural committee after the first 12 years. The committee’s interpretation of the CC & Rs and what the committee did on previous occasions are immaterial. The committee had sweeping power to disapprove houses under paragraph XII(f) and did not need to rely on paragraph IV. Their actions cannot alter the plain meaning of the language in paragraphs III and IV which governed respondents’ rights after the committee ceased to exist.

Appellants place great reliance on our opinion in Seligman v. Tucker (1970) 6 Cal. App.3d 691 [86 Cal. Rptr. 187]. In that case the plaintiff successfully enforced a restriction against an addition to a house. The restriction, abbreviated by the opinion, read: “`No … structure shall be … erected … upon any lot in such location or in such height as to unreasonably obstruct the view from any other lot….'” (Ibid. at p. 693.) The reliance is misplaced. Paragraph IV of the case at bar is not in the identical language as the Seligman restriction, as appellant suggests. As previously noted, because of the specific enumeration of hedges, hedgerows, walls or fences, the phrase “other structure” took on a particular meaning as referring to “structures of a similar kind or nature.” Furthermore, the interpretation of paragraph IV was made with reference to the CC & Rs as a whole, and specifically in conjunction with paragraph899*899 III. A meaningful comparison cannot be made between the restrictions in the two cases since the Seligman opinion is silent on what other provisions were in that document.

Appellants’ next argument is that the trial court erred in not granting them a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence and surprise.

The alleged new evidence was an affidavit of Charles Church which stated in part: “The phrase `other structure’ as used in this paragraph meant anything that might be built on a lot, other than a hedge, hedgerow, wall or fence, including a house or the main dwelling house to be built on a lot. The phrase `other structure’ was never meant to be limited to other structures similar to a hedge, hedgerow, or wall or fence.”

Charles Church was a member of the architectural committee. His evidence, which was mainly cumulative to the testimony of Mr. Lewis and also probably immaterial and irrelevant, could not change the patent language of the CC & Rs.

(3) Furthermore, a motion for a new trial on the grounds of newly discovered evidence is within the discretion of the trial court and will not be disturbed on appeal unless a clear abuse of discretion is shown. (Ballard v. Pacific Greyhound Lines(1946) 28 Cal.2d 357, 358-359 [170 P.2d 465]; Cansdale v. Board of Administration(1976) 59 Cal. App.3d 656, 667 [130 Cal. Rptr. 880].)

(4) The essential elements that must be established by appellants are: (1) that the evidence is newly discovered, (2) that reasonable diligence has been exercised in its discovery and production, and (3) that the evidence is material to the movant’s case. (Horowitz v. Noble (1978) 79 Cal. App.3d 120, 137 [144 Cal. Rptr. 710].)

Appellants’ attorney by his own admission knew of Charles Church, but had decided against expending additional time and money to locate him. “Your declarant decided it was unnecessary to expend additional time and effort to locate Judge Church[2] or other signators…. Because of all the foregoing, your declarant decided that it was unnecessary to disturb Judge Church by hiring an investigator to locate him.” We find no abuse of discretion in the court’s refusal to grant a new trial.

900*900 Finally, respondents’ cross-appeal, claiming that the trial court abused its discretion in reducing the amount of attorneys’ fees in the absence of any declarations or evidence produced by appellants.

(5) An award of attorneys’ fees is within the sound discretion of the trial court and absent a manifest abuse of discretion we will not interfere with their decision. (Shannon v. Northern Counties Title Ins. Co. (1969) 270 Cal. App.2d 686 [76 Cal. Rptr. 7].)

We find no abuse of discretion here. “The value of legal services performed in a case is a matter in which the trial court has its own expertise. [Citations.] The trial court may make its own determination of the value of the services contrary to, or without the necessity for, expert testimony…. [Citations.]” Melnyk v. Robledo (1976) 64 Cal. App.3d 618, 623 [134 Cal. Rptr. 602].)

The judgment is affirmed.

Kaus, P.J., and Stephens, J., concurred.

[1] Paragraph XII(f) states: “Said Architectural Committee or its designated representative shall have power and authority to approve or disapprove the plans and specifications, and the approval of said plans, specifications and plot plan may be withheld not only because of the non-compliance with any of the specific conditions, covenants and restrictions contained in this Declaration, but also by reason of the reasonable dissatisfaction of the Committee with the grading plan, location of the structure on the lot or building site, the finished ground elevation, the color scheme, finish, design, proportions, architecture, shape, height, style and appropriateness of the proposed structure or altered structures, the materials used therein, the kind, pitch or type of roof proposed to be placed thereon, the planting, landscaping, size height or location of trees on the lot or building site, or because of its reasonable dissatisfaction with any or all other matters or things which, in the reasonable judgment of the Committee, will render the proposed structure inharmonious or out of keeping with the general plan of improvement of said property or with the structures erected on other building sites in said tract.”

[2] Judge Church was a well known superior court judge in Los Angeles.

 

Keywords: Views

Villa de las Palmas Homeowners Ass’n. v. Terifaj

Villa de las Palmas Homeowners Association v. Terifaj

14 Cal.Rptr.3d 67 (2004)

Summary by Mary M. Howell, Esq.:

Facts

Homeowner sought to keep numerous pets in violation of a CC&R provision adopted by the members. She argued that Nahrstedt only covered developer-imposed restrictions, and that restrictions adopted by the members should not be presumed to be reasonable (meaning the association would have to prove, in each case, that the CC&R provision was reasonable as to a particular homeowner in a particular case.)

Held

For association. The California Supreme Court held that homeowner-adopted CC&R provisions are to be accorded the same presumption of reasonableness as those imposed by a developer. To hold otherwise would result in a patchwork of restrictions, which does not accord with the legislature’s endorsement of common interest developments. Further, when a homeowner purchases a home subject to CC&Rs which may be amended by the other homeowners, that buyer takes title subject to the possibility that the homeowners may amend the documents in ways he or she finds undesirable.

*** End Summary ***

Villa de las Palmas Homeowners Ass’n. v. Terifaj

14 Cal.Rptr.3d 67 (2004)

68*68 Law Office of Russell P. Nowell and Russell P. Nowell, Brea, for Defendant and Appellant.

Jeff Thom, Los Angeles, for California Council of the Blind as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Defendant and Appellant.

Fiore, Racobs & Powers, Peter E. Racobs, Riverside, and Margaret G. Wangler, Palm Desert, for Plaintiff and Respondent.

MORENO, J.

Civil Code section 1354, subdivision (a),[1] provides that covenants and restrictions in the declaration of a common interest development “shall be enforceable equitable servitudes, unless unreasonable.” Section 1355, subdivision (b), in turn, provides that the declaration may be amended if certain procedures are followed. In Nahrstedt v. Lakeside Village Condominium Association (1994) 8 Cal.4th 361, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275 (Nahrstedt), we construed subdivision (a) of section 1354 and held that covenants and restrictions in the declaration are enforceable “unless they are wholly arbitrary, violate a fundamental public policy, or impose a burden on the use of affected land that far outweighs any benefit.” (Nahrstedt, supra, at p. 382, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.) The use restriction in that case, a no-pet restriction, was included in a condominium development’s originating declaration and recorded prior to the conveyance of any of the units.

The questions we confront in this case are whether use restrictions added to a declaration through an amendment and recorded after a homeowner has purchased an individual unit bind such an owner, and whether the rule of Nahrstedt — that restrictions in a development’s declaration are presumed to be reasonable and are enforceable unless they are arbitrary, impose an undue burden on the property or violate fundamental public policy (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th 361, 386, 33 Cal. 69*69Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275)—applies to subsequently enacted restrictions. We are also called upon to decide whether the trial court abused its discretion in awarding attorney fees to the homeowners association.

We conclude that under the plain and unambiguous language of sections 1354, subdivision (a), and 1355, subdivision (b), use restrictions in amended declarations recorded subsequent to a challenging homeowner’s purchase of a condominium unit are binding on that homeowner, are enforceable via injunctive relief under section 1354, subdivision (a), and are entitled to the same judicial deference given use restrictions recorded prior to the homeowner’s purchase. We also conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in awarding attorney fees to the homeowners association as the prevailing party.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Villa De Las Palmas is a relatively small condominium development consisting of 24 units located in a single L-shaped building. There are 12 units each on the top and bottom levels, and all units have either a small patio or a deck, with common walls separating them. The walls, described as “pony walls,” initially extend from the unit at full height, and then slope down. Many owners, including defendant Paula Terifaj, do not make Villa De Las Palmas, which is located in Palm Springs, their primary residence, but visit only periodically or seasonally.

The individual condominium units were conveyed to the original grantees in 1962 by recorded grant deeds that contained the development’s covenants, conditions, and restrictions, also commonly known as CC & R’s. Pursuant to the 1962 deed (Declaration), all grantees were required to execute a management agreement and “covenant and agree to observe, perform and abide by any and all lawful by-laws, rules, regulations and conditions with respect to the use and occupancy of said premises which may from time to time be adopted or prescribed by the Board of Governors constituted in said Management Agreement.” Failure to abide by any covenant or restriction in the Declaration could result in forfeiture, and “any owner or occupant of any apartment upon said premises may bring legal action for injunction and/or damages against said defaulting owner. . . .” The Declaration further provided that “[t]he benefits and obligations of this deed shall inure to and be binding upon the heirs . . . and assigns of the respective parties hereto.”

Pursuant to the authority granted in the Declaration, the Villa De Las Palmas Homeowners Association (the Association) adopted a rule prohibiting pets. The unrecorded rule provided: “Pets of any kind are forbidden to be kept in the apartment building or on the grounds at any time.” While the exact date of the adoption of the no-pet rule is unknown, it is undisputed that it was in existence when Terifaj purchased her unit. Terifaj, a veterinarian who purchased her unit in 1995, did not receive a written copy of the rule prohibiting pets, but she admitted at trial that she was aware of the no-pet rule when she purchased her unit.

Despite the prohibition on pets, from the time Terifaj purchased her unit until 1998, she visited her unit with her dog Lucy. When Lucy died in 1998, Terifaj acquired another dog, a female boxer, and brought her to the property. Terifaj attempted to have the Association amend the no-pet rule at the Association’s 1996 and 2000 general meetings, but was unsuccessful.

The Association repeatedly warned Terifaj that she was violating the rule prohibiting pets on the property and fined her accordingly. Terifaj, however, was undeterred 70*70 and continued to bring her dog to the development. In response, in August 1999, the Association filed a complaint for injunctive and declaratory relief and nuisance, along with a motion for preliminary injunction, to compel Terifaj to abide by the no-pet rule. The trial court denied the motion for preliminary injunction in October 1999, ruling that it was not convinced the Association would prevail on the merits and that irreparable injury was not evident. The court ordered the case to nonbinding arbitration with a March 8, 2000, completion date.

In the interim between the denial of the preliminary injunction and the completion of arbitration, the members of the Association voted to amend the Declaration. In January 2000, the Association adopted and recorded the Amended and Restated Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions (Amended Declaration), which added a no-pet restriction, providing: “No pets or animals of any kind, including without limitation, dogs, cats, birds, livestock, reptiles or poultry, may be kept or permitted in any Apartment or anywhere on the Property.” The Amended Declaration further provides that violations of the covenants and restrictions contained in the Amended Declaration are nuisances, and that such violations may be enjoined.

Based on the recorded Amended Declaration, the Association filed an amended complaint alleging the same causes of action and seeking the same relief as the original complaint. Following a bench trial, the trial court ruled in favor of the Association on all causes of action. It found the covenants and restrictions in the Amended Declaration to be enforceable equitable servitudes, granted a permanent injunction against any further violation of the no-pet restriction, and found the violation to be a nuisance. The court awarded the Association $15,000 in attorney fees.

The Court of Appeal affirmed. It concluded that section 1354 “[o]n its face . . . applies to any declaration, regardless of when it is adopted and recorded.” Because the no-pet restriction was in the recorded Amended Declaration, it therefore constituted an equitable servitude under section 1354, subdivision (a). Relying on Nahrstedt, which the Court of Appeal found governed review of the pet restriction, the court held the restriction was not unreasonable.

We granted Terifaj’s petition for review.

II. DISCUSSION

As a condominium project, Villa De Las Palmas is a common interest development subject to the provisions of the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act (the Davis-Stirling Act or the Act). (§ 1350 et seq.) The Davis-Stirling Act, enacted in 1985 (Stats.1985, ch. 874, § 14, pp. 2774-2786), consolidated the statutory law governing condominiums and other common interest developments. Under the Act, a common interest development is created “whenever a separate interest coupled with an interest in the common area or membership in [an] association is, or has been, conveyed” and a declaration, a condominium plan, if one exists, and a final or parcel map are recorded.[2] (§ 1352.) Common interest developments are required to be managed by a homeowners association (§ 1363, subd. (a)), defined as “a nonprofit corporation or unincorporated association created for the purpose of managing a common interest development” (§ 1351, subd. (a)), which 71*71 homeowners are generally mandated to join (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 373, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275).

The Act contains a fairly extensive definitions section, defining as relevant here “governing documents” and “declaration.” The declaration is defined as “the document, however denominated, which contains the information required by section 1353.” (§ 1351, subd. (h).) Section 1353 requires that declarations recorded on or after January 1, 1986, contain certain information, including the development’s covenants and restrictions. The governing documents encompass a broader category of documents, including “the declaration and any other documents, such as bylaws, operating rules of the association, articles of incorporation, or articles of association, which govern the operation of the common interest development or association.” (§ 1351, subd. (j).)

The declaration is often referred to as the development’s constitution (see Rest.3d Property, Servitudes, § 6.10, com. a, p. 196; 1 Hanna & Van Atta, Cal. Common Interest Developments: Law and Practice (2003) § 22:2, p. 1325) and “establish[es] a system of governance.” (Villa Milano Homeowners Association v. Il Davorge (2000) 84 Cal.App.4th 819, 827, 102 Cal.Rptr.2d 1.) Importantly, it contains the development’s covenants and restrictions, which are “enforceable equitable servitudes, unless unreasonable.” (§ 1354, subd. (a).) Several provisions of the Act allow for the amendment of the declaration. Of particular relevance here is section 1355, subdivision (b) (hereafter section 1355(b)), which provides in relevant part: “Except to the extent that a declaration provides by its express terms that it is not amendable, in whole or in part, a declaration which fails to include provisions permitting its amendment at all times during its existence may be amended at any time.”[3]

Terifaj’s argument is somewhat ambiguous with respect to enforcement of restrictions contained in amended declarations. She appears to argue that such restrictions are entirely unenforceable in any manner, but also maintains that such restrictions are not enforceable pursuant to section 1354, subdivision (a), because they do not meet the requirements of equitable servitudes. Since her argument is vague, we address both contentions.

Because we are construing provisions in the Davis-Stirling Act, we briefly recite the rules of statutory construction that will guide our decision. Our primary task in construing a statute is to ascertain the intent of the Legislature. (Peracchi v. Superior Court (2003) 30 Cal.4th 1245, 1253, 135 Cal.Rptr.2d 639, 70 P.3d 1054.) We make this determination by looking to the words used in the statute and giving them their plain meaning. (Smith v. Rae-Venter Law Group (2002) 29 Cal.4th 345, 358, 127 Cal.Rptr.2d 516, 58 P.3d 367.) “`”If there is no ambiguity in the language of the statute, `then the Legislature is presumed to have meant what it said.'”‘” (Ibid.)

72*72 A.

We must first decide whether a use restriction contained in an amended declaration is enforceable against a homeowner who acquired his or her separate interest before the challenged amendment was adopted and recorded. As noted above, under the Davis-Stirling Act, a common interest development may amend its declaration pursuant to the provisions of the declaration itself or under the provisions of the Act. When a declaration is silent on whether it may be amended, section 1355(b) provides that it may be amended at any time. For the following reasons, we conclude that use restrictions added to a declaration by amendment bind not only subsequent purchasers, but current homeowners as well.

This conclusion follows from the plain language of section 1355(b), which provides in part: “For purposes of this subdivision, an amendment is only effective after (1) the proposed amendment has been distributed to all of the owners of separate interests in the common interest development by first-class mail postage prepaid or personal delivery not less than 15 days and not more than 60 days prior to any approval being solicited; (2) the approval of owners representing more than 50 percent . . . of the separate interests in the common interest development has been given, and that fact has been certified in a writing, executed and acknowledged by an officer of the association; and (3) the amendment has been recorded in each county in which a portion of the common interest development is located.” (Italics added.) Additionally, a copy of the recorded amendment must immediately be mailed or delivered to all homeowners.[4] In short, the statute provides that an amendment is effective after notice of the proposed amendment is given to the homeowners, a majority of the homeowners approve the amendment, and the amendment is recorded. (1 Hanna & Van Atta, Cal Common Interest Developments: Law and Practice, supra, § 22:119, p. 1439; 9 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate (3d ed.2001) § 25:133, pp. 302-303.)

Plainly read, any amendment duly adopted under this subdivision is effective against all homeowners, irrespective of when the owner acquired title to the separate interest or whether the homeowner voted for the amendment. (See, e.g., 1 Hanna & Van Atta, Cal Common Interest Developments: Law and Practice, supra, § 22:119, p. 1439; 9 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate, supra, § 25:133, p. 308.) Terifaj’s argument that subsequently enacted amendments are not binding on current homeowners runs counter to section 1355(b)’s express language that an amendment is effective upon the satisfaction of 73*73 the requirements enumerated in that provision. Neither section 1355(b) nor any other provision in the Davis-Stirling Act exempts from compliance with amendments to the declaration homeowners who purchased their individual units prior to the amendment.

That is not surprising. To allow a declaration to be amended but limit its applicability to subsequent purchasers would make little sense. A requirement for upholding covenants and restrictions in common interest developments is that they be uniformly applied and burden or benefit all interests evenly. (See, e.g., Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 368, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275 [restrictions must be “uniformly enforced”]; Rest.3d Property, Servitudes, § 6.10, com. f, p. 200.) This requirement would be severely undermined if only one segment of the condominium development were bound by the restriction. It would also, in effect, delay the benefit of the restriction or the amelioration of the harm addressed by the restriction until every current homeowner opposed to the restriction sold his or her interest. This would undermine the stability of the community, rather than promote stability as covenants and restrictions are intended to do.

Terifaj’s position would also, essentially, render meaningless the simple majority vote required for amendments to take effect under section 1355(b). Instead, unanimous consent would be needed, which would often be unattainable. The language of section 1355(b), however, makes clear that a simple majority is all that is required before an amendment becomes effective. One reason for this is because amendment provisions are designed to “prevent[] a small number of holdouts from blocking changes regarded by the majority to be necessary to adapt to changing circumstances and thereby permit the community to retain its vitality over time.” (Rest.3d Property, Servitudes, § 6.10, com. a, p. 196.)

Subjecting owners to use restrictions in amended declarations promotes stability within common interest developments. As we observed in Nahrstedt, “[u]se restrictions are an inherent part of any common interest development and are crucial to the stable, planned environment of any shared ownership arrangement.” (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 372, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.) Such restrictions may “preclude alteration of building exteriors, limit the number of persons that can occupy each unit, and place limitations on — or prohibit altogether — the keeping of pets. [Citations.]” (Id. at p. 373, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.) We explained that a homeowners association, “through an elected board of directors, is empowered . . . to enact new rules governing the use and occupancy of property within the [development].” (Ibid.) We further observed that “anyone who buys a unit in a common interest development with knowledge of its owners association’s discretionary power accepts `the risk that the power may be used in a way that benefits the commonality but harms the individual.'” (Id., at p. 374, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275, quoting Natelson, Consent, Coercion, and “Reasonableness” in Private Law: The Special Case of the Property Owners Association (1990) 51 Ohio State L.J. 41, 67.) A prospective homeowner who purchases property in a common interest development should be aware that new rules and regulations may be adopted by the homeowners association either through the board’s rule making power or through the association’s amendment powers. (See, e.g., Randolph, Changing the Rules: Should Courts Limit the Power of Common Interest Communities to Alter Unit Owners’ Privileges in the Face of Vested 74*74 Expectations? (1998) 38 Santa Clara L.Rev. 1081, 1126 [“There is no basis to argue that purchasers of units within common interest communities have an expectation that there will be no changes at all.”].)

Finally, section 1355(b)’s legislative history supports the conclusion that all homeowners are bound by amendments adopted and recorded subsequent to purchase. (Jarrow Formulas, Inc. v. LaMarche (2003) 31 Cal.4th 728, 736, 3 Cal.Rptr.3d 636, 74 P.3d 737 [court “may observe that available legislative history buttresses a plain language construction”].) Subdivision (b) of section 1355 was not part of the bill enacting the Davis-Stirling Act, but was added three years later in 1988. (Stats.1988, ch. 1409, § 1, p. 4776 [Assem. Bill No. 4426].)[5] An enrolled bill report from the Department of Real Estate states that “[m]embers of a homeowners’ association . . . should not forever be saddled with provisions they desire to change.” (Cal. Dept. of Real Estate, Enrolled Bill Rep. on Assem. Bill No. 4426 (1987-1988 Reg. Sess.) Aug. 29, 1988, p. 1.) Significantly, the report recommended approval of Assembly Bill No. 4426, despite acknowledging that current homeowners may have relied on the restrictions in place at the time they made their purchase, stating: “The failure to include a provision for amendment may indicate an intentional omission. Additionally, some changes may provide for inconsistent uses which were not previously permissible. Many owners may have acquired their interest in the subdivision because of such a restriction limiting use. To permit an amendment would affect their reasonable expectations.” (Enrolled Bill Rep. on Assem. Bill No. 4426, supra, p. 2.) The Legislature was thus aware that amendments could affect settled or reasonable expectations of some homeowners, but it did not limit the language of section 1355(b) to exempt those homeowners from subdivision (b)’s operation. Tellingly, nothing in the text of section 1355(b) indicates the Legislature intended only subsequent purchasers or homeowners who voted for an amendment to be bound by a use restriction so enacted.

Section 1355(b)’s express language and the limited legislative history compel the conclusion that all homeowners are bound by amendments made to a declaration pursuant to that section. Accordingly, we conclude that all homeowners are subject to use restrictions contained in amended declarations irrespective of when the amendment was passed.

B.

To enforce the no-pet restriction in the Amended Declaration, the Association sought injunctive relief under section 1354, subdivision (a) (hereafter section 1354(a)), which provides in relevant part: “The covenants and restrictions in the declaration shall be enforceable equitable servitudes, unless unreasonable.”[6] Terifaj contends that even if subsequently enacted use restrictions promulgated pursuant to section 1355(b) and recorded after a homeowner 75*75 has purchased property in the development are binding on those homeowners, equitable relief under section 1354(a) is nonetheless unavailable to the homeowners association to enforce such restrictions.

Equitable relief, maintains Terifaj, may not be granted under section 1354(a) in this case because that section requires that a use restriction constitute an equitable servitude in order to be enforceable through injunctive relief.[7] She cites our decision in Citizens for Covenant Compliance v. Anderson (1995) 12 Cal.4th 345, 47 Cal.Rptr.2d 898, 906 P.2d 1314 for the applicable California law on equitable servitudes, which she contends is incorporated in section 1354(a). She maintains the no-pet restriction in this case did not meet the requirements of equitable servitudes, in part, because it was not contained in a document recorded prior to her purchase of a unit in the development, and she did not have notice of the restriction when she purchased the property.

The Association counters that section 1354(a) applies to all restrictions and covenants in the development’s recorded declaration, original or amended, and relies primarily on the Court of Appeal’s conclusion that section 1354(a) facially applies to any declaration. The Association contends, and the Court of Appeal concluded, that use restrictions in amended declarations are equitable servitudes because section 1354(a) makes no distinction between restrictions contained in the original declaration and those added to the declaration through amendment. We agree with the Association that section 1354(a) facially applies to all covenants and restrictions in the declaration, irrespective of when such covenants and restrictions were incorporated into the declaration.

The text of section 1354(a) belies Terifaj’s contention that covenants and restrictions must meet the common law requirements of equitable servitudes before they may be enforced against a current homeowner. That section does not provide that covenants and restrictions are enforceable only if they meet the common law requirements of equitable servitudes, but clearly provides that covenants and restrictions in the declaration “shall be enforceable equitable servitudes, unless unreasonable” and shall bind all owners. (§ 1354(a), italics added.) This language could mean one of two things, both of which undermine Terifaj’s contention. Such restrictions are deemed to be equitable servitudes notwithstanding their failure to meet the technical requirements of equitable servitudes; that is, the Legislature has made such restrictions enforceable equitable servitudes by virtue of their inclusion in the declaration. Or, such restrictions may simply be enforceable in the same manner asequitable servitudes, with equitable remedies available to the Association, including injunctive relief. Either reading precludes the conclusion that the Legislature intended to incorporate the technical requirements of equitable servitudes into the statute. This interpretation appears compelled by the observation that accepting Terifaj’s position would, in effect, nullify the amendment provisions in the Davis-Stirling Act because homeowners could argue, as does Terifaj here, that they did not have notice of the particular use restriction enacted pursuant to those provisions. A homeowners association, thus, would be unable to seek injunctive relief to compel a complaining homeowner to comply with duly promulgated restrictions pursuant to section 76*761355(b). We do not think the Legislature intended such an anomalous result.

We therefore agree with the Court of Appeal that section 1354(a) governs enforcement of an amendment to a declaration because that section does not distinguish between an original and an amended declaration. The Legislature, by using expansive language in section 1354(a), intended all covenants and restrictions in the declaration to be enforceable against all homeowners under that provision. Only if the covenant or restriction in question is unreasonable will it be unenforceable under section 1354(a).

Accordingly, we conclude that section 1354(a) applies to enforcement actions relating not only to the covenants and restrictions in the original declaration, but also covenants and restrictions in any declaration.[8] We are left then with the issue whether the deferential Nahrstedt standard of presumptive reasonableness applies to use restrictions adopted and recorded after a challenging homeowner has purchased his or her individual interest.

C.

We interpreted section 1354(a) in Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th 361, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275, and held, pursuant to principles distilled from various authorities and the text of section 1354(a), that covenants and restrictions in recorded declarations of common interest developments are presumptively reasonable (Nahrstedt, supra,at p. 380, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275), and are enforceable “unless they are wholly arbitrary, violate a fundamental public policy, or impose a burden on the use of affected land that far outweighs any benefit” (id. at p. 382, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275).

In articulating the judicial standard of review to be applied to such restrictions, we relied on the language of section 1354(a) and noted that the prior version of section 1354(a) provided that covenants and restrictions in recorded declarations “`shall be enforceable equitable servitudes where reasonable‘” (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 380, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275; former § 1355 [Stats.1963, ch. 860, § 3, p. 2092]), and that the Legislature’s use of the double negative “unless unreasonable” in the current version of the statute “cloaked use restrictions contained in a condominium development’s recorded declaration with a presumption of reasonableness by shifting the burden of proving otherwise to the party challenging the use restriction.” (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 380, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.)

The Association contends Nahrstedt’s deferential standard applies to subsequently adopted and recorded use restrictions incorporated into a development’s declaration. Terifaj disagrees, emphasizing that our conclusion in Nahrstedt was based on the fact that the use restriction in that case was contained in a declaration recorded prior to the homeowner’s purchase, and relies on our reasoning that “giving deference to use restrictions contained in a condominium project’s originating documents protects the general expectations of condominium owners `that restrictions in place at the time they purchase their units will be enforceable.’ (Note, Judicial Review of Condominium Rulemaking [(1981)] 94 Harv. L.Rev. 647, 653; Ellickson, Cities 77*77and Homeowners’ Associations (1982) 130 U.Pa. L.Rev. 1519, 1526-1527 [stating that association members `unanimously consent to the provisions in the association’s original documents’ and courts therefore should not scrutinize such documents for `reasonableness’].)” (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 377, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.)

In Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th 361, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275, the homeowner, who had three indoor cats, sought to prevent the condominium homeowners association from enforcing a no-pet restriction against her because, she contended, her cats did not make noise and were not a nuisance (id. at p. 367,33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275), and she had been unaware of the restriction when she purchased her unit (id. at p. 369, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275). Applying the deferential standard, we held the no-pet restriction was enforceable because the homeowner failed to meet the burden placed on her, as the party challenging the restriction, to show that the restriction was “unreasonable.” (Id. at p. 389, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.)

Unlike in this case, Nahrstedt involved a pet restriction contained in a development’s originating declaration that was recorded prior to the challenging homeowner’s purchase, a fact we emphasized throughout our discussion. Because of that factual difference, much of reasoning in that decision is not necessarily relevant to the resolution of this case. However, Nahrstedt does contain reasoning that arguably supports the conclusion that subsequently enacted and recorded use restrictions should receive greater judicial scrutiny. We observed in Nahrstedt that other jurisdictions, “lacking . . . legislative guidance,” applied some form of reasonableness analysis to use restrictions in common interest developments. Significantly, we noted that some courts applied “the `reasonableness’ standard only to those restrictions adopted by majority vote of the homeowners or enacted under the rulemaking power of an association’s governing board, and would not apply this test to restrictions included in a planned development project’s recorded declaration or master deed.” (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 376, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.)

We discussed, in particular, Hidden Harbour Estates v. Basso(Fla.Dist.Ct.App.1981) 393 So.2d 637 (Basso), in which a Florida appellate court delineated two categories of restrictions — those found in the development’s declaration and those later promulgated by an association’s board of directors. Restrictions found in the development’s declaration are “clothed with a very strong presumption of validity which arises from the fact that each individual unit owner purchases his unit knowing of and accepting the restrictions to be imposed,” while restrictions in the second category are subjected to a reasonableness analysis. (Id.at pp. 639-640; Nahrstedt, supra, at pp. 376-377, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.)Basso imposed a reasonableness analysis to rules promulgated by a board of directors or decisions by the board denying a certain use when the decision falls within the board’s authority, explaining the reason for the more stringent standard is “to somewhat fetter the discretion of the board of directors.” (Basso, supra, at p. 640.) While the Basso court spoke of restrictions in the declaration, without distinguishing the original declaration from restrictions subsequently adopted through amendment, the reference to “each individual unit owner” purchasing with knowledge “of and accepting the restrictions to be imposed” (id. at p. 639), makes clear that the court was referring to the founding declaration or one in existence at the time of purchase.

78*78 We also discussed Noble v. Murphy (1993) 34 Mass.App.Ct. 452, 612 N.E.2d 266. In that case, the original recorded bylaws of a condominium development incorporated the development’s rules and regulations, which included a no-pet rule. (Id. at p. 270.) In the course of upholding the pet restriction, which had been added to the recorded bylaws prior to the challenging homeowner’s purchase of a unit, the court stated that “[a] condominium use restriction appearing in originating documents which predate the purchase of individual units may be subject to even more liberal review than if promulgated after units have been individually acquired.” (Ibid.;Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 377, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.)

Based on this discussion and because we explained that our interpretation of section 1354(a) was consistent with “judicial decisions in other jurisdictions that have applied a presumption of validity to the recorded land use restrictions of a common interest development” (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 382, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275, citing Noble and Basso), we have acknowledged that “some of our reasoning arguably suggested a distinction between originating [covenants and restrictions] and subsequently promulgated use restrictions.” (Lamden v. La Jolla Shores Clubdominium Homeowners Association (1999) 21 Cal.4th 249, 264, 87 Cal.Rptr.2d 237, 980 P.2d 940.) Our discussion of Basso and Noble suggests that we would not necessarily apply the same deferential standard to subsequently enacted use restrictions. For the reasons that follow, however, we conclude that subsequently promulgated and recorded use restrictions are entitled to the same judicial deference accorded covenants and restrictions in original declarations; that is, they are presumptively valid, and the burden of proving otherwise rests upon the challenging homeowner.

Although we discussed and seemingly approved of the distinction drawn in Bassobetween restrictions in the original declaration and those subsequently adopted, we did not hold or state in Nahrstedt that we were adopting such an approach. Instead we prefaced our discussion of Basso and Noble with the caveat that those decisions were from “states lacking . . . legislative guidance.” (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 376, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.) We, however, have been provided guidance by our Legislature through the Davis-Stirling Act, and as the Court of Appeal observed, the statutory language is “controlling.” Section 1354(a) unambiguously refers to the “declaration” and provides that the covenants and restrictions in the declaration are equitable servitudes that are enforceable unless unreasonable. It further provides that the covenants and restrictions shall bind all owners of separate interests. (§ 1354(a).) We have previously construed the phrase “unless unreasonable” in section 1354(a) to mean that restrictions in a declaration are enforceable unless they are arbitrary, violate public policy, or impose a burden on the land that outweighs any benefits. (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 389, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.) This interpretation was governed by the Legislature’s use of the double negative “unless unreasonable” in place of the previous phrase “where reasonable.” (Id. at p. 380, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.)

While our interpretation was consistent with Basso, Basso was not the primary basis for our holding — the statutory language was. As we concluded, “[i]n section 1354, the Legislature has specifically addressed the subject of the enforcement of use restrictions that, like the one in 79*79 this case prohibiting the keeping of certain animals, are recorded in the declaration of a condominium or other common interest development. The Legislature has mandated judicial enforcement of those restrictions unless they are shown to be unreasonable when applied to the development as a whole.” (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at pp. 388-389, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275, italics added.)

Nor did Nahrstedt imply that we would apply a more stringent standard, such as objective reasonableness, to restrictions in recorded amended declarations, as opposed to unrecorded use restrictions promulgated by a board of directors of a homeowners association or other unrecorded rules and regulations. (E.g., Lamden v. La Jolla Shores Clubdominium Homeowners Association, supra, 21 Cal.4th at p. 264, 87 Cal.Rptr.2d 237, 980 P.2d 940; Rancho Santa Fe Association v. Dolan-King(2004) 115 Cal.App.4th 28, 38 & fn. 2, 8 Cal.Rptr.3d 614.)

Moreover, there is no language in section 1355(b) that indicates a different standard for enforcing its provisions should, or may, apply. (California Fed. Savings & Loan Assn. v. City of Los Angeles (1995) 11 Cal.4th 342, 349, 45 Cal.Rptr.2d 279, 902 P.2d 297 [“It is our task to construe, not to amend, the statute.”].) Once the declaration is amended and recorded, section 1354(a) governs its enforcement, and hence, amendments are enforceable unless unreasonable. Had the Legislature intended a different standard to apply to subsequently adopted and recorded use restrictions than applies to restrictions in the original declaration, it would have so provided.

The language of another amendment provision in the Davis-Stirling Act — section 1356, subdivision (c)(5) — demonstrates that the Legislature, if it wished, could have provided that an amendment must be reasonable to be enforceable against a current homeowner under section 1354(a). When the declaration itself provides that it may be amended only with a supermajority vote, section 1356 allows a homeowners association or any homeowner in a common interest development to petition the court for a reduction of the required percentage of votes necessary for the passage of an amendment. (§ 1356, subd. (a).) Pursuant to section 1356, the court may reduce the required minimum percentage of votes needed to amend the declaration, provided a majority of the homeowners approves the amendment and the petition complies with the requirements set out in subdivision (a)(1) through (5). (§ 1356, subd. (a).) Under section 1356, subdivision (c), it is within the court’s discretion to approve or deny such a petition, but in order to grant the petition, the court must find, inter alia, that “[t]he amendment is reasonable.” (§ 1356, subd. (c)(5).)[9]

80*80 No similar limitation was inserted in the text of section 1355(b). Section 1355(b) enumerates the criteria necessary for the amendment of a declaration when the declaration is silent on whether it may be amended, and once the requirements are met, including recordation, the amendment becomes effective and binds all homeowners. Given that section 1356 was added to the Davis-Stirling Act before section 1355(b), it is unlikely the omission of a reasonableness standard was an oversight. This point is buttressed by the fact that section 1355, subdivision (a), which provides for amendment of the declaration pursuant to either the amendment provisions in the declaration itself, or pursuant to other amendment provisions in the Davis-Stirling Act, was enacted as part of the original Act, yet it also does not contain a reasonableness element as does section 1356.

D.

Applying the deferential Nahrstedt standard of review to the Amended Declaration in this case, we hold, as we did in Nahrstedt, that the recorded restriction prohibiting pets is not unreasonable as a matter of law.[10] Terifaj, however, contends that a subsequent amendment to the Davis-Stirling Act, providing in relevant part that “no governing documents shall prohibit the owner of a separate interest . . . from keeping at least one pet” (§ 1360.5, added by Stats.2000, ch. 551, § 2 [Assem. Bill No. 860]), calls into question Nahrstedt’s ultimate holding that the no-pet restriction in that case was not unreasonable. Section 1360.5, however, does not aid Terifaj. As the Court of Appeal observed, subdivision (e) of section 1360.5 clearly provides that its provisions “shall only apply to governing documents entered into, amended, or otherwise modified on or after [January 1, 2001].” The Declaration in this case was amended and recorded in January 2000, a year prior to section 1360.5’s operative date. To allow section 1360.5 to undermine Nahrstedt’s holding in this case would essentially render section 1360.5’s operative date meaningless. Any homeowner could challenge a recorded no-pet restriction on the basis of section 1360.5 without regard to its effective date.

Moreover, the fact that the Legislature has passed section 1360.5 does not undermine our conclusion in Nahrstedt that a restriction prohibiting pets may be reasonable. By enacting section 1360.5, the Legislature did not declare that prohibiting pets is unreasonable, but merely demonstrated a legislative preference for allowing homeowners in common interest developments to keep at least one pet. As we observed in Nahrstedt, prohibiting pets is “rationally related to health, sanitation and noise concerns legitimately held by residents” of common interest developments. (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 386, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.) While Nahrstedt involved a “high-density” project, the concerns expressed in that case apply equally to the present case, which involves a smaller development. Therefore, nothing in section 1360.5 undermines Nahrstedt’s holding that a no-pet restriction may be reasonable given the characteristics of common interest developments 81*81 such as condominium projects.[11]

E.

Terifaj contends that even if the recorded no-pet restriction is an enforceable equitable servitude, the trial court erred in awarding the Association attorney fees for prosecuting the original complaint, which was based, according to Terifaj, on the unrecorded and unenforceable no-pet rule. With respect to the original complaint, she contends she was the prevailing party. We conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the Association was the prevailing party (Heather Farms Homeowners Association v. Robinson (1994) 21 Cal.App.4th 1568, 1574, 26 Cal.Rptr.2d 758) and awarding the Association $15,000 in attorney fees. On a “practical level” (ibid.), the Association “achieved its main litigation objective” (Castro v. Superior Court (2004) 116 Cal.App.4th 1010, 1020, 10 Cal.Rptr.3d 865) in ultimately securing an injunction to enjoin Terifaj from bringing her dog onto the development. Moreover, Terifaj fails to provide evidence that the trial court actually awarded the Association attorney fees for prosecuting the original complaint. The record discloses the Association sought $19,787 in attorney fees, more than the trial court awarded. Presumably, the court took into account Terifaj’s argument regarding the original complaint. In any event, Terifaj fails to establish that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding the Association $15,000 in attorney fees. (See Rancho Santa Fe Association v. Dolan-King, supra, 115 Cal.App.4th at p. 46, 8 Cal.Rptr.3d 614.)

III. DISPOSITION

For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.

WE CONCUR: GEORGE, C.J., KENNARD, BAXTER, WERDEGAR, CHIN, and BROWN, JJ.

[1] All further statutory references are to the Civil Code.

[2] Although Villa De Las Palmas was created prior to the enactment of the Davis-Stirling Act, the Act applies to common interest developments in existence prior to its enactment. (§ 1352; Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 378, fn. 8, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.)

[3] In addition to section 1355(b), the Davis-Stirling Act provides several methods for amending the declaration. Section 1355, subdivision (a), provides that a declaration may be amended pursuant to its own amendment provisions or pursuant to other provisions of the Act; section 1356 allows a homeowners association to petition the court for approval of an amendment if the declaration provides for a larger majority than the association is able to muster, provided at least 50 percent of the owners vote in favor of the proposed amendment; section 1355.5 provides for the deletion of certain developer-oriented provisions; section 1357 provides for the extension of a termination date set forth in a declaration.

[4] Section 1355(b) provides in full: “Except to the extent that a declaration provides by its express terms that it is not amendable, in whole or in part, a declaration which fails to include provisions permitting its amendment at all times during its existence may be amended at any time. For purposes of this subdivision, an amendment is only effective after (1) the proposed amendment has been distributed to all of the owners of separate interests in the common interest development by first-class mail postage prepaid or personal delivery not less than 15 days and not more than 60 days prior to any approval being solicited; (2) the approval of owners representing more than 50 percent, or any higher percentage required by the declaration for the approval of an amendment to the declaration, of the separate interests in the common interest development has been given, and that fact has been certified in a writing, executed and acknowledged by an officer of the association; and (3) the amendment has been recorded in each county in which a portion of the common interest development is located. A copy of any amendment adopted pursuant to this subdivision shall be distributed by first-class mail postage prepaid or personal delivery to all of the owners of separate interest immediately upon its recordation.”

[5] Section 1355(b) initially contained a sunset provision with a termination date of January 1, 1990. In 1993, the Legislature amended the subdivision by deleting the sunset provision. (§ 1355(b), as amended by Stats.1993, ch. 21, § 1, pp. 134-135.) Section 1355(b), therefore, was inoperative between January 1, 1990 and January 1, 1994.

[6] In full, section 1354(a), provides: “The covenants and restrictions in the declaration shall be enforceable equitable servitudes, unless unreasonable, and shall inure to the benefit of and bind all owners of separate interests in the development. Unless the declaration states otherwise, these servitudes may be enforced by any owner of a separate interest or by the association, or by both.”

[7] Section 1354(a) is found in article 2 of the Davis-Stirling Act, which is entitled “Enforcement.”

[8] Because the Association amended the Declaration pursuant to section 1355(b) and filed an amended complaint based on the newly enacted and recorded no-pet restriction, we need not decide in this case whether the Association would have been entitled to equitable relief based on Terifaj’s violation of the unrecorded no-pet rule passed pursuant to the 1962 Declaration.

[9] Section 1356, subdivision (c), provides in full: “The court may, but shall not be required to, grant the petition if it finds all of the following: [¶] (1) The petitioner has given not less than 15 days written notice of the court hearing to all members of the association, to any mortgagee of a mortgage or beneficiary of a deed of trust who is entitled to notice under the terms of the declaration, and to the city, county, or city and county in which the common interest development is located that is entitled to notice under the terms of the declaration. [¶] (2) Balloting on the proposed amendment was conducted in accordance with all applicable provisions of the governing documents. [¶] (3) A reasonably diligent effort was made to permit all eligible members to vote on the proposed amendment. [¶] (4) Owners having more than 50 percent of the votes, in a single class voting structure, voted in favor of the amendment. In a voting structure with more than one class, where the declaration requires a majority of more than one class to vote in favor of the amendment, owners having more than 50 percent of the votes of each class required by the declaration to vote in favor of the amendment voted in favor of the amendment. [¶] (5) The amendment is reasonable. [¶] (6) Granting the petition is not improper for any reason stated in subdivision (e).”

[10] We do not quarrel with Terifaj about the benefits of pet ownership, but that is not the issue in this case. The primary issue in this case is whether subsequently enacted and recorded use restrictions may be enforced against a current homeowner.

[11] Terifaj, supported by the California Council of the Blind as amicus curiae, contends that the injunction issued in this case is overbroad and infringes on her civil rights because she is prohibited from inviting to her unit guests who require guide dogs or leasing her unit to an individual requiring a guide dog. This contention is hypothetical since there is no indication the Association will not permit blind persons to use guide dogs on the property. Furthermore, despite Terifaj’s implication to the contrary (“the Court of Appeal reasons that the issue of overbreadth does not apply”), the Court of Appeal did not mention, much less address this issue, and Terifaj did not seek rehearing in the Court of Appeal to address this alleged omission. We, therefore, decline to address her contention here. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 28(c)(2).)

 

Keywords: Governing Documents, Enforcement

Mission Shores Association v. Pheil

Mission Shores Association v. Pheil

166 Cal.App.4th 789 (2008)

Summary by Mary M. Howell, Esq.:

Facts

Association sought to enact a CC&R amendment which limited rentals to a minimum of 30 days. When the vote failed to pass by a super-majority, as required by the CC&Rs, the association filed a petition under Civil Code §1356 (“1356 petition,” now a “4275 petition” under Civil Code §4275), asking the court to approve the amendment. Homeowner opposed because he had bought his unit with the express intent to rent it on a short-term basis.

Held

For association. In a 4275 petition, the association must demonstrate that the proposed amendment is reasonable. The association urged that the amendment sought to avoid having the residential community become more like a hotel. The court agreed, and noted that such restrictions were quite common. Further, the amendment granted the association the right to evict tenants of the owners for violations of the documents. The court found this, too, to be reasonable: “…[I]f an association is held to a landlord’s obligations, it should equally benefit from any rights attributed to the landlord. We agree. Second, the association argues that any tenant should be bound by the CC&Rs to the same extent that the homeowner is bound. In the event the homeowner fails or refuses to take effective measures to assure his or her tenant is complying with the CC&Rs, the association needs some means to assure compliance. We agree. Third, according to the association, the enforcement remedies apply to any and all tenants in breach of the CC&Rs, and providing the association with the right to enforce any breach of the CC&Rs does not violate public policy … Again, we agree.”

*** End Summary ***

Mission Shores Association v. Pheil

166 Cal.App.4th 789 (2008)

792*792 Law Firm of Kaiser & Swindells, Raymond T. Kaiser and J. Rodney DeBiaso for Defendant and Appellant.

Peters & Freedman and Laurie S. Poole for Plaintiff and Respondent.

OPINION

HOLLENHORST, J.

David Pheil (Pheil) appeals a trial court order that reduced the percentage of votes necessary to amend the Mission Shores Association’s (the Association) declaration of covenants, conditions and restrictions (CC&R’s). (Civ. Code, § 1356.)[1] Pheil challenges the order on the grounds the trial court erred in finding that (1) the amendment was reasonable (§ 1356, subd. (c)(5)); (2) the balloting conformed to the CC&R’s (§ 1356, subd. (c)(2)); and (3) there was no impairment to the security interest of mortgagees (§ 1356, subd. (e)(3)). We affirm the order.

I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND AND FACTS

The Association is the homeowners association which governs the Mission Shores common interest development (Mission Shores) located in Rancho Mirage and consisting of 168 separate interests (Homes), in addition to common areas and facilities. On May 12, 2004, the CC&R’s were recorded for the development.

In 2004, Pheil and his wife decided to purchase a vacation home in Rancho Mirage. At Mission Shores, the developer’s agent represented to Pheil and his wife that they would be allowed to rent or lease a home without restriction. According to the applicable CC&R’s, an owner may rent to a single family where the rental agreement is in writing and subject to the CC&R’s. In reliance on the agent’s representation, Pheil and his wife purchased a Home, which they rented, on occasion, to others. As a homeowner, Pheil is a member of the Association.

The board of directors for the Association (Board) is composed of five members, three of which were appointed by the developer. The developer owns 11 of the 168 Homes in the development. Concerned with how some homeowners were renting their Homes, on May 19, 2005, the Board 793*793 unanimously voted to accept proposed rule 2.10.2 of the CC&R’s (Rule 2.10.2), which provided, “`No short-term rentals or leases of less than 30 days are allowed.'” Pheil challenged the rule. This dispute came before Mediator Peter J. Lesser. A July 31, 2006, mediation did not resolve the dispute. On August 23, Pheil, through his attorney, mailed a “Demand for Internal Dispute Resolution” to Attorney James R. McCormick, Jr., an attorney for the Association, with respect to Rule 2.10.2.

In response to the dispute over Rule 2.10.2, the Board decided to amend the CC&R’s to provide the same temporal limitation on rentals. Additionally, the proposed amendment granted the Association the right to evict a tenant for breach of the governing documents and to impose the related attorney fees and court costs on the homeowner. On September 28, 2006, the Association mailed a cover letter, voting instructions, official ballot, the proposed amendment to the CC&R’s (Amendment), and two envelopes to all members of record of the Association. It presented a “redlined” version of article II, section 2.1 of the CC&R’s, showing precisely the language to be added and to be deleted. A deadline of November 13, 2006, was set to return the ballots. The owners were further informed the ballots would be tabulated at the Board meeting on November 15.

Article IV, section 4.4.3 of the CC&R’s sets forth the different types of voting “classes.” “Class A” consists of members of the Association who own a Home. Of the 168 Homes, 157 had been sold such that there were 157 owner votes. The remaining 11 Homes were still owned by the developer, who was entitled to three “Class B” votes per Home, or a total of 33 developer votes. In order for the Amendment to pass, the Association had to obtain at least 67 percent of the voting power of both classes. Thus, passage of the Amendment required 105 owner votes and 22 developer votes. On November 13, 2006, 132 of the 168 ballots were received. The inspectors of the election opened the ballots and tabulated the results. In the “Class A” category, 93 owner votes were in favor of the Amendment, 28 owner votes were against the Amendment, and 36 owner votes abstained. In the “Class B” category, all 33 developer votes were cast in favor of the Amendment. Because the Amendment garnered only 59 percent of the owner vote, it failed.

On March 8, 2007, pursuant to section 1356, the Association petitioned the trial court for an order reducing the percentage of affirmative votes required for passage of the Amendment and approving the Amendment based upon the number of affirmative votes actually cast constituting at least a majority of each voting class. A hearing date was set for April 9, 2007. The Association filed a notice of hearing, memorandum of points and authorities, 794*794 and supporting declarations. Notice of the hearing was mailed to each homeowner of record on March 23, 2007.

Pheil opposed the petition, objecting to the imposition of a 30-day minimum for leases on the grounds that this violated an alleged representation made by the developers of the project when he purchased his Home. In reply, the Association stated the reason for the minimum lease term was to prevent use of any Home as a hotel. The Association provided a declaration from its counsel regarding the prevalence of CC&R restrictions containing a 30-day minimum provision.

At the initial hearing on April 9, 2007, the trial court continued the matter to allow Pheil’s counsel to obtain copies of the supporting declarations. The second hearing was continued to allow the Association to hold its election of directors to see if the new Board would want to continue pursuing the petition. During the final hearing on May 25, 2007, the trial court indicated its intent to grant the petition.

By order dated June 12, 2007, the trial court found that the Association had complied with the requirements of section 1356, subdivision (c)(1) through (6) and that granting the petition was “not improper” under section 1356, subdivision (e)(1) through (3). Thus, the trial court granted the petition, which reduced the percentage required to amend the CC&R’s. Pheil filed the instant appeal.

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

(1) “[S]ection 1356, part of the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act (the Act), provides that a homeowners association, or any member, may petition the superior court for a reduction in the percentage of affirmative votes required to amend the CC&R’s if they require approval by `owners having more than 50 percent of the votes in the association….’ [Citation.] The court may, but need not, grant the petition if it finds all of the following: Notice was properly given; the balloting was properly conducted; reasonable efforts were made to permit eligible members to vote; `[o]wners having more than 50 percent of the votes, in a single class voting structure, voted in favor of the amendment’; and `[t]he amendment is reasonable.’ [Citation.]” (Peak Investments v. South Peak Homeowners Assn., Inc. (2006) 140 Cal.App.4th 1363, 1366-1367 [44 Cal.Rptr.3d 892], fn. omitted.)

The purpose of section 1356 is to provide homeowners associations with the “ability to amend [their] governing documents when, because of voter 795*795 apathy or other reasons, important amendments cannot be approved by the normal procedures authorized by the declaration. [Citation.] In essence, it provides [an] association with a safety valve for those situations where the need for a supermajority vote would hamstring the association.” (Blue Lagoon Community Assn. v. Mitchell (1997) 55 Cal.App.4th 472, 477 [64 Cal.Rptr.2d 81].)

Section 1356, subdivision (c), gives the trial court broad discretion in ruling on such petition. Accordingly, on appeal, we review the trial court’s ruling for abuse of discretion. (Fourth La Costa Condominium Owners Assn. v. Seith (2008) 159 Cal.App.4th 563, 570 [71 Cal.Rptr.3d 299].)

III. WAS THE AMENDMENT REASONABLE?

Pheil contends that because three of the five seats on the Board were held by representatives of the developer, the developer “in fostering the petition was clearly acting for its own purposes and not [those] of the owners.” Specifically, Pheil claims there is no evidence that any individual homeowner complained about the rental of a home without temporal restriction. Instead, Pheil notes the evidence is limited to the vague determination by the Board and the self-serving declaration of the Association’s attorney. Given the facts that (1) the Board was controlled by the developer who was behind the petition; (2) this was not a case of homeowner apathy; and (3) the trial court’s words suggest that it thought the owners were entitled to a representative board, Pheil argues the trial court abused its discretion in finding the Amendment to be reasonable.

(2) Clearly, the Association was charged with the burden of proving the Amendment was reasonable. (Fourth La Costa Condominium Owners Assn. v. Seith, supra, 159 Cal.App.4th at p. 577.) “The term `reasonable’ in the context of use restrictions has been variously defined as `not arbitrary or capricious’ [citations], `rationally related to the protection, preservation and proper operation of the property and the purposes of the Association as set forth in its governing instruments,’ and `fair and nondiscriminatory.’ [Citation.]” (Ibid.)

Here, the Association argued that the need to restrict rentals to 30 days or more was to ensure the property would not become akin to a hotel. Mission Shores is a residential community. According to the Association’s attorney, “The overwhelming majority of the [CC&R’s] that [she] review[s], both in preparing restated [CC&R’s] and reviewing existing [CC&R’s], contain[s] provisions regarding minimum lease terms of thirty (30) days or longer….” As the trial court noted, “these kinds of restrictions are very common. And … many counties and cities have these restrictions that essentially when 796*796 you rent for less than 30 days, you’re essentially operating a hotel in a residential district.” Furthermore, the court observed, “there is a movement afoot to restrict homes from being on vacation rentals. It is not just in this project. It is throughout California. [¶] So for example … I have a home in San Luis Obispo County and they have a very strict rule about vacation rentals. I was just reading in the paper in Palm Springs they’re talking about passing a law restricting rentals to only 30 days or more.”

“A CC&R is unreasonable if it is arbitrary and capricious, violates the law or a fundamental public policy or imposes an undue burden on property, and it is reasonable unless it meets those criteria. [Citation.]” (Fourth La Costa Condominium Owners Assn. v. Seith, supra, 159 Cal.App.4th at pp. 577-578.) On the record before this court, we cannot find that the imposition of a 30-day minimum lease term is unreasonable. The provision applies to all owners who rent their Homes, the restriction does not violate public policy (see, e.g., City of Oceanside v. McKenna(1989) 215 Cal.App.3d 1420, 1426-1427 [264 Cal.Rptr. 275] [restrictions requiring owner occupancy and forbidding the leasing of units were reasonable in view of the city’s redevelopment goals of providing a stabilized community of owner-occupied units for low and moderate-income persons]), and any burden to enforce the minimum lease term is outweighed by its beneficial value in preserving the residential character of the development.

With cursory argument and no citation to any legal authority, Pheil contends the Amendment is unreasonable because it grants the Association the right to evict tenants for breach of the CC&R’s and to impose attorney fees and costs onto the owner. “[E]very brief should contain a legal argument with citation of authorities on the points made. If none is furnished on a particular point, the court may treat it as waived, and pass it without consideration. [Citations.]” (9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (4th ed. 1997) Appeal, § 594, p. 627.) Although we may deem this point waived, we note the Association addressed it on the merits.[2]

(3) The Association argues this provision is reasonable. First, the Association notes that associations have been analogized to landlords for purposes of determining tort liability. (Frances T. v. Village Green Owners Assn. (1986) 42 Cal.3d 490, 499-501 [229 Cal.Rptr. 456, 723 P.2d 573].) As such, if an association is held to a landlord’s obligations, it should equally benefit from any rights attributed to the landlord. We agree. Second, the Association argues that any tenant should be bound by the CC&R’s to the same extent that the homeowner is bound. In the event the homeowner fails 797*797 or refuses to take effective measures to assure his or her tenant is complying with the CC&R’s, the Association needs some means to assure compliance. We agree. Third, according to the Association, the enforcement remedies apply to any and all tenants in breach of the CC&R’s, and providing the Association with the right to enforce any breach of the CC&R’s does not violate public policy. (See, e.g., 1 Sproul & Rosenberry, Advising Cal. Common Interest Communities (Cont.Ed.Bar 2007 supp.) § 6.45, pp. 423-424.) Again, we agree. Nonetheless, in his reply brief, Pheil claims that commentators have criticized provisions allowing associations the right to enforce the CC&R’s against tenants as being “unlawful.” Reviewing the practice tip referenced by Pheil, we note the commentators merely caution practitioners to consider the risks involved. Specifically, an association may be liable for wrongful eviction given the fact that the association does not have possession of the property, and thus, is not the rightful party to bring the action. (Id. at pp. 424-425.)

(4) For the above reasons, we find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding the Amendment to be reasonable.

IV. DID THE BALLOTING CONFORM WITH THE CC&R’S?

(5) According to Pheil, subdivision (c)(2) of section 1356 was not complied with because the letter that accompanied the ballot inaccurately portrayed the context of the Amendment and made improper reference to the ineffective rule. In response, the Association argues it complied with the procedures for amending the CC&R’s as governed by section 1363.03. According to that section, a secret ballot procedure must be used with a double envelope system, inspectors of the election must be appointed, and the results must be tabulated at a board meeting. (§ 1363.03, subds. (c), (e).) Here, the Association maintains it mailed the Amendment, the ballot, voting instructions, and two envelopes to each of its members. Furthermore, the results were tabulated at the Board meeting.

The Amendment clearly indicated the language to be added and the language to be deleted. Presenting the owners with a redlined version of the proposed Amendment constituted the reasonably detailed form the CC&R’s require. While Pheil claims the cover letter accompanying the ballot and other documents misled the owners, we note there is no evidence in the record that supports this claim. Not one owner submitted a declaration claiming he or she voted in a particular way solely due to the information contained in the cover letter. Moreover, as the Association points out, the798*798 cover letter highlighted the fact that the Amendment would provide for a 30-day minimum leasing requirement and the ability of the Association to evict tenants.[3]

Notwithstanding the above, Pheil claims the Association failed to give notice of the election results pursuant to section 1363.03, subdivision (g). That section provides, “The tabulated results of the election shall be promptly reported to the board of directors of the association and shall be recorded in the minutes of the next meeting of the board of directors and shall be available for review by members of the association. Within 15 days of the election, the board shall publicize the tabulated results of the election in a communication directed to all members.” The Association does not claim that it gave notice of the election results; however, it does claim the results were reported at the Board meeting on November 15, 2006, and recorded in the minutes of the Board meeting (which are available to each member). Thus, the Association argues that it provided the required notice to its members, but even if it had not, the petition was not precluded. We agree with the Association.

Pheil does not oppose the results of the election. Rather, he opposes the Amendment itself. Pheil does not provide any argument or legal citation to any authority as to the consequences which the Association should suffer given its failure to comply with section 1363.03, subdivision (g). Under the circumstances of this case, we find such failure to be trivial. Accordingly, we cannot agree that such failure should result in precluding the Association from proceeding with its petition. Moreover, we cannot find that the trial court abused its discretion in failing to find that the balloting did not comply with the CC&R’s.

V. DOES THE AMENDMENT IMPAIR THE SECURITY INTEREST OF MORTGAGEES?

In his final contention, Pheil argues that the CC&R’s require approval of 51 percent of first mortgagees who have previously requested notification 799*799 under two stated circumstances, namely, where any amendment affects the rights or protection granted to mortgagees and where any amendment could result in a mortgage being canceled by forfeiture. He claims the Association failed to give such notice and to obtain such approval. Again, we note that Pheil fails to support his claim with any legal argument with citation of authorities on the points made. His brief reference to section 1356, subdivision (e)(3), is insufficient. Nonetheless, given the fact that the Association addressed the merits of the issue, so will we.

(6) Section 1356, subdivision (e)(3), forbids the court from approving any amendment to CC&R’s that impairs the security interest of a mortgagee, if approval of a specified percentage of the mortgagees is required under the CC&R’s. According to article XIII, section 13.2.2 of the CC&R’s, the following amendments require 51 percent approval of the first mortgagees: “(a) Any amendment which affects or purports to affect the validity or priority of Mortgages or the rights or protection granted to Mortgagees, insurers or guarantors of first Mortgages. [¶] (b) Any amendment which would require a Mortgagee after it has acquired a Lot through foreclosure to pay more than its proportionate share of any unpaid Assessment or Assessments accruing before such foreclosure. [¶] (c) Any amendment which would or could result in a Mortgage being canceled by forfeiture, or in a Lot not being separately assessed for tax purposes. [¶] (d) Any amendment relating to (i) the insurance provisions in Article VIII, (ii) the application of insurance proceeds in Article IX, or (iii) the disposition of any money received in any taking under condemnation proceedings. [¶] (e) Any amendment which would subject any Owner to a right of first refusal or other such restriction, if such Lot is proposed to be transferred.” The Amendment does not fall under any item in this list.

In his reply brief, Pheil claims the temporal restriction on renting “clearly impacts the ability of owners to pay their mortgages.” However, Mission Shores is a residential development. Pheil has not provided any evidence to the contrary. Other than his claim that he was told he could lease or rent his home and that he thereafter on occasion rented it to others, there is no evidence that he needed to borrow money to purchase his home, that he obtained a nonowner occupied loan, or that he purchased his home with the sole purpose of renting it out to pay the mortgage.

Accordingly, we conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding that there was no impairment to the security interests of mortgagees.

800*800 VI. DISPOSITION

The order is affirmed. The Association is entitled to its costs on appeal.

Ramirez, P. J., and King J., concurred.

[1] All further statutory references are to the Civil Code unless otherwise indicated.

[2] The Association argues that this issue is waived because Pheil failed to raise it in his written opposition. While the Association discounts the fact that Pheil did raise the issue during oral argument before the trial court, we do not.

[3] The cover letter provided, in part, the following: “The Association’s [CC&R’s] currently discuss[] rental of residences in a very broad manner. There are few protections afforded to the Owners against tenants who treat the Association not as their personal home, but instead as a weekend party place…. [¶] Enclosed is a proposed amendment of Article II, Section 2.1…. The purpose of the proposed amendment is to further define the rights and obligations of Owners who rent or lease their residences. Among other things and consistent with the current Rules and Regulations, the proposed amendment places a thirty (30) day minimum on any lease and provides the Association with the right, but not the obligation, to evict problem tenants on an Owner’s behalf if the Owner refuses to take corrective action.”

 

Keywords: Governing Documents, Amendments, Rental Restrictions

Mullaly v. Ojai Hotel Co

Mullaly v. Ojai Hotel Company

266 Cal.App.2d 9 (1968)

Summary by Mary M. Howell, Esq.:

Facts

Defendant Ojai Hotel Co. (“Hotel”) owned a property adjacent to a development which was subject to CC&Rs providing for a single-family residential use. The Hotel bought lots within the association, intending to build tennis courts on those lots, for use by the Hotel’s guests. The Hotel obtained the requisite city permits for such construction. Homeowners then sought to enforce the CC&Rs as to the lots in question, maintaining that construction of the tennis courts would violate the CC&Rs. The Hotel countered that it had obtained city permits, and that should override the CC&R prohibitions.

Held

For association owners. The CC&Rs are different than zoning laws. If a lot is subject to the CC&Rs, use of the lot must comply with the CC&Rs, regardless of whether zoning laws would permit a different use.

*** End Summary ***

Mullaly v. Ojai Hotel Co

266 Cal.App.2d 9 (1968)

William B. Murrish and Charles W. Adams for Defendant and Appellant.

Johnston, Lucking & Hitch, Johnston, Lucking & Bertelsen, William A. Lucking, Jr., and Karl H. Bertelsen for Plaintiffs and Respondents.

KAUS, P. J.

The several plaintiffs own lots in a subdivision which juts, peninsula fashion, into the real property of the defendant Ojai Hotel Company. On that property defendant operates a hotel, the Ojai Valley Inn. The inn is surrounded by a golf course.

Defendant became the owner of several lots in the subdivision. The lots adjoined the hotel property. Defendant caused the lots to be annexed to the City of Ojai on condition that it grant defendant a conditional use permit. The planning commission of the City of Ojai then permitted defendant to establish tennis courts on two of the lots in question. It was defendant’s intention to operate the tennis courts as an integral part of its hotel business.

The problem was that the subdivision was subject to a covenant which restricted the use of the lots to single family residences. When plaintiffs learned that defendant had actually started construction of the tennis courts they sued to enjoin it from violating the restrictions.

On the remaining lots in the subdivision owned by defendant, there is located a private residence which the manager of the inn uses as his home. On occasion rooms in that residence were rented to hotel guests. These facts were learned by plaintiffs shortly before the trial and they were permitted to amend their complaint to pray for an injunction against the use of the residence by hotel guests. 11*11

After a fairly lengthy trial the court granted judgment as prayed. Defendant appeals. In this court defendant concedes that as far as the injunction against the establishment of tennis courts is concerned, the judgment is supported by substantial evidence. It argues, however, that section 731a of the Code of Civil Procedure forbids the use of the injunctive process against a land use permitted by city zoning. Defendant also claims that the record discloses that the trial court really wanted to grant a “limited” injunction, allowing the establishment of tennis courts with certain protective conditions, but that the court erroneously thought it had no power to do so. With respect to the injunction against the use of the manager’s home for hotel guests it is claimed that, such use being merely incidental and occasional, applicable case law militates against the court’s judgment.

[1] We disagree with defendant on all three points. While defendant makes an ingenious argument, based on certain canons of statutory construction, in support of its interpretation of section 731a [fn. 1] of the Code of Civil Procedure, we think that it is perfectly clear that the entire intent of the section is to prevent certain nuisance actions permitted by the courts before the section was enacted in 1935 and not to abolish enforcement of equitable restrictions by injunction, provided the landowner is able to lobby a zoning change through City Hall. The Supreme Court explained the purpose of section 731a in Gelfand v. O’Haver, 33 Cal.2d 218, 220 [200 P.2d 790]: “Prior to the addition of that section to the Code of Civil Procedure in 1935, the law was settled that a person could enjoin certain conduct as a nuisance even though the business was conducted in a district zoned to permit business of the type of which complaint was made and defendant was making an effort to operate his business in a careful and efficient manner. [Citations omitted.] In the light of that rule the manifest purport of the adoption of section 731a was to eliminate injunctive relief where the business is operated in its appropriate zone and the only showing is an injury and nuisance to the plaintiff in such operation. He must now show more, namely, that the defendant employed ‘unnecessary and injurious methods’ in the operation of the business. …” 12*12

There is no need to engage in the “thrust and parry” [fn. 2] of matching maxims of statutory interpretation. We simply cannot get ourselves to believe that, had the Legislature intended to abolish the rule that a land use, violative of restrictions, may be enjoined even though zoning permits it (Rice v. Heggy, 158 Cal.App.2d 89, 92 [322 P.2d 53]), clearer language would not have been found, nor would it have been necessary to sandwich the new section into the code, as section 731a, right after section 731, which pertains to nuisance actions in general.

Further, it is evident that to leave property owners to an action in damages would, in many cases, deprive them of any effective remedy whatsoever. It is a matter of common knowledge that restrictive covenants quite frequently forbid land uses which, if permitted, would make the property far more valuable. (Cf. Wolff v. Fallon, 44 Cal.2d 695, 697-698 [283 P.2d 802].)

[2] At the oral argument below defendant had urged that the court allow the tennis courts to be built, but subject to certain restrictions with respect to their use. After the matter had been submitted the court delivered an oral opinion from the bench. At the end of the opinion the court said: “I toyed with the idea of equitable plan of letting the inn violate the restrictions providing that it would do it in a certain controlled and protective manner such as with no lights, no night use, trees and shrubs as a sound and sight barrier, et cetera, and some similar kind of controlled use of the Hill House. I abandoned that when I read the case of Cooper v. Kovan [349 Mich. 520] 84 Northwestern 2d, 859, a Michigan case.” The court then analyzed Cooper v. Kovanas we shall do shortly. Having done so the court concluded as follows: “So, this deters me from trying to work out any controlled variation from the restrictions and I feel bound to hold that the restrictions must be upheld; that the plaintiffs would be entitled to the judgment. For this reason, Mr. Lucking is the one designated to prepare findings of fact, conclusions of law. I will add this, and now that the inn knows what it faces from 13*13 the trial court level, recognizing that I wouldn’t have any equity power to make any conditional arrangement, if there is any desire, intention of the parties to try to work out something to forestall an appeal or to benefit the inn to some extent despite the victory, I would be willing to try to help out.”

In Cooper v. Kovan the trial court had permitted the defendant to use an area, restricted to residential uses, for parking and shopping center purposes, provided that a green belt, 130 feet wide, was maintained between the proposed parking lot and the plaintiffs’ residences. [fn. 3] The decree was reversed. The appellate court characterized the trial court’s action as effecting “a compromise” and engaging in “city planning.” It then listed the equitable considerations which, in Michigan, permit restrictions to be invalidated and found that none of them applied. It therefore reversed. The following language appears in the opinion: “… Desirable as such a plan may be in general city planning terms, we must answer the question here as to whether the circuit judge sitting in equity had power to effect such a compromise in the face of and at the expense of existing and valid residential restrictions, or whether such planning must be left to planning boards and private developers.” (Ibid., p. 864. Italics added.)

It is quite evident to us that what the trial court in the case at bar meant was that if it did issue what defendant calls a “limited injunction,” it would not be acting as a court but as a city planner or arbitrator. There is nothing to show that the trial court was unaware that, in a proper case, it had the power to give plaintiffs less than the whole loaf.

[3] There was evidence that, from time to time, when the hotel was full, the manager’s residence had been used for paying hotel guests. This happened only sporadically, particularly when there were conventions at the inn. The guests were served continental breakfasts in their rooms.

The trial court found as follows: “The use of the residence house on Lots 10 and 12 for paying guests of the resort hotel is considerably different from such use by full-time residents, in that patrons of a resort hotel would have a tendency to go to bed later, to be more free and easy in their activities and in the amount of noise made, in the exuberance displayed, and would not be in harmony with the habits of full-time residents.” 14*14

Defendant cites a number of cases for the proposition that such sporadic commercial use of a private residence is not a violation of restrictions similar to the one to which its lots were subject.principally the cases involve holdings to the effect that the incidental keeping of boarders does not make a private residence a boarding house. (Robbins v. Bangor Ry. etc. Co., 100 Me. 496 [62 A. 136, 1 L.R.A. N.S. 963]; Trainor v. LeBeck, 101 N.J.Eq. 823 [139 A. 16]; Southampton Civic Club v. Couch, 159 Tex. 464 [322 S.W.2d 516]; Cook v. Papa, 18 Misc.2d 871 [181 N.Y.S.2d 938].) None of them involve two factors present in the case at bar: 1. that the rooms, when occupied by paying guests, were used as an integral part of a hotel operation; and 2. that by their nature the guests–conventioneers–behave in a manner more obnoxious to the purpose of the restriction than they would were the rooms their permanent home.

The judgment is affirmed.

Stephens, J., and Aiso, J. pro tem., [fn. *] concurred.

[fn. 1] 1. “Whenever any city, city and county, or county shall have established zones or districts under authority of law wherein certain manufacturing or commercial or airport uses are expressly permitted, except in an action to abate a public nuisance brought in the name of the people of the State of California, no person or persons, firm or corporation shall be enjoined or restrained by the injunctive process from the reasonable and necessary operation in any such industrial or commercial zone or airport of any use expressly permitted therein, nor shall such use be deemed a nuisance without evidence of the employment of unnecessary and injurious methods of operation. Nothing in this act shall be deemed to apply to the regulation and working hours of canneries, fertilizing plants, refineries and other similar establishments whose operation produce offensive odors.” (Code Civ. Proc., 731a.)

[fn. 2] 2. The metaphor is Professor Llewellyn’s. (Llewellyn, Remarks On The Theory Of Appellate Decision And The Rules Or Canons About How Statutes Are To Be Construed, 3 Vand. L.Rev. 394, 401.)

[fn. 3] 3. According to the Michigan Supreme Court this decision had “the peculiar merit of having left both sides completely dissatisfied, resulting in plaintiffs’ appeal and defendants’ cross-appeal.”

[fn. *] *. Assigned by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.

 

Keywords: Governing Documents, Enforcement, Interpretation

 

Dover Village Assn. v. Jennison

Dover Village Association v. Jennison

191 Cal.App.4th 123 (2010)

Summary by Mary M. Howell, Esq.:

Facts

A deteriorated sewage pipe underneath an owner’s condominium unit ruptured, and the sewage entered owner’s unit. The association entered the unit and made repairs, including jack-hammering the unit’s slab and replacing approximately 50′ of sewer line that connected owner’s line to the main line. A dispute arose over who was responsible for the cost of the repair. The governing documents provided that pipes and other utility installations, wherever located, except the portions within the unit, were not part of the unit. The issue was whether the pipes were common area, or exclusive use common area (if exclusive use common area, the repair would be the owner’s responsibility, if merely common area, repair would be the association’s responsibility.)

Held

For owner. Although the Davis-Stirling Act identifies as exclusive use common area “a portion of the common areas designated by the declaration for the exclusive use of one or more, but fewer than all the owners…” in this case, the CC&Rs specifically identified exclusive use common area as consisting of the patio area and garage area. The court ruled that since the CC&Rs had called out specifically what exclusive use common area would be that meant the drafter intended to exclude other potential exclusive use common areas.

*** End Summary ***

Dover Village Assn. v. Jennison

191 Cal.App.4th 123 (2010)

125*125 Feldsott & Lee, Martin L. Lee and Erika M. Hsu for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Michael Maguire & Associates, Paul Kevin Wood and Brian Y. Fujita for Defendants and Respondents.

OPINION

RYLAARSDAM, Acting P. J.—

Patrick E. Jennison had a leaky sewer pipe two feet beneath the concrete slab underlying his Newport Beach condo. The homeowners association said he was responsible for the repair bill on the theory that the sewer pipe was “exclusive use common area” for which he was responsible. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court disagreed, and entered a judgment declaring that the association should bear the expense of the repair cost. The court later awarded Jennison about $17,000 in attorney fees and court costs. The association has appealed from the ensuing judgment.

We affirm. Under a natural reading of the CC&R’s (covenants, conditions and restrictions), the sewer pipe was a genuine common area to be maintained and repaired by the association, as distinct from “an exclusive use common area appurtenant” to an individual owner’s separate interest.

FACTS

A. Brief Overview

The Dover Village Association (Association) is a 38-unit condominium complex in Newport Beach. For some time before the summer of 2007, a deteriorated four-inch cast iron sewage pipe beneath Patrick Jennison’s condo had been venting sewage. Finally, in late July 2007 the leak seeped up into 126*126 the floors and carpet of Jennison’s unit and the unit of another. Jennison’s tenant reported the leak to the Association’s president, who called property management, who then sent a plumber to make repairs.

The repairs were extensive, costing about $15,000. It was necessary to cut through Jennison’s floor, jack hammer the concrete slab underneath, and trench out and replace the 50 feet or so of sewer pipe that connected Jennison’s condo with the main service line. A dispute soon arose as to who was responsible. In October the Association sent Jennison a letter asserting that because the sewer pipe exclusively serviced Jennison’s condo, it was his responsibility “to maintain and repair” the sewer pipe. The letter directed Jennison to pay the $15,000 plus repair cost. Jennison did not send a check. The Association filed this action.

The parties agreed to have the issue decided on cross-motions for summary judgment. The trial court ruled that, as a matter of law under both the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act (the Davis-Stirling Act), codified as section 1350 et seq. of the Civil Code and the CC&R’s, the sewer pipe is common area to be maintained and repaired by the Association. (All statutory references will be to the Civil Code.)

B. Governing Texts

This case involves the interaction between the two sets of texts. First, the Davis-Stirling Act set forth in section 1350 et seq. provides general rules for the governance of condominium associations. Second, there are the particular rules set forth the Association’s own CC&R’s. We examine each in turn.

1. The Act

(1) The way the Davis-Stirling Act is structured, a homeowners association is normally responsible for repairs to “common areas,” but the individual unit owner is responsible for repairs to “any exclusive use common area appurtenant to the separate interest.” Section 1364, subdivision (a) provides both the general rule and the exception for exclusive use common areas: “(a) Unless otherwise provided in the declaration of a common interest development, the association is responsible for repairing, replacing, or maintaining the common areas, other than exclusive use common areas, and the 127*127 owner of each separate interest is responsible for maintaining that separate interest and any exclusive use common area appurtenant to the separate interest.”

The definitions section of the Davis-Stirling Act is set out in section 1351. Subdivision (i) defines “exclusive use common area.” The definition is: “`Exclusive use common area’ means a portion of the common areas designated by the declaration for the exclusive use of one or more, but fewer than all, of the owners of the separate interests and which is or will be appurtenant to the separate interest or interests. (1)Unless the declaration otherwise provides, any shutters, awnings, window boxes, doorsteps, stoops, porches, balconies, patios, exterior doors, doorframes, and hardware incident thereto, screens and windows or other fixtures designed to serve a single separate interest, but located outside the boundaries of the separate interest, are exclusive use common areas allocated exclusively to that separate interest.” (Italics added.)

2. The CC&R’s

There is no question under the CC&R’s that sewer pipes are not within any individual owner’s separate interest. Article I, section 6 of the CC&R’s for Dover Village says: “The following are not a part of the Unit: roofs, foundations, below finished pad elevation, pipes, ducts, flues, chutes, conduits, wires and other utility installationswherever located, except the portions thereof located within the physical boundaries of the Unit.” (Italics added.) The question is whether a given pipe that can be said to exclusively service a unit is a “exclusive use common area appurtenant” for purposes of section 1364.

Two exclusive use common areas are expressly mentioned in the CC&R’s: Patio and garage areas. Article XIX expressly designates patio and garage areas for the exclusive use and enjoyment of a single unit: Unit owners “shall… be entitled to the exclusive use and possession of the patio area and garage area designated for the use of said unit…. It shall be the duty of the unit owner … to maintain the interior of said patio and garage.”

Finally, the CC&R’s give the Association power to make repairs and structural alterations to particular units, and then assess the costs to the individual owner. Article V is generally devoted to the Association’s board’s powers. Section 5 of article V, subdivision (l), provides that the board shall 128*128 have power: “To acquire and pay for any other materials, supplies, furniture, labor, services, maintenance, repairs, structural alterations, insurance, taxes or assessments which the Board is required to secure or pay for pursuant to the terms of these restrictions or by law, or which in its opinion shall be necessary or proper for the operation of the common area or for the enforcement of these restrictions, provided that if any such materials, supplies, furniture, labor, services, maintenance, repairs, structural alterations, insurance, taxes or assessments are provided for particular units, the costs thereof shall be specifically addressed to the owners of such units.” (Italics added.)

DISCUSSION

As shown above, under the Association’s bylaws, garage and patio areas are expressly classified as “exclusive use common areas appurtenant.” Such a conclusion, of course, makes sense: Ordinary condominium buyers might expect a secure place to park and exclusive use of the patio immediately adjacent to their units. The question is whether sewer lines also come within the same category.

(2) Under the rule of “expressio unius est exclusio alterius”—say one thing and impliedly exclude the other—the most natural reading of the CC&R’s is that sewer lines are not “exclusive use common areas appurtenant.” By expressly saying patio and garage areas come within the category, the CC&R’s impliedly say that sewer lines do not. (Cf. People v. Palacios (2007) 41 Cal.4th 720, 732 [62 Cal.Rptr.3d 145, 161 P.3d 519] [as applied to statutory construction, expressio unius maxim means that “`”if exemptions are specified in a statute, we may not imply additional exemptions unless there is a clear legislative intent to the contrary”‘”].)

The Association asserts two counterarguments, one based on language in the CC&R’s and the other on language in the Davis-Stirling Act.

A. The Structural Alteration Clause

The argument from the CC&R’s is based on article V’s structural alteration clause. The Association reasons that because unit owners can be individually charged for structural alterations, they can similarly be charged for sewer pipes outside their units.

The argument fails because it is circular, that is, it proves nothing. If one begins with the premise that sewer pipes servicing a particular unit already fall into the category of “exclusive use common area appurtenant,” then one can say that repairs to such pipes are indeed “for particular units.” But one 129*129 must first establish that a sewer pipe is such an “exclusive use common area appurtenant,” and, as we have seen, the only explicit mention of such exclusive use areas in the CC&R’s are the patio and garage areas.

B. The Fixture Statute

(3) The argument based on the Davis-Stirling Act is rooted in section 1351, subdivision (i)’s inclusion of fixtures as “exclusive use common areas.” This argument fails for two reasons. First and most fundamentally, interconnected sewerpipes cannot really be said to be the “fixtures” of any particular unit. A sewer system is a series of interconnected pipes which ultimately feed into one common line. Differentiating parts of that interconnected system is unreasonable. The portion of piping coming from one unit is no more affixed to that unit than it is to the sewer system and other pipes or piping within that system.

(4) In this regard, another fancy Latin phrase, ejusdem generis, operates. (See In re Tobacco Cases I (2010) 186 Cal.App.4th 42, 48 [111 Cal.Rptr.3d 313] [“`the general term or category is “restricted to those things that are similar to those which are enumerated specifically”‘”].) Under the canon of ejusdem generis, one determines whether a given thing comes within a more general category—here, “other fixtures designed to serve a single separate interest”—by comparing it to other things specifically mentioned in that category.

In section 1351, subdivision (i), here are the things specifically mentioned as being exclusive use common areas: “shutters, awnings, window boxes, doorsteps, stoops, porches, balconies, patios, exterior doors, doorframes, and hardware incident thereto, screens and windows.”

Some pipes—for example, drain pipes exclusively servicing one unit and not connected to any other system of piping—might indeed come within the category, because they can be said to be, like shutters and window boxes, “designed to serve a single separate interest.” But a piece of a system of interconnected sewer piping does not fit: It is, literally, physically connected to every other piece of the system. Every unit’s sewer pipes are a “fixture” of every other unit’s sewer pipes.

The second reason the argument fails is the clause in section 1351, subdivision (i) that allows for a different result if the CC&R’s so provide. As shown above, the most natural reading of these CC&R’s is that sewer pipes, as distinct from patios and garages, are not contemplated as exclusive use common areas.

130*130 C. Confirmation in Other Sections of the CC&R’s

Our conclusion, that the portion of piping connecting Jennison’s condo with the sewer system is not an exclusive use common area, is confirmed by language in article VIII of the CC&R’s that indicate that common areas— including exclusive use common areas—are areas to which owners generally have access. Section 2 of article VIII precludes individual owners from any “obstruction of the common area without prior consent of the Board.” Section 6 of article VIII precludes any “noxious or offensive activity” in any common area. And significantly, section 7 provides: “Nothing shall be altered or constructed in or removed from the common area, except upon the written consent of the Board.” Such language is perfectly consistent with normal patio and garage use. It is not consistent with the idea that individual unit owners somehow control the sewer lines beyond the boundaries of their unit.

D. The Argument from Deference

Finally, the Association makes what we might call a “deference argument,” i.e., it asserts that its determination of whether a portion of sewer line was exclusive use common area is a matter committed to its discretion to which the courts should accord it deference. The argument fails because it confuses a legal issue governed by statutory and contract text with matters that genuinely do lend themselves to board discretion.

The case primarily relied on by the Association for its discretion argument is, in fact, a nice illustration of matters genuinely within a board’s discretion. In Lamden v. La Jolla Shores Clubdominium Homeowners Assn. (1999) 21 Cal.4th 249 [87 Cal.Rptr.2d 237, 980 P.2d 940], a unit owner disputed the homeowners association’s preferred method of treating termite infestation. The owner, supported by inspection reports, wanted fumigation. The board decided on “spot-treatment.” (Id. at pp. 253-254.) The board’s decision was ultimately upheld by the Supreme Court because it was a matter “entrusted” to the board’s “discretion.” (Id. at p. 265.)

There is an obvious difference between a legal issue over who precisely has the responsibility for a sewer line and how a board should go about making a repair that is clearly within its responsibility. But we know of no provision in the Davis-Stirling Act or the CC&R’s that makes the Association or its board the ultimate judge of legal issues affecting the development.

CONCLUSION

Because our decision today is solely a matter of the applicable texts, we need not deal with issues raised by the Association as to issues of parole evidence or estoppel. By the same token, there are no issues involving the 131*131 reasonableness of the attorney fee and cost award assuming a judgment in Jennison’s favor. The judgment and fee and cost awards are affirmed. Respondent Jennison shall recover his appellate fees and costs.

Moore, J., and Fybel, J., concurred.

 

Keywords: Governing Documents, Interpretation

Nahrstedt v. Lakeside Village Condominium Assn.

Nahrstedt v. Lakeside Village Condominium Association

8 Cal.4th 361 (1994)

Summary by Mary M. Howell, Esq.:

Facts

The association tried to force a homeowner with 3 cats to remove them, on the basis of a “no pet” prohibition in the CC&Rs. The homeowner argued that the restriction was unreasonable as applied to her, because her cats never went outside, and did not bother the surrounding owners. She argued that the CC&R provision violated her constitutional right to privacy.

Held

For association. The California Supreme Court ruled (in this major case on association jurisprudence) that developer-imposed CC&R provisions are presumed reasonable and enforceable For a homeowner to prove a CC&R provision unreasonable (and therefore unenforceable), the homeowner has to prove one or more of the following: (1) that the restriction violates public policy, (2) that the restriction bears no rational relationship to the protection, preservation, operation or purpose of the association, or (3) that the burden of the restriction, as to the entire community, outweighs the benefit, as to the entire community.

NOTE

Since Nahrstedt was decided, California adopted a provision of the Civil Code which requires an association to allow at least one pet, as described in the statute. See Civ. Code §4715.

*** End Summary ***

Nahrstedt v. Lakeside Village Condominium Assn.

8 Cal.4th 361 (1994)

367*367 COUNSEL

Joel F. Tamraz for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Wilner, Klein & Siegel, Leonard Siegel, Laura J. Snoke and Thomas M. Ware II for Defendants and Respondents.

Gerald J. Van Gemert, James A. Judge, Bigelow, Moore & Tyre, James S. Tyre, Musick, Peeler & Garrett, Gary L. Wollberg, Berding & Weil, James O. Devereaux, Bergerson & Garvic and John Garvic as Amici Curiae on behalf of Defendants and Respondents.

Swanson & Dowdall and C. Brent Swanson as Amici Curiae.

OPINION

KENNARD, J.

A homeowner in a 530-unit condominium complex sued to prevent the homeowners association from enforcing a restriction against keeping cats, dogs, and other animals in the condominium development. The owner asserted that the restriction, which was contained in the project’s declaration[1] recorded by the condominium project’s developer, was “unreasonable” as applied to her because she kept her three cats indoors and because her cats were “noiseless” and “created no nuisance.” Agreeing with the premise underlying the owner’s complaint, the Court of Appeal concluded that the homeowners association could enforce the restriction only368*368 upon proof that plaintiff’s cats would be likely to interfere with the right of other homeowners “to the peaceful and quiet enjoyment of their property.”

Those of us who have cats or dogs can attest to their wonderful companionship and affection. Not surprisingly, studies have confirmed this effect. (See, e.g., Waltham Symposium 20, Pets, Benefits and Practice (BVA Publications 1990); Melson, The Benefits of Animals to Our Lives (Fall 1990) People, Animals, Environment, at pp. 15-17.) But the issue before us is not whether in the abstract pets can have a beneficial effect on humans. Rather, the narrow issue here is whether a pet restriction that is contained in the recorded declaration of a condominium complex is enforceable against the challenge of a homeowner. As we shall explain, the Legislature, in Civil Code section 1354, has required that courts enforce the covenants, conditions and restrictions contained in the recorded declaration of a common interest development “unless unreasonable.”[2]

Because a stable and predictable living environment is crucial to the success of condominiums and other common interest residential developments, and because recorded use restrictions are a primary means of ensuring this stability and predictability, the Legislature in section 1354 has afforded such restrictions a presumption of validity and has required of challengers that they demonstrate the restriction’s “unreasonableness” by the deferential standard applicable to equitable servitudes. Under this standard established by the Legislature, enforcement of a restriction does not depend upon the conduct of a particular condominium owner. Rather, the restriction must be uniformly enforced in the condominium development to which it was intended to apply unless the plaintiff owner can show that the burdens it imposes on affected properties so substantially outweigh the benefits of the restriction that it should not be enforced against any owner. Here, the Court of Appeal did not apply this standard in deciding that plaintiff had stated a claim for declaratory relief. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeal and remand for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed in this opinion.

I

Lakeside Village is a large condominium development in Culver City, Los Angeles County. It consists of 530 units spread throughout 12 separate 3-story buildings. The residents share common lobbies and hallways, in addition to laundry and trash facilities.

369*369 The Lakeside Village project is subject to certain covenants, conditions and restrictions (hereafter CC&R’s) that were included in the developer’s declaration recorded with the Los Angeles County Recorder on April 17, 1978, at the inception of the development project. Ownership of a unit includes membership in the project’s homeowners association, the Lakeside Village Condominium Association (hereafter Association), the body that enforces the project’s CC&R’s, including the pet restriction, which provides in relevant part: “No animals (which shall mean dogs and cats), livestock, reptiles or poultry shall be kept in any unit.”[3]

In January 1988, plaintiff Natore Nahrstedt purchased a Lakeside Village condominium and moved in with her three cats. When the Association learned of the cats’ presence, it demanded their removal and assessed fines against Nahrstedt for each successive month that she remained in violation of the condominium project’s pet restriction.

Nahrstedt then brought this lawsuit against the Association, its officers, and two of its employees,[4] asking the trial court to invalidate the assessments, to enjoin future assessments, to award damages for violation of her privacy when the Association “peered” into her condominium unit, to award damages for infliction of emotional distress, and to declare the pet restriction “unreasonable” as applied to indoor cats (such as hers) that are not allowed free run of the project’s common areas. Nahrstedt also alleged she did not know of the pet restriction when she bought her condominium. The complaint incorporated by reference the grant deed, the declaration of CC&R’s, and the condominium plan for the Lakeside Village condominium project.

The Association demurred to the complaint. In its supporting points and authorities, the Association argued that the pet restriction furthers the collective “health, happiness and peace of mind” of persons living in close proximity within the Lakeside Village condominium development, and therefore is reasonable as a matter of law. The trial court sustained the demurrer as to each cause of action and dismissed Nahrstedt’s complaint. Nahrstedt appealed.

A divided Court of Appeal reversed the trial court’s judgment of dismissal. In the majority’s view, the complaint stated a claim for declaratory relief based on its allegations that Nahrstedt’s three cats are kept inside her condominium unit and do not bother her neighbors. According to the majority, whether a condominium use restriction is “unreasonable,” as that term is used in section 1354, hinges on the facts of a particular homeowner’s case. 370*370 Thus, the majority reasoned, Nahrstedtwould be entitled to declaratory relief if application of the pet restriction in her case would not be reasonable. The Court of Appeal also revived Nahrstedt’s causes of action for invasion of privacy, invalidation of the assessments, and injunctive relief, as well as her action for emotional distress based on a theory of negligence.

The dissenting justice took the view that enforcement of the Lakeside Village pet restriction against Nahrstedt should not depend on the “reasonableness” of the restriction as applied to Nahrstedt. To evaluate on a case-by-case basis the reasonableness of a recorded use restriction included in the declaration of a condominium project, the dissent said, would be at odds with the Legislature’s intent that such restrictions be regarded as presumptively reasonable and subject to enforcement under the rules governing equitable servitudes. Application of those rules, the dissenting justice concluded, would render a recorded use restriction valid unless “there are constitutional principles at stake, enforcement is arbitrary, or the association fails to follow its own procedures.”

On the Association’s petition, we granted review to decide when a condominium owner can prevent enforcement of a use restriction that the project’s developer has included in the recorded declaration of CC&R’s.

To facilitate the reader’s understanding of the function served by use restrictions in condominium developments and related real property ownership arrangements, we begin with a broad overview of the general principles governing common interest forms of real property ownership.

II

Today, condominiums, cooperatives, and planned-unit developments with homeowners associations have become a widely accepted form of real property ownership. These ownership arrangements are known as “common interest” developments. (4B Powell, Real Property (1993) Condominiums, Cooperatives and Homeowners Association Developments, § 631, pp. 54-7 to 54-8; 15A Am.Jur.2d, Condominium and Co-operative Apartments, § 1, p. 827.) The owner not only enjoys many of the traditional advantages associated with individual ownership of real property, but also acquires an interest in common with others in the amenities and facilities included in the project. It is this hybrid nature of property rights that largely accounts for the popularity of these new and innovative forms of ownership in the 20th century. (4B Powell, Real Property, supra, § 631, pp. 54-7 to 54-8.)

The term “condominium,” which is used to describe a system of ownership as well as an individually owned unit in a multi-unit development, is 371*371 Latin in origin and means joint dominion or co-ownership. (4B Powell, Real Property, supra, § 632.1[4], p. 54-18.) The concept of shared real property ownership is said to have its roots in ancient Rome. (Ibid.; see also Ramsey, Condominium (1963) 9 Prac. Law. 21; Note,Land Without Earth — The Condominium (1962) 15 U.Fla. L.Rev. 203, 205.) The accuracy of this view has been challenged, however. (See Natelson, Comments on the Historiography of Condominium: The Myth of Roman Origin (1987) 12 Okla. City U.L.Rev. 17; 15A Am.Jur.2d, supra, § 6, p. 834, fn. 69.) Professor Natelson points to evidence tracing the condominium concept to medieval Germanic custom. By the 12th century, the towns of Germany had embraced the notion of separate ownership of individual stories in a building. (Natelson, Law of Property Owners Associations (1989) § 1.3.2, p. 20; see also Leyser, The Ownership of Flats — A Comparative Study (1958) 7 Int’l & Comp. L.Q. 31, 33; 15A Am.Jur.2d, supra, § 6, p. 834.) “`Houses were horizontally divided, and specific parts so created — the stories, floors, and cellars — were held by different persons in separate ownership; this being associated, as a rule, with the community ownership of the building site and the portions of the building (walls, stairs, roof, etc.) that were used in common.'” (Huebner, History of Germanic Private Law (1918) p. 174, as quoted in Note, Land Without Earth — The Condominium, supra, 15 U.Fla. L.Rev. at p. 205, fn. 14.) Development of this innovative form of ownership in Germany may have been encouraged by two factors: “a vibrant middle class made the institution possible, and the cramped nature of life behind town walls made it desirable.” (Natelson, Law of Property Owners Associations, supra, § 1.3.2.2, p. 20.)

The concept of “horizontal property” or “strata” ownership simply means that the area above land can be divided into a series of strata or planes capable of severed ownership, making the ownership of things affixed to land separable from the ownership of the land itself. (Natelson, Law of Property Owners Associations, supra,§ 1.3.2, pp. 24-25; Ball, Division into Horizontal Strata of the Landscape Above the Surface (1930) 39 Yale L.J. 616.) This idea, however, was inconsistent with the view expressed in many European civil codes and at English common law that the owner of the soil possessed the exclusive right to control everything on, above, or beneath the land, and that fixtures attached to land therefore could not be severed from ownership of the land. (See Schwartz, Condominium: A Hybrid Castle in the Sky(1964) 44 B.U.L.Rev. 137, 141 [noting the traditional view that “whatever is attached to the land belongs to the land” and, consequently, to the person who owns the land itself]; Note, Land Without Earth — The Condominium, supra, 15 U.Fla. L.Rev. at pp. 205-206 [noting the general hostility expressed in European civil codes to the concept of horizontal property].)

372*372 Indeed, there was no statutory authority for the severing of real property ownership by planes or floors until 1804, when the French Civil Code (the Code Napoleon) acknowledged that “the different stories of a house [could] belong to different proprietors,” and that in such cases “[t]he main walls and the roof [could be] at the charge of all the proprietors, each in proportion to the story belonging to him.” (Quoted in Natelson, Law of Property Owners Associations, supra, § 1.3.2, pp. 24-25.)

Not until nearly 160 years later did the notion of shared ownership of real property gain general acceptance in the United States. This occurred after Congress, through the National Housing Act of 1961, made federal mortgage insurance available to condominium units so as to encourage and facilitate home ownership. (15A Am.Jur.2d, supra, § 7, p. 835; Note, Judicial Review of Condominium Rulemaking(1981) 94 Harv.L.Rev. 647, 653, fn. 33.) Why did it take so long for this country to accept the idea of horizontal property ownership? Perhaps because the United States was, until recent times, so sparsely populated — and undeveloped habitable land and building materials so affordable — that there was “no great physical need for superimposing one dwelling upon another.” (Note, Land Without Earth — The Condominium, supra, 15 U.Fla. L.Rev. at p. 206; see also Leyser, The Ownership of Flats — A Comparative Study, supra, 7 Int’l & Comp. L.Q. at p. 31, fn. 3 [noting the similarly late development of shared ownership housing arrangements in another large, sparsely populated country — Australia.])

To divide a plot of land into interests severable by blocks or planes, the attorney for the land developer must prepare a declaration that must be recorded prior to the sale of any unit in the county where the land is located. (Natelson, Consent, Coercion, and “Reasonableness” in Private Law: The Special Case of the Property Owners Association (1990) 51 Ohio State L.J. 41, 47 [hereafter Natelson, Consent, Coercion, and “Reasonableness”].) The declaration, which is the operative document for the creation of any common interest development, is a collection of covenants, conditions and servitudes that govern the project. (Ibid.; see also 4B Powell, Real Property, supra, § 632.4[1] & [2], pp. 54-84, 54-92; 15A Am.Jur.2d, supra, § 14, p. 843.) Typically, the declaration describes the real property and any structures on the property, delineates the common areas within the project as well as the individually held lots or units, and sets forth restrictions pertaining to the use of the property. (15A Am.Jur.2d, supra, § 14, p. 843.)

Use restrictions are an inherent part of any common interest development and are crucial to the stable, planned environment of any shared ownership arrangement. (Note, Community Association Use Restrictions: Applying the Business Judgment Doctrine (1988) 64 Chi.-Kent L.Rev. 653, 673 [hereafter 373*373 Note, Business Judgment]; see also Natelson, Consent, Coercion and “Reasonableness,” supra, 51 Ohio State L.J. at p. 47.) The viability of shared ownership of improved real property rests on the existence of extensive reciprocal servitudes, together with the ability of each co-owner to prevent the property’s partition. (Natelson, Law of Property Owners Associations, supra, § 1.3.2.1, p. 19; see also Note, Business Judgment, supra, 64 Chi.-Kent L.Rev. at p. 673 [suggesting that medieval building societies, an early form of shared real property ownership, had failed for lack of enforceable regulations].)

The restrictions on the use of property in any common interest development may limit activities conducted in the common areas as well as in the confines of the home itself. (Reichman, Residential Private Governments (1976) 43 U.Chi. L.Rev. 253, 270; 15A Am.Jur.2d, supra, § 16, pp. 845-846.) Commonly, use restrictions preclude alteration of building exteriors, limit the number of persons that can occupy each unit, and place limitations on — or prohibit altogether — the keeping of pets. (4B Powell, Real Property, supra, § 632.5[11], p. 54-221; Reichman, Residential Private Governments, supra, at p. 270; Natelson, Consent, Coercion, and “Reasonableness,” supra, 51 Ohio St. L.J. at p. 48, fn. 28 [as of 1986, 58 percent of highrise developments and 39 percent of townhouse projects had some kind of pet restriction]; see also Noble v. Murphy (1993) 34 Mass. App. 452 [612 N.E.2d 266][enforcing condominium ban on pets]; Dulaney Towers Maintenance Corp. v. O’Brey, supra, 418 A.2d 1233 [upholding pet restriction]; Wilshire Condominium Ass’n, Inc. v.Kohlbrand (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1979) 368 So.2d 629 [same].)[5]

Restrictions on property use are not the only characteristic of common interest ownership. Ordinarily, such ownership also entails mandatory membership in an owners association, which, through an elected board of directors, is empowered to enforce any use restrictions contained in the project’s declaration or master deed and to enact new rules governing the use and occupancy of property within the project. (Cal. Condominium and Planned Development Practice (Cont.Ed.Bar 1984) § 1.7, p. 13; Note, Business Judgment, supra, 64 Chi.-Kent L.Rev. at p. 653; Natelson, Law of Property Owners Associations, supra, § 3.2.2, p. 71 et seq.) Because of its considerable power in managing and regulating a common interest development, the governing board of an owners association must guard against the potential 374*374 for the abuse of that power.[6] As Professor Natelson observes, owners associations “can be a powerful force for good or for ill” in their members’ lives. (Natelson, Consent, Coercion, and “Reasonableness,” supra, 51 Ohio St. L.J. at p. 43.) (1) Therefore, anyone who buys a unit in a common interest development with knowledge of its owners association’s discretionary power accepts “the risk that the power may be used in a way that benefits the commonality but harms the individual.” (Id. at p. 67.) Generally, courts will uphold decisions made by the governing board of an owners association so long as they represent good faith efforts to further the purposes of the common interest development, are consistent with the development’s governing documents, and comply with public policy. (Id. at p. 43.)

Thus, subordination of individual property rights to the collective judgment of the owners association together with restrictions on the use of real property comprise the chief attributes of owning property in a common interest development. As the Florida District Court of Appeal observed in Hidden Harbour Estates, Inc. v. Norman(Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1975) 309 So.2d 180 [72 A.L.R.3d 305], a decision frequently cited in condominium cases: “[I]nherent in the condominium concept is the principle that to promote the health, happiness, and peace of mind of the majority of the unit owners since they are living in such close proximity and using facilities in common, each unit owner must give up a certain degree of freedom of choice which he [or she] might otherwise enjoy in separate, privately owned property. Condominium unit owners comprise a little democratic subsociety of necessity more restrictive as it pertains to use of condominium property than may be existent outside the condominium organization.” (Id. at pp. 181-182; see also Leyser, The Ownership of Flats — A Comparative Study, supra, 7 Int’l & Comp. L.Q. at p. 38 [explaining the French system’s recognition that “flat ownership” has limitations that considerably exceed those of “normal” real property ownership, “limitations arising out of the rights of the other flat owners.”].)

Notwithstanding the limitations on personal autonomy that are inherent in the concept of shared ownership of residential property, common interest developments have increased in popularity in recent years, in part because they generally provide a more affordable alternative to ownership of a single-family home. (See Frances T. v.Village Green Owners Assn. (1986) 42 Cal.3d 490, 500, fn. 9 [229 Cal. Rptr. 456, 723 P.2d 573, 59 A.L.R.4th 447] [noting that common interest developments at that time accounted for as much as 70 percent of the new housing market in Los Angeles and San 375*375 Diego Counties]; Laguna Royale Owners Assn. v. Darger (1981) 119 Cal. App.3d 670, 681 [174 Cal. Rptr. 136]; Natelson, Consent, Coercion and “Reasonableness,” supra, 51 Ohio St. L.J. at pp. 42-43 [as of 1988, more than 30 million Americans lived in housing governed by owners associations]; see also McKenzie, Welcome Home. Do as We Say., N.Y. Times (Aug. 18, 1994) p. 23A, col. 1 [stating that 32 million Americans are members of some 150,000 homeowners associations and predicting that between 25 to 30 percent of Americans will live in community association housing by the year 2000.])

(2) One significant factor in the continued popularity of the common interest form of property ownership is the ability of homeowners to enforce restrictive CC&R’s against other owners (including future purchasers) of project units. (Natelson, Law of Property Owners Associations, supra, § 1.3.2.1, p. 19; Note, Business Judgment, supra, 64 Chi.-Kent L.Rev. at p. 673.) Generally, however, such enforcement is possible only if the restriction that is sought to be enforced meets the requirements of equitable servitudes or of covenants running with the land. (Cal. Condominium and Planned Development Practice, supra, §§ 8.42-8.44, pp. 666-668; Note, Covenants and Equitable Servitudes in California (1978) 29 Hastings L.J. 545, 553-573.)

Restrictive covenants will run with the land, and thus bind successive owners, if the deed or other instrument containing the restrictive covenant particularly describes the lands to be benefited and burdened by the restriction and expressly provides that successors in interest of the covenantor’s land will be bound for the benefit of the covenantee’s land. Moreover, restrictions must relate to use, repair, maintenance, or improvement of the property, or to payment of taxes or assessments, and the instrument containing the restrictions must be recorded. (See § 1468; Advising Cal. Condominium and Homeowners Associations (Cont.Ed.Bar 1991) § 7.33, p. 342.)

Restrictions that do not meet the requirements of covenants running with the land may be enforceable as equitable servitudes provided the person bound by the restrictions had notice of their existence. (Riley v. Bear Creek Planning Committee(1976) 17 Cal.3d 500, 507 [131 Cal. Rptr. 381, 551 P.2d 1213]; Cal. Condominium and Planned Development Practice, supra, § 8.44, pp. 667-668.)

When restrictions limiting the use of property within a common interest development satisfy the requirements of covenants running with the land or of equitable servitudes, what standard or test governs their enforceability? In California, as we explained at the outset, our Legislature has made common 376*376 interest development use restrictions contained in a project’s recorded declaration “enforceable … unless unreasonable.” (§ 1354, subd. (a), italics added.)

In states lacking such legislative guidance, some courts have adopted a standard under which a common interest development’s recorded use restrictions will be enforced so long as they are “reasonable.” (See Riley v. Stoves (1974) 22 Ariz. App. 223 [526 P.2d 747, 752, 68 A.L.R.3d 1229] [asking whether the challenged restriction provided “a reasonable means to accomplish the private objective”]; Hidden Harbour Estates, Inc. v. Norman, supra, 309 So.2d at p. 182 [to justify regulation, conduct need not be “so offensive as to constitute a nuisance”]; 15A Am.Jur.2d, supra, § 31, p. 861.) Although no one definition of the term “reasonable” has gained universal acceptance, most courts have applied what one commentator calls “equitable reasonableness,” upholding only those restrictions that provide a reasonable means to further the collective “health, happiness and enjoyment of life” of owners of a common interest development. (Note, Business Judgment, supra, 64 Chi.-Kent L.Rev. at p. 655.) Others would limit the “reasonableness” standard only to those restrictions adopted by majority vote of the homeowners or enacted under the rulemaking power of an association’s governing board, and would not apply this test to restrictions included in a planned development project’s recorded declaration or master deed. Because such restrictions are presumptively valid, these authorities would enforce them regardless of reasonableness. The first court to articulate this view was the Florida Fourth District Court of Appeal.

In Hidden Harbour Estates v. Basso (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1981) 393 So.2d 637, the Florida court distinguished two categories of use restrictions: use restrictions set forth in the declaration or master deed of the condominium project itself, and rules promulgated by the governing board of the condominium owners association or the board’s interpretation of a rule. (Id. at p. 639.) The latter category of use restrictions, the court said, should be subject to a “reasonableness” test, so as to “somewhat fetter the discretion of the board of directors.” (Id. at p. 640.) Such a standard, the court explained, best assures that governing boards will “enact rules and make decisions that are reasonably related to the promotion of the health, happiness and peace of mind” of the project owners, considered collectively. (Ibid.)

By contrast, restrictions contained in the declaration or master deed of the condominium complex, the Florida court concluded, should not be evaluated under a “reasonableness” standard. (Hidden Harbour Estates v. Basso, supra, 393 So.2d at pp. 639-640.) Rather, such use restrictions are “clothed with a very strong presumption of validity” and should be upheld even if they 377*377 exhibit some degree of unreasonableness. (Id. at pp. 639, 640.) Nonenforcement would be proper only if such restrictions were arbitrary or in violation of public policy or some fundamental constitutional right. (Id. at pp. 639-640.) The Florida court’s decision was cited with approval recently by a Massachusetts appellate court in Noble v. Murphy, supra, 612 N.E.2d 266.

In Noble, managers of a condominium development sought to enforce against the owners of one unit a pet restriction contained in the project’s master deed. The Massachusetts court upheld the validity of the restriction. The court stated that “[a] condominium use restriction appearing in originating documents which predate the purchase of individual units” was entitled to greater judicial deference than restrictions “promulgated after units have been individually acquired.” (Noble v.Murphy, supra, 612 N.E.2d at p. 270.) The court reasoned that “properly-enacted and evenly-enforced use restrictions contained in a master deed or original bylaws of a condominium” should be insulated against attack “except on constitutional or public policy grounds.” (Id. at p. 271.) This standard, the court explained, best “serves the interest of the majority of owners [within a project] who may be presumed to have chosen not to alter or rescind such restrictions,” and it spares overcrowded courts “the burden and expense of highly particularized and lengthy litigation.” (Ibid.)

Indeed, giving deference to use restrictions contained in a condominium project’s originating documents protects the general expectations of condominium owners “that restrictions in place at the time they purchase their units will be enforceable.” (Note, Judicial Review of Condominium Rulemaking, supra, 94 Harv.L.Rev. 647, 653; Ellickson, Cities and Homeowners’ Associations (1982) 130 U.Pa. L.Rev. 1519, 1526-1527 [stating that association members “unanimously consent to the provisions in the association’s original documents” and courts therefore should not scrutinize such documents for “reasonableness.”].) This in turn encourages the development of shared ownership housing — generally a less costly alternative to single-dwelling ownership — by attracting buyers who prefer a stable, planned environment. It also protects buyers who have paid a premium for condominium units in reliance on a particular restrictive scheme.

To what extent are these general principles reflected in California’s statutory scheme governing condominiums and other common interest developments? We shall explore that in the next section.

III

In California, common interest developments are subject to the provisions of the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act (hereafter Davis-Stirling Act or Act). (§ 1350 et seq.) The Act, passed into law in 1985, 378*378 consolidated in one part of the Civil Code certain definitions and other substantive provisions pertaining to condominiums and other types of common interest developments. (Stats. 1985, ch. 874, § 14, p. 2774.)

The Act enumerates the specific shared ownership arrangements that fall under the rubric “common interest development.” (§ 1351, subd. (c)(1)-(4).)[7] It also sets out the requirements for establishing a common interest development (§ 1352), reserves to each homeowner in such a development limited authority to modify an individual unit (§ 1360), grants to the owners association of the development those powers necessary to the development’s long-term operation (§§ 1363, 1364, 1365.5, 1366), and recognizes the right of homeowners collectively to alter or amend existing use restrictions, or to add new ones (§ 1356).

Section 1352 states that “whenever a separate interest coupled with an interest in the common area or membership in the association is, or has been, conveyed” and a declaration, a condominium plan, and (when necessary) a subdivision map plan recorded, “[t]his title applies and a common interest development is created.” (Italics added.)[8] Declarations recorded after January 1, 1986, the effective date of the Act, must include a legal description of the common interest development, a statement of the type of development (condominium project, stock cooperative, etc.), the name of the association charged with operating the development, and “the restrictions on the use or enjoyment of any portion of the common interest development.” (§ 1353.)

(3a) Pertinent here is the Act’s provision for the enforcement of use restrictions contained in the project’s recorded declaration. That provision, subdivision (a) of section 1354, states in relevant part: “The covenants and restrictions in the declaration shall be enforceable equitable servitudes, unless unreasonable, and shall inure to the benefit of and bind all owners of separate interests in the development.” (Italics added.)[9] To determine when a restrictive covenant included in the declaration of a common interest development cannot be enforced, we must construe section 1354. In doing so, our primary task is to ascertain legislative intent, giving the words of the statute their ordinary meaning. (People v. Broussard (1993) 5 Cal.4th 1067, 1071 [22 Cal. Rptr.2d 278, 856 P.2d 1134]; Woods v. Young (1991) 53 Cal.3d 315, 323 [279 Cal. Rptr. 613, 807 P.2d 455].) The words, however, must be read 379*379 in context, considering the nature and purpose of the statutory enactment. (Woods v. Young, supra, at p. 323; California Mfrs. Assn. v. Public Utilities Com.(1979) 24 Cal.3d 836, 844 [157 Cal. Rptr. 676, 598 P.2d 836].)

(4) As we have mentioned in the preceding paragraph, section 1354 states that covenants and restrictions appearing in the recorded declaration of a common interest development are “enforceable equitable servitudes, unless unreasonable.” The provision’s express reference to “equitable servitudes” evidences the Legislature’s intent that recorded use restrictions falling within section 1354 are to be treated as equitable servitudes. (See Cal. Condominium and Planned Development Practice, supra, § 8.40, p. 666 [giving this interpretation to former § 1355].)[10] Thus, although under general rules governing equitable servitudes a subsequent purchaser of land subject to restrictions must have actual notice of the restrictions, actual notice is not required to enforce recorded use restrictions covered by section 1354 against a subsequent purchaser. Rather, the inclusion of covenants and restrictions in the declaration recorded with the county recorder provides sufficient notice to permit the enforcement of such recorded covenants and restrictions as equitable servitudes. (See Seaton v. Clifford (1972) 24 Cal. App.3d 46, 50 [100 Cal. Rptr. 779] [recorded document of restrictions gives adequate notice to future grantees].)

(5) Under the law of equitable servitudes, courts may enforce a promise about the use of land even though the person who made the promise has transferred the land to another. (See Marra v. Aetna Construction Co. (1940) 15 Cal.2d 375, 378 [101 P.2d 490].) The underlying idea is that a landowner’s promise to refrain from particular conduct pertaining to land creates in the beneficiary of that promise “an equitable interest in the land of the promisor.” (Rest., Property, § 539, com. a, p. 3227; 2 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (2d ed. 1886) § 689, quoted in Hunt v. Jones(1906) 149 Cal. 297, 301 [86 P. 686] [a grantee or purchaser with notice that premises are bound by a covenant “`will be restrained from violating it.'”].) The doctrine is useful chiefly to enforce uniform building restrictions under a general plan for an entire tract of land or for a subdivision. (Marra v. Aetna Construction Co., supra, at p. 378.) (6) “It is undoubted that when the owner of a subdivided tract conveys the various parcels in the tract by deeds containing appropriate language imposing restrictions on each parcel as part of a general plan of restrictions common to all the parcels and designed for their 380*380 mutual benefit, mutual equitable servitudes are thereby created in favor of each parcel as against all the others.” (Werner v. Graham (1919) 181 Cal. 174, 183 [183 P. 945].)

(7) In choosing equitable servitude law as the standard for enforcing CC&R’s in common interest developments, the Legislature has manifested a preference in favor of their enforcement. This preference is underscored by the use of the word “shall” in the first phrase of section 1354: “The covenants and restrictions shall be enforceable equitable servitudes….” (See Common Cause v. Board of Supervisors (1989) 49 Cal.3d 432, 443 [261 Cal. Rptr. 574, 777 P.2d 610]; Long Beach Police Officers Assn. v. City of Long Beach (1988) 46 Cal.3d 736, 743 [250 Cal. Rptr. 869, 759 P.2d 504] [“shall” is ordinarily mandatory].)

The Legislature did, however, set a condition for the mandatory enforcement of a declaration’s CC&R’s: a covenant, condition or restriction is “enforceable … unless unreasonable.” (§ 1354, subd. (a), italics added.) The Legislature’s use of the phrase “unless unreasonable” in section 1354 was a marked change from the prior version of that statutory provision, which stated that “restrictions shall be enforceable equitable servitudes where reasonable.” (Former § 1355, italics added; see fn. 10,ante.) Under settled principles of statutory construction, such a material alteration of a statute’s phrasing signals the Legislature’s intent to give an enactment a new meaning. (McDonough Power Equipment Co. v. Superior Court (1972) 8 Cal.3d 527, 534, fn. 5 [105 Cal. Rptr. 330, 503 P.2d 1338].) Here, the change in statutory language, from “where reasonable” to “unless unreasonable,” cloaked use restrictions contained in a condominium development’s recorded declaration with a presumption of reasonableness by shifting the burden of proving otherwise to the party challenging the use restriction. (Cal. Condominium and Planned Development Practice, supra, § 1.9, p. 18 [stating that the change in statutory language “switches the burden to the person challenging the restriction to establish that it is unreasonable”]; Advising Cal. Condominium and Homeowners Associations, supra,§ 7.34, p. 344 [same].)

How is that burden satisfied? To answer this question, we must examine the principles governing enforcement of equitable servitudes.

(8) As noted earlier, equitable servitudes permit courts to enforce promises restricting land use when there is no privity of contract between the party seeking to enforce the promise and the party resisting enforcement. Like any promise given in exchange for consideration, an agreement to refrain from a particular use of land is subject to contract principles, under 381*381 which courts try “to effectuate the legitimate desires of the covenanting parties.” (Hannula v. Hacienda Homes (1949) 34 Cal.2d 442, 444-445 [211 P.2d 302, 19 A.L.R.2d 1268].) When landowners express the intention to limit land use, “that intention should be carried out.” (Id. at p. 444; Epstein,Notice and Freedom of Contract in the Law of Servitudes (1982) 55 So.Cal.L.Rev. 1353, 1359 [“We may not understand why property owners want certain obligations to run with the land, but as it is their land … some very strong reason should be advanced” before courts should override those obligations. (Original italics.)].)

Thus, when enforcing equitable servitudes, courts are generally disinclined to question the wisdom of agreed-to restrictions. (Note, Covenants and Equitable Servitudes in California, supra, 29 Hastings L.J. at p. 577, citing Walker v. Haslett(1919) 44 Cal. App. 394, 397-398 [186 P. 622].) This rule does not apply, however, when the restriction does not comport with public policy. (Ibid.) (9) Equity will not enforce any restrictive covenant that violates public policy. (See Shelley v. Kraemer(1948) 334 U.S. 1 [92 L.Ed. 1161, 68 S.Ct. 836, 3 A.L.R.2d 441] [racial restriction unenforceable]; § 53, subd. (b) [voiding property use restrictions based on “sex, race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, or disability”].) Nor will courts enforce as equitable servitudes those restrictions that are arbitrary, that is, bearing no rational relationship to the protection, preservation, operation or purpose of the affected land. (See Laguna Royale Owners Assn. v. Darger, supra, 119 Cal. App.3d 670, 684.)

These limitations on the equitable enforcement of restrictive servitudes that are either arbitrary or violate fundamental public policy are specific applications of the general rule that courts will not enforce a restrictive covenant when “the harm caused by the restriction is so disproportionate to the benefit produced” by its enforcement that the restriction “ought not to be enforced.” (Rest., Property, § 539, com. f, pp. 3229-3230; see also 4 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1987) Real Property, § 494, pp. 671-672; Note, Covenants and Equitable Servitudes in California, supra, 29 Hastings L.J. at pp. 575-576.) When a use restriction bears no relationship to the land it burdens, or violates a fundamental policy inuring to the public at large, the resulting harm will always be disproportionate to any benefit.

Sometimes lesser burdens too can be so disproportionate to any benefit flowing from the restriction that the restriction “ought not to be enforced.” (Rest., Property, § 539, com. f, p. 3230.) For instance, courts will not enforce a land use restriction when a change in surrounding properties effectively defeats the intended purpose of the restriction, rendering it of little benefit to the remaining property owners. (Lincoln Sav. & Loan Assn. v. Riviera Estates 382*382 Assn. (1970) 7 Cal. App.3d 449, 460 [87 Cal. Rptr. 150].) In such cases, enforcing the restriction would be oppressive or inequitable. (Atlas Terminals, Inc. v. Sokol (1962) 203 Cal. App.2d 191, 195 [21 Cal. Rptr. 293]; see generally, 7 Miller & Starr, California Real Estate (1990) Covenants and Restrictions, § 22:19, p. 575; Note, Restrictive Covenants: Injunctions: Changed Conditions in the Neighborhood as a Bar to Enforcement of Equitable Servitudes(1927) 16 Cal.L.Rev. 58.)

(10) As the first Restatement of Property points out, the test for determining when the harmful effects of a land-use restriction are so disproportionate to its benefit “is necessarily vague.” (Rest., Property, § 539, com. f, p. 3230.) Application of the test requires the accommodation of two policies that sometimes conflict: “One of these is that [persons] should be required to live up to their promises; the other that land should be developed to its normal capacity.” (Ibid.) Reconciliation of these policies in determining whether the burdens of a recorded use restriction are so disproportionate to its benefits depends on the effect of the challenged restriction on “promoting or limiting the use of land in the locality….” (Ibid.)

From the authorities discussed above, we distill these principles: An equitable servitude will be enforced unless it violates public policy; it bears no rational relationship to the protection, preservation, operation or purpose of the affected land; or it otherwise imposes burdens on the affected land that are so disproportionate to the restriction’s beneficial effects that the restriction should not be enforced.

(3b) With these principles of equitable servitude law to guide us, we now turn to section 1354. As mentioned earlier, under subdivision (a) of section 1354 the use restrictions for a common interest development that are set forth in the recorded declaration are “enforceable equitable servitudes, unless unreasonable.” In other words, such restrictions should be enforced unless they are wholly arbitrary, violate a fundamental public policy, or impose a burden on the use of affected land that far outweighs any benefit.

This interpretation of section 1354 is consistent with the views of legal commentators as well as judicial decisions in other jurisdictions that have applied a presumption of validity to the recorded land use restrictions of a common interest development. (Noble v. Murphy, supra, 612 N.E.2d 266, 270; Hidden Harbour Estates v. Basso, supra, 393 So.2d 637, 639-640; Note, Judicial Review of Condominium Rulemaking, supra, 94 Harv.L.Rev. 647, 653.) As these authorities point out, and as we discussed previously, recorded CC&R’s are the primary means of achieving the stability and predictability so essential to the success of a shared ownership housing development. In general, then, enforcement of a common interest development’s 383*383recorded CC&R’s will both encourage the development of land and ensure that promises are kept, thereby fulfilling both of the policies identified by the Restatement. (See Rest., Property, § 539, com. f, p. 3230.)

When courts accord a presumption of validity to all such recorded use restrictions and measure them against deferential standards of equitable servitude law, it discourages lawsuits by owners of individual units seeking personal exemptions from the restrictions. This also promotes stability and predictability in two ways. It provides substantial assurance to prospective condominium purchasers that they may rely with confidence on the promises embodied in the project’s recorded CC&R’s. And it protects all owners in the planned development from unanticipated increases in association fees to fund the defense of legal challenges to recorded restrictions.

How courts enforce recorded use restrictions affects not only those who have made their homes in planned developments, but also the owners associations charged with the fiduciary obligation to enforce those restrictions. (See Posey v. Leavitt (1991) 229 Cal. App.3d 1236, 1247 [280 Cal. Rptr. 568]; Advising Cal. Condominium and Homeowner Associations, supra, § 6.11. pp. 259-261.) When courts treat recorded use restrictions as presumptively valid, and place on the challenger the burden of proving the restriction “unreasonable” under the deferential standards applicable to equitable servitudes, associations can proceed to enforce reasonable restrictive covenants without fear that their actions will embroil them in costly and prolonged legal proceedings. Of course, when an association determines that a unit owner has violated a use restriction, the association must do so in good faith, not in an arbitrary or capricious manner, and its enforcement procedures must be fair and applied uniformly. (See Ironwood Owners Assn. IX v. Solomon (1986) 178 Cal. App.3d 766, 772 [224 Cal. Rptr. 18]; Cohen v. Kite Hill Community Assn. (1983) 142 Cal. App.3d 642, 650 [191 Cal. Rptr. 209].)

There is an additional beneficiary of legal rules that are protective of recorded use restrictions: the judicial system. Fewer lawsuits challenging such restrictions will be brought, and those that are filed may be disposed of more expeditiously, if the rules courts use in evaluating such restrictions are clear, simple, and not subject to exceptions based on the peculiar circumstances or hardships of individual residents in condominiums and other shared-ownership developments.

Contrary to the dissent’s accusations that the majority’s decision “fray[s]” the “social fabric” (dis. opn., post, p. 390), we are of the view that our social fabric is best preserved if courts uphold and enforce solemn written instruments that embody the expectations of the parties rather than treat them as 384*384 “worthless paper” as the dissent would (dis. opn., post, p. 396). Our social fabric is founded on the stability of expectation and obligation that arises from the consistent enforcement of the terms of deeds, contracts, wills, statutes, and other writings. To allow one person to escape obligations under a written instrument upsets the expectations of all the other parties governed by that instrument (here, the owners of the other 529 units) that the instrument will be uniformly and predictably enforced.

The salutary effect of enforcing written instruments and the statutes that apply to them is particularly true in the case of the declaration of a common interest development. As we have discussed, common interest developments are a more intensive and efficient form of land use that greatly benefits society and expands opportunities for home ownership. In turn, however, a common interest development creates a community of property owners living in close proximity to each other, typically much closer than if each owned his or her separate plot of land. This proximity is feasible, and units in a common interest development are marketable, largely because the recorded declaration of CC&R’s assures owners of a stable and predictable environment.

Refusing to enforce the CC&R’s contained in a recorded declaration, or enforcing them only after protracted litigation that would require justification of their application on a case-by-case basis, would impose great strain on the social fabric of the common interest development. It would frustrate owners who had purchased their units in reliance on the CC&R’s. It would put the owners and the homeowners association in the difficult and divisive position of deciding whether particular CC&R’s should be applied to a particular owner. Here, for example, deciding whether a particular animal is “confined to an owner’s unit and create[s] no noise, odor, or nuisance” (dis. opn., post, p. 394) is a fact-intensive determination that can only be made by examining in detail the behavior of the particular animal and the behavior of the particular owner. Homeowners associations are ill-equipped to make such investigations, and any decision they might make in a particular case could be divisive or subject to claims of partiality.

Enforcing the CC&R’s contained in a recorded declaration only after protracted case-by-case litigation would impose substantial litigation costs on the owners through their homeowners association, which would have to defend not only against owners contesting the application of the CC&R’s to them, but also against owners contesting any case-by-case exceptions the homeowners association might make. In short, it is difficult to imagine what could more disrupt the harmony of a common interest development than the course proposed by the dissent.

385*385 IV

Here, the Court of Appeal failed to consider the rules governing equitable servitudes in holding that Nahrstedt’s complaint challenging the Lakeside Village restriction against the keeping of cats in condominium units stated a cause of action for declaratory relief. Instead, the court concluded that factual allegations by Nahrstedtthat her cats are kept inside her condominium unit and do not bother her neighbors were sufficient to have the trial court decide whether enforcement of the restriction against Nahrstedt would be reasonable. For this conclusion, the court relied on two Court of Appeal decisions, Bernardo Villas Management Corp. v. Black (1987) 190 Cal. App.3d 153 [235 Cal. Rptr. 509] and Portola Hills Community Assn. v. James(1992) 4 Cal. App.4th 289 [5 Cal. Rptr.2d 580], both of which had invalidated recorded restrictions covered by section 1354.

In Bernardo Villas, the manager of a condominium project sued two condominium residents to enforce a restriction that prohibited them from keeping any “truck, camper, trailer, boat … or other form of recreational vehicle” in the carports. (190 Cal. App.3d at p. 154.) In holding that the restriction was unreasonable as applied to the clean new pickup truck with camper shell that the defendants used for personal transportation, the Court of Appeal observed that parking the truck in the development’s carport would “not interfere with other owners’ use or enjoyment of their property.” (Id. at p. 155.)

Thereafter, a different division of the same district Court of Appeal used a similar analysis in Portola Hills. There, the court refused to enforce a planned community’s landscape restriction banning satellite dishes against a homeowner who had installed a satellite dish in his backyard. After expressing the view that “[a] homeowner is allowed to prove a particular restriction is unreasonable as applied to his property,” the court observed that the defendant’s satellite dish was not visible to other project residents or the public, leading the court to conclude that the ban promoted no legitimate goal of the homeowners association. (4 Cal. App.4th at p. 293.)

At issue in both Bernardo Villas Management Corp. v. Black, supra, 190 Cal. App.3d 153, and Portola Hills Community Assn. v. James, supra, 4 Cal. App.4th 289, were recorded use restrictions contained in a common interest development’s declaration that had been recorded with the county recorder. Accordingly, the use restrictions involved in these two cases were covered by section 1354, rendering them presumptively reasonable and enforceable under the rules governing equitable servitudes. As we have explained, courts will enforce an equitable servitude unless it violates a 386*386 fundamental public policy, it bears no rational relationship to the protection, preservation, operation or purpose of the affected land, or its harmful effects on land use are otherwise so disproportionate to its benefits to affected homeowners that it should not be enforced. In determining whether a restriction is “unreasonable” under section 1354, and thus not enforceable, the focus is on the restriction’s effect on the project as a whole, not on the individual homeowner. Although purporting to evaluate the use restrictions in accord with section 1354, bothBernardo Villas and Portola Hills failed to apply the deferential standards of equitable servitude law just mentioned. Accordingly, to the extent they differ from the views expressed in this opinion, we disapprove Bernardo Villas and Portola Hills.

V

Under the holding we adopt today, the reasonableness or unreasonableness of a condominium use restriction that the Legislature has made subject to section 1354 is to be determined not by reference to facts that are specific to the objecting homeowner, but by reference to the common interest development as a whole. As we have explained, when, as here, a restriction is contained in the declaration of the common interest development and is recorded with the county recorder, the restriction is presumed to be reasonable and will be enforced uniformly against all residents of the common interest development unless the restriction is arbitrary, imposes burdens on the use of lands it affects that substantially outweigh the restriction’s benefits to the development’s residents, or violates a fundamental public policy.

(11) Accordingly, here Nahrstedt could prevent enforcement of the Lakeside Village pet restriction by proving that the restriction is arbitrary, that it is substantially more burdensome than beneficial to the affected properties, or that it violates a fundamental public policy. For the reasons set forth below, Nahrstedt’s complaint fails to adequately allege any of these three grounds of unreasonableness.

We conclude, as a matter of law, that the recorded pet restriction of the LakesideVillage condominium development prohibiting cats or dogs but allowing some other pets is not arbitrary, but is rationally related to health, sanitation and noise concerns legitimately held by residents of a high-density condominium project such asLakeside Village, which includes 530 units in 12 separate 3-story buildings.

Nahrstedt’s complaint alleges no facts that could possibly support a finding that the burden of the restriction on the affected property is so disproportionate to its benefit that the restriction is unreasonable and should 387*387 not be enforced. Also, the complaint’s allegations center on Nahrstedt and her cats (that she keeps them inside her condominium unit and that they do not bother her neighbors), without any reference to the effect on the condominium development as a whole, thus rendering the allegations legally insufficient to overcome section 1354’s presumption of the restriction’s validity.

(12a) Nahrstedt’s complaint does contend that the restriction violates her right to privacy under the California Constitution, article I, section 1.[11] According toNahrstedt, this state constitutional provision (enacted by voter initiative in 1972) guarantees her the right to keep cats in her Lakeside Village condominium notwithstanding the existence of a restriction in the development’s originating documents recorded with the county recorder specifically disallowing cats or dogs in the condominium project. Because a land-use restriction in violation of a state constitutional provision presumably would conflict with public policy (see Gantt v.Sentry (1992) 1 Cal.4th 1083, 1094-1095 [4 Cal. Rptr.2d 874, 824 P.2d 680]), we construe Nahrstedt’s contention as a claim that the Lakeside Village pet restriction violates a fundamental public policy and for that reason cannot be enforced. As we have pointed out earlier, courts will not enforce a land use restriction that violates a fundamental public policy. The pertinent question, therefore, is whether the privacy provision in our state Constitution implicitly guarantees condominium owners or residents the right to keep cats or dogs as household pets. We conclude that California’s Constitution confers no such right.

(13) We recently held, in Hill v. National Collegiate Athletic Assn. (1994) 7 Cal.4th 1 [26 Cal. Rptr.2d 834, 865 P.2d 633] that the privacy provision in our state Constitution does not “encompass all conceivable assertions of individual rights” or create “an unbridled right” of personal freedom. (Id. at pp. 35-36.) The legally recognized privacy interests that fall within the protection of the state Constitution are generally of two classes: (1) interests in precluding dissemination of confidential information (“`informational privacy'”); and (2) interests in making personal decisions or in conducting personal activities free of interference, observation, or intrusion (“`autonomy privacy'”). (Id. at p. 35.) The threshold question in deciding whether “established social norms safeguard a particular type of information or protect a personal decision from public or private intervention,” we explained in Hill, must be determined from “the usual sources of positive law governing the right to privacy — common law development, constitutional development, statutory enactment, and the ballots arguments accompanying the Privacy Initiative.” (Id. at p. 36.)

388*388 (12b) From these sources we discern no fundamental public policy that would favor the keeping of pets in a condominium project. There is no federal or state constitutional provision or any California statute that confers a general right to keep household pets in condominiums or other common interest developments.[12] There is nothing in the ballot arguments relating to the privacy provision in our state Constitution that would be of help to plaintiff’s argument in this case. The ballot arguments focused on the conduct of government and business in “`collecting and stockpiling unnecessary information … and misusing information gathered for one purpose in order to serve other purposes or to embarrass….'” (Hill v. National Collegiate Athletic Assn., supra, 7 Cal.4th at p. 21, quoting from the ballot arguments for initiative adopted by voters on Nov. 7, 1972 [Privacy Initiative]), and therefore lend no support to Nahrstedt. Nor does case law offer any support for the position that the recognized scope of autonomy privacy encompasses the right to keep pets: courts that have considered condominium pet restrictions have uniformly upheld them. (Noble v. Murphy, supra, 612 N.E.2d 266 [upholding total ban on pets];Wilshire Condominium Ass’n, Inc. v. Kohlbrand, supra, 368 So.2d 629 [upholding pet restriction]; Dulaney Towers Maintenance v. O’Brey, supra, 418 A.2d 1233 [same].)

Our conclusion that Nahrstedt’s complaint states no claim entitling her to declaratory relief disposes of her primary cause of action challenging enforcement of the Lakeside Village condominium project’s pet restriction, but does not address other causes of action (for invasion of privacy, invalidation of assessments, injunctive relief, and seeking damages for emotional distress) revived by the Court of Appeal. Because the Court of Appeal’s decision regarding those other causes of action may have been influenced by its conclusion that Nahrstedt had stated a claim for declaratory relief, we remand this case to the Court of Appeal so it can reconsider whether Nahrstedt’s complaint is sufficient to state those other causes of action.

CONCLUSION

In section 1354, the Legislature has specifically addressed the subject of the enforcement of use restrictions that, like the one in this case prohibiting 389*389 the keeping of certain animals, are recorded in the declaration of a condominium or other common interest development. The Legislature has mandated judicial enforcement of those restrictions unless they are shown to be unreasonable when applied to the development as a whole.

Section 1354 requires courts determining the validity of a condominium use restriction in a recorded declaration to apply the deferential standards of equitable servitude law. These standards grant courts no unbridled license to question the wisdom of the restriction. Rather, courts must enforce the restriction unless the challenger can show that the restriction is unreasonable because it is arbitrary, violates a fundamental public policy, or imposes burdens on the use of the affected property that substantially outweigh the restriction’s benefits.

By providing condominium homeowners with substantial assurance that their development’s recorded use restrictions can be enforced, section 1354 promotes the stability and predictability so essential to the success of any common interest development. Persons who purchase homes in such a development typically submit to a variety of restrictions on the use of their property. In exchange, they obtain the security of knowing that all other homeowners in the development will be required to abide by those same restrictions. Section 1354 also protects the general expectations of condominium homeowners that they not be burdened with the litigation expense in defending case-by-case legal challenges to presumptively valid recorded use restrictions.

In this case, the pet restriction was contained in the project’s declaration or governing document, which was recorded with the county recorder before any of the 530 units was sold. For many owners, the pet restriction may have been an important inducement to purchase into the development. Because the homeowners collectively have the power to repeal the pet restriction, its continued existence reflects their desire to retain it.

Plaintiff’s allegations, even if true, are insufficient to show that the pet restriction’s harmful effects substantially outweigh its benefits to the condominium development as a whole, that it bears no rational relationship to the purpose or function of the development, or that it violates public policy. We reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeal, and remand for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed in this opinion.

Lucas, C.J., Mosk, J., Baxter, J., George, J., and Werdegar, J., concurred.

390*390 ARABIAN, J., Dissenting.

“There are two means of refuge from the misery of life: music and cats.”[1]

I respectfully dissent. While technical merit may commend the majority’s analysis,[2]its application to the facts presented reflects a narrow, indeed chary, view of the law that eschews the human spirit in favor of arbitrary efficiency. In my view, the resolution of this case well illustrates the conventional wisdom, and fundamental truth, of the Spanish proverb, “It is better to be a mouse in a cat’s mouth than a man in a lawyer’s hands.”

As explained below, I find the provision known as the “pet restriction” contained in the covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&R’s) governing the Lakeside Village project patently arbitrary and unreasonable within the meaning of Civil Code section 1354. Beyond dispute, human beings have long enjoyed an abiding and cherished association with their household animals. Given the substantial benefits derived from pet ownership, the undue burden on the use of property imposed on condominium owners who can maintain pets within the confines of their units without creating a nuisance or disturbing the quiet enjoyment of others substantially outweighs whatever meager utility the restriction may serve in the abstract. It certainly does not promote “health, happiness [or] peace of mind” commensurate with its tariff on the quality of life for those who value the companionship of animals. Worse, it contributes to the fraying of our social fabric.[3]

1. The pleadings.

I begin my analysis with the plaintiff’s pleadings, the allegations of which must be accepted as true on review of an order sustaining a demurrer. (Long Beach Equities, Inc. v. County of Ventura (1991) 231 Cal. App.3d 1016, 1024 [282 Cal. Rptr. 877].) Moreover, in evaluating the sufficiency of the complaint at this stage of the proceedings, a reviewing court must “look to 391*391 substance, not to form” (Menefeev. Oxnam (1919) 42 Cal. App. 81, 96 [183 P. 379]; see, e.g., Universal By-Product, Inc. v. City of Modesto (1974) 43 Cal. App.3d 145, 151 [117 Cal. Rptr. 525]), construing the pleadings liberally, “with a view to substantial justice between the parties” (Code Civ. Proc., § 452).

In relevant part, plaintiff has alleged that she is the owner of a condominium unit located in Lakeside Village; that she has three cats which she brought with her when she moved there; that she maintains her cats entirely within the confines of her unit and has “never released [them] in any common area”; that they are “noiseless, create no nuisance, [and] have not destroyed any portion of [her] unit, or the common area”; and that they provide her companionship. She further alleges the homeowners association is seeking to enforce a recorded restriction that prohibits keeping any pets except domestic fish and birds.

The majority acknowledge that under their interpretation of Civil Code section 1354 “the test for determining when the harmful effects of a land-use restriction are disproportionate to benefit `is necessarily vague.’ [Citation.]” (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 382.) Nevertheless, in their view the foregoing allegations are deficient because they do not specifically state facts to “support a finding that the burden of the restriction on the affected property is so disproportionate to its benefit that the restriction is unreasonable and should not be enforced.” (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 386-387.) They also fail to make “any reference to the effect on the condominium development as a whole….” (Maj. opn. ante, at p. 387.) This narrow assessment of plaintiff’s complaint does not comport with the rule of liberal construction that should prevail on demurrer. (Youngman v. Nevada Irrigation Dist. (1969) 70 Cal.2d 240, 245 [74 Cal. Rptr. 398, 449 P.2d 462].) When considered less grudgingly, the pleadings are sufficient to allege that the pet restriction is unreasonable as a matter of law.

Generically stated, plaintiff challenges this restriction to the extent it precludes not only her but anyone else living in Lakeside Village from enjoying the substantial pleasures of pet ownership while affording no discernible benefit to other unit owners if the animals are maintained without any detriment to the latter’s quiet enjoyment of their own space and the common areas. In essence, she avers that when pets are kept out of sight, do not make noise, do not generate odors, and do not otherwise create a nuisance, reasonable expectations as to the quality of life within the condominium project are not impaired. At the same time, taking into consideration the well-established and long-standing historical and cultural relationship between human beings and their pets and the value they impart (cf. Evid. 392*392 Code, § 452, subd. (g)), enforcement of the restriction significantly and unduly burdens the use of land for those deprived of their companionship. Considered from this perspective, I find plaintiff’s complaint states a cause of action for declaratory relief.[4]

2. The burden.

Under the majority’s construction of Civil Code section 1354, the pet restriction is unreasonable, and hence unenforceable, if the “burdens [imposed] on the affected land … are so disproportionate to the restriction’s beneficial effects that the restriction should not be enforced.” (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 382.) What, then, is the burden at issue here?

Both recorded and unrecorded history bear witness to the domestication of animals as household pets.[5] Throughout the ages, dogs and cats have provided human beings with a variety of services in addition to their companionship — shepherding flocks, guarding life and property, hunting game, ridding the house and barn of vermin. Of course, the modern classic example is the assist dog, which facilitates a sense of independence and security for disabled persons by enabling them to navigate their environment, alerting them to important sounds, and bringing the world within their reach.[6] Emotionally, they allow a connection full of sensation and delicacy of feeling.

393*393 Throughout the ages, art and literature, as well as mythology, depict humans in all walks of life and social strata with cats and dogs, illustrating their widespread acceptance in everyday life.[7] Some religions have even incorporated them into their worship.[8] Dogs and cats are also admired for the purity of their character traits.[9]Closer to home, our own culture is populated with examples of the well-established place pets have found in our hearts and homes.[10]

In addition to these historical and cultural references, the value of pets in daily life is a matter of common knowledge and understanding as well as extensive documentation. People of all ages, but particularly the elderly and the young, enjoy their companionship. Those who suffer from serious disease or injury and are confined to their home or bed experience a therapeutic, even spiritual, benefit from their presence.[11] Animals provide comfort at the death of a family member or dear friend, and for the lonely can offer a reason for living when life seems to have lost its meaning.[12] In recognition of these benefits, both Congress and the state Legislature have expressly guaranteed that elderly and handicapped persons living in public-assistance housing cannot be deprived of their pets. (12 U.S.C. § 1701r-1; Health & Saf. Code, § 19901.) Not only have children and animals always been natural companions, children learn responsibility and discipline from pet 394*394 ownership while developing an important sense of kindness and protection for animals.[13] Single adults may find certain pets can afford a feeling of security. Families benefit from the experience of sharing that having a pet encourages. While pet ownership may not be a fundamental right as such, unquestionably it is an integral aspect of our daily existence, which cannot be lightly dismissed and should not suffer unwarranted intrusion into its circle of privacy.

3. The benefit.

What is gained from an uncompromising prohibition against pets that are confined to an owner’s unit and create no noise, odor, or nuisance?

To the extent such animals are not seen, heard, or smelled any more than if they were not kept in the first place, there is no corresponding or concomitant benefit. Pets that remain within the four corners of their owners’ condominium space can have no deleterious or offensive effect on the project’s common areas or any neighboring unit. Certainly, if other owners and residents are totally unaware of their presence, prohibiting pets does not in any respect foster the “health, happiness [or] peace of mind” of anyone except the homeowners association’s board of directors, who are thereby able to promote a form of sophisticated bigotry. In light of the substantial and disproportionate burden imposed for those who must forego virtually any and all association with pets, this lack of benefit renders a categorical ban unreasonable under Civil Code section 1354.

The proffered justification is all the more spurious when measured against the terms of the pet restriction itself, which contains an exception for domestic fish and birds. A squawking bird can readily create the very kind of disturbance supposedly prevented by banning other types of pets. At the same time, many animals prohibited by the restriction, such as hamsters and the like, turtles, and small reptiles, make no sound whatsoever. Disposal of bird droppings in common trash areas poses as much of a health concern as cat litter or rabbit pellets, which likewise can be handled in a manner that avoids potential problems. Birds are also known to carry disease and provoke allergies. Neither is maintaining fish without possible risk of interfering with the quiet enjoyment of condominium neighbors. Aquarium water must be changed and disposed of in the common drainage system. Leakage from a fish tank could cause serious water damage to the owner’s unit, those below, and common areas. Defendants and the majority purport such solicitude for the “health, sanitation and noise concerns” of other unit owners, but 395*395 fail to explain how the possession of pets, such as plaintiff’s cats, under the circumstances alleged in her complaint, jeopardizes that goal any more than the fish and birds expressly allowed by the pet restriction. This inconsistency underscores its unreasonableness and discriminatory impact.[14]

4. The majority’s burden/benefit analysis.

From the statement of the facts through the conclusion, the majority’s analysis gives scant acknowledgment to any of the foregoing considerations but simply takes refuge behind the “presumption of validity” now accorded all CC&R’s irrespective of subject matter. They never objectively scrutinize defendants’ blandishments of protecting “health and happiness” or realistically assess the substantial impact on affected unit owners and their use of their property. As this court has often recognized, “deference is not abdication.” (People v. McDonald (1984) 37 Cal.3d 351, 377 [208 Cal. Rptr. 236, 690 P.2d 709, 46 A.L.R.4th 1011].) Regardless of how limited an inquiry is permitted under applicable law, it must nevertheless be made.

Here, such inquiry should start with an evaluation of the interest that will suffer upon enforcement of the pet restriction. In determining the “burden on the use of land,” due recognition must be given to the fact that this particular “use” transcends the impersonal and mundane matters typically regulated by condominium CC&R’s, such as whether someone can place a doormat in the hallway or hang a towel on the patio rail or have food in the pool area, and reaches the very quality of life of hundreds of owners and residents. Nonetheless, the majority accept uncritically the proffered justification of preserving “health and happiness” and essentially consider only one criterion to determine enforceability: was the restriction recorded in the original declaration?[15] If so, it is “presumptively valid,” unless in violation of public policy. Given the application of the law to the facts alleged and by an 396*396 inversion of relative interests, it is difficult to hypothesize any CC&R’s that would not pass muster.[16] Such sanctity has not been afforded any writing save the commandments delivered to Moses on Mount Sinai, and they were set in stone, not upon worthless paper.

Moreover, unlike most conduct controlled by CC&R’s, the activity at issue here is strictly confined to the owner’s interior space; it does not in any manner invade other units or the common areas. Owning a home of one’s own has always epitomized the American dream. More than simply embodying the notion of having “one’s castle,” it represents the sense of freedom and self-determination emblematic of our national character. Granted, those who live in multi-unit developments cannot exercise this freedom to the same extent possible on a large estate. But owning pets that do not disturb the quiet enjoyment of others does not reasonably come within this compromise. Nevertheless, with no demonstrated or discernible benefit, the majority arbitrarily sacrifice the dream to the tyranny of the “commonality.”

5. Conclusion.

Our true task in this turmoil is to strike a balance between the governing rights accorded a condominium association and the individual freedom of its members. To fulfill that function, a reviewing court must view with a skeptic’s eye restrictions driven by fear, anxiety, or intolerance. In any community, we do not exist in vacuo.There are many annoyances which we tolerate because not to do so would be repressive and place the freedom of others at risk.

In contravention, the majority’s failure to consider the real burden imposed by the pet restriction unfortunately belittles and trivializes the interest at stake here. Pet ownership substantially enhances the quality of life for those who desire it. When others are not only undisturbed by, but completely unaware of, the presence of pets being enjoyed by their neighbors, the balance of benefit and burden is rendered disproportionate and unreasonable, rebutting any presumption of validity. Their view, shorn of grace and guiding philosophy, is devoid of the humanity that must temper the interpretation and application of all laws, for in a civilized society that is the source 397*397 of their authority. As judicial architects of the rules of life, we better serve when we construct halls of harmony rather than walls of wrath.

I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.

[1] The declaration is the operative document for a common interest development, setting forth, among other things, the restrictions on the use or enjoyment of any portion of the development. (Civ. Code, §§ 1351, 1353.) In some states, the declaration is also referred to as the “master deed.” (SeeDulaney Towers Maintenance v. O’Brey (1980) 46 Md. App. 464 [418 A.2d 1233, 1235].)

[2] Under Civil Code section 1354, subdivision (a) such use restrictions are “enforceable equitable servitudes, unless unreasonable.” Further undesignated references are to the Civil Code.

[3] The CC&R’s permit residents to keep “domestic fish and birds.”

[4] Further references to the Association will pertain to these defendants collectively.

[5] Even the dissent recognizes that pet restrictions have a long pedigree. (See dis. opn., post, p. 392, fn. 5, citing Crimmins, The Quotable Cat (1992) p. 58 [English nuns living in a nunnery prohibited in 1205 from keeping any pet except a cat].)

[6] The power to regulate pertains to a “wide spectrum of activities,” such as the volume of playing music, hours of social gatherings, use of patio furniture and barbecues, and rental of units. (Note,Business Judgment, supra, 64 Chi.-Kent L.Rev. at p. 669.)

[7] These are: community apartment projects, condominium projects, planned developments, and stock cooperatives.

[8] Thus, the Act governs common interest developments that predate its enactment.

[9] Section 1354 also confers standing on owners of separate interests in a development and on the association to enforce the equitable servitudes, and it sets out requirements for commencing a civil action.

[10] Before the enactment of section 1354 as part of the Davis-Stirling Act, a similar provision pertaining only to condominium units appeared in former section 1355. As relevant here, that statute provided: “The owner of a project shall, prior to the conveyance of any condominium therein, record a declaration of restrictions relating to such project, which restrictions shall be enforceable equitable servitudes where reasonable, and shall inure to and bind all owners of condominiums in the project.” (Stats. 1963, ch. 860, § 3, p. 2092.)

[11] That provision states: “All people are by nature free and independent and have inalienable rights. Among these are enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing, and protecting property, and pursuing and obtaining safety, happiness, and privacy.” (Italics added.)

[12] With respect to either disabled individuals living in rented housing or elderly persons living in publicly funded housing, the situation is otherwise. The Legislature has declared its intent that, in specified circumstances, these two classes of Californians be allowed to keep pets. Thus, section 54.1, which guarantees equal access to housing accommodations to individuals with disabilities, permits landlords to refuse to rent to tenants who have dogs, except when the prospective tenant is a disabled person needing the services of a guide, service, or signal dog. (Id. at subd. (b)(5).) And, under Health and Safety Code section 19901, elderly residents in publicly funded housing are entitled to have up to two household pets.

Because this case does not involve a disabled person needing guide dog assistance or an elderly person living in public housing, we do not address the public policy implications of recorded CC&R’s that are in conflict with these statutes.

[1] Albert Schweitzer.

[2] The majority invest substantial interpretive significance regarding the enforceability of condominium restrictions in the replacement of “where reasonable” in Civil Code former section 1355 with “unless unreasonable” in Civil Code section 1354. (See maj. opn., ante, at p. 380.) Other than the statutory language itself, however, they cite no evidence the Legislature considered this a “material alteration” or intended a “marked change” in the statute’s interpretation. Although I fail to see other than a semantical distinction carrying little import as to legislative intent, I find the pet restriction at issue here unenforceable under either standard.

[3] The majority imply that if enough owners find the restriction too oppressive, they can act collectively to alter or rescind it. (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 389.) However, realistically speaking, implementing this alternative would only serve to exacerbate the divisiveness rampant in our society and to which the majority decision itself contributes.

[4] At the very least, plaintiff should be permitted to amend her pleadings. Under the judicial authority prevailing at the time she filed her complaint, the type of allegations now required by the majority’s holding were unnecessary to state a cause of action for declaratory relief when challenging enforcement of CC&R’s under the present circumstances. (See Portola Hills Community Assn. v.James (1992) 4 Cal. App.4th 289 [5 Cal. Rptr.2d 580]; Bernardo Villas Management Corp. v. Black(1987) 190 Cal. App.3d 153 [235 Cal. Rptr. 509].) Thus, in fairness, she should have the opportunity to rectify the deficiency in light of the majority’s disapproval of these decisions. (See Youngman v.Nevada Irrigation Dist., supra, 70 Cal.2d at p. 245.)

[5] Archeologists in Israel found some of the earliest evidence of a domesticated animal when they unearthed the 12,000-year-old skeleton of a woman who was buried with her hand resting on the body of her dog. (Clutton-Brock, Dog (1991) p. 35.) Romans warned intruders “Cave canem” to alert them to the presence of canine protectors. (Id., p. 34.) Cats were known to be household pets in Egypt 5,000 years ago and often mummified and entombed with their owners. (Clutton-Brock, Cat (1991) p. 46.) According to the English Nuns Rule in 1205, “Ye shall not possess any beast, my dear sisters, except only a cat.” (Crimmins, The Quotable Cat (1992) p. 58.)

[6] Although it is possible only to estimate the total, well in excess of 10,000 individuals avail themselves of the benefits of guide, alert, and service dogs in California alone. (See Sen. Subcom. Interim Hg. on Guide, Signal, and Service Dogs (Nov. 15, 1990) pp. 1-42.) State law guarantees them the right to live with their animals free from discrimination on that basis. (See Gov. Code, § 12955, subd. (l) [impermissible discrimination under the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA) “includes … restrictive covenants, zoning laws, denial of use permits, and other actions … that make housing opportunities unavailable.” (Italics added.)]; see also Civ. Code, § 53; cf. 42 U.S.C. §§ 3601, 3604(f)(3)(B) [federal fair housing act].) Thus, to the extent the pet restriction contains no exception for assist dogs, it clearly violates public policy. At oral argument, counsel for the association allowed that an individual who required assistance of this kind could seek a waiver of the pet restriction, although he in no manner assured that the association’s board would necessarily accede to such an effort to enforce the mandate of FEHA. In any event, this “concession” only serves to prove the point of discriminatory impact: disabled persons who have dogs to assist them in normalizing their daily lives do not have the equal access to housing guaranteed under state law if they must go, hat in hand as an Oliver Twist supplicant, to request an association board’s “permission” to live as normal a life as they are capable of with canine assistance.

[7] For example, poetry runs the gamut from the doggerel of Ogden Nash to T.S. Eliot’s “Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats.”

[8] Eastern religions often depict dogs as gods or temple guards. (See Clutton-Brock, Dog, supra, p. 35.) Ancient Egyptians considered the cat sacred, and their religion included the cat goddess Bastet. (See Clutton-Brock, Cat, supra, p. 47.)

[9] For example, the Odyssey chronicles the faithfulness of Odysseus’s dog. The legendary terrier “Greyfriars’ Bobby” is synonymous with loyalty. In 1601, when the Earl of Southampton was being held in the Tower of London, his cat is reputed to have located his master’s cell and climbed down the chimney to join him during his imprisonment. (Clutton-Brock, Cat, supra, p. 16.) And military annals document the wartime bravery and courage of dogs in the K-9 Corps.

[10] The President and his family often set a national example in this regard. Chelsea Clinton’s cat “Socks” is only the latest in a long line of White House pets, including Franklin Roosevelt’s “Fala” and the Bushes’ “Millie.”

[11] See, e.g., Siegel, Companion Animals: In Sickness and in Health (1993) 49 Journal of Social Issues 157.

[12] See, e.g., Waltham Symposium 20, Pets, Benefits and Practice (BVA Publications 1990).

[13] See, e.g., Melson, The Benefits of Animals to Our Lives (Fall 1990) People, Animals, Environment at pages 15-17.

[14] On a related point, the association rules and regulations already contain a procedure for dealing with problems arising from bird and fish ownership. There appears no reason it could not be utilized to deal with similar concerns about other types of pets such as plaintiff’s cats.

[15] The majority purport to rely on several out-of-state cases to support their conclusions as to the validity of the pet restriction. These decisions are either distinguishable or reflect the same lack of objective analysis. Hidden Harbour Estates, Inc. v. Norman (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1975) 309 So.2d 180 [72 A.L.R.3d 305], involved a prohibition against the consumption of alcoholic beverages in the condominium project club house, one of the common areas used by all the owners. Hidden Harbour Estates v. Basso (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1981) 393 So.2d 637 likewise did not concern a restriction on pets but a ban on the construction of private wells, which had the potential for creating serious salination problems in the common drinking water. Of those cases involving pet restrictions, only Noble v.Murphy (1993) 34 Mass. App. 452 [612 N.E.2d 266] dealt with a categorical prohibition (See Dulaney Towers Maintenance v. O’Brey (1980) 46 Md. App. 464 [418 A.2d 1233]; Wilshire Condominium Ass’n, Inc. v. Kohlbrand (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1979) 368 So.2d 629.) The court there also failed to give any consideration to the qualitative nature of the restriction or the burden it imposed on those arbitrarily deprived of the opportunity to own pets that could be confined to their units and kept without disturbing the quiet enjoyment of other unit owners.

[16] Under the facts of this case, the majority do more than simply accord the restriction a presumption of reasonableness. They encourage and endorse the enforcing body to disregard the privacy interests of law-abiding property owners. If pets are maintained in the manner alleged in plaintiff’s complaint, then only snoopers are in a position to claim a violation of the restriction.

 

Keywords: Governing Documents, Enforcement

 

Fourth La Costa Condo Owners v. Seith

Fourth La Costa Condominium Owners v. Seith

71 Cal.Rptr.3d 299 (2008)

Summary by Mary M. Howell, Esq.:

Facts

Association circulated proposed CC&R amendment which required the consent of lenders.  The association mailed a notice and consent form to the lenders by certified mail.  The notice recited that if the ballot were not received within 30 days, the signature on the certified mail receipt would be counted as consent.  Homeowner challenged the propriety of this procedure.

Held

For association.  Requiring only consent from the lenders, as opposed to an affirmative vote, indicates less was required to signal lender consent, and therefore the method chosen was adequate for the purpose of proving lender consent.

*** End Summary ***

Fourth La Costa Condo Owners v. Seith

71 Cal.Rptr.3d 299 (2008)

304*304 Alan H. Burson, Feist, Vetter, Kanuf & Loy, Oceanside, CA, for Objector and Appellant.

No appearance for Petitioner and Respondent.

McCONNELL, P.J.

Barbara Seith appeals an order the trial court entered that reduced the percentage of votes necessary to amend the Fourth La Costa Condominium Owners Association’s (Owners Association) Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions (CC & R’s) (Civ.Code,[1] § 1356) and Bylaws (Corp. Code, § 7515). Seith challenges the order on the grounds the underlying vote was invalid because it was by mail ballot, the ballot was not secret, the Owners Association made an insufficient effort to permit all owners to vote, and there was insufficient evidence of lender acquiescence; the court exceeded its statutory authority and implied an improper standard; certain provisions of the amendment are unreasonable; and Civil Code section 1356 is unconstitutional as it impairs the obligation of contracts. We affirm the order.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The 48-unit Fourth La Costa condominium development was governed by CC & R’s and Bylaws recorded in 1969. Both documents provided they may be amended only by an affirmative vote of not less than 75 percent of the owners.

In 2004 the Owners Association decided the CC & R’s and Bylaws should be amended because some provisions were superseded by changes in the law, other provisions were ambiguous and had caused confusion, and provisions pertaining to developer rights and obligations no longer applied. In an August 29, 2005 letter to owners, the Owners Association asked for an affirmative vote on the First Restated CC & R’s, which contain dozens of new provisions and the amendment of numerous original provisions, and on amended Bylaws. The letter notified owners of the 75 percent vote requirement, and of an October 1 informational meeting. It requested the return of ballots by October 7.

In a September 2005 newsletter, the Owners Association reminded owners to vote. Many owners did not return their ballots, and on October 11 the Owners Association sent a memorandum and another ballot to each owner who had not voted, and it extended the deadline for voting to October 21.

In February 2006 the Owners Association filed a petition in the superior court for an order under section 1356 to reduce the percentage of affirmative votes needed to amend the CC & R’s. The petition stated 305*305 25 owners voted in favor of the amendment, 11 owners voted against it, and 12 owners did not return their ballots. The petition prayed that the First Restated CC & R’s “be ordered approved based upon the number of affirmative votes actually cast constituting at least a majority of owners.”

In July 2006 the Owners Association filed a supplemental petition under Corporations Code section 7515 to reduce the percentage of affirmative votes necessary to approve the Bylaws.

Seith owns and leases out two condominiums at Fourth La Costa. She filed a written objection to the petitions on various grounds, including that the proposed amendments imposed “onerous terms and burdens on the leasing of units.”

In a tentative ruling, the court granted the petitions. After an August 16, 2006 hearing, the court took the matter under submission. On August 21 it confirmed its tentative ruling.

DISCUSSION[2]

I

Validity of Vote

A

1

“[S]ection 1356, part of the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act [Davis-Stirling Act] …, provides that a homeowners association, or any member, may petition the superior court for a reduction in the percentage of affirmative votes required to amend the CC & R’s if they require approval by `owners having more than 50 percent of the votes in the association….’ [Citation.] The court may, but need not, grant the petition if it finds all of the following: Notice was properly given; the balloting was properly conducted [in accordance with all applicable provisions of the governing documents]; reasonable efforts were made to permit eligible members to vote; `[o]wners having more than 50 percent of the votes, in a single class voting structure, voted in favor of the amendment’; and `[t]he amendment is reasonable.'” (Peak Investments v. South Peak Homeowners Assn., Inc. (2006) 140 Cal.App.4th 1363, 1366-1367, 44 Cal.Rptr.3d 892, fn. omitted.)

“Viewed objectively, the purpose of … section 1356 is to give a property owners’ association the ability to amend its governing documents when, because of voter apathy or other reasons, important amendments cannot be approved by the normal procedures authorized by the declaration. [Citation.] In essence, it provides the association with a safety valve for those situations where the need for a supermajority vote would hamstring the association.” (Blue Lagoon Community Assn. v. Mitchell (1997) 55 Cal.App.4th 472, 477, 64 Cal.Rptr.2d 81.)

Because section 1356 gives the trial court broad discretion in ruling on a petition (§ 1356, subd. (c)), we review its ruling for abuse of discretion. “Discretion is abused whenever, in its exercise, the court exceeds the bounds of reason, all of the circumstances before it being considered.” (Denham v. Superior Court (1970) 2 Cal.3d 557, 566, 86 Cal.Rptr. 65, 468 P.2d 193.)

2

Seith contends the vote here was not “conducted in accordance with all applicable provisions of the governing documents,” 306*306 as required by section 1356, subdivision (c)(2), because it was by mail ballots. She concedes, however, that there is statutory authority for mail ballots. Corporations Code section 7513, subdivision (a) provides that “unless prohibited in the articles or bylaws, any action which may be taken at any regular or special meeting of members may be taken without a meeting if the corporation distributes a written ballot to every member entitled to vote on the matter.”

Seith cites the Bylaws as stating they “may only be amended `at a regular or special meeting of members.'” The Bylaws, however, actually provide they “may be amended, at a regular or special meeting of the members.”[3] (Italics added.) Seith also cites the CC & R’s requirement there must be an affirmative “vote” of at least 75 percent of owners. A vote, however, may be made at a meeting or by mail ballots.

Seith ultimately acknowledges the governing documents did not prohibit mail ballots. She asserts, however, that since the governing documents did not expressly authorize mail ballots, and the authority for their use was purely statutory, the vote was not in accordance with the governing documents and the Owners Association was thus precluded from obtaining relief from the supermajority vote requirement under section 1356.

The interpretation of statutes presents questions of law we review independently. (Board of Retirement v. Lewis (1990) 217 Cal.App.3d 956, 964, 266 Cal. Rptr. 225.) Seith cites no authority that supports her position, and we find it unpersuasive. The Legislature intends to allow mail ballots unless they are expressly prohibited by the governing documents, and their use would run afoul of section 1356, subdivision (c)(2) only if the governing documents prohibited their use.

3

Additionally, Seith cites Corporations Code section 7513, subdivision (b), which provides that “[a]pproval by written ballot pursuant to this section shall be valid only when the number of votes cast by ballot … equals or exceeds the quorum required to be present at a meeting authorizing the action, and the number of approvals equals or exceeds the number of votes that would be required to approve at a meeting at which the total number of votes cast was the same as the number of votes cast by ballot.”

Seith asserts Corporations Code section 7513, subdivision (b) and Civil Code section 1356 have “equal legislative dignity, and neither prevails over the other.” She asserts section 1356 “permits the court to ignore supermajority requirements of the association’s CC & R’s, but it does [not] permit the court to ignore express provisions of other statutes. By granting the petition under [section] 1356 where the vote was only valid because of the provisions of [Corporations Code section 7513, subdivision (a) ], the court disregarded the express language of [Corporations Code section 7513, subdivision (b) j, which here mandates 75 [percent] owner approval.” In other words, Seith again takes the position that when mail ballots are used an association may never petition under Civil Code section 1356 for relief from a supermajority vote requirement.

We disagree. As the court explained in its order, “the relief requested in the petition is exactly the type for which judicial intervention under Civil Code [section] 307*307 1356 is deemed proper as only 69 [percent] of the owners have responded despite the efforts of the [Owners] Association to increase participation.” There is no suggestion the Legislature intended to limit the reach of section 1356 to votes taken at a regular or special meeting, and we see no reason for such a distinction. If an election is held at a meeting, the governing documents may be amended only if the percentage of affirmative votes required by the governing documents is cast, or the association obtains relief under section 1356. As there is no evidence of legislative intent to the contrary, the same rule should apply to votes by mail ballot.

B

Alternatively, Seith contends the vote violated section 1355, subdivision (b), under which an amendment to CC & R’s is effective only after “the proposed amendment has been distributed to all of the owners of separate interests in the common interest development by first-class mail postage prepaid or personal delivery not less than 15 days and not more than 60 days prior to any approval being solicited.” Seith complains that the Owners Association distributed the proposed amendment and ballots at the same time, and thus gave owners an unreasonably short time within which to evaluate the issues and mount an opposition.

Subdivision (b) of section 1355, however, is inapplicable. Subdivision (a) of section 1355 provides the “declaration may be amended pursuant to the governing documents or this title [title 6 of the Civil Code, ‘Common Interest Developments’].Except as provided in Section 1356, an amendment is effective after … the approval of the percentage of owners required by the governing documents has been given.” (Italics added.) The Owners Association proceeded under its governing documents, not section 1355, and when a supermajority affirmative vote was not cast, it proceeded under section 1356.

Seith asserts the vote here was pursuant to title 6 of the Civil Code, and not the governing documents, because the vote was by mail ballots instead and a supermajority affirmative vote was not cast. As discussed, however, Corporations Code section 7513, subdivision (a) authorized the mail ballots. Further, the lack of a supermajority affirmative vote does not mean the vote was not conducted under the governing documents within the meaning of Civil Code section 1356, subdivision (c)(2). Rather, the lack of a supermajority affirmative vote made a petition for relief under section 1356 appropriate.

C

Further, Seith contends the vote was invalid because it was not by secret ballot. She cites Civil Code section 1363.03, subdivision (b), which provides that “[notwithstanding any other law or provision of the governing documents, elections regarding … amendments to the governing documents … shall be held by secret ballot in accordance with the procedures set forth in this section.” The statute is inapplicable, however, because it was not effective until July 1, 2006, nearly nine months after the vote here. Contrary to Seith’s view, the dates of filing of the Owners Association’s petitions and the trial court’s order are immaterial. At the relevant time, the Owners Association was not required to conduct the vote by secret ballot. Indeed, Seith concedes the legislative history shows that before the enactment of section 1363.03, ballots in common interest developments were not required by law to be secret.

D

Seith also contends the vote is invalid because there is insufficient evidence 308*308 of acquiescence by lenders. The original CC & R’s provided that in addition to a supermajority vote of owners, they may be amended “provided written notice of the proposed amendment is sent to all lenders and a written consent is obtained of seventy-five percent … of the lenders holding the beneficial interests in any Mortgages or Trust Deeds of record as valid liens against said project or any portion thereof, provided, however, that the lender shall not unreasonably withhold their consents.”

The Owners Association’s original petition averred that through its legal counsel it “mailed letters and ballots to the holders of the Mortgages as required [by] … the CC & Rs. These letters were sent via Certified Mail, Return Receipt Requested (`RRR’) and the letter informed the Mortgagees that the signature on the RRR would be deemed consent of the proposed [amended] CC & Rs, unless a ballot was returned within thirty … days…. As of February 8, 2006, over 75 [percent] of the Mortgagees had signed the RRR. One … lender indicated that it could not consent because it did not have a copy of the original CC & Rs.” The petition included a copy of the letter and the ballot sent the lenders.

As the court noted, the CC & R’s required an affirmative vote of owners, but only written consent by lenders. The court explained “[t]his would tend to indicate that the CC & R’s, as originally drafted, contemplated a distinction between the forms of approval required from each group, with the approval from the latter group being more relaxed in form. The CC [&] R’s did not specify the method by which the consent may be obtained. [The Owners Association’s] method of assuring receipt of the proposed changes by the lenders and thereafter providing them with 30 days within which to reject the changes is as good as any.” We agree with the court’s assessment.

E

Seith also contends the Owners Association violated section 1356, subdivision (c)(3), which requires an association to make a “reasonably diligent effort … to permit all eligible members to vote on the proposed amendment.”

In support of its petitions, the Owners Association submitted the declaration of Ashley Rosas, a management consultant who oversees its day-to-day operations. The declaration stated the Owners Association maintains a list of all current record owners, and Rosas’s staff used the list to mail the proposed CC & R’s and ballots to owners on August 29, 2005. The declaration also stated that in mid-September a reminder memorandum was sent to owners who did not respond, another reminder was included in the Owner Association’s , September newsletter, on October 1 it conducted a special meeting regarding the proposed amendment, and on October 11 another reminder and ballots were sent to owners who had still not responded.

Seith submits that “further solicitation [of owners who did not vote] was likely [to lead] to outright defeat,” and thus the Owners Association had “no incentive to seek more votes.” Seith submitted no evidence pertaining to the Owners Association’s motives, and her position is mere speculation. Perhaps, as Seith asserts, it would not have been onerous for the Owners Association to try to reach by telephone the 12 owners who did not vote. We conclude, however, that its efforts were sufficient to satisfy section 1356, subdivision (c)(3). The vote was valid.

II

Trial Court’s Statutory Authority

A

Next, Seith contends the trial court exceeded the authority of section 1356, subdivision 309*309 (d), which provides: “If the court makes the findings required by subdivision (c), any order issued pursuant to this section may confirm the amendment as being validly approved on the basis of the affirmative votes actually received during the balloting period or the order may dispense with any requirement relating to quorums or to the number or percentage of votes needed for approval of the amendment that would otherwise exist under the governing documents.”

The proposed amendment to the CC & R’s changes the supermajority vote for their amendment to a majority vote. The original CC & R’s, however, provided they “shall not be amended to allow amendments by vote of less than seventy-five percent … of the Owners.” Seith asserts the original CC & R’s may never be amended to allow a majority vote.

The issue is one of contract interpretation. “The same rules that apply to interpretation of contracts apply to the interpretation of CC & R’s.” (Chee v. Amanda Goldt Property Management (2006) 143 Cal.App.4th 1360, 1377, 50 Cal. Rptr.3d 40.) “`A contract must be so interpreted as to give effect to the mutual intention of the parties as it existed at the time of contracting, so far as the same is ascertainable and lawful.’ [Citation.] ‘Where the language of a contract is clear and not absurd, it will be followed.'” (Templeton Development Corp. v. Superior Court (2006) 144 Cal.App.4th 1073, 1085, 51 Cal.Rptr.3d 19; Civ.Code, § 1638 [“The language of a contract is to govern its interpretation, if the language is clear and explicit, and does not involve an absurdity]”.)

At the trial court, the Owners Association argued the original CC & R’s unreasonably restricted it from amending the document, and requiring it to obtain the approval of 75 percent of owners “for each and every amendment, stagnates [it] from being able to update the CC & Rs and to reflect the desires of the community. The fact that the CC & Rs have not been amended since 1969 is proof of the unreasonable hold the current amendment provision has on this community.”

The court found reasonable the provision of the First Restated CC & R’s to allow a majority vote to amend the document, and we agree. It would be rather absurd to allow the governing documents to restrict an association’s ability to amend the document in perpetuity, even if, for instance, 100 percent of the owners preferred a majority vote rather than a supermajority vote. Accordingly, the court did not exceed its authority under section 1356 by approving the majority vote amendment.

B

Seith also contends the court exceeded its authority under section 1357. Under subdivision (a) of section 1357, the Legislature “finds and declares that it is in the public interest to provide a vehicle for extending the term of the declaration if owners having more than 50 percent of the votes in the association choose to do so.” Subdivision (b) of section 1357 provides that a “declaration which specifies a termination date, but which contains no provision for extension of the termination date, may be extended by the approval of owners having more than 50 percent of the votes in the association or any greater percentage specified in the declaration for an amendment thereto. If the approval of owners having more than 50 percent of the votes in the association is required to amend the declaration, the term of the declaration may be extended in accordance with Section 1356.” (Italics added.)

310*310 Under subdivision (d) of section 1357, “[n]o single extension of the terms of the declaration made pursuant to this section shall exceed the initial term of the declaration of 20 years, whichever is less. However, more than one extension may occur pursuant to this section.” Here, the original CC & R’s provided for a term of 40 years from the date of recordation, December 9, 1969, but they also provided that after the 40-year period they shall be automatically extended for successive ten-year periods. The First Restated CC & R’s provide they are in effect until December 31, 2055, after which they shall be automatically extended for successive 10year periods. Seith asserts the extension to 2055 violates subdivision (d) of section 1357.

Section 1357, however, is inapplicable here because the original CC & R’s had an automatic renewal provision, and the statute plainly applies only to CC & R’s that have a termination date and do not provide for an extension. In enacting the statute, the Legislature was concerned that “there are common interest developments that have been created with deed restrictions which do not provide a means for the property owners to extend the term of the declaration…. [C]ovenants and restrictions, contained in the declaration, are an appropriate method for protecting the common plan of developments and to provide for a mechanism for financial support for the upkeep of common areas…. If declarations terminate prematurely, common interest developments may deteriorate and the housing supply of affordable units could be impacted adversely.” (§ 1357, subd. (a).) Had the Legislature intended to limit the extension of any CC & R’s to 20-year periods it could easily have said so.

III

Section 1356’s Reasonableness Standard

Seith contends the trial court violated section 1356, subdivision (c)(5) by not applying a reasonableness standard, and instead applying a deferential standard under Nahrstedt v. Lakeside Village Condominium Assn., Inc. (1994) 8 Cal.4th 361, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275 (Nahrstedt).

In Nahrstedt, our high court interpreted section 1354, subdivision (a), under which recorded CC & R’s are enforceable equitable servitudes “unless unreasonable.” The court held CC & R’s are unreasonable if they are “wholly arbitrary, violate a fundamental public policy, or impose a burden on the use of affected land that far outweighs any benefit.” (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 382, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275.) The prior version of the statutory provision (former § 1355) stated “`restrictions shall be enforceable equitable servitudes where reasonable,’” and the court concluded the shift from “where reasonable” to the double negative “unless unreasonable” signaled the Legislature’s intent to “cloak[ ] use restrictions contained in a condominium development’s recorded declaration with a presumption of reasonableness by shifting the burden of proving otherwise to the party challenging the use restrictions.” (Nahrstedt, at p. 380, 33 Cal.Rptr.2d 63, 878 P.2d 1275, italics added by court; see also Villa De Las Palmas Homeowners Assn. v. Terifaj (2004) 33 Cal.4th 73, 79,14 Cal.Rptr.3d 67, 90 P.3d 1223.)

We agree with Seith that since section 1356 pertains to proposed amendments to CC & R’s, rather than recorded CC & R’s, and it does not contain the “unless unreasonable” language of section 1354, there is no presumption of reasonableness under section 1356 and the party 311*311 petitioning for relief from a supermajority vote requirement has the burden of proving reasonableness. The term “reasonable” in the context of use restrictions has been variously defined as “not arbitrary or capricious” (Ironwood Owners Assn. IX v. Solomon (1986) 178 Cal.App.3d 766, 772, 224 Cal.Rptr. 18; Lamden v. La Jolla Shores Condominium Homeowners Assn. (1999) 21 Cal.4th 249, 266, 87 Cal.Rptr.2d 237, 980 P.2d 940), “rationally related to the protection, preservation or proper operation of the property and the purposes of the Association as set forth in its governing instruments,” and “fair and nondiscriminatory.” (Laguna Royale Owners Assn. v. Darger (1981) 119 Cal.App.3d 670, 680, 174 Cal.Rptr. 136.)

Here, in discussing 11 specific issues Seith raised, on three instances the court found provisions of the First Restated CC & R’s not “unreasonable.” The order, however, also expressly acknowledges section 1356 imposes a reasonableness requirement, and it states the “[p]etitioner has satisfied the elements of … section 1356,” and the court “finds that all of the proposed changes with which the objecting party takes issue are indeed reasonable and that it does not appear that the amendments are’ for an improper purpose.” (Italics added.) Accordingly, the order establishes the court applied the correct burden of proof and a standard of reasonableness.

Further, when the court properly places the burden of proof on the party petitioning under section 1356, its finding that a proposed amendment is not unreasonable, as opposed to reasonable, is of no real import. As the court explained in Nahrstedt, the differences between the terms “where reasonable” and “unless unreasonable” under section 1354 and its predecessor were germane to the issue of whether there is a presumption of validity and the allocation of burden of proof. A CC & R is unreasonable if it is arbitrary and capricious, violates the law or a fundamental public policy or imposes an undue burden on property, and it is reasonable unless it meets those criteria. (See Miller & Starr, 9 Cal. Real Estate (3d ed. 2007) § 25B:13, pp. 25B-42 to 25B-43.) We find no error.

IV

Objections to Specific Provisions

A

Seith complains that Article IV, Section 2(K) of the First Restated CC & R’s eliminates an owner’s right to an assigned parking space in the common area. The original CC & R’s provided that the Owners Association “shall” “assign to each Unit … the right to use one … parking space contained within the Common Area…. The [Owners] Association, however, reserves the right to re-assign and re-allocate said parking spaces in such manner and at such time as it may deem reasonably necessary for the benefit of all of the Owners of all of the Units.” The First Restated CC & R’s have the same language, but use the term “may” instead of “shall” with regard to the assignment of common area parking spaces to units.

At the trial court, the Owners Association explained that when the CC & R’s were originally adopted in 1969, common area parking spaces had not been assigned to the units, but shortly after their adoption parking spaces were assigned to the units and the assignments continue. The Owners Association argued the previous version was outdated because it no longer has any affirmative duty to assign spaces to the units since that task has been completed.

We disagree with Seith’s speculation that under the amendment the Owners 312*312Association may take assigned spaces away from units, as it cannot reassign spaces under the First Restated CC & R’s unless reassignment is necessary for the benefit of all owners. Taking spaces away from owners would not benefit them. Although the amended provision could have been drafted more clearly, under the circumstances we find it reasonable.

B

1

Article VI, Section 3(A) of the First Restated CC & R’s states: “Except as may be required by legal proceedings or authorized by the Association’s Rules, no commercial signs, billboards, real estate flags or advertising of any kind shall be maintained or permitted on any portion of the Development except for one `For Sale’ or `For Rent’ sign per Unit, not larger than 18 [inches] by 24 [inches]. The sign must be professionally printed, be maintained in good condition, and may only be posted in the window and may not be posted on the railings of balconies or locations on the buildings…. All signs must be removed within three … days of close of escrow or lease of the Unit.”

Seith contends the provision violates section 1353.6, which as of January 1, 2004, limits an association’s restrictions on noncommercial signs. The statute provides: “(a) The governing documents … may not prohibit posting or displaying of noncommercial signs, posters, flags, or banners on or in an owner’s separate interest, except as required for the protection of public health or safety or if the posting or display would violate a local, state, or federal law. [¶] (b) For the purposes of this section, a noncommercial sign, poster, flag, or banner may be made of paper, cardboard, cloth, plastic, or fabric, and may be posted or displayed from the yard, window, door, balcony, or outside wall of the separate interest…. [¶] (c) An association may prohibit noncommercial signs and posters that are more than 9 square feet in size and noncommercial flags or banners that are more than 15 square feet in size.”

In enacting the statute, the Legislature intended to provide: “`(a) That homeowners throughout the state shall be able to engage in constitutionally protected free speech traditionally associated with private residential property. [¶] (b) That owners of a separate interest in a common interest development shall be specifically protected from unreasonable restrictions on this right in the governing documents.'” (Historical and Statutory Notes, 8 West’s Ann. Civ.Code (2007 ed.) foll. § 1353.6, p. 184.)

In accordance with section 1353.6, Article VI, Section 3(B) of the First Restated CC & R’s does allow the display of noncommercial signs not exceeding nine square feet “from the yard, window, door, balcony, or outside walls of the Units and must be, made of paper, cardboard, cloth, plastic, or fabric.” Seith essentially asserts that for sale and for lease signs should be included within that provision because they are noncommercial, based on a dictionary definition of “commercial” as “engaged in commerce or work intended for commerce.” (Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Diet. (11th ed.2006) p. 249, col. 2.) She asserts that a typical owner is not engaged in buying and selling units, and is thus not engaged in commerce.

It is established, however, that signs advertising property for sale or for lease constitute commercial speech as the advertiser’s interest is purely economical. (Linmark Associates, Inc. v. Township of Willingboro (1977) 431 U.S. 85, 92, 98, 97 S.Ct. 1614, 52 L.Ed.2d 155; Kennedy v. Avondale Estates, Ga. (N.D.Ga.2005) 414 F.Supp.2d 1184, 1198-1199.) “[C]ommercial Speech is that which `propose[s] a commercial 313*313 transaction.'” (Kennedy v. Avondale, at p. 1198, citing Virginia State Board of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council, Inc. (1976) 425 U.S. 748, 762, 96 S.Ct. 1817, 48 L.Ed.2d 346.) As section 1353.6 pertains only to noncommercial speech it is inapplicable here.

2

Alternatively, Seith contends that even if for sale and for lease signs are commercial, the restrictions on their size and placement violate section 712, subdivision (a), which provides: “Every provision contained in or otherwise affecting a grant or a fee interest in … real property in this state …, which purports to prohibit or restrict the right of the property owner … to display … on the real property, or on real property owned by others with their consent, or both, signs which are reasonably located, in plain view of the public, are of reasonable dimensions and design, and do not adversely affect public safety, … and which advertise the property for sale, lease, or exchange, or advertise directions to the property, by the property owner or his or her agent is void as an unreasonable restraint upon the power of alienation.” (Italics added.) A sign may include directions to the property, the owners’ or the agent’s name, address and telephone number, and it is deemed to be of reasonable dimension and design if it complies with a local sign ordinance. (§§ 712, subd. (c), 713, subd. (a).)

Section 712 applies to the placement of signs on an owner’s “real property.” In a condominium project, however, unit owners ordinarily have no separate interest in the real property. Subdivision (f) of section 1351 provides: “A condominium consists of an undivided interest in common in a portion of real property coupled with a separate interest in space called a unit, the boundaries of which are described on a recorded final map, parcel map, or condominium plan…. The area within these boundaries may be filled with air, earth, or water, or any combination thereof, and need not be physically attached to land except by easements for access and, if necessary, support…. The portion or portions of real property held in undivided interest may be all of the real property, except for the separate interests…. An individual condominium within a condominium project may include, in addition, a separate interest in other portions of the real property.”

Further, the balconies, exterior doors and walls of units are also common areas. Section 1351, subdivision (i) provides: “(i) ‘Exclusive use common area’ means a portion of the common areas designated by the declaration for the exclusive use of one or more, but fewer than all, of the owners of the separate interests and which is or will be appurtenant to the separate interest of interests. [¶] (1) Unless the declaration otherwise provides [as here] any shutters, awnings, window boxes, doorsteps, stoops, porches, balconies, patios, exterior doors, doorframes, and hardware incident thereto, screens and windows or other fixtures designed to serve a single separate interest, but located outside the boundaries of the separate interest, are exclusive use common areas allocated exclusively to that separate interest.”

Here, the original CC & R’s defined a “Unit” as “any portion of a building located on The Properties designed and intended for use and occupancy as a residence …, the boundaries of each unit are the interior surfaces of the ceiling, floors, perimeter walls, windows and doors thereof; which … boundaries include the air space so encompassed and the portions of the building located within [the] air space.” The CC & R’s defined “Common area” as “all land and improvements, and all portions of the divided property not located with any unit.”

314*314 We conclude that under the plain language of section 712, subdivision (a), a condominium owner in a project such as Fourth La Costa has no right to post for sale and for lease advertisements in the common areas. Had the Legislature intended to extend such a right it could have expressly stated so.[4] While an association may not ban such advertisements entirely (see Linmark Associates, Inc. v. Township of Willingboro, supra, 431 U.S. 85, 92, 98, 97 S.Ct. 1614, 52 L.Ed.2d 155), to protect all owners it may impose reasonable restrictions for aesthetic purposes (id. at p. 93, 97 S.Ct. 1614). Here, the amendment allows an owner to post a sign in the window of his or her unit, and it is undisputed that such a sign would be viewable to the public. Seith claims the size restriction of 18 inches by 24 inches “would prohibit the typical professional real estate broker sign,” but she did not provide the trial court with any supporting evidence. Moreover, we see no problem with allowing only one sign per unit, or requiring that signs be removed within three days of a lease or sale. Article IV, Section 3(A) of the First Restated CC & R’s is reasonable.

C

Further, Seith contends Article VI, section 1(B) of the First Restated CC & R’s increases the costs and burdens of owners who lease their units, because it requires leases to be in writing and to state the tenant is bound by the provisions of the CC & R’s. At the trial court, the Owners Association explained “there are many situations where a tenant is in violation of the governing documents and notice to the Owner regarding the tenant’s violations have gone unheeded.” The Owners Association sought written leases to ensure that provisions of the CC & R’s are contained in the lease, as lessees would not otherwise be bound to follow them. “When the declaration permits leasing, a community association faces enforcement problems if an owner’s tenant engages in conduct that violates other declaration provisions.” (1 Sproul & Rosenberry, supra, § 6.45, p. 423.) Article VI, Section 1(B) is reasonable.

Seith claims the provision makes tenants responsible for assessments and maintenance costs and “[n]o tenant in their right mind would agree to undertake that liability.” The First Restated CC & R’s, however, specifies that assessments are the personal obligations of owners. The CC & R’s pertain to a tenant’s conduct insofar as permitted uses are concerned. For instance, with limited exception 315*315 each residence may be used only for residential purposes, each residence may have only a reasonable number of pets, and no temporary structures are allowed. Potential tenants should not be concerned about any liability for assessments against an owner.[5]

V

Amendment of Bylaws

The original Bylaws, adopted in 1969, provided they could be amended by a vote of not less than 75 percent of all votes entitled to be cast. In its supplemental petition, the Owners Association sought a reduction in the percentage of required votes. It cited Corporations Code section 7515, subdivision (a) which provides: “If for any reason it is impractical or unduly difficult for any corporation to call or conduct a meeting of its members, … or otherwise obtain their consent, in the manner prescribed by its articles or bylaws, or this part, then the superior court …, upon petition … may order that such a meeting be called or that a written ballot or other form of obtaining the vote of members … be authorized, in such a manner as the court finds fair and equitable under the circumstances.”

The statute further provides: “The order issued pursuant to this section may dispense with any requirement relating to the holding of and voting at meetings or obtaining of votes, including any requirement as to quorums or as to the number or percentage of votes needed for approval, that would otherwise be imposed by the articles, bylaws, or this part.” (Corp.Code, subd. (c).) As with Civil Code section 1356, Corporations Code section 7515 is intended to “overcome membership voting apathy.” (Greenback Townhomes Homeowners Assn. v. Rizan (1985) 166 Cal.App.3d 843, 849, 212 Cal.Rptr. 678.)

Seith asserts Corporations Code section 7515 authorizes the court to order only a prospective vote, and it erred by approving a vote retrospectively. In rejecting that interpretation, commentators have explained: “Corporations Code[, section] 7515 [subdivision] (a) seems prospective in permitting the court to order `that such a meeting be called or that a written ballot … be authorized in such a manner as the court finds fair and equitable.’ Under this interpretation the court could act prospectively to relax voting or meeting requirements only as they apply to meetings or requests for member approvals that occur after the association has failed in its efforts to obtain member approvals or to conduct meetings in accordance with applicable bylaw, article, or statutory requirements. Corporations Code[, section] 7515 [subdivision] (c), however, permits the order to `dispense with any requirement relating to the holding of and voting at meetings or obtaining of votes.’ Thus, a more reasonable interpretation of [section] 7515 would be that the court may, as empowered under [Civil Code, section] 1356 with regard to the declaration, retroactively 316*316 approve amendments to the articles and bylaws.” (2 Sproul & Rosenberry, supra, § 9.44, pp. 682-683.)

We agree with that assessment, particularly since Civil Code section 1356, which applies to the amendment of CC & R’s, was patterned after Corporations Code section 7515. (2 Sproul & Rosenberry, supra, at § 9.30, p. 660.) The Owners Association established the apathy of a substantial percentage of owners and that the supermajority requirement precluded it from amending the Bylaws as well as the CC & R’s. We are unaware of any reason to allow relief from the supermajority vote requirement after a vote has already been taken in the context of CC & R’s—which are central to the establishment, operation and maintenance of a common interest development and ordinarily control in the event of a conflict with the bylaws (Hanna & Van Atta, supra, § 1.30, pp. 28-29; § 18:19, pp. 1103-1104)—but only allow prospective relief in the context of bylaws. We find no error.

VI

Constitutionality of Section 1356

A

Seith contends that as applied retroactively to the original CC & R’s, section 1356 is an unconstitutional impairment of the obligation of contracts.[6] Article I, section 10 of the United States Constitution states: “No State shall … pass any … Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts.” Article I, section 9 of the California Constitution provides: “A … law impairing the obligation of contracts may not be passed.”

“The language of these constitutional provisions `appears unambiguously absolute….’ [Citation.] However, the provisions have not been so treated by the courts. `Read literally, these provisions appear to proscribe any impairment. However, it has long been settled that the proscription is “not an absolute one and is not to be read with literal exactness like a mathematical formula.” [Citation.]'” (Hall v. Butte Home Health, Inc. (1997) 60 Cal.App.4th 308, 318, 70 Cal.Rptr.2d 246.)

“As the United States Supreme Court has interpreted the federal contracts clause, contracts clause questions turn on a three-step analysis. [Citation.] The first and threshold step is to ask whether there is any impairment at all, and, if there is, how substantial it is. [Citation.] If there is no `substantial impairment,’ that ends the inquiry. If there is substantial impairment, the court must next ask whether there is a `significant and legitimate public purpose’ behind the state regulation at issue. [Citation.] If the state regulation passes that test, the final inquiry is whether means by which the regulation acts are of a `character appropriate’ to the public purpose identified in step two.” (Barrett v. Dawson (1998) 61 Cal.App.4th 1048, 1055, 71 Cal.Rptr.2d 899.) The same analysis is applicable to the state constitution’s contract clause. (Id. at p. 1056, 71 Cal. Rptr.2d 899.)

“The obligations of a contract are impaired by a law which renders them invalid, or releases or extinguishes them.” (Home Building & Loan Assn. v. Blaisdell (1934) 290 U.S. 398, 431, 54 S.Ct. 231, 78 L.Ed. 413.) For instance, a law that discharged a debtor from liability was held invalid as applied to contracts in existence when the law was passed. (Ibid.)

317*317 The Legislature has applied the Davis-Stirling Act (§ 1350 et seq.) “both prospectively and to existing documents.” (2 Sproul and Rosenberry, supra, § 9.47, p. 693.) To any extent the reduction in the percentage of affirmative votes required to amend CC & R’s may be said to substantially impair preexisting contract rights, there is no unconstitutionality because the statutes have a significant and legitimate public purpose and act by appropriate means. (Barrett v. Dawson, supra, 61 Cal. App.4th at p. 1055, 71 Cal.Rptr.2d 899.) “`”[A]s is customary in reviewing economic and social regulation, … courts properly defer to legislative judgment as to the necessity and reasonableness of a particular measure.”‘” (Hall v. Butte Home Health, Inc., supra,60 Cal.App.4th at p. 322, 70 Cal.Rptr.2d 246.)

Section 1356 is intended “to give a property owners’ association the ability to amend its governing documents when, because of voter apathy or other reasons, important amendments cannot be approved by the normal procedures authorized by the declaration. [Citation.] In essence, it provides the association with a safety valve for those situations where the need for a supermajority vote would hamstring the association.” (Blue Lagoon Community Assn. v. Mitchell, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th at p. 477, 64 Cal.Rptr.2d 81.) Owners have a substantial interest in the long-term viability of a condominium project, and that interest is not served when a supermajority vote requirement and voter disinterest combine to preclude or unduly hinder an association’s efforts to amend outdated governing documents. (See Rest.3d Property, Servitude, § 6.12, com. a., p. 226.)

B

Additionally, Seith claims section 1356 is unconstitutional because it violates owners’ procedural due process rights and equal protection rights. The record, however, does not show that Seith raised these issues at the trial court. “Typically, constitutional issues not raised in earlier civil proceedings are waived on appeal.” (Bettencourt v. City and County of San Francisco (2007) 146 Cal.App.4th 1090, 1101, 53 Cal.Rptr.3d 402.) We decline to reach the issues.

DISPOSITION

The order is affirmed. The Owners Association is entitled to costs on appeal.

WE CONCUR: HUFFMAN and NARES, JJ.

[1] Undesignated statutory references are to the Civil Code.

[2] The Owners Association did not file a respondent’s brief, and thus we decide the appeal based on the record, the opening brief and any oral argument by Seith. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.220(a)(2).)

[3] Technically, the Bylaws were amended under Corporations Code section 7515 rather than Civil Code section 1356, as discussed below.

[4] Commentators on common interest developments indicate that sections 712 and 713 apply to common interest developments, but they do not discuss any right of owners to place for sale or for lease signs in common areas. (See, e.g., 1 Sproul & Rosenberry, Advising Cal. Common Interest Communities (Cont.Ed.Bar.2007) § 6.7, pp. 389-391 (hereafter Sproul & Rosenberry); Hanna & Van Atta, Cal. Common Interest Developments (2007) § 22.61, pp. 1675-1678 (hereafter Hanna & Van Atta).) Sproul and Rosenberry explain that “[l]ike so many other Davis-Stirling Act statutory provisions that seek to regulate a subject matter addressed in other California statutes that are applicable to common interest communities, no effort is made to clearly integrate the new statutory rules with pre-existing laws pertaining to the same subject. For example, new [Civil Code section] 1353.6 suggests that governing documents could prohibit any form of commercial expression by signs, banners and the like, and yet [Civil Code sections] 712 and 713 have for many years prohibited private covenants from prohibiting or restricting the right of owners to display signs of reasonable dimension, design, and location that advertise the owner’s property for sale, lease, or exchange.” (1 Sproul & Rosenberry,supra, § 6.7, pp. 390-391.)

[5] Seith also challenges the reasonableness of Article V, Section 8 of the First Restated CC & R’s, which authorizes the collection of interest on unpaid assessments; and Article V, Section 9, which pertains to the recordation of liens for delinquent assessments. She did not, however, address those provisions at the trial court. “As a general rule, failure to raise a point in the trial court constitutes … waiver and appellant is estopped to raise that objection on appeal.” (Redevelopment Agency v. City of Berkeley (1978) 80 Cal.App.3d 158, 167, 143 Cal.Rptr. 633.) The First Restated CC & R’s contain dozens of new provisions and amended provisions, and the trial court could not be expected to comb through them and independently research each one to determine its reasonableness. It was incumbent on Seith to raise all objections she had.

[6] Seith also contends Corporations Code section 7515 impairs the obligations of contracts, but she did not preserve the issue for appellate review by raising it at the trial court. (Hale v. Morgan (1978) 22 Cal.3d 388, 394, 149 Cal.Rptr. 375, 584 P.2d 512.)

 

Keywords: Governing Documents, Amendments, Voting, Elections

Costa Serena Owners Coalition v. Costa Serena Architectural Com. (2009) 175 Cal.App.4th 1175.

Costa Serena Owners Coalition v. Costa Serena Architectural Com. (2009) 175 Cal.App.4th 1175.

Counsel: Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, Jeffry A. Miller, Matthew B. Stucky, Esther P. Holm and Lisa Ricksecker for Defendant and Appellant and for Defendant and Respondent.

Shifflet, Kane & Konoske and Gregory C. Kane for Plaintiff and Respondent and for Plaintiff and Appellant.

K. Martin White for Movant and Appellant.

Judges: Opinion by Aaron, J., with McConnell, P. J., and McIntyre, J., concurring.

OPINION

I. INTRODUCTION

Costa Serena is a planned development located in Oceanside, California, that was built in the 1970’s. A “Declaration of Restrictions” that governed the community was set to expire at the end of 2006. During that year, a group of homeowners led by the Costa Serena Architectural Committee (the Architectural Committee)—a committee comprising homeowners who had been elected to enforce the Declaration of Restrictions—attempted to extend the life of the Declaration of Restrictions beyond 2006. Other homeowners in the community opposed extending the Declaration of Restrictions. The group that opposed extending the Declaration of Restrictions was particularly opposed to a provision in the Declaration of Restrictions that required that residents be at least 55 years old. Some of these homeowners formed a group—the Costa Serena Owners Coalition (the Coalition)—and filed an action challenging the actions of the Architectural Committee. The Coalition attacked the Architectural Committee’s attempt to extend the Declaration of Restrictions by, among other things, challenging the validity of amendments to the Declarations of Restrictions that had been recorded in 1986, 1987 and 1999, including a unification amendment that was intended to ensure that the entire Costa Serena community would be governed by a single Declarations of Restrictions and a single Architectural Committee.[1]

Both the Architectural Committee and the Coalition filed motions for summary judgment. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the Coalition, concluding that the Architectural Committee could not establish that the extension of the UDoR had been accomplished in the manner required by the provisions of the UDoR. The trial court’s ruling was premised on its conclusion that the 1986, 1987 and 1999 amendments to, variously, the DoR’s and the UDoR were void ab initio because they were enacted in a manner that did not comply with the provision in the DoR’s and subsequent UDoR pertaining to amendments. The court entered judgment in favor of the Coalition.

After judgment was entered, homeowner Jess Diaz filed a motion to vacate the judgment. The trial court denied the motion on the ground that the court did not have jurisdiction to consider the motion because the Architectural Committee had filed a notice of appeal before the court was able to rule on Diaz’s motion. In addition, the Coalition filed a motion for attorney fees, arguing that the DoR’s provided that the prevailing party in litigation concerning the DoR’s was entitled to attorney fees. The trial court denied the Coalition’s motion for attorney fees.

This matter involves three consolidated appeals, one filed by the Architectural Committee, one filed by Diaz, and one filed by the Coalition. First, the Architectural Committee appeals from the trial court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of the Coalition. The Architectural Committee contends that the judgment must be reversed because (1) the Coalition’s claims are barred by the statute of limitations; (2) the Coalition’s claims are barred by the doctrine of laches; and (3) the trial court erred in interpreting the amendment provisions of the DoR’s/UDoR to require that the Architectural Committee(s) have recorded a document signed by 75 percent of record owners of the Units, in order to properly amend the DoR’s/UDoR.  The Architectural Committee further appeals from the trial court’s order excluding a number of exhibits that the Architectural Committee filed in support of its motion for summary judgment.

Diaz appeals from the postjudgment order of the trial court denying his motion to vacate the judgment. Diaz contends that the trial court retained jurisdiction to consider his motion, and that the court should have vacated the judgment on essentially the same grounds that the Architectural Committee raises on appeal.

The Coalition appeals from the postjudgment order of the trial court pertaining to attorney fees. The Coalition contends that the trial court erred in failing to award it attorney fees pursuant to the language of the DoR’s.

We conclude that the trial court erred in ruling that the amendments to the DoR’s/UDoR were void ab initio and that they therefore could be collaterally attacked at any time. We further conclude that the Coalition’s claims with regard to those amendments are barred by the statute of limitations. Thus, we need not consider whether the amendments that were recorded in 1986, 1987 and 1999 were properly adopted under the terms of the DoR’s/UDoR.

We also conclude that the trial court erred in ruling that the Architectural Committee did not comply with the provisions of the UDoR in extending the UDoR in 2006. In reaching this conclusion, we determine that the trial court erroneously sustained objections to a number of the homeowner consent forms that the Architectural Committee submitted in support of its motion for summary judgment. The trial court apparently concluded that some of the consent forms were inadmissible because the property owners’ names and the property descriptions on the forms were not identical to the names and property descriptions that appear on the deeds to the properties. We conclude that the consent forms are sufficient to demonstrate that a majority of property owners agreed to extend the UDoR, and that the trial court improperly sustained the Coalition’s objections to the consent forms. We therefore reverse the judgment, and direct the trial court to enter judgment in favor of the Architectural Committee.

By reversing the judgment, we render moot Diaz’s appeal from the trial court’s refusal to consider his motion to vacate the judgment, since, having reversed the judgment, this court can no longer grant Diaz the relief he seeks. Similarly, our reversal of the judgment renders moot the Coalition’s appeal pertaining to attorney fees, since the Coalition is not the prevailing party in the litigation.

 

II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Rosedale Homes Development Corporation developed the Costa Serena community in the early 1970’s. Upon completion of the seven Units, the entire community consisted of 724 homes.

Each of the seven DoR’s governing the seven Units originally contained a restriction that provided that no person under the age of 45 could regularly occupy a residence in Costa Serena.

Each DoR also contained a provision that stated that the DoR would expire on December 31, 2006, and set forth the process by which the DoR could be extended beyond that date. That provision, located in paragraph 16 of each DoR, provided: “Each and all of the foregoing conditions and restrictions shall terminate on December 31, 2006, unless the owners of a majority of said lots have executed and recorded at any time within six (6) months prior to December 31, 2006, in the manner required for a conveyance of real property, a writing in which they agree that said Conditions and Restrictions shall continue for a further specified period and providing therein a similar provision for the further extension of said Conditions and Restrictions, or some of them, provided, also, that the above and foregoing Conditions and Restrictions may be modified, after said termination date at the times and in the manner hereinabove provided for the extension of said Conditions and Restrictions in force at the time of such extension or modification.”

The procedure for amending a DoR was set forth in paragraph 28 of each DoR: “Subject to the provisions of paragraph[s] 16 and 27[2], the provisions of these restrictions, other than this paragraph, may be amended by an instrument in writing signed and acknowledged by record owners of at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the units located on the real property, which amendment shall be effective upon recordation in the Office of the Recorder of San Diego County, California.”

In 1986, in response to a change in the law in California, the Architectural Committee for each of the seven Units recorded amendments to the DoR’s increasing the minimum age of residents from 45 to 55. Each amendment was signed by one or more individuals. The signatures appeared below a paragraph in each document that reads as follows: “We, the undersigned[,] comprising all of the members of the Costa Serena Architectural Committee, the unincorporated Association named in the Declaration to enforce the provisions thereof, hereby certify and declare that the foregoing provisions related to use and occupancy of living units in Costa Serena Unit No. [respective Unit number], are the provisions applicable to and enforceable and enforced with respect to the above-described property.”

In 1987, an amendment was recorded that, by its terms, applied to all seven DoR’s (the 1987 Amendment). The amendment made three significant changes to the original DoR’s. First, the 1987 Amendment combined all seven Units into a single community that would be subject to a single governing document, the UDoR. The 1987 Amendment identified the DoR that had been previously governing Unit 7 as the new UDoR. Second, the 1987 Amendment provided for the creation of a single Architectural Committee, which was to comprise five individuals who would be responsible for enforcing the UDoR.[3]  Third, the 1987 Amendment altered the procedure for amending the UDoR, providing: “Any amendment to the Declaration of Restrictions as amended, may be signed and acknowledged by a majority of the elected members of the Architectural Committee, said members certifying that the contents contained therein have been approved by a vote of the Owners as required by the Declaration.”

The 1987 Amendment was signed by three members  of the Architectural Committee, and included a provision that stated:  “[W]e the undersigned, comprising all of the members of the COSTA SERENA ARCHITECTURAL COMMITTEE hereby certify that pursuant to the requirements of said Declaration of Restrictions, owners of dwelling units located within Units 1 through 7 of COSTA SERENA, constituting at least seventy-five (75%) of the present Ownership of dwellings within each respective unit have declared and fixed the conditions and restrictions as contained in the Declaration of Restrictions recorded at File Page No. 73-186901, recorded July 6, 1973, as amended at File Page N[o]. 86-082339, recorded March 3, 1986, upon and subject to which each and all of the lots of all units shall be hereinafter held, used, occupied, leased, sold and/or conveyed.”

The Architectural Committee thereafter recorded an amendment to the UDoR on April 22, 1999 (the 1999 Amendment), which further purported to alter the amendment procedure. The 1999 Amendment provides:

“ARTICLE 28

“AMENDMENT OF DECLARATION

“28.1 Subject to the provisions of paragraphs 16 and 27, this Declaration may be amended or revoked in any respect by the vote or assent by written ballot of more than 50% of all owners entitled to vote and casting ballots.  With respect to any vote, the Association shall be entitled to accept the vote of an owner of record of a unit within Costa Serena. Each unit will be entitled to only one vote, regardless of how many titleholders appear of record.

“28.2 An amendment to the Declaration will be effective upon the recording in the Office of Recorder of San Diego County, a Certificate of Amendment duly executed and certified by the President and Secretary of the Association, and the Chairman of the Architectural Committee setting forth in full the amendment so approved and that the approval requirements of 28.1 above, have been duly met. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein, no such amendment shall [a]ffect the rights of the holder of any first deed of trust or mortgage recorded prior to the recording of such amendment.

“28.3 Any amendment made in accordance with the terms of this Declaration shall be presumed valid by anyone relying on them in good faith.”

The 1999 Amendment was signed by the chairman and two members of the Architectural Committee, as well as the president and secretary of the Costa Serena Community Association.[4]  The signatories “certifi[ed] and declare[d]” that the 1999 Amendment “was approved by a vote of the owners as required by the Declaration of Restrictions.”

There is no evidence in the record that the validity of the 1986, 1987 or 1999 amendments was challenged at any time prior to the current litigation.

In 2006, the Architectural Committee attempted to extend the UDoR by utilizing the voting process provided for in paragraph 28.1 of the UDoR, as amended by the 1999 Amendment.

On July 14, 2006, in response to the Architectural Committee’s efforts to extend the UDoR pursuant to the amendment process provided for in paragraph 28.1 of the UDoR, the Coalition filed a complaint seeking to enjoin the Architectural Committee from proceeding with the voting process. The Coalition contended that the DoR’s for the separate Units had not been unified into a single DoR, and requested declaratory relief regarding the proper interpretation of the provisions in the DoR’s that set forth the procedure for amending and extending the DoR’s. That day, the trial court issued a preliminary injunction enjoining the Architectural Committee from completing the voting process identified in paragraph 28.1 to extend the UDoR.

The Coalition filed an amended complaint (First Amended Complaint) on July 6, 2006, in which it alleged the same two causes of action that it alleged in its original complaint.

After the court enjoined the Architectural Committee from pursuing the voting process in an effort to extend the UDoR, the Architectural Committee took a different approach to extend the DoR beyond December 31, 2006. The Architectural Committee collected 375 signed and notarized forms captioned, “CONSENT[S] TO EXTENSION” from Costa Serena property owners.[5]  On September 25, 2006, the Architectural Committee recorded a document entitled “Extension of Declaration of Restrictions” (Extension Document). The notarized consent documents were included in an exhibit to the Extension Document, as well as in a supplemental exhibit to the Extension Document that was recorded November 22, 2006.

On December 21, 2006, the Coalition filed a document entitled “SUPPLEMENTAL COMPLAINT FOR DECLARATORY RELIEF AND CANCELLATION OF WRITTEN INSTRUMENT (CCP § 464)” (Supplemental Complaint). In the Supplemental Complaint, the Coalition alleged that the Extension Document was invalid, and requested a declaration of the parties’ rights and duties with respect to the Extension Document and the DoR’s/UDoR. In a second cause of action in the Supplemental Complaint, the Coalition sought cancellation of the prior amendments to the DoR’s/UDoR and cancellation of the Extension Document, on the same grounds that it alleged in support of its request for declaratory relief.

The Coalition moved for summary judgment or, in the alternative, summary adjudication of a number of issues. Shortly after the Coalition filed its motion, the Architectural Committee also moved for summary judgment and/or summary adjudication.

On November 29, 2007, the trial court issued a tentative ruling in which the court addressed both parties’ motions. The trial court ruled in the Coalition’s favor on a number of issues, and granted summary adjudication in favor of the Coalition on three of its four causes of action. The court concluded that the original DoR’s required that the property owners’ signatures be attached to any amendment document and that these signatures also be recorded with the amendment. The court concluded that the 1986, 1987 and 1999 Amendments (jointly, Amendments) were void ab initio, rejecting the Architectural Committee’s arguments that the Coalition’s challenges to these Amendments were barred by the statute of limitations and laches. The court also determined that portions of the 1987 Amendment and the 1999 Amendment were void because they attempted to amend the amendment provision itself, which, by its terms, was not subject to amendment.

Based on its determination that the 1987 Amendment was void, the court concluded that the seven original Units remained separate for purposes of the DoR’s, and, therefore, that the Extension Document was invalid because a majority of owners in Units 1, 2, 6, and 7, individually, had not voted in favor of extending their DoR’s. The court also held that the Extension Document did not apply to Units 3, 4, and 5 because the consent forms referred to an extension of the DoR for Unit 7, only.

The court made a number of rulings with regard to the Coalition’s First Amended Complaint. In the first cause of action (for injunctive relief) in the First Amended Complaint, the Coalition sought (1) a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction preventing the Architectural Committee from taking a number of actions in going forward with the May 2006 vote to extend the UDoR; (2) a preliminary and permanent injunction enjoining the Architectural Committee “from recording any document … certifying, declaring or otherwise asserting that the [Unified] Declaration of Restrictions for Costa Serena has been changed, amended or extended by virtue of the May 2006 Election”; and (3) a preliminary and permanent injunction enjoining the Architectural Committee from “conducting any vote or ballot purporting to be for the purpose of amending, changing or extending the term of the [Unified] Declaration of Restrictions of Costa Serena or seeking to amend the Declaration except by an instrument in writing signed and acknowledge[d] by record owners of at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the units located on the real property.” The trial court ruled that the Coalition’s request for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction was moot because the court had already granted that relief. As to the Coalition’s other two requests for injunctive relief and its request for declaratory relief, the court granted summary adjudication in favor of the Coalition, and denied the Architectural Committee’s motion for summary adjudication with respect to those requests for relief.

With regard to the Coalition’s Supplemental Complaint, the trial court ruled that the Coalition was entitled to summary adjudication of its cause of action for declaratory relief, but that summary adjudication of its claim for cancellation of a written instrument was not appropriate as to either party. The Coalition’s claim for declaratory relief involved requests that the court determine the parties’ rights and duties pursuant to the UDoR, that the court declare the Amendments to the UDoR to be invalid and without effect, and that the court declare the “purported extension” of the UDoR to be “void, invalid and of no effect.”

In ruling with respect to the Coalition’s Supplemental Complaint, the court repeated its conclusion that the 1987 Amendment was void ab initio, and that the Amendment therefore failed to “combine the seven Units into a single community operating under the DORs of Unit 7.” The court further ruled that the “purported extension instruments recorded on 9/25/06 and 11/22/06 were insufficient under ¶16 of the Original DORs for each [Unit],” and that those instruments therefore did not effect an extension of the DoR’s past December 31, 2006. Consequently, the court granted the Coalition’s motion for summary adjudication as to the cause of action for declaratory relief in the Supplemental Complaint, and on similar grounds, denied the Architectural Committee’s motion for summary adjudication as to the same cause of action.

The court denied summary adjudication in favor of either party as to the Coalition’s cause of action for cancellation of a written instrument on the grounds that (1) the Coalition failed to present any evidence of damages, and (2) the Architectural Committee failed to present evidence that a majority of the property owners in each of the Units had consented to extending the original DoR’s for the individual Units.

The court heard oral argument regarding its tentative decision on November 30, and confirmed the tentative ruling in its entirety that same day. Because there remained triable issues of fact with regard to the Coalition’s cause of action for cancellation of a written instrument, the court did not enter judgment in favor of the Coalition at that time.

The Architectural Committee filed a petition for a writ of mandate seeking review of the trial court’s summary adjudication order in favor of the Coalition. This court summarily denied the petition.[6]

On January 7, 2008, the Coalition requested dismissal without prejudice of its claim for damages under the cause of action for cancellation of a written instrument (par. 26 of the Supplemental Complaint). On April 4, 2008, the Coalition appeared before the trial court and stipulated to dismissing “any and all causes of action which request cancellation of a written instrument without prejudice.” The trial court entered judgment that same day.

The judgment provided:

“IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED:

“That COSTA SERENA ARCHITECTURAL COMMITTEE is hereby permanently enjoined from recording any document asserting that the Declaration of Restrictions for Costa Serena has been changed, amended, or extended by virtue of the May 2006 election.

“That the Declaration of Restrictions for the seven units of COSTA SERENA have expired as of December 31, 2006.

“That COSTA SERENA ARCHITECTURAL COMMITTEE is hereby permanently enjoined from conducting any vote or ballot purporting to be for the purposes of amending, changing, or extending the term of the Declaration of Restrictions of Costa Serena or seeking to amend the Declaration, except by an instrument in writing, signed and acknowledged by record owners of at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the units located on the real property.

“That the 1986, 1987, and 1999 purported amendments to the Declaration of Restrictions are void ab initio.

“That Paragraph 28 of the Declaration of Restrictions for the seven individual units cannot be amended.

“That the seven individual units of Costa Serena remain separate, each operating under its own Declaration of Restrictions.

“That Plaintiff COSTA SERENA OWNERS COALITION, shall recover from said Defendant attorneys fees and costs in the sum of $ ______.” (Italics added.)

On April 18, 2008, Jess Diaz, identifying himself as a “party aggrieved by the Judgment entered on April 4, 2008,” filed a motion to vacate the judgment. Five days later, on April 23, the Architectural Committee filed a notice of appeal from the judgment (case No. D052903).

On April 30, the Coalition moved for an award of attorney fees and expenses. The Coalition contended that paragraph 20 of each Unit’s DoR, which concerned maintenance and repairs, provided for an award of attorney fees to the Coalition as the prevailing party.

The Coalition filed an opposition to Diaz’s motion to vacate the judgment on May 9, 2008, arguing that the filing of the notice of appeal terminated the trial court’s jurisdiction over the judgment, such that the court was without authority to rule on Diaz’s motion to vacate.

On May 29, 2008, the trial court issued a tentative ruling denying Diaz’s motion to vacate on the ground that it had lost jurisdiction to rule on the motion when the Architectural Committee filed a notice of appeal. After hearing oral argument on May 30, the court confirmed its tentative ruling.

On May 30, Diaz filed a notice of appeal from the April 4 judgment and the May 30 postjudgment order denying his motion to vacate (case No. D053159).

On June 30, 2008, this court consolidated the two appeals under case No. D052903 and set a briefing schedule accommodating the three parties involved.

On July 11, 2008, the trial court considered the Coalition’s motion for an award of attorney fees and expenses. After hearing oral argument from both parties, the court denied the Coalition’s motion, without prejudice.

On August 6, 2008, the Coalition filed a notice of appeal from the trial court’s attorney fee order (case No. D053553).

The Architectural Committee filed its opening brief in case No. D052903 on September 18, 2008.

Diaz filed his opening brief on October 10, 2008. Diaz raises two main contentions: (1) that the trial court erred in declining to assert jurisdiction to consider his motion to vacate the judgment, and (2) that the judgment is erroneous. Diaz attacks the judgment on a variety of grounds, including that the Coalition’s claims are barred by the statute of limitations and laches, that there remain triable issues of material fact as to the intentions of the property owners who signed documents consenting to an extension of the UDoR, and that the Coalition failed to sue the appropriate parties, i.e., the property owners, and that, as a result, those property owners were denied the opportunity to challenge claims that implicate the chains of title on the subject properties.

On October 24, 2008, the City of Oceanside (Oceanside) applied to file an amicus curiae brief in support of the Architectural Committee. In its proposed brief, Oceanside argues that the four-year statute of limitations in Code of Civil Procedure section 343 applies to the Coalition’s claims, or, in the alternative, that homeowners associations act in a manner similar to municipal governments and, therefore, should receive the benefit of short statutes of limitations that often apply to local agency land use decisions. Oceanside also requested that this court take judicial notice of resolution No. 2008-P18—a resolution that was adopted at a meeting of the Planning Commission of the City of Oceanside on March 24, 2008. The resolution approves certain land use entitlements for a recent Oceanside condominium development unrelated to Costa Serena.

On November 7, 2008, the Coalition filed a combined opposition to Oceanside’s application to file an amicus curiae brief and objection to the city’s request for judicial notice.

This court informed the parties that it would consider Oceanside’s application to file an amicus curiae brief with the appeal, and that if the court were to grant the application, the court would also specify the time within which the parties would be permitted to file an answer to the brief pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 8.200, subd. (c)(6).

The Coalition filed a brief in response to the Architectural Committee’s and Diaz’s opening briefs, in which it addressed the Architectural Committee and Diaz, together, as “Appellants.” The Coalition did not respond to Diaz’s argument that the trial court should have considered his motion to vacate because the motion was already pending at the time the Architectural Committee filed a notice of appeal. Both Diaz and the Architectural Committee filed reply briefs.

On March 13, 2009, this court ordered that the Coalition’s appeal concerning attorney fees (case No. D053553) would be considered with the Architectural Committee’s and Diaz’s already pending appeal (case No. D052903). In an order filed concurrently with this opinion, we consolidate the Coalition’s appeal with the Architectural Committee’s appeal for purposes of disposition.

 

III.        DISCUSSION

The trial court granted summary adjudication of three of the Coalition’s causes of action (two in the First Amended Complaint and one in the Supplemental Complaint) in favor of the Coalition. The Coalition dismissed its fourth cause of action for cancellation of a written instrument, thereby permitting the trial court to enter judgment in favor of the Coalition on the remaining causes of action. Although the Coalition continued to assert what purported to be only three causes of action (one seeking injunctive relief and two seeking declaratory relief), each cause of action actually encompasses a number of claims. The Coalition essentially challenges the validity of the 1986, 1987, and 1999 Amendments, and the validity of the Extension Document recorded in 2006. The court ruled in favor of the Coalition on all issues, ultimately determining that as of January 1, 2007, there exists no valid declaration of restrictions or similar instrument governing any of the lots in the Costa Serena community.

We conclude that the trial court erred in finding that the 1986, 1987, and 1999 Amendments are void ab initio. Our rejection of the trial court’s conclusions concerning these Amendments necessarily affects our determination of the correctness of the trial court’s ruling with regard to the 2006 Extension Document. As we explain below, we conclude that the Costa Serena community successfully extended the UDoR, such that the lots in Costa Serena remain governed by the restrictions of the UDoR that was created pursuant to the 1987 Amendment and amended thereafter.

Because we decide the issues based on the arguments of the parties, there is no need to address the additional arguments that Oceanside raises in its proposed brief. For this reason, we deny Oceanside’s application to file an amicus curiae brief in support of the Architectural Committee, and deny Oceanside’s request for judicial notice of an Oceanside resolution.

 

A. Standards on summary judgment

“The standards applicable to appellate court review of a motion for summary judgment are well established.” (Alexander v. Codemasters Group Limited (2002) 104 Cal.App.4th 129, 139 [127 Cal. Rptr. 2d 145] (Alexander), citing Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001) 25 Cal.4th 826 [107 Cal. Rptr. 2d 841, 24 P.3d 493] (Aguilar).)  “We determine de novo whether a triable issue of material fact exists and whether the moving party was entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law. [Citation.]” (Alexander, supra, 104 Cal.App.4th at p. 139.) A triable issue of fact exists—and summary judgment is inappropriate—where the evidence reasonably permits the trier of fact, under the applicable standard of proof, to find the purportedly contested fact in favor of the party opposing the motion. (Aguilar, supra, 25 Cal. 4th at p. 850.)

 

B. The Coalition’s challenge to the 1986, 1987, and 1999 Amendments is untimely

The trial court concluded that the Architectural Committee’s affirmative defenses challenging the timeliness of the Coalition’s claims lacked merit on the ground that all of the Amendments at issue were void ab initio and thus could be challenged at any time. The court interpreted paragraph 28 in the original DoR’s as requiring “that the acknowledged signatures [of the owners of at least 75 percent of the ‘units located on the real property’[7]] be attached to the document itself.” Because “it [was] undisputed that no such signatures [were] attached [to the 1986, 1987, or 1999 Amendments], the instruments are void.” The court cited City of Los Angeles v. Morgan (1951) 105 Cal.App.2d 726 [234 P.2d 319] (Morgan) and Taormina Theosophical Community, Inc. v. Silver (1983) 140 Cal.App.3d 964 [190 Cal. Rptr. 38] (Taormina) in reaching this conclusion.

We have found no authority supporting the trial court’s conclusion that the 1986, 1987, and 1999 Amendments are void ab initio and that they therefore may be challenged at any time. We specifically reject the court’s reliance on Morgan and Taormina. The trial court apparently misapprehended the limited circumstances in which a court may conclude that an instrument is a complete nullity, as opposed to being voidable pursuant to a timely challenge by a party, due to a deficiency in the instrument’s creation.

Morgan, supra, 105 Cal.App.2d 726, is inapplicable to this case for a number of reasons. Morgan involved a judgment that was determined to be void ab initio because the defendant in a quiet title action had never been served with the summons and complaint. (Morgan, supra, 105 Cal.App.2d at pp. 730–731.) The Morgan court noted, “Under the due process clause of the federal Constitution a personal judgment rendered without service of process on, or legal notice to, a defendant is not merely voidable, but void, in the absence of a voluntary appearance or waiver. [Citation.]” (Morgan, supra, 105 Cal.App.2d at p. 730.) The court explained: “Where it is contended, as here, that the court had no jurisdiction to enter the decree for want of service upon respondent’s predecessor, evidence is admissible to challenge the fact of service. … ‘It has long been established that a false affidavit of service constitutes extrinsic fraud. A party is thus prevented from having his day in court. Courts of equity will relieve a party from an unjust judgment rendered against him when, without service of process, either actual or constructive, no opportunity has been given him to be heard in his defense. [Citations.]’” (Morgan, supra, 105 Cal.App.2d at p. 731.)

The Morgan court held that “‘[a] judgment absolutely void upon its face may be attacked anywhere, directly or collaterally, whenever it presents itself, either by parties or strangers. It is simply a nullity, and can be neither the basis nor evidence of any right whatever.’” (Morgan, supra, 105 Cal.App.2d at p. 732, italics added.)

Because the instruments at issue in this case are not judgments, the rule announced in Morgan does not directly apply.

Nor does the rule in Morgan apply by analogy to the circumstances that exist in this case. The absence of service on the affected party in Morgan, and the defendant’s resultant lack of an opportunity to respond to the complaint, meant that the trial court never had jurisdiction over the defendant, and thus, lacked jurisdiction to enter any judgment at all. Here, the Architectural Committee(s) clearly had the authority to amend the DoR’s/UDoR in 1986, 1987 and 1999. There has been no allegation that the Amendments were created in secret, or that persons affected by the Amendments were unaware of their existence. In fact, there has been no allegation that the Architectural Committee(s) amended the DoR’s/UDoR without providing the affected parties notice of the proposed changes and an opportunity to vote on the matter. Nor is there any allegation that the required number of owners did not approve of any of the Amendments. Because the Coalition has not challenged the authority of the Architectural Committee(s) to enact the Amendments, its challenges do not undermine the very existence of the Amendments, as the challenge to the judgment in Morgan did, but rather seek only to redress alleged infirmities in the adoption and recording of the Amendments. Morgan involved an invalid act, while this case involves a valid act, the result of which might have been voided if challenged in a timely manner.

In addition, neither the First Amended Complaint nor the Supplemental Complaint contains any allegation that the 1986, 1987 or 1999 Amendments were procured by fraud or some other method that would undermine the validity of the instruments in question from their inception. (See Rosenthal v. Great Western Fin. Securities Corp. (1996) 14 Cal.4th 394, 416 [58 Cal. Rptr. 2d 875, 926 P.2d 1061] [“If the entire contract is void ab initio because of fraud, the parties have not agreed to arbitrate any controversy; under that circumstance, Prima Paint [v. Flood & Conklin (1967) 388 U.S. 395 [18 L.Ed.2d 1270, 87 S.Ct. 1801]] does not require a court to order arbitration.”].)

(1) Even if the Coalition had alleged fraud in the enactment of the Amendments, the fraud would have to have been one by which the homeowners were induced to agree to Amendments different from the Amendments that were actually recorded. As the court observed in Erickson v. Bohne (1955) 130 Cal.App.2d 553, 556 [279 P.2d 619]:  “‘[T]he courts distinguish between those cases in which a purported instrument never had any legal inception or existence—due to the fact that one party was induced to execute an agreement totally different from that which he apparently made, or where, due to the fraud, there was no execution at all—and those cases in which the agreement was induced by fraudulent misrepresentations or concealments which in no degree make the instrument anything other than it purports to be. In the first case it is clear that the purported agreement is void ab initio and an action to avoid it may be brought at any time, or it may be treated as nonexistent; while in the second case the agreement is voidable and may be rescinded at the election of the party defrauded … .’”

The Coalition’s only challenge to the Amendments is that they were enacted in a manner that failed to conform to the requirements of the provision that outlined how the DoR’s/UDoR could be amended.[8] 8 Since this is the only challenge to the validity of the Amendments, the Coalition’s claims would render the Amendments voidable, not void ab initio. (Cf. Peyton v. Cly (1960) 184 Cal.App.2d 193, 196 [7 Cal. Rptr. 504] [“A contract not executed in conformity with the provisions of the statute of frauds is not void but merely voidable. [Citation.]”].)

(2) The trial court also cited Taormina, supra, 140 Cal. App. 3d 964, in support of its conclusion that the Amendments were void ab initio. However, Taormina supports only the limited proposition that amendments to CC&R’s (covenants, conditions and restrictions) that are not made pursuant to the procedure “established in the provision” for modifying the restrictive covenants may be voided under certain circumstances. (Id. at p. 970.) The case does not speak to the issue here—i.e., whether an amendment that was not enacted pursuant to the procedure set out in the provisions of a declaration of restrictions is void ab initio, or merely voidable. The Taormina court never expressly considered the question whether the parties’ challenge to the amendment at issue in that proceeding would render the amendment voidable or rather, void ab initio. The Taormina court simply stated: “The trial court found that 75 percent of the owners had not approved the changes embodied in the November 9 CCRs. The changes therefore are not enforceable and to the extent that they purport to make such changes, the November 9 CCRs are void.” (Id. at p. 970.) The Taormina court did not refer to the documents at issue as void ab initio, nor did it appear to reach this conclusion. Rather, it appears that the court was simply permitting the plaintiff to void a voidable instrument.

At a minimum, Taormina simply does not support the trial court’s conclusion in this case because it does not state that amendments to CC&R’s and/DoR’s that are not adopted in conformance with the provisions of those CC&R’s and/or DoR’s may be challenged on this basis and voided at any time. The lawsuit in Taormina was filed less than three years after the amendment in question was recorded; there was no statute of limitations issue raised in that case. Thus, whether the provisions in that case were voidable, and thus subject to the statute of limitations, or rather, void ab initio, and thus subject to challenge at any time, was immaterial. For these reasons, Taormina does not provide authority for the trial court’s conclusion that the Amendments in this case were void ab initio.

We conclude that the Coalition has not demonstrated that the Amendments were void ab initio; at most, the Amendments may be voidable. We therefore consider whether the arguments that the Architectural Committee raised in its summary judgment motion, i.e., challenges to the validity of the 1986, 1987 and 1999 Amendments, are timely. (See Marin Healthcare Dist. v. Sutter Health (2002) 103 Cal.App.4th 861, 879 [127 Cal. Rptr. 2d 113] (Marin) [“Actions to void contracts are nonetheless subject to the statute of limitations. [Citations.]”].)

(3) “‘To determine the statute of limitations which applies to a cause of action it is necessary to identify the nature of the cause of action, i.e., the “gravamen” of the cause of action. [Citations.] “[T]he nature of the right sued upon and not the form of action nor the relief demanded determines the applicability of the statute of limitations under our code.” [Citation.]’ [Citations.]” (Marin, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at pp. 874–875.)

(4) The Coalition’s causes of action for declaratory and injunctive relief are premised upon its claims that the 1986, 1987 and 1999 Amendments are void. The Architectural Committee contends that the statute of limitations applicable to the Coalition’s claims attacking the Amendments is the four-year limitations period provided under Code of Civil Procedure[9] section 343—the general catch-all statute of limitations period. Section 343 provides: “An action for relief not hereinbefore provided for must be commenced within four years after the cause of action shall have accrued.”  Other courts have applied section 343 to causes of action seeking to cancel a voidable instrument (see Marin, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at p. 878, and cases cited therein), and the Coalition has not asserted that any other statute of limitations applies. Further, the Supreme Court has acknowledged that the four-year limitations period of section 343 has been applied to claims seeking to set aside all kinds of instruments for a variety of reasons: “Citing a broad range of cases, including actions to set aside a deed made under undue influence, a proceeding to set aside a satisfaction of judgment, and actions to set aside void bonds, the [Supreme Court] concluded: ‘Although plaintiff contends that laches and lapse of time cannot be defenses in an action to cancel an instrument void because contrary to public policy … equitable factors … may not be used as a means of avoiding the express mandate of the statute of limitations. We must hold, therefore, that if plaintiff had a cause of action for cancellation, it is now barred by section 343 … .’ [Citation.]” (Robertson v. Superior Court (2001) 90 Cal.App.4th 1319, 1326 [109 Cal. Rptr. 2d 650].)

We conclude that the four-year limitations period provided in section 343 applies to the Coalition’s claims that the Amendments are invalid.

(5) The Coalition did not bring its claims challenging the Amendments within the four-year limitations period.  “As a general rule, a statute of limitations accrues when the act occurs which gives rise to the claim [citation], that is, when ‘the plaintiff sustains actual and appreciable harm. [Citation.] Any “manifest and palpable” injury will commence the statutory period. [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (Marin, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at p. 879.)

If the Amendments were, in fact, ineffective as a result of being enacted/adopted in a manner that did not comply with the amendment provisions of the DoR’s/UDoR, as the Coalition asserts, then homeowners in the Costa Serena community sustained a “manifest and palpable” injury at the time each of the Amendments was recorded and thereby made effective. Further, the recording of the Amendments served to provide notice to anyone who may have wished to challenge their validity. The Architectural Committee’s recording of each of the instruments that contained the Amendments thus triggered the statutory period for bringing an action to invalidate the Amendments, since the recording of the Amendments ensured that homeowners and subsequent purchasers had at least constructive knowledge that there existed amendments to the DoR’s/UDoR that purported to change the provisions of the DoR’s/UDoR. (See Citizens for Covenant Compliance v. Anderson (1995) 12 Cal.4th 345, 355 [47 Cal. Rptr. 2d 898, 906 P.2d 1314] (Citizens for Covenant Compliance) [recording of CC&R’s provides constructive notice of restrictions on property].) The statute of limitations therefore began to run as to each Amendment as soon as the Architectural Committee recorded that Amendment.

The Coalition has offered no evidence that the commencement of the running of the statute of limitations should be tolled for any reason. The Coalition suggests in its briefing that the statutes of limitations for challenges to the Amendments should be tolled because the Coalition “did not have any interest in challenging the 1986, 1987 or 1999 amendments until such time as it appeared Appellants were going to attempt to rely upon those amendments to extend the Declaration of Restrictions in 2006.” This clearly does not constitute a valid reason to toll the statute of limitations.

(6) All of the information that was available to the Coalition in 2006 concerning the potential invalidity of the Amendments was available to all homeowners in Costa Serena as soon as the Amendments were recorded in 1986, 1987, and 1999. The Architectural Committee conducted business for years under the DoR’s and the UDoR, as amended by the Amendments at issue. There is no indication that the Architectural Committee(s) did not interpret the DoR’s/UDoR as incorporating the Amendments after they were approved by the owners and recorded by representatives of the Architectural Committee(s). The Coalition is deemed to have had notice of the Amendments at least from the time they were recorded (see Citizens for Covenant Compliance, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 355), and does not allege that the Amendments were procured by fraud. There is thus no basis for tolling the statute of limitations.

We conclude that the Coalition’s claims challenging the 1986, 1987 and 1999 Amendments—brought 20, 19, and seven years, respectively, after the Amendments were passed and recorded—are time-barred. The trial court thus erred in rejecting the Architectural Committee’s statute of limitations defense to the Coalition’s claims pertaining to the 1986, 1987 and 1999 Amendments.

Because the Coalition’s challenges to the Amendments are barred by the statute of limitations, the trial court should have given effect to the amended version of the UDoR, which incorporates all three challenged Amendments.

C. The Architectural Committee successfully effected an extension of the UDoR by executing and recording a writing evidencing that a majority of lot owners agreed to the extension

 

1. Under the governing UDoR, the Architectural Committee needed the assent of a majority of owners in the Costa Serena community, as a whole, to extend the DoR

In granting summary adjudication in favor of the Coalition on its cause of action for declaratory relief in its Supplemental Complaint (seeking to declare the Extension Document void), the trial court ruled that the Extension Document was insufficient to extend the UDoR because the 1987 Amendment was void ab initio. Based on the trial court’s determination that the 1987 Amendment was void ab initio, the court concluded that there had been no unification of the separate DoR’s for each of the original Units, and, therefore, that each of the seven Units remained distinct, and operated under its own separate DoR. According to the trial court, each individual Unit had to extend its individual DoR by the consent of a majority of homeowners within that Unit. The trial court concluded that although the Architectural Committee “ha[d] provided competent evidence that a majority [of consents] was received as to the Costa Serena communities as a whole,” the Architectural Committee had not demonstrated that “a majority of consents were received as to each separate unit.” Instead, the trial court found that the Coalition had provided competent and admissible evidence that the Architectural Committee “did not achieve a majority of consents to extend as to Units 1, 2, 6, and 7.”[10]

As we have already concluded, the trial court erred in its determination that the 1987 Amendment was void. The court’s determination that each original Unit in Costa Serena had to individually agree to extend the applicable original DoR before December 31, 2006, by the consent of a majority of the owners within each Unit was thus also erroneous. As of 2006, the entire Costa Serena community operated under a single governing document—the UDoR. Therefore, pursuant to paragraph 16 of the UDoR, in order to extend the UDoR in 2006, the Architectural Committee was required to execute and record a writing evidencing that a majority of the owners of the lots in the Costa Serena community, as a whole, agreed to the extension.

 

2. The Architectural Committee presented evidence sufficient to establish that a majority of owners agreed to extend the UDoR

The Architectural Committee asserts that the trial court should have granted summary judgment in its favor because it presented the court with evidence that a majority of the owners of lots in Costa Serena consented to extend the UDoR, and that the Architectural Committee had thus fulfilled the requirements of paragraph 16 of the UDoR. We agree.[11]

 

a. Interpreting the relevant language in the UDoR

The Coalition contends that paragraph 16 of the UDoR should be interpreted to require that “any desire to continue the restrictions be made ‘in a manner required for a conveyance of real property.’” Although the Coalition fails to explain its interpretation beyond this single sentence, we presume, based on the Coalition’s arguments concerning the effect of the Architectural Committee’s proffered evidence, that the Coalition means that the UDoR should be read to require that the owner or owners of each lot demonstrate his, her, or their consent to extend the UDoR by way of an individual document that both evidences the owner or owners’ consent and identifies the owner or owners and the property in a manner that would be sufficient to convey that real property. In other words, the Coalition maintains that the UDoR requires that the information in each consent form be identical to that found in the deeds to the lots owned by consenting homeowners. We conclude that this interpretation of the relevant provision is unreasonable.

(7) “It is our duty to interpret the deed restriction ‘in a way that is both reasonable and carries out the intended purpose of the contract.’ [Citation.]” (Alfaro v. Community Housing Improvement System & Planning Assn., Inc. (2009) 171 Cal.App.4th 1356, 1378 [89 Cal. Rptr. 3d 659].) The same rules that govern the interpretation of contracts apply to the interpretation of CC&R’s. (Fourth La Costa Condominium Owners Assn. v. Seith (2008) 159 Cal.App.4th 563, 575 [71 Cal. Rptr. 3d 299].)  Contracts, in turn, are to be construed in accordance with substantially the same canons of interpretation as statutes. (Verdier v. Verdier (1953) 121 Cal.App.2d 190, 193 [263 P.2d 57].) “ ‘ “ ‘[W]e must independently interpret the provisions of the document. …’ ” ’ [Citation.]” (Gray v. McCormick (2008) 167 Cal.App.4th 1019, 1024 [84 Cal. Rptr. 3d 777].)

“The language of the CC&R’s governs if it is clear and explicit, and we interpret the words in their ordinary and popular sense unless a contrary intent is shown. [Citations.] The parties’ intent is to be ascertained from the writing alone if possible. [Citation.]” (Harvey v. The Landing Homeowners Assn. (2008) 162 Cal.App.4th 809, 817 [76 Cal. Rptr. 3d 41], fn. omitted.) “‘Where the language of a contract is clear and not absurd, it will be followed. [Citations.]’ ” (Templeton Development Corp. v. Superior Court (2006) 144 Cal.App.4th 1073, 1085 [51 Cal. Rptr. 3d 19].)

Paragraph 16, the provision in question, provides in relevant part that the UDoR will expire on December 31, 2006, “unless the owners of a majority of said lots have executed and recorded … , in the manner required for a conveyance of real property, a writing in which they agree” that the UDoR shall continue to govern the properties. The most reasonable interpretation of this provision is that the DoR requires that the owners execute and record “in the manner required for a conveyance of real property” a single “writing” that in some way evidences that a majority of the owners have agreed to the proposed extension. This requirement may be met by a document that certifies that a majority of owners of lots in the Costa Serena community have agreed to extend the UDoR. Such an instrument would constitute sufficient evidence that the requirement that a majority of owners have agreed to the extension has been met. As long as that instrument is executed and recorded in the same manner in which a deed or other instrument conveying real property would be executed and recorded, all of the requirements of paragraph 16 of the UDoR are met.

The plain language of paragraph 16 does not require that each owner express his/her agreement in a separate document that itself must be “executed and recorded … , in the manner required for a conveyance of real property.” Rather, a single writing that sufficiently evidences the fact that a majority of owners have agreed to the extension is the document that the UDoR requires be executed and recorded in the same manner in which the conveyance of real property would have to be executed and recorded, in order for the extension to be effective.[12]

 

b. The evidence establishes that the Architectural Committee met the requirements of paragraph 16 and that the UDoR was extended before it expired

The Architectural Committee submitted evidence of the existence of the required “writing,” as well as evidence that the writing was executed and recorded in the official records of the San Diego County Recorder’s Office in the same manner in which a conveyance of real property would be executed and recorded. Specifically, the Architectural Committee submitted a document, recorded September 25, 2006, entitled “EXTENSION OF DECLARATION OF RESTRICTIONS.” The document includes a notarized certification of the extension, signed by DeLoris Devine, chairperson of the Architectural Committee, which states, “The extension of DECLARATION OF RESTRICTIONS has been consented to by at least a majority of the owners of the lots in accordance with Section 16 of the DECLARATION OF RESTRICTIONS. The consents are collectively attached hereto as Exhibit ‘1’ to this Extension of DECLARATION OF RESTRICTIONS.” Immediately following Devine’s certification is the Extension Document itself.

The Extension Document identifies each DoR for each of the original Units by its official record number and identifies each of the properties in Costa Serena by referencing the lots by Unit, as originally identified by the individual DoR’s for the Units. The Extension Document then states: “The owners of a majority of the lots subject to the DECLARATION OF RESTRICTIONS, and any valid amendment(s) thereto, hereby extend the DECLARATION OF RESTRICTIONS, and any valid amendment(s) thereto, until December 31, 2039.”

The Extension Document is signed by four members of the Architectural Committee, and each member’s signature is notarized. The Extension Document is clearly a “writing” that evidences that a majority of owners in Costa Serena have agreed to the extension. The document was executed and recorded in “the manner required for conveyance of real property” since it included all of the necessary formalities: it contained a sufficient description of the properties affected by the extension, identified the restrictions on the properties that were being extended, was signed and notarized, and was recorded at the county recorder’s office. The effect of the execution and recordation of the Extension Document is that any person having title to or interested in acquiring title to an affected property has, at a minimum, constructive notice that the residences in Costa Serena continue to be governed by the UDoR. (Citizens for Covenant Compliance, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 355.)

In its ruling on the Architectural Committee’s motion for summary judgment/adjudication, the trial court found that the Architectural Committee obtained the consent of a majority of the owners in Costa Serena, and that the Architectural Committee presented sufficient evidence to establish this fact. In the part of the court’s order rejecting the Architectural Committee’s argument that it was entitled to judgment as to the first cause of action (declaratory relief) in the Supplemental Complaint, the court states, “Defendant has provided competent evidence that a majority [of consents] was received as to the Costa Serena communities as a whole.” However, having erroneously concluded that the 1987 Amendment was void, the trial court proceeded to conclude that the Architectural Committee’s evidence was insufficient to establish that it had obtained the consents of a majority of the owners within each separate Unit. The trial court’s finding that the Architectural Committee provided competent evidence that a majority of owners of property in the Costa Serena community as a whole had agreed to extend the UDoR is sufficient to support a judgment in favor of the Architectural Committee.

Further, the parties do not dispute that 375 lot owners did in fact agree to extend the UDoR. Even the Coalition agrees that the consents sufficiently establish the intent of the homeowners who signed them: “In any event, the intention of the homeowners who signed a consent to extend the Declaration of Restrictions is not in issue. It can be assumed a homeowner who signed a consent form wished to extend the Declaration of Restrictions.” According to the Coalition, the question is not whether there is sufficient evidence to establish that a majority of the owners agreed to extend the UDoR, but, rather, whether “that homeowner compl[ied] with the requirements of the Declaration of Restrictions.” Based on the most reasonable interpretation of the UDoR, we conclude that it is not necessary that each home owner have executed and recorded a consent document that would be sufficient to convey property in order to comply with the UDoR’s extension provision. The Architectural Committee and the homeowners, as a whole, complied with the requirements of paragraph 16 of the UDoR by having the Architectural Committee representatives sign and record a writing evidencing that a majority of the owners of lots in Costa Serena agreed to extend the UDoR. This is sufficient to meet the procedural requirements of paragraph 16.

No additional evidence of the owners’ signatures, consent forms, or any other documents were required, since Devine’s certification is sufficient to establish that a majority of owners of lots in Costa Serena agreed to extend the UDoR. This is particularly true in view of the fact that the Coalition does not dispute that the owners who signed the consent forms agreed to the extension. In the face of the recorded “writing” that the Architectural Committee submitted, the Coalition did not argue or present evidence that Devine’s certification in the Extension Document that a majority of owners of lots in Costa Serena had consented to extend the UDoR was somehow invalid, mistaken, or fraudulent. The Coalition thus has not placed in dispute the fact that a majority of owners of lots in Costa Serena did in fact agree to extend the UDoR.

Despite conceding that a majority of owners agreed to extend the UDoR, the Coalition objected to the form of more than 200 of the consent forms that the Architectural Committee submitted as evidence to support its motion for summary judgment. In a ruling that seems to conflict with the trial court’s finding that the Architectural Committee had submitted sufficient proof that a majority of owners of Costa Serena agreed to the extension, the trial court sustained the Coalition’s objections to 70 of the consent forms that the Architectural Committee submitted. This ruling left the Architectural Committee with evidence of only 305 owner consents. We conclude that the trial court erred in sustaining the Coalition’s objections to the consent forms.[13]

We review a trial court’s rulings on evidentiary objections for an abuse of discretion. (Walker v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. (2002) 98 Cal.App.4th 1158, 1169 [121 Cal. Rptr. 2d 79].) Although the abuse of discretion standard gives the trial court substantial latitude, “[t]he scope of discretion always resides in the particular law being applied, i.e., in the ‘legal principles governing the subject of [the] action … .’” (City of Sacramento v. Drew (1989) 207 Cal.App.3d 1287, 1297 [255 Cal. Rptr. 704].) “Action that transgresses the confines of the applicable principles of law is outside the scope of discretion and we call such action an ‘abuse’ of discretion.” (Ibid.) Here, the trial court appears to have erroneously interpreted the UDoR, and on this basis, rejected some of the consent forms. In doing so, the court incorrectly applied legal principles of contract interpretation. The trial court’s evidentiary rulings premised on its erroneous interpretation constitute an abuse of the court’s discretion.

The Architectural Committee included the 375 consent forms in two exhibits to the Extension Document.[14]  Each consent form was in the same format. In the first paragraph, the consent form states, “The undersigned, is/are the Owner(s) of the following real property located within San Diego County, California: … .” Each consent form then identifies the property by street address. The second paragraph of each form provides a legal description of each property, in a form similar to the following example from consent No. 1: “Lot 3, inclusive, of COSTA SERENA UNIT NO. 1, in the City of Oceanside, County of San Diego, State of California, according to Map thereof no. 6892 filed in the Office of the County Recorder of said San Diego County on March 31, 1971.”

The third paragraph states: “Said real property is subject to a DECLARATION OF RESTRICTIONS which was recorded in the official records of San Diego County, California, on July 6, 1973, as Instrument No. 186901.” The fourth paragraph of each consent form affirms the owner’s or owners’ consent, stating, “I/we, by affixing our signature below, hereby consent to extend the DECLARATION OF RESTRICTIONS, and any valid amendment thereto, until December 31, 2039.” The Architectural Committee also submitted to the trial court copies of the deeds of each of the properties for which an owner had signed a consent form.

The Coalition objected to a large number of the consent forms on the ground that the consents suffered from one or more of three identified deficiencies: (1) discrepancies between the legal descriptions of the properties provided on the consent forms and those on the deeds for those properties; (2) discrepancies between the signatures on the consent forms and the names on the deeds; and (3) the form was signed by only one of two record owners or trustees. For example, the Coalition’s grounds for objecting to consent No. 1 was, “Lacks foundation.[15]  Legal description of the property and the Deed does not match that in the Consent.” Another example of the type of objection the Coalition raised was its objection to consent No. 90 on the following grounds: “Lacks foundation. Signature on Consent does not match name on Deed.” The Coalition similarly objected to consent No. 281, on the following grounds: “Lacks foundation. Consent not signed by one of the owners per Deed.” The Coalition’s position was that consents that suffered from such discrepancies were insufficient to “convey real property,” and thus did not meet the requirements of paragraph 16 of the UDoR, rendering the consents invalid and inadmissible.

The Coalition’s presumption that the consent forms had to be in precisely the same form as a document intended to convey real property is based on an unreasonable interpretation of paragraph 16 of the UDoR. The Coalition seems to have persuaded the trial court to read the words “in the manner required for a conveyance of real property” to refer to each property owner’s, or owners’, consent form.

The court appears to have determined that each consent form had to describe the relevant property in a manner identical to the description of the property in the deed establishing the consenter’s ownership, and had to be signed by each owner in exactly the same manner as he or she is identified in the deed. For example, the court sustained the Coalition’s objection to the consent form signed by “Elenore L. Buitenman” and “Charles T. Buitenman,” apparently on the basis that the deed names “Elenore Louise Buitenman” and “Charles Taze Buitenman” as the owners of the property, using middle names rather than initials. Similarly, the court rejected all of the consent forms signed by owners of lots that had originally been part of Unit 7 because those consent forms incorrectly identified the plat map number in the legal descriptions of the properties as 6939, while the true plat map number is 6940. The court rejected these consent forms in spite of the fact that each form contained the street address of the owners’ property.

As we have already explained, this interpretation misconstrues the language of paragraph 16. The UDoR cannot reasonably be read to require that the consent forms include a legal description of the properties. Nor can it be understood to require that each individual owner consenting to the extension sign his or her name in exactly the same manner as he or she took title to the property. The consent forms that the Architectural Committee collected are more than sufficient to establish that a majority of Costa Serena lot owners agreed to the Extension Document. Each individual owner certified that he or she was the owner of the property, and each consent form identifies the property by address. There is no allegation that the persons who signed the consent forms are not the owners of the properties.

Reading the UDoR to mean that the consent of an owner who signed his name “Floyd A. Beatty” on his consent form will not be counted because the deed to his property identifies him as “Floyd Andrew Beatty” would lead to an absurd result, particularly where Floyd A. Beatty attested to the fact that he owns the relevant property. It is clear that Floyd A. Beatty is Floyd Andrew Beatty, and the Coalition has presented no evidence that he, or any of the other individuals who signed the consent forms, was not an owner who was entitled to vote to extend the UDoR.

A majority of owners agreed to extend the UDoR, as evidenced by the signed consent forms that the Architectural Committee filed as exhibits to the recorded Extension Document and presented to the court. As long as the consent forms identify the person or persons who signed the form, reasonably identify their properties (by, for example, providing the street address), and indicate that the person or persons owns or own the identified property, the forms are sufficient. All of the consent forms that the Architectural Committee submitted meet these requirements. The consent forms are relevant to determining whether a majority of owners agreed to extend the UDoR, and are admissible in evidence. The trial court thus erred in sustaining the Coalition’s objections to some of the consent forms.

We conclude that the trial court erred in entering judgment in favor of the Coalition and not entering judgment in favor of the Architectural Committee. The judgment must be reversed and a new judgment entered in favor of the Architectural Committee.

 

D. Jess Diaz’s appeal from the trial court’s order denying his motion to vacate is moot

Our disposition of the Architectural Committee’s appeal from the judgment in this case renders moot Diaz’s appeal from the trial court’s denial of his motion to vacate the judgment. The judgment that Diaz wishes to have vacated is no longer in effect. Therefore, neither the trial court nor this court can grant him the relief that he requests in his motion to vacate, or in his appeal from the denial of that motion.

(8) “ ‘ “It is this court’s duty ‘ “to decide actual controversies by a judgment which can be carried into effect, and not to give opinions upon moot questions or abstract propositions, or to declare principles or rules of law which cannot affect the matter in issue in the case before it. …” ’ …” … “ ‘When no effective relief can be granted, an appeal is moot and will be dismissed.’ ” ’ ” (Amaral v. Cintas Corp. No. 2 (2008) 163 Cal.App.4th 1157, 1215 [78 Cal. Rptr. 3d 572], citations omitted.) “Accordingly, because our decision on the matter would be academic” (ibid.), we express no opinion as to the trial court’s jurisdiction to consider a filed and pending motion to vacate a judgment after another party has filed a notice of appeal from the same judgment.

 

E. The Coalition’s appeal concerning attorney fees

Our reversal of the judgment and our remand of the case with directions to enter judgment in favor of the Architectural Committee renders moot the Coalition’s consolidated appeal challenging the court’s refusal to award it attorney fees as the prevailing party, since the Coalition is no longer the prevailing party in this litigation. (See Graham v. Scissor-Tail, Inc. (1981) 28 Cal.3d 807, 831 [171 Cal. Rptr. 604, 623 P.2d 165] [consolidated appeal from special order after judgment taxing costs relating to attorney fees dismissed as moot after underlying judgment confirming award of arbitrator was reversed]; see also Oakland Raiders v. Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum, Inc. (2006) 144 Cal.App.4th 1175, 1195 [51 Cal. Rptr. 3d 144] [reversing trial court’s order denying defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, vacating judgment in favor of plaintiff, and dismissing as moot plaintiff’s appeal from a postjudgment order denying attorney fees]; Kreutzer v. City and County of San Francisco (2008) 166 Cal.App.4th 306, 312, fn. 3 [82 Cal. Rptr. 3d 644] [stating that the court would be entering a “separate order in the [defendant’s] attorney fees appeal dismissing it as moot” after reversing a judgment for plaintiff]; Kotla v. Regents of University of California (2004) 115 Cal.App.4th 283, 296, fn. 10 [8 Cal. Rptr. 3d 898] [after reversing judgment and remanding case for new trial, court dismissed as moot defendant’s appeal from postjudgment order awarding attorney fees].)

 

IV. DISPOSITION

The judgment of the trial court is reversed. The case is remanded to the trial court with instructions to enter judgment in favor of the Architectural Committee.

Jess Diaz’s appeal from the denial of his motion to vacate, and the Coalition’s appeal from the denial of its motion for attorney fees, are dismissed.

The Architectural Committee is entitled to costs on appeal for both its appeal and its opposition to the Coalition’s appeal. Diaz is to bear his own costs on appeal.

McConnell, P. J., and McIntyre, J., concurred.


[1] The Costa Serena development was built in seven phases. Each phase was called a “Unit.” As each Unit was completed, a Declaration of Restrictions for that Unit was recorded, so that upon completion of the entire community, seven Declarations of Restrictions existed and seven separate architectural committees were established to enforce the Declaration of Restrictions for each Unit. The Declarations of Restrictions for the Units were essentially identical, and differed only with respect to the properties identified as being subject to the restrictions.

In an attempt to make clear which document and/or documents are being referenced, we will identify the single Declaration of Restrictions that purports to govern the entire Costa Serena community as a whole at the time this lawsuit was filed as the “Unified Declaration of Restrictions” (UDoR). We will refer to the individual Declarations of Restrictions that originally governed the seven separate Costa Serena Units as the Declarations of Restrictions (DoR’s), together, or individually as a Declaration of Restrictions (DoR).

[2] Paragraph 27 involves protecting mortgagers and title insurance companies from the consequences of homeowner breaches of a DoR.

[3] The original DoR’s for the seven Units provided for Architectural Committees consisting of three individuals.

[4] The record does not disclose the relationship between the Architectural Committee and the Costa Serena Community Association, or the various rights and duties of each entity.

[5] There were a total of 696 Costa Serena residences in 2006. Although Costa Serena had 724 residences at the time it was completed in the 1970’s, only 696 Costa Serena residences existed in 2006 because, during the 1990’s, the City of Oceanside took title to and vacated 28 of the original 92 lots in Unit 7 in order to build a road. On appeal, the parties dispute the effect of the City of Oceanside’s ownership of land that formerly represented 28 Costa Serena lots for purposes of determining how many owners would constitute a “majority.”

[6] On our own motion, we take judicial notice of Costa Serena Architectural Committee v. Superior Court (Feb. 28, 2008, D052235), in which we denied the Architectural Committee’s petition for a writ of mandate.

[7] The use of the word “units” in paragraph 28 of the DoR’s is odd, since each phase of the development was referred to as a “unit.” However, in view of the fact that the DoR for each of the seven Units contained paragraph 28, the most reasonable interpretation is that the word “units” in paragraph 28 refers to the “lots” in each Unit.

[8] Without explaining the relevance of the issue, the Coalition raises a question in its brief on appeal as to the legality of the age restriction in the DoR, suggesting that Costa Serena’s age restriction may be illegal under the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Civ. Code, § 51.2) because Costa Serena does not qualify as senior citizen housing—an exception to the Unruh Civil Rights Act’s prohibition against age discrimination. However, the narrow issues presented in this appeal do not include questions relating to Costa Serena’s status as a senior citizen community, or the application of the Unruh Civil Rights Act to Costa Serena’s UDoR. The Coalition did not allege in its complaint that the age restriction in the UDoR is illegal and/or unconstitutional. Rather, the Coalition challenged the validity of a number of amendments to the DoR’s/UDoR and the extension of the UDoR, based on the interpretation and application of the DoR’s/UDoR provisions. In its points and authorities supporting its motion for summary adjudication in the trial court, the Coalition outlines what is and is not at issue in this case:

“Contrary to rhetoric in prior proceedings, this action is not about whether Costa Serena is or is not a senior citizen community! This action is solely about:

“1. Whether the 1987, 1999 and 2006 recorded documents are valid, and

“2. Whether the 2006 election should be permanently enjoined.”

We agree with the Coalition’s position in the trial court and conclude that the legality of the age restriction in the DoR is also not at issue in this appeal.

[9] Further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise indicated.

[10] The court also faulted the Architectural Committee’s evidence in that it demonstrated that the consents “purport to extend the DORs of Unit 7 only, not the DORs of each individual unit.” As a result, the court concluded that the Coalition had demonstrated that the Extension Document “did not sufficiently describe the real property at issue to effect an extension of the DORs for Units 3, 4, and 5,” and, therefore, that there had been no extension of any DoR for any of the Costa Serena Units.

[11] Again, the parties disagree as to the number of owner consents required to extend the UDoR. In support of its motion for summary judgment, the Architectural Committee submitted evidence that during the 1990’s, title to 28 of the original 724 lots in Costa Serena was transferred to Oceanside so that the city could build a road. The Architectural Committee argues that in 2006, there were only 696 voting lots in Costa Serena. If the Architectural Committee is correct, then the number of lot owners needed to consent to an extension is 349. The Coalition asserts that the Architectural Committee has cited no authority for its position that Oceanside’s ownership of the lots altered the number of lots given a vote under the UDoR, and contends that the consent of a majority of 724 voting lots is therefore necessary to effectuate an extension of the UDoR. Under the Coalition’s theory, the number of lot owners needed to consent to an extension of the UDoR is 363. We need not determine whether the relevant number of lots is 724 or 696, however, because the Architectural Committee offered sufficient evidence that it complied with paragraph 16, demonstrating that 375 owners agreed to extend the UDoR. This number constitutes a majority of lot owners under either scenario.

[12] The Coalition suggests that if there exists any “perceived ambiguity” in the UDoR, the Architectural Committee should “not get to benefit from” such ambiguity. The only support that the Coalition offers for this assertion is the following claim: “There is no basis to interpret the Declaration of Restrictions against Respondent [Coalition].” However, since neither of these parties drafted paragraph 16 (which has not been amended since the DoR’s were drafted by the original developer of Costa Serena), neither party should receive a more favorable interpretation by virtue of the fact that it did not draft the language at issue.

[13] We are not convinced that the evidence of the consent forms was required at all, given the fact that the Architectural Committee provided sufficient evidence of a “writing” that met the requirements of paragraph 16, and that the Coalition never challenged the veracity of Devine’s certification that a majority of homeowners in Costa Serena had agreed to extend the DoR. Nevertheless, to the extent that the Coalition’s claims can be seen as a challenge to the sufficiency of Devine’s certification of the Extension Document, these excluded consent forms are relevant, and, as we conclude, the trial court erred in excluding them.

[14] The two exhibits to the Extension Document were recorded on different dates, September 25, 2006, and November 22, 2006.

[15] The Coalition made the same foundation objection to every consent form to which it objected. However, because the trial court sustained the Coalition’s objections to only some of the consent forms, we infer that the court did not exclude these forms on the ground that they lacked foundation. To the extent that the court may have sustained some of the Coalition’s objections on foundational grounds, this would have been an abuse of discretion, since the Architectural Committee laid the same foundation for the excluded forms as for the forms that the court did not exclude.