The recent, unpublished opinion in Klein v. Nyamthi (2012) illustrates that owners may bring such enforcement actions in certain circumstances and may also recover their attorney’s fees should they prevail.
In Klein, the Defendant was violating the HOA’s CC&Rs by not fixing a landscape grading problem which ultimately caused his neighbor’s (the Plaintiff’s) home to sustain flooding damage. The Defendant violated the maintenance and nuisance provisions of the HOA’s CC&Rs by not “plant[ing] and water[ing] the slopes of [his] property, or otherwise maintain[ing] it in such a manner” as to prevent erosion and potential flooding. In recognizing that CC&Rs essentially constitute a contract between each of the owners and the HOA, the court highlighted the fact that CC&Rs are “enforceable by the owner of any lot in the development” pursuant to Civil Code Section 1354(a). Moreover, because the Plaintiff prevailed “in an action to enforce [the] CC&Rs,” in accordance with Civil Code Section 1354(c), the court ruled that the Plaintiff was “entitled to recover [attorney’s fees] as a matter of right.”
The Civil Code does provide owners the general right to enforce their Association’s CC&Rs against neighboring owners and the Association itself. However, some CC&Rs may contain provisions which limit or otherwise affect this right in certain situations. As a general rule, it is best for an owner to defer to the enforcement efforts of her Association and its Board of Directors when violations of the CC&Rs exist. Exercising “self-help” should be a measure of last resort in the rare instances where the Association is either unable or unwilling to comply with its enforcement obligations. |