Court Opinion

ID: 4582994
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-02 21:19:22.870513+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:47:23.938362
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

BIRNEY DEMPCY and MARIE
DEMPCY, husband and wife, and their            No. 79697-6-I
marital community,
                                               DIVISION ONE
                    Appellants,
                                               UNPUBLISHED OPINION
              v.

CHRIS AVENIUS and NELA
AVENIUS, husband and wife, and their
marital community; JACK SHANNON,
an individual; and RADEK ZEMEL, an
individual,

                    Respondents.

      APPELWICK, J. — Dempcy’s neighbors voted to remove a tennis court from

property owned in common by the parties. Dempcy sued to stop the removal. He

appeals the trial court’s grant of summary judgment for the defendants that the

removal vote complied with applicable CC&Rs. We affirm.

                                   FACTS

      Birney and Marie Dempcy, Chris and Nela Aveniuses, Jack Shannon, and

Radek Zemel own the four properties that make up the Pickle Point neighborhood

in Bellevue. Each neighbor owns their own property, as well as an interest in a

common area that abuts the properties. Maintenance of the common area is

governed by the protective covenants, restrictions, easements, and agreements

for the Pickle Point Association (CC&Rs). The CC&Rs establish an “Architectural
No. 79697-6-I/2

Control Committee” (ACC) to make maintenance decisions and assessments for

the common area. The ACC is made up of one member representing each parcel

owner other than the common parcel. The common property includes a tennis

court that sits directly adjacent to the Dempcy property. The tennis court has fallen

into a state of disrepair.

       Dempcy has been discussing maintenance of the tennis court with his

neighbors since at least 2003. At that time, the neighbors decided to put off

maintenance for financial reasons. Dempcy again sought to perform extensive

maintenance on the court from 2010-2013. Again, the neighbors decided to defer

maintenance. Around that time, ownership of two of the parcels changed. The

Aveniuses purchased one of the properties in 2012. Zemel moved into another

property around the same time.

       On May 18, 2013, the ACC met again to discuss maintenance of the

common area. All owners from Pickle Point attended. They discussed the tennis

court. That discussion centered on the question of whether to repair the court or

remove it. Dempcy communicated during the meeting that he was not sure what

to do “given the feeling of others that there is little interest in having a tennis court.”

Dempcy nevertheless discussed how many votes it would take to resurface the

court versus removing it. The minutes from that meeting indicate that the question

of whether to repair or remove the court had been discussed at previous meetings.

Shannon produced a bid from a contractor at the meeting to remove the tennis

court for $11,425.

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       On May 27, 2013, Avenius sent an e-mail to the other owners with another

cost estimate for removing the court. That estimate put the total cost of replacing

the tennis court with a green space at $19,120. He sent another e-mail on June

12, 2013 with sketches of how a new green area would look compared to the

current tennis court. Dempcy sent an e-mail to the other owners later that day. In

the e-mail, he described two “alternatives” for what could be done with the court.

The first plan would be to maintain the tennis court “as required by the [c]ovenants.”

The second would be to create a green space in place of the tennis court. Dempcy

recommended the committee, “vote on the second plan” at the next ACC meeting.

       The ACC met again on June 22, 2013. At the meeting, Dempcy proposed

an assessment on the owners to fund repair of the tennis court. Dempcy argued

that such repairs were “ordinary maintenance of a tennis court” and presented an

expert opinion supporting that contention. The three other owners voted against

the assessment. They believed that such maintenance was “extraordinary” rather

than “ordinary” and thus was subject to a different section of the CC&Rs. The

other three owners also reiterated that they did not want to keep the tennis court

and would rather convert the area to a greenbelt.

       On July 9, 2013, Dempcy sent an e-mail to the other owners asking to be

removed from any further discussion of common area maintenance. He indicated

that he and his wife had “turned this matter over to our attorney.” On July 17, 2013,

Shannon sent an e-mail to the other owners calling for an ACC meeting to take

place on July 23. His proposed agenda did not include discussion of the tennis

court. Dempcy responded to the e-mail indicating that he would not attend the

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meeting. However, he asked the ACC to consider tennis court maintenance at the

meeting.

      The ACC met on July 23, 2013. Shannon, Avenius, and Zemel were

present. The owners tried to call Dempcy into the meeting, but were unsuccessful.

A lengthy discussion of the tennis court occurred at the meeting. The owners voted

3-11 that Dempcy’s proposed maintenance was “extraordinary maintenance”

rather than “ordinary maintenance.” Their stated reason for this determination was

that the maintenance differed from the regular maintenance that had been

occurring on the court, and that there was no budget for the type of maintenance

that Dempcy proposed. They specifically noted that their interpretation was made

in good faith, though it differed from Dempcy’s, and that Dempcy could still

accomplish the maintenance through a different section of the CC&Rs. They noted

in the minutes that a determination by the ACC interpreting a term in the CC&Rs

was final and binding.

      The owners present then voted to remove the tennis court. They charged

Avenius and Zemel with developing and proposing a plan to do so. The owners

expected the plan to be executed in a three to five year time frame.

      Dempcy then commenced this suit against the other owners on November

4, 2013.   He sought a declaratory judgment that the tennis court must be

maintained and could not be destroyed or removed. The other owners filed a

      1  The minutes do not indicate which owners voted for and against. They
also do not explain how four owners voted when only three owners were in
attendance. Presumably, the owners recorded Dempcy as a “no” vote based on
his previously stated position on the issue.

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No. 79697-6-I/5

motion for partial summary judgment. They sought to have the common area

partitioned. They also sought a declaration that two of the four property owners

could agree to changes to the common area, and dismissal of Dempcy’s request

of declaratory judgment. The trial court granted the motion.

       Dempcy appealed to this court. Dempcy v. Avenius, No. 73369-9-I, slip op.

at 3 (Wash. Ct. App. April, 3, 2017) (unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.gov/

opinions/pdf/733699.pdf.      We concluded that trial court erred in ordering the

common property partitioned. Id. at 6-7. We also found that the CC&Rs do not

require that the tennis court must remain on the property in perpetuity. Id. at 9.

We found that the ACC had authority to remove the court, but that such removal

would qualify as an “extraordinary maintenance or capital improvemen[t] to the

common property.” Id. at 9-10. Such a decision would be subject to approval of

two votes of the ACC. Id. at 10. Due to an inadequate record on appeal, we

remanded the question of whether the ACC had appropriately exercised its

authority to the trial court. Id. at 10.

       On remand, the other owners filed a summary judgment motion seeking a

declaration that the ACC had properly exercised its authority to eliminate the tennis

court. Dempcy opposed the motion. He also requested the court grant summary

judgment that the ACC be required to undertake his proposed repairs of the tennis

court immediately. The trial court granted the other owners’ motion for summary

judgment and denied Dempcy’s request for summary judgment.

       Dempcy appeals.

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No. 79697-6-I/6

                                    DISCUSSION

       Dempcy assigns four errors. First, he argues the trial court erred in finding

the ACC properly exercised its authority to eliminate the tennis court. Second, he

claims the trial court erred in declining to address whether the ACC was obliged to

order his proposed repairs to the tennis court. Third, he argues the trial court erred

in failing to find the other owners acted in bad faith by defining his proposed repairs

as “extraordinary” maintenance. Last, he claims the trial court erred in granting

the other owners’ attorney fees and costs and denying his request for attorney fees

and costs. Both sides request fees and costs on appeal.

       We review summary judgment rulings de novo, viewing all facts and

reasonable inferences from the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving

party. Christensen v. Grant County Hosp. Dist. No. 1, 152 Wash. 2d 299, 305, 96
P.3d 957 (2004). Summary judgment is appropriate where there are no genuine

issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of

law. CR 56(c). The primary goal in interpreting covenants is to determine the

intent or purpose of the covenants. Hollis v. Garwall, Inc., 137 Wash. 2d 683, 695,

974 P.2d 836 (1999). Courts are to determine the drafter’s intent by examining the

clear and unambiguous language of the covenant. Bauman v. Turpen, 139 Wn.

App. 78, 88-89, 160 P.3d 1050 (2007). Extrinsic evidence may be relevant in

discerning that intent, where the evidence gives meaning to words used. Hollis,
137 Wash. 2d at 695.

  I.   Removal of the Tennis Court

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No. 79697-6-I/7

       Dempcy claims the trial court erred in finding the ACC properly exercised

its authority to eliminate the tennis court. He argues that because removal of the

tennis court constitutes “extraordinary maintenance or capital improvements,” the

CC&Rs required the ACC to fulfill certain procedural requirements, which the ACC

failed to do.

       Dempcy argues that the decision to remove the tennis court is governed by

§ 5.6 of the CC&Rs. That section provides,

       If the Committee determines that a special assessment is necessary
       for the extraordinary maintenance of or capital improvements to the
       common property, the Committee shall send notice of special
       assessment to the owners of all parcels. This notice shall include a
       statement of the reasons such an assessment is necessary, the
       amount to be assessed, the method of payment proposed by the
       Committee, and the date and place for a meeting to discuss such a
       special assessment. This meeting shall be held no sooner than thirty
       (30) days from the date of the notice of special assessment. The
       meeting will be conducted according to the rules adopted by the
       Committee, and the owner of each parcel shall be entitled to one vote
       for each parcel. Approval of the special assessment shall require
       consent of 50% of the Parcels excluding Parcel 5.

       Respondents argue that § 5.6 is inapplicable because no assessment has

been made. Dempcy does not dispute that no assessment has been made. He

argues instead that § 5.6 is the “only basis for undertaking such extraordinary

maintenance or capital improvement.”

       The clear and unambiguous language of § 5.6 refers only to assessments.

It is entitled “Special Assessments.” Its requirements include informing other

owners of the “amount to be assessed” and the “method of payment.” Thus, the

most reasonable reading of the section is that it applied only to the decision to

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No. 79697-6-I/8

assess owners an amount of money to pay for extraordinary maintenance or

capital improvements, not the initial decision to undertake such improvements.2

       This reading is supported by extrinsic evidence. Namely, the minutes from

ACC meetings, and the parties’ communications with one another indicate that

they believed that the requirements § 5.6 were triggered only when an assessment

was to be made, and not before. Though the parties communicated at length

regarding the tennis court in e-mail and in ACC meetings, nobody asserted that

the requirements of § 5.6 needed to be followed in order for those discussions to

begin. Dempcy advocated for a vote on a plan to replace the tennis court in an e-

mail to the owners in advance of the June 22 ACC meeting. He did not claim that

such a vote would require compliance with § 5.6. The only communication in the

record that explicitly invokes § 5.6 and attempts to comply with its procedural

requirements is a July 23 e-mail calling for a meeting to assess costs on members

to complete a retaining wall.

       The owners, in interpreting the CC&Rs during the July 23 meeting,

recognized that any plan to repurpose the tennis court into a green space would

require a special assessment vote under § 5.6. But, the owners proceeded to

approve a motion indicating they no longer wished to have a tennis court in the

commons. They indicated that this plan would be executed in a three to five year

timeframe. This course of action is consistent with their understanding that the

       2The CC&Rs give the ACC general authority over maintenance and upkeep
of the common area. They also give it limited authority over the four parcels to
accomplish the goals of the CC&Rs.

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No. 79697-6-I/9

only step in the planning process that required compliance with § 5.6 was the

actual assessment of money on the owners to pay a contractor to begin the work.

       We find that § 5.6 of the CC&Rs applies only to assessments, not an initial

vote to remove the tennis court.

       This court previously recognized that the ACC had authority to remove the

tennis court if two owners so voted. Dempcy, slip op. at 9-10. There is no dispute

that three owners voted to remove the tennis court on July 23, 2013. Because §

5.6 does not apply to that initial decision, nothing else was required of the members

ACC to appropriately exercise its authority.

       It is also clear that the ACC weighed all reasonable options before making

a decision to remove the tennis court. The ACC specifically considered whether

to leave the tennis court as is, repair it, convert it to a grassy area, or reallocate

ownership. Dempcy submitted a bid from a contractor reflecting the cost of repair.

Shannon produced a bid reflecting the cost of removal. Avenius produced a bid

and drawings of different plans to convert the court to a green space. The ACC

discussed that failing to do anything about the court would decrease the value of

all members’ properties. After considering the three options, members of the ACC

determined that removing the tennis court would best serve their interests.

       We affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment that the ACC properly

exercised its authority to remove the tennis court.

 II.   Maintenance of the Tennis Court

       Dempcy argues that the trial court erred in declining to address his

argument that his proposed repairs to the tennis court were “ordinary” maintenance

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No. 79697-6-I/10

that the property owners were required to fund.         He argues that this court

remanded that issue to the trial court, along with the question of whether the ACC

appropriately exercised its authority to remove the court. He points to the following

language from this court’s previous opinion:

              We leave to the trial court the question or whether the ACC
       has exercised its authority to eliminate the tennis court. Whether the
       tennis court is to be maintained or replaced, all owners are entitled
       to have the action taken in a reasonable and timely manner,
       overseen by the trial court if necessary. It would be no more
       acceptable for the ACC to leave the common property in a state of
       perpetual construction than to leave it in a state of perpetual
       disrepair. We remand to the trial court for further proceedings
       regarding the ACC’s maintenance of the common property.

Dempcy, slip op. at 10. The parties agree that the paragraph remands the issue

of whether the ACC appropriately exercised its authority to remove the tennis

court. Dempcy argues that the last sentence remands an additional question:

whether the ACC was required to order resurfacing of the tennis court as “ordinary

maintenance.” “Ordinary maintenance” is mandatory under the CC&Rs.

       This court did not remand two issues. Rather, this court remanded the

single question of whether the tennis court was to be repaired or replaced.

Dempcy, slip op. at 10. The resolution of that question determined the path forward

on the other issues. If the ACC had in fact exercised its authority to remove the

court, it would not also be required to resurface it before it was removed. Such an

expense would be a waste. Ordinary maintenance would remain necessary should

the removal be delayed significantly. We encouraged the trial court on remand to

supervise a timely resolution, if necessary. Id. But, Dempcy does not allege that

delay in removal of the tennis court requires ordinary maintenance in the

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No. 79697-6-I/11

meantime. He challenges only the decision to remove rather than resurface the

tennis court.

       Dempcy argues that the ACC’s determination was not made in good faith.

He argues that a “maintenance assessment” is understood to be an assessment

“for the purpose of keeping an improvement in working order.” So, he argues that

whatever amount was necessary to keep the tennis court in working order must be

“ordinary maintenance.” He also produced an expert report indicating that outdoor

tennis courts in Western Washington must be resurfaced every five to eight years.3

But, the ACC had not done what Dempcy describes as ordinary maintenance for

many years prior to the change in ownership and makeup of the ACC. The dispute

here is not about the word “maintenance.” The ACC’s interpretation differentiated

between two different types of maintenance: ordinary and extraordinary.

       Under § 6.6 of the CC&Rs, the ACC has authority to interpret the terms in

the CC&Rs. The ACC explicitly exercised that authority in its July 23, 2013

meeting to interpret “ordinary maintenance” to include only that work that was

ordinarily done to the tennis court on a yearly basis. It determined that resurfacing

would be considered “extraordinary maintenance” governed by § 5.6. Section 6.6

provides that the ACC’s good faith interpretations of the CC&Rs are final and

binding.

       3 The expert described resurfacing as “ordinary maintenance.” Dempcy
also apparently shared this expert’s opinion with the ACC. While the ACC was
certainly free to consider this opinion in interpreting the CC&Rs, it was not obliged
to agree with it. The CC&Rs give authority to the ACC to interpret the CC&Rs.
The only limitation on this authority is that it be exercised in good faith.

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No. 79697-6-I/12

       The ACC differentiated resurfacing from ordinary maintenance because

there was no approved budget for such maintenance. It also differentiated such

maintenance because it was different than the maintenance that had been

occurring on a yearly basis. “Ordinary” means “in the usual course of events” or

“being of frequent occurrence.” WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY

1586 (2002).    An interpretation that differentiates between maintenance that

occurs yearly and that which must occur every five to eight years fits within that

definition. And, it is appropriate for the ACC to consider the maintenance cost in

its interpretation because the terms it was interpreting were from sections of the

CC&Rs that deal with assessing costs on owners. That the CC&Rs impose

additional procedural requirements on “extraordinary” maintenance is most likely

because those costs would be a greater financial burden on the owners. The ACC

was aware of its obligation to act in good faith. It considered Dempcy’s option, it

made a decision, and specifically noted that it made its determination in good faith.

       Dempcy nevertheless argues that the other owners acted in bad faith,

because they did not want to have the tennis court and so did not want to spend

money to repair it. But, a decision to remove the tennis court is squarely within the

ACC’s authority. Dempcy, slip op. at 9-10. The ACC exercised that authority. It

was reasonable at that point to determine that resurfacing of the court was not

necessary if the court was going to be removed. Dempcy has not demonstrated

bad faith by the ACC members.

       The trial court did not err in finding the ACC members acted in good faith,

nor in declining to order maintenance rather than removal of the tennis court.

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III.   Attorney Fees

       Dempcy argues the trial court erred in granting the other owners’ attorney

fees and denying him attorney fees and costs below. Both sides request attorney

fees and costs on appeal. Secton 6.1 of the CC&Rs states that the “prevailing

party in any action brought to enforce the covenants . . . shall have the right to

collect attorney[] fees, court costs, and other expenses of litigation.” The parties

do not dispute that § 6.1 entitles the prevailing party to fees and costs below and

on appeal. Because we affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment for the

respondents, we also affirm the award of attorney fees and costs, and grant the

same for this appeal.

WE CONCUR:

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