COUNSEL
Pray, Price, Williams & Picking, William A. Williams and Jay H.
Picking for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Crowell & Moring and Steven P. Rice for Defendants and Respondents
Carol Franz, Richard Braun, Edmund Brian Marineau, Clara M.
Vanderzee-Bos, Edmund Loritz, and Jacklyn E. Shaw.
Matison & Margolese and Wayne Hunkins for Defendant and Respondent
David Lyon.
Fiore, Racobs & Powers, Richard S. Fiore, John R. MacDowell, and
Alejandro Portales for Amici Curiae Seal Beach Mutual Nos. One-Twelve
and Fifteen --Seventeen.
Shannon M. Walpole; Bell, Rosenberg & Hughes and Robert Rosenberg
for Amicus Curiae Golden Rain Foundation of Walnut Creek. [163
Cal.App.4th 1144]
OPINION
IKOLA, J.-
Plaintiff Golden Rain Foundation (GRF) appeals from a judgment for
defendants Carol Franz, Richard Braun, Edmund Brian Marineau, Clara M.
Vanderzee-Bos, Edmund Loritz, Jacklyn E. Shaw, and David Lyon. The court
found that GRF is an "association" subject to the Davis-Stirling Common
Interest Development Act (Civ. Code, § 1350 et seq.) (the
Davis-Stirling Act). fn.
1 We agree, and affirm.
FACTSGRF and Leisure World
GRF is a California nonprofit corporation formed in 1961. Its articles
of incorporation state that it was formed "[t]o engage primarily and
specifically in providing services and furnishing community facilities
to housing operated on a cooperative or other basis and to the occupants
thereof." To that end, GRF sponsored and formed 16 entities known as
Seal Beach Mutual Nos. One through Seventeen (the Mutuals) -- there is
no Mutual No. Thirteen. Mutuals Nos. One through Sixteen are California
corporations formed as stock cooperatives. Mutual No. Seventeen is a
California nonprofit mutual benefit corporation formed as a condominium
project. GRF sold parcels of property in Seal Beach to the Mutuals,
which built multi-unit residential buildings and associated common areas
on them.
GRF is the trustee of the Golden Rain Foundation Trust, created by a
declaration of trust recorded in 1962. The declaration provides,
"[GRF's] present and proposed operations include (but are not limited
to): [¶] (1) Sponsorship of TRUSTOR and other corporations formed
primarily to provide cooperative apartment housing within the area of
540 acres more or less now known as Rossmoor Leisure World in Seal
Beach, California . . . ." The original trustor and beneficiary is Seal
Beach Mutual No. One. The declaration contemplates that each other
Mutual may "become an additional trustor and beneficiary hereunder by . .
. adopting and agreeing to the terms [163 Cal.App.4th 1145] of
this instrument." Every Mutual has since adopted the terms of the
declaration of trust and is bound by it.
Pursuant to the declaration of trust, GRF retains title as trustee to
"common facilities" for the benefit of the Mutuals. The common
facilities include the streets needed to access the residential
buildings, administration buildings, utility lines, a golf course, a
clubhouse, and other property. GRF maintains the common facilities, as
required by the declaration, and makes them available to the Mutuals'
residents. GRF also owns nontrust property including a library and other
facilities made available to the residents.
Collectively, the property owned by the Mutuals, the property to which
GRF holds title as trustee, and the nontrust property owned by GRF, is
commonly known as Seal Beach Leisure World, or simply Leisure World. fn.
2 Leisure World is a prominent senior citizen community. A person
wishing to live in Leisure World must buy a share of Mutual stock (or a
condominium unit in Mutual No. Seventeen) and join GRF. Residents enter
into written occupancy agreements with their Mutuals.
While the Mutuals are contractually responsible for maintaining their
residential buildings and common areas, they rely upon GRF to perform
management and maintenance services. The declaration of trust provides,
"[GRF] shall perform for the benefit of all [the Mutuals] and their
members all duties imposed upon [GRF] under separate written Agreement
with . . . Mutual No. One and under any other written agreements of
similar nature hereinafter entered into by [GRF] with other [Mutuals]."
The management agreement with Mutual No. One requires GRF to, among
other things, oversee final construction of the residential buildings,
pay the mortgages, maintain the Mutual's buildings and grounds, contract
for utilities and "other necessary services," maintain insurance,
comply with requests by governmental authorities, coordinate each
resident's relocation, inspect each unit, handle the residents' service
requests, collect the residents' monthly assessments, allocate the
collected funds to specified reserve and expense accounts, pay all
operating and maintenance expenses, maintain the Mutual's records and
books, submit accountings to the Mutual, prepare the Mutual's operating
budgets, and otherwise "operate and maintain the Project according to
the highest standards achievable . . . ." Longstanding management
agreements require GRF to provide a host of similar services to the
other Mutuals. GRF [163 Cal.App.4th 1146] stated in its 2003
Annual Report, "[t]he sole purpose for the existence of [GRF] is to
provide management, accounting and maintenance services to the sixteen
mutual corporations and to care for the community facilities."
The declaration of trust and the written management agreements allow GRF
to charge the Mutuals for its management services, at cost and for no
profit, and similarly to charge the residents for costs incurred
maintaining the common facilities. GRF incorporates these charges into a
monthly assessment. The residents pay their monthly assessment directly
to GRF.
Each November, GRF sends an annual letter to each resident. The letter
contains GRF's budget, the budget for the recipient's Mutual, legal
disclosures, alternative dispute resolution provisions, and other
information. GRF acknowledges in the letters that it is required to send
them by the Davis-Stirling Act. In at least one letter, GRF refers to
the residents as "owner[s] in a Common Interest Development under [the
Davis-Stirling] Act" and states, "Leisure World Seal Beach, [GRF], and
the [Mutuals] are subject to a California law known as the 'Common
Interest Development Law,' also known as the 'Davis-Stirling Common
Interest Development Act.'"
The letters instruct residents contemplating legal action against GRF to
comply with the Davis-Stirling Act's alternative dispute resolution
provisions. GRF states in the letters, in reference to those provisions,
"[t]he association herein referred to relates to[,] as to the Mutual
Corporations, the Mutual, and as [to] the Golden Rain Foundation, the
Foundation."
The Litigation
Defendants are among the 9,000 residents of Leisure World and members of
GRF. They sought various documents from GRF pursuant to the
Davis-Stirling Act and other statutes. GRF refused the document
requests. Defendants initiated small claims actions, in which the courts
found GRF wrongly withheld the documents and awarded damages to
defendants. The Superior Court affirmed these decisions.
GRF, undeterred, filed this action to obtain a declaration it is not
subject to penalties pursuant to the Davis-Stirling Act for failing to
produce the requested documents. Though GRF produced the documents
before trial, the parties continued to seek a declaration whether GRF is
an "association" pursuant to the Davis-Stirling Act. The court
conducted a bench trial, received lengthy stipulations of fact and over
150 stipulated exhibits, and heard live testimony. It issued a 20-page
statement of decision, finding that GRF is an "association" governed by
the Davis-Stirling Act. It entered judgment accordingly. [163
Cal.App.4th 1147]
DISCUSSION
GRF contends the court wrongly found it is an association subject to the
Davis-Stirling Act. This issue turns largely on the nature of GRF's
relationship to Leisure World and whether Leisure World is a common
interest development pursuant to the act. We defer to the court's
factual findings regarding the relationship between GRF and Leisure
World when they are supported by substantial evidence, but independently
construe the act. (Benninghoff v. Superior Court (2006) 136
Cal.App.4th 61, 66.)
Our Supreme Court has explained the advance of the common interest
development. "[C]ondominiums, 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. [Citations.] 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 . . . ." (Nahrstedt
v. Lakeside Village Condominium Assn. (1994) 8
Cal.4th 361, 370 (Nahrstedt).)
"In California, common interest developments are subject to the
provisions of the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act . . . .
The Act, passed into law in 1985, consolidated in one part of the Civil
Code certain definitions and other substantive provisions pertaining to
condominiums and other types of common interest developments.
[Citation.] [¶] The Act enumerates the specific shared ownership
arrangements that fall under the rubric 'common interest development.'
[Citation.] It also sets out the requirements for establishing a common
interest development [and] grants to the owners association of the
development those powers necessary to the development's long-term
operation . . . ." (Nahrstedt, supra, 8 Cal.4th at pp.
377-378, fn. omitted.)
The Davis-Stirling Act defines an "association" as "a nonprofit
corporation or unincorporated association created for the purpose of
managing a common interest development." (§ 1351, subd. (a).) GRF
concedes it is a nonprofit corporation. The issues remaining are whether
GRF was "created for the purpose of managing" Leisure World, and
whether Leisure World is a common interest development. [163
Cal.App.4th 1148]
Substantial Evidence Supports the Finding GRF Was Created To Manage
Leisure World
GRF's governing documents support the court's finding that "the only
purpose GRF has ever had, from its inception to the present, is to
manage Leisure World." GRF's articles of incorporation explain that it
was formed "[t]o engage primarily and specifically in providing services
and furnishing community facilities to housing operated on a
cooperative or other basis and to the occupants thereof" -- i.e., to
provide services to the Mutuals and the residents. The declaration of
trust similarly provides that GRF was "formed primarily for the purpose
of providing services and furnishing community facilities" to the
Mutuals and the residents. According to the declaration, GRF's
operations include sponsoring the Mutuals, conveying their parcels to
them, constructing the common facilities for them, and maintaining the
common facilities for the Mutuals and the residents. The declaration
further provides it was executed to guarantee "the operation and
management" of the common facilities by GRF.
GRF's management agreements with the Mutuals bolster the court's
conclusion. The declaration of trust provides, "[GRF] shall perform for
the benefit of all [the Mutuals] and their members all duties imposed
upon [GRF] under separate written Agreement with . . . Mutual No. One
and under any other written agreements of similar nature hereinafter
entered into by [GRF] with other [Mutuals]." An attached agreement
provides, "[GRF] shall operate and manage the community facilities and
maintain and repair the private streets, and provide administrative,
recreational and medical services for the benefit of the members of the
[Mutuals] at cost and on a nonprofit basis." Subsequent management
agreements require GRF to provide the Mutuals with the long list of
management services noted above, such as maintaining their files,
handling their finances and banking, and providing their property
management services.
GRF's administrator confirmed it manages the Mutuals. He testified GRF
has entered into a management agreement with each Mutual, whereby GRF
provides "[a]dministrative services, maintenance services, accounting
services, security, transportation, rule enforcement, and various other
administrative functions for stockholder-related activities." He further
testified GRF provides management services including stock transfer
services, file maintenance, and contract supervision. While GRF has 225
employees to carry out its managerial duties, the administrator conceded
the Mutuals have no staff to perform administrative functions.
Unsurprisingly, the parties stipulated GRF performs most, if not all, of
the Mutual's administrative duties. They stipulated GRF provides
contract management, property management, financial, payroll, file
maintenance, and stock [163 Cal.App.4th 1149] transfer services
to the Mutuals. They further stipulated GRF has a staff of more than 200
administrators, property managers, and other personnel; the Mutuals
have no permanent staff. Equally important is what GRF does not
do. GRF does not have any independent operations other than servicing
the Mutuals and maintaining the common facilities. The parties
stipulated, "[GRF] has no other business except that which relates to
Seal Beach Leisure World."
Finally, GRF has acknowledged it was created to manage Leisure World. It
stated in its 2003 annual report, "[t]he sole purpose for the existence
of [GRF] is to provide management, accounting and maintenance services
to the sixteen mutual corporations and to care for the community
facilities." Going a step further, GRF has even acknowledged it is an
"association" subject to the Davis-Stirling Act. It stated in a letter
to the residents, "Leisure World Seal Beach, [GRF], and the [Mutuals]
are subject to a California law known as the 'Common Interest
Development Law,' also known as the 'Davis-Stirling Common Interest
Development Act.'" It repeatedly stated in its alternative dispute
resolution letters to residents sent pursuant to the Davis-Stirling Act,
"[t]he association herein referred to relates to[,] as to the Mutual
Corporations, the Mutual, and as [to] the Golden Rain Foundation, the
Foundation."
GRF unpersuasively contends it does not manage Leisure World because it
does not manage the Mutuals' residential buildings and common areas. It
notes the declaration of trust requires GRF to manage only the common
facilities, not the Mutuals' property. It further notes the Mutuals'
articles of incorporation and bylaws require them to manage their own
property. Finally, GRF claims it was not "created for the purpose" of
managing Leisure World because it entered the management contracts after
its creation; moreover, the management contracts can be terminated.
GRF exalts form over substance. Managing the Mutuals was at the core of
GRF's formation. Its articles of incorporation provide it will "engage
primarily and specifically in providing services and furnishing
community facilities" to the Mutuals and their residents. (Italics
added.) The declaration of trust provides GRF was "formed primarily for the
purpose of providing services and furnishing community facilities"
to the Mutuals and the residents. (Italics added.) The same three
persons formed both GRF and Seal Beach Mutual No. 1 and, less than three
months after Seal Beach Mutual No. 1 transferred the first soon-to-be
Leisure World property to the trust by recording the declaration of
trust, one of those persons executed the first GRF-Mutual management
agreement on behalf of both GRF and Seal Beach Mutual No. 1. Similar
management agreements between GRF and the other Mutuals followed
thereafter." The management agreements require GRF to manage the
residential buildings and perform substantially all administrative
functions. GRF in fact provides all those services for the Mutuals; it
has no other business. As GRF aptly conceded in its annual report,
"[t]he sole purpose for the existence of [GRF] is to provide management,
accounting and maintenance services [163 Cal.App.4th 1150] to
the sixteen mutual corporations and to care for the community
facilities.
[1] In sum, substantial evidence shows GRF was created to manage the
Mutuals' residential buildings, their common areas, and its own common
facilities. The court correctly found GRF was created to manage Leisure
World.
GRF alternatively contends that it manages Leisure World as an agent of
the Mutuals, not as an association. The Davis-Stirling Act defines a
"managing agent" as "a person or entity who, for compensation or in
expectation of compensation, exercises control over the assets of a
common interest development." (§ 1363.1, subd. (b).) But the declaration
of trust bars GRF from receiving any compensation for managing the
common facilities, other than recouping its expenses on an at-cost
basis. It provides that GRF "shall receive no profits or other
compensation for any of its services rendered as trustee, but shall
receive full reimbursement for its costs . . . ." And GRF does more than
merely provide management services. It holds title to common facilities
pursuant to the declaration of trust. GRF's own expert witness on the
customs and practices of common interest developments conceded at trial
that GRF is "unique." To his knowledge, no other purported management
company for a common interest development holds title to property in the
community it manages, charges initiation fees to residents, or requires
residents to acquire a membership in the management company.
The Court Correctly Found Leisure World is a Common Interest
Development
Because substantial evidence supports the finding GRF is a nonprofit
association created to manage Leisure World Seal Beach, we now
independently construe the Davis-Stirling Act to decide whether the
court correctly found Leisure World is a common interest development.
Three provisions of that act are relevant: sections 1351, 1352, and
1353.
[2] Section 1351 defines "[c]ommon interest development" as "any of the
following: [¶] (1) A community apartment project. [¶] (2) A condominium
project. [¶] (3) A planned development. [¶] (4) A stock cooperative." (§
1351, subd. (c).) Leisure World comprises one condominium project and
15 stock cooperatives, satisfying the Act's definition of common
interest development. GRF contends a common interest development cannot
comprise a complex of condominiums and stock cooperatives, but it
offers no support for this construction. Moreover, another provision of
the Davis-Stirling Act expressly contemplates that a common interest
development may comprise "a community apartment project, condominium
project, planned development, stock cooperative, or combination
thereof." (§ 1353, subd. (a)(1), italics added.) [163 Cal.App.4th
1151]
Section 1352 conditions the creation of a common interest development
upon (1) the conveyance of certain interests, and (2) the recordation of
certain documents. It provides, "This title applies and a common
interest development is created whenever a separate interest coupled
with an interest in the common area or membership in the association is,
or has been, conveyed, provided, all of the following are recorded: [¶]
(a) A declaration. [¶] (b) A condominium plan, if any exists. [¶] (c) A
final map or parcel map, if Division 2 (commencing with Section 66410)
of Title 7 of the Government Code requires the recording of either a
final map or parcel map for the common interest development." (§ 1352.)
Leisure World meets these conditions.
[3] First, Leisure World residents are conveyed the required "separate
interest coupled with an interest in the common area or membership in
the association . . . ." (§ 1352.) A separate interest in a condominium
means "an individual unit," i.e., an interest in space within boundaries
described on a recorded parcel map or condominium plan. (§ 1351, subds.
(f).) A separate interest in a stock cooperative means "the exclusive
right to occupy a portion of the real property," as "evidenced by a
share of stock, a certificate of membership, or otherwise." (§ 1351,
subds. (l)(4), (m).) Each resident of Leisure World's condominium
receives exclusive title to a specific condominium unit, as described on
a recorded condominium plan. Each resident of Leisure World's stock
cooperatives receives a share of stock in their Mutual and the exclusive
right to occupy a unit pursuant to an occupancy agreement. Thus, each
resident receives an appropriate separate interest. And each separate
interest is "coupled with . . . membership in the association" --
namely, GRF. (§ 1352.)
Second, the necessary documents have been recorded. A condominium plan
was recorded for Mutual No. Seventeen in 1980, and amended pursuant to a
recorded document in 1982. (§ 1352, subd. (b).) Subdivision maps for
the tracts containing Mutual Nos. One through Twelve and Fourteen
through Sixteen were also recorded. The Seal Beach city engineer stamped
each recorded subdivision map, certifying that "all provisions of the
Subdivision Map Act . . . have been complied with." The Subdivision Map
Act is codified at title 7, division 2 of the Government Code section
66410 et seq. (§ 1352, subd. (c).)
The only necessary document remaining is a "declaration." (§ 1352, subd.
(a).) The Davis-Stirling Act defines "declaration" as "the document,
however denominated, which contains the information required by Section
1353." (§ 1351, subd. (h).) Section 1353, subdivision (a)(1), provides,
"A declaration, recorded on or after January 1, 1986, shall contain a
legal description of the common interest development, and a statement
that the common interest development is a community apartment project,
condominium project, planned development, stock cooperative, or
combination [163 Cal.App.4th 1152] thereof. The declaration shall
additionally set forth the name of the association and the restrictions
on the use or enjoyment of any portion of the common interest
development that are intended to be enforceable equitable servitudes." fn.
3 Section 1353, subdivision (b), provides, "The declaration may
contain any other matters the original signator of the declaration or
the owners consider appropriate."
[4] While section 1353 sets strict standards for declarations recorded
in or after 1986, it imposes no such requirements for declarations
recorded before 1986. At most, it implies the declaration must be
recorded and may contain any matter deemed "appropriate." (§ 1353, subd.
(b).) This is no accident. The Davis-Stirling Act "governs common
interest developments that predate its enactment." (Nahrstedt, supra,
8 Cal.4th at p. 378, fn. 8.) As originally enacted in 1985, section
1353 imposed the same requirements on all common interest development
declarations, even those that had already been recorded. (Former § 1353;
Stats. 1985, ch. 874, § 14, p. 2777.) The Legislature amended section
1353 in 1986 to add the limiting phrase, "recorded on or after January
1, 1986," to the declaration requirements. (Stats. 1986, ch. 9, § 2, p.
850.) The Legislature thus intended the Davis-Stirling Act to govern
pre-existing common interest developments without foisting section
1353's new declaration requirements upon them. Accordingly, the amended
version of section 1353 demands little of a declaration for a pre-1986
common interest development.
The declaration of trust meets section 1353's minimal requirements for a
pre-1986 declaration. Namely, it was recorded in 1962 and binds GRF and
each Mutual. (§ 1353, subd. (a).) It contains other matter that Leisure
World's creators deemed appropriate -- GRF's duty to construct, manage,
and maintain the common facilities; GRF's title as trustee to the
common facilities; and GRF's duty to perform services for the Mutuals
pursuant to contemplated agreements. The Legislature requires nothing
more.
GRF and its amici offer a multitude of arguments why the declaration of
trust cannot be a declaration pursuant to section 1353. None are
convincing.
[5] GRF primarily contends the declaration of trust does not satisfy
section 1353 because it lacks any covenants, conditions, and
restrictions (CC&R's). But section 1353 does not require a pre-1986
declaration to contain CC&R's or much of anything else, as already
shown.
GRF misplaces its heavy reliance on Nahrstedt, supra, 8
Cal.4th 361, taking that case's language out of context. Before Nahrstedt[163 Cal.App.4th 1153] issue before it -- whether
CC&R's barring pet ownership are enforceable -- it provided "a broad
overview of the general principles governing common interest forms of
real property ownership" (id. at p. 370), tracing "[t]he concept
of shared real property ownership" back to "its roots in ancient Rome." (Id.
at p. 371.) Nahrstedt was still in the throes of its historical
reverie when it stated that a declaration "is a collection of covenants,
conditions and servitudes" and "[t]ypically . . . sets forth
restrictions pertaining to the use of the property." (Id. at p.
372.) It was not analyzing section 1353 when it made these observations
-- it was paraphrasing a law review article, a treatise, and a legal
encyclopedia. (Nahrstedt, at p. 372.) Nahrstedt did not
begin examining the "extent [to which] these general principles [are]
reflected in California's statutory scheme" for almost another six pages
of its opinion. (Id. at p. 377.) And Nahrstedt never did
analyze section 1353, except to note, "[d]eclarations recorded after
January 1, 1986, the effective date of the Act, must include . . .
'the restrictions on the use or enjoyment of any portion of the common
interest development.'" (Id. at p. 378.) Nothing in Nahrstedt
suggests the Davis-Stirling Act requires pre-1986 declarations to
contain CC&R's.
addressed the
GRF also relies upon section 1353's predecessor statute, though the
statutory evolution actually works against it. Before the Davis-Stirling
Act was enacted to govern all types of common interest developments,
the statute governing condominium projects required developers to
"record a declaration of restrictions relating to such project, which
restrictions shall be enforceable equitable servitudes . . . ." (Former
Civ. Code, § 1355; Stats. 1963, ch. 860, § 3, p. 2092.) But this section
applies only to condominiums like Mutual No. Seventeen -- it does not
govern GRF or the other Mutuals. And there is no dispute that Mutual No.
Seventeen has CC&R's. Moreover, when the Legislature enacted the
Davis-Stirling Act and replaced former section 1355 with current section
1353, it replaced the phrase, "a declaration of restrictions," with the
much broader term, "a declaration." Contrary to GRF's suggestion, this
change reinforces the conclusion that pre-1986 declarations for
common interest developments other than condominiums need not contain
CC&R's.
[6] GRF also relies upon a host of practice guides, treatises, and
regulations suggesting that declarations typically contain CC&R's.
That may be so. But the plain language of section 1353 does not require
pre-1986 declarations to contain CC&R's. "In the construction of a
statute or instrument, the office of the Judge is simply to ascertain
and declare what is in terms or in substance contained therein, not to
insert what has been omitted." (Code Civ. Proc., § 1858.) "'When
deciding what a statute means, courts seek to determine what effect the
legislative body that enacted it intended to achieve. [Citation.] To
make this determination, courts begin with the text of the statute,
because the words used are the best evidence of legislative intent. [163
Cal.App.4th 1154] [Citations.] Unless there is reason to believe
that a special or technical meaning was intended, courts give the words
of the statute their usual, ordinary meaning.'" (Sacramento County
Alliance of Law Enforcement v. County of Sacramento (2007) 151
Cal.App.4th 1012, 1017.) We will not rely upon common contemporary
technical practice to rewrite section 1353 or trump the ordinary meaning
of its plain language. The statute simply does not require pre-1986
declarations to contain CC&R's or much else -- we will not "insert
what has been omitted." (Code Civ. Proc., § 1858.) At any rate, to
whatever extent use restrictions are typical of common interest
developments, Leisure World appears to have such restrictions through
the occupancy agreement each resident must accept.
Next, GRF contends that reading section 1353 as permitting pre-1986
declarations to lack CC&R's will wreak havoc by suddenly
transforming property across the state into common interest
developments. Not so. A recorded declaration pursuant to section 1353 is
just one element of a common interest development. The defining feature
of a common interest development is the conveyance of "a separate
interest coupled with an interest in the common area or membership in
the association . . . ." (§ 1352.) Construing section 1353 according to
its plain language will not transform any property into a common
interest development unless a declaration is recorded and the
owners hold separate interests coupled with a common interest or
association membership.
[7] In addition, GRF contends the declaration of trust was recorded to
satisfy the concerns of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and
other lenders, not with the intention of creating a common interest
development. But the Davis-Stirling Act conditions common interest
development status on the recording of a declaration, not the subjective
intention behind the recordation. And because the FHA loans were repaid
decades ago, as GRF concedes, no concern about any sort of federal
preemption arises.
GRF and its amici contend the declaration of trust conflicts with
various Davis-Stirling Act provisions regarding common interest
development declarations. They assert the declaration does not authorize
GRF to levy assessments or record liens directly against residents or
their separate interests, although associations have those rights
pursuant to the Davis-Stirling Act. (§§ 1366, 1367.) The Davis-Stirling
Act also imposes requirements on associations bringing construction
defect suits, but the amici note the declaration of trust imposes no
such duties on GRF. (§ 1375.) The amici also claim the Davis-Stirling
Act allows common interest development members to amend their
declaration, whereas Leisure World residents are not parties to the
declaration of trust and have no amendment rights under it. (§ 1355.) [163
Cal.App.4th 1155]
There is no conflict. The declaration does not prohibit GRF from making
direct assessments, direct levies, or complying with section 1375's
procedural requirement. GRF cannot avoid association status simply by
noting the declaration did not expressly anticipate each of the rights
and obligations it would eventually have under the Davis-Stirling Act.
And section 1355, subdivision (a), provides that a development's
declaration "may be amended pursuant to the governing documents or this
title." Thus, the declaration of trust will continue to be subject to
amendment pursuant to its terms or the statute.
Contrary to GRF's and the Mutuals' concern, the court did not unfairly
adjudicate the Mutuals' rights in their absences by determining Leisure
World is a common interest development. The judgment addresses only GRF,
without mentioning the Mutuals. It provides, "Petitioner [GRF] is an
'association' within the meaning of and subject to the provisions of the
Davis-Stirling Act." The court's observation in its statement of
decision that "GRF and the Mutuals have, in effect, a master
association/subassociation relationship," was an analogy, not a
finding of fact. And "even if one assumes that [the court's] observation
in the statement of decision was a finding, it was entirely unnecessary
to the judgment rendered and should not be given collateral estoppel
effect." (Bronco Wine Co. v. Frank A. Logoluso Farms 214
Cal.App.3d 699, 712.) We express no opinion on whether GRF and the
Mutuals do, in fact, have a master/subassociation relationship, leaving
that determination, if necessary, for later resolution in an appropriate
forum. (1989)
[8] Nor is the judgment suspect because the Mutuals now claim to be indispensable parties. "Since the 1971 revision of Code of Civil
Procedure section 389, failure to join 'indispensable' parties does not
deprive a court of the power to make a legally binding adjudication
between the parties properly before it." (Weir v. Ferreira (1997)
59
Cal.App.4th 1509, 1519.) "[T]he failure to join an 'indispensable'
party is not 'a jurisdictional defect' in the fundamental sense; even in
the absence of an 'indispensable' party, the court still has the power
to render a decision as to the parties before it which will stand." (Kraus
v. Willow Park Public Golf Course (1977) 73
Cal.App.3d 354, 364.) And where, as here, "'a case has been fully
tried without objection to the absence of parties and the claim that the
absent parties were indispensable is raised for the first time on
appeal, the rule's underlying policy considerations of avoiding
piecemeal litigation and multiplicity of suits [citations] are of little
consequence inasmuch as the judicial and litigant resources necessary
to the litigation have already been expended.'" (Id. at p. 369.) [163
Cal.App.4th 1156]
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Defendants shall recover their costs on
appeal.
Rylaarsdam, Acting P. J., and Aronson, J., concurred.
FN
1. All further statutory references are to the Civil Code unless
otherwise stated.
FN
2. The parties agree Leisure World Seal Beach is not related to
other senior citizen communities also commonly known as Leisure World.
(See Finley v. Superior Court (2000) 80
Cal.App.4th 1152, 1155 [discussing "Leisure World, a senior
citizens community in Laguna Hills," and noting, "Golden Rain Foundation
of Laguna Hills (Golden Rain) functions as a sort of master homeowners
association"].)
FN
3. Section 1353, subdivision (a)(1)-(4), contains other
requirements for declarations regarding property located within an
"airport influence area" or the jurisdiction of the San Francisco Bay
Conservation and Development Commission. No party contends these
requirements apply here.