O'Toole v. Kingsbury Court Owners Assn.
(2005) 126 Cal.App.4th 549
(Opinion by Vogel, J., with Mallano, Acting P. J., and Suzukawa, J., fn. * concurring.)
COUNSEL
Rapkin, Gitlin & Beaumont and Michael S. Rapkin for Defendant and Appellant.
John F. Kunath, Jr., for Plaintiff and Respondent.
[126 Cal.App.4th 551] OPINION
VOGEL, J.-
A plaintiff obtained a judgment against a homeowners association. When
the association failed to pay the judgment and refused to levy a special
emergency assessment against its members, the plaintiff obtained an
order appointing a receiver and compelling the association to levy the
emergency assessment. The association appeals, claiming it cannot be
ordered to impose an assessment and, inferentially, that the judgment
never has to be paid. We reject the association's arguments and affirm
the order. fn. 1
FACTS
A.
After the common areas of the Los Angeles Kingsbury Court, a 46-unit
condominium complex in Granada Hills, were damaged in the 1994
Northridge earthquake, the Los Angeles Kingsbury Court Owners
Association hired an insurance adjuster, James F. O'Toole Company, Inc.,
to deal with the Association's insurer. The Association agreed to pay
O'Toole 10 percent of the proceeds paid by its insurer but later refused
to pay, notwithstanding that the Association received about $1.4
million in insurance proceeds. O'Toole sued the Association for breach
of contract and won, and (in March 2002) a judgment was entered
directing the Association to pay damages to O'Toole [126 Cal.App.4th 552]
($140,196.59) plus pre-judgment interest ($59,881.19), with
post-judgment interest accruing at the rate of about $80 per day. The
Association did not pay the judgment.
B.
In early 2003, O'Toole obtained a writ of execution, recorded an
abstract of judgment and, by motion, sought an order directing the
Association to assign to him both the regular and special assessments
collected by the Association from its members (the homeowners). The
Association, in turn, filed a claim of exemption, asserting that all
assessment income was needed for essential services and, therefore,
exempt from execution. (Civ. Code, § 1366, subd. (c).) fn. 2
In May, the trial court agreed with the Association that its claimed expenses were essential, and that all regular assessments
collected by the Association were exempt from execution. At the same
time, the court held that O'Toole's judgment was an "extraordinary
expense" within the meaning of subdivision (b) of section 1366, that the
Association had "the power to levy an emergency assessment to
satisfy [the] judgment," that the Association's general duty to maintain
its property included a more specific duty to meet its legal
obligations, that it was obligated to pay a valid civil money judgment
entered against it, and that it was thus required to levy a "special" or "emergency" assessment
to raise the money needed to pay the judgment. To that end, the court
ordered the Association "to convene a meeting of the individual
condominium owners . . . to consider and provide for a meaningful
emergency assessment so as to satisfy [O'Toole's] judgment."
C.
The Association held a meeting in May but the members refused to impose
an emergency assessment to pay O'Toole's judgment. O'Toole then filed a
motion for an order directing the Association to levy a special
emergency assessment or, in the alternative, for an order appointing a
receiver to levy and administer a special emergency assessment. Over the
Association's opposition, the trial court granted O'Toole's motion for
the appointment of a [126 Cal.App.4th 553] receiver to levy and
administer a special emergency assessment, then stayed its order to
permit the Association to pursue this appeal. fn. 3
DISCUSSION
[1] Unless otherwise provided in a homeowners association's declaration
of common interest development, the association is responsible for the
repair and maintenance of the common areas. (§ 1364, subd. (a).) In this
case, in typical form, the Los Angeles Kingsbury Court Owners
Association's Declaration charges the Association with the duty to
"maintain, repair, restore, replace and make necessary improvements to
the Common Area so that the same are at all times in a first-class
condition and good state of repair," and to "pay, out of the general
funds of the Association, the costs of any such maintenance and repair .
. . ." After the Northridge earthquake, the Association took the first
step but not the second, and the question now before us is whether the
Association can be compelled to impose an assessment to obtain the money
needed to pay for the work that was performed for the benefit of the
Association and its members. For the reasons that follow, we answer the
question affirmatively.
A.
[2] The relationship between individual homeowners and the managing association of a common interest development is complex (Lamden v. La Jolla Shores Clubdominium Homeowners Assn. (1999) 21 Cal.4th 249, 266), and their respective rights depend upon the nature of the particular dispute. Some years ago, in Duffey v. Superior Court (1992) 3 Cal.App.4th 425, 428-429, the court observed that associations were sometimes treated as landlords (Frances T. v. Village Green OwnersAssn. (1986) 42 Cal.3d 490,
499-501 [association could be held liable for rape and robbery of
individual owner who was not allowed to install additional lighting at
time of crime wave]), sometimes as "minigovernments" (Laguna Publishing Co. v. Golden Rain Foundation (1982) 131 Cal.App.3d 816, 844 [gated community could not discriminate among give-away newspapers]), sometimes as businesses (O'Connor v. Village Green Owners Assn. (1983) 33 Cal.3d 790,
796 [condominium project with age restrictions . . . was 'business'
within the meaning of Unruh Civil Rights Act]), and sometimes as
corporations (Beehan v. Lido Isle [126 Cal.App.4th 554] Community Assn. (1977) 70 Cal.App.3d 858,
865-867 [board of directors' good faith refusal to take action against
construction of house in arguable contravention of setback restrictions
was protected by corporate business judgment rule]).
[3] More recently, the Supreme Court has differentiated between (1) the
situation where, for the sake of maximizing the value of the homeowner's
investment, each individual owner has an economic interest in the
proper management of the development as a whole, and the relationship
between the owner and the association is analogous to that of a
shareholder to a corporation, and (2) the situation where an individual
owner who resides in the development has a personal, "not strictly
economic," interest in the appropriate management of the development in a
manner that will keep the property secure from risks of physical
injury, in which sense the relationship is analogous to that between a
tenant and landlord. (Lamden v. La Jolla Shores Clubdominium Homeowners Assn., supra, 21 Cal.4th at pp. 266-267.)
This case -- where the homeowners' interests are strictly economic -- is
plainly one in which the relationship of the Association to the
homeowners is akin to that of a corporation to its shareholders.
B.
We begin by rejecting the Association's contention that it is not
required to levy a special emergency assessment to satisfy a civil
judgment, and that the trial court had no power to order it to do so. As
relevant, section 1366 provides:
"(a) Except as provided in this section, the association shall levy
regular and special assessments sufficient to perform its obligations
under the governing documents and this title. However, annual increases in regular assessments for any fiscal year . . . shall not be imposed unless the board has complied with [specified requirements].
"(b) Notwithstanding more restrictive limitations placed on the board by
the governing documents, the board of directors may not impose a regular assessment that is more than 20 percent greater than the regular assessment for the association's preceding fiscal year or
impose special assessments which in the aggregate exceed 5 percent of
the budgeted gross expenses of the association for that fiscal year
without the approval of owners, constituting a quorum, casting a majority of the votes at a meeting or election of the association . . . . This section does not limit assessment increases necessary for emergency situations. For purposes of this section, an emergency situation is any one of the following: [126 Cal.App.4th 555]
"(1) An extraordinary expense required by an order of a court.
"(2) An extraordinary expense necessary to repair or maintain the common
interest development or any part of it for which the association is
responsible where a threat to personal safety on the property is
discovered.
"(3) An extraordinary expense necessary to repair or maintain the common
interest development or any part of it for which the association is
responsible that could not have been reasonably foreseen by the board in
preparing and distributing the pro forma operating budget under Section
1365. . . .
"(c) Regular assessments imposed or collected to perform the obligations of an association under the governing documents or this title shall
be exempt from execution by a judgment creditor of the association only
to the extent necessary for the association to perform essential
services, such as paying for utilities and insurance. In determining
the appropriateness of an exemption, a court shall ensure that only
essential services are protected under this subdivision. . . ."
(Emphasis added.)
In furtherance of its duties under the Association's Declaration, the
Association retained O'Toole as the first step in arranging for the
repairs necessitated by the Northridge earthquake. O'Toole performed his
part of the bargain, and his judgment establishes that he is entitled
to be paid for the work he performed for the Association. Although it is
true, as the Association contends, that section 1366 does not expressly obligate
it to impose a special emergency assessment to satisfy O'Toole's civil
judgment, the statute most assuredly permits such an assessment in an
"emergency situation," including a "situation" where an order of a court
is entered in aid of enforcement of a judgment arising out of an
extraordinary and unforeseeable expense necessarily incurred to repair
the common areas following the Northridge earthquake. (§ 1366, subds.
(b)(1)-(b)(3).) Under the circumstances of this case, section 1366
permits the Association to impose a special emergency assessment to
satisfy O'Toole's judgment.
[4] To avoid this result, the Association claims the exemption created
by subdivision (c) of section 1366 applies to special emergency
assessments and thus prohibits the order made by the trial court. This
argument fails for the simple reason that the subdivision (c) exemption
applies only to regular assessments, not special or emergency
assessments. (§ 1366, subd. (c) ["Regular assessments . . . collected
to perform the obligations of an association . . . shall be exempt . . .
."].) [126 Cal.App.4th 556]
C.
The Association contends the Legislature's rejection of a proposed
amendment to section 1366 shows a legislative intent to prohibit the
imposition of an assessment to satisfy a civil judgment. To the
contrary, we believe the legislative history shows the opposite intent.
1.
Before its amendment in 2000, section 1366 authorized an association to
levy regular and special assessments sufficient to perform its
obligations, limited increases in regular assessments, and authorized special assessments for an "emergency situation" defined as an "extraordinary expense required by an order of a court,"
an extraordinary expense necessary to repair or maintain the common
area where there was a threat to personal safety, and an unforeseeable
extraordinary expense necessary to repair or maintain the property.
(Former § 1366, subds. (a), (b).)
As introduced on February 7, 2000, Assembly Bill 1859 modified the first definition of "emergency situation" (for which a special assessment without a dollar limit could be levied) to cover "[a]n extraordinary repair or maintenance expense that arises from an order of a court," and added a new subdivision (c): "Regular or special assessments
imposed or collected to perform the obligations of an association under
the governing documents and this title shall be exempt from execution
by a judgment creditor of the association to the extent necessary for
the association to perform those obligations. . . ." (Assem. Bill No.
1859 (1999-2000 Reg. Sess.) § 1 as introduced Feb. 7, 2000, emphasis
added.) The bill, as introduced, did one more thing.
It amended section 7350 of the Corporations Code (which generally
provides that a member of a corporation is not personally liable for the
corporation's debts) by adding this provision: "No member of a
[homeowners] association . . . shall be required to pay assessments,
fees, or other sums that exceed one-half of 1 percent of the assessed
value of the member's property toward satisfaction of any claim, award,
or judgment against the association, and no services provided by the
association to the property may be terminated or interrupted once the
maximum payment specified herein has been made." (Assem. Bill No. 1859
(1999-2000 Reg. Sess.) § 2 as introduced [126 Cal.App.4th 557]
Feb. 7, 2000.) This provision was deleted by an April 13 amendment to
the bill. (Assem. Amend. to Assem. Bill No. 1859 (1999-2000 Reg. Sess.) §
2, April 13, 2000.)
2.
According to the Assembly Committee on Housing and Community Development
(in a report prepared for an April 26 hearing), the bill was a response
to an extremely unusual and complex problem arising out of the
Northridge earthquake. A contractor sued a homeowners association for
trade libel and interference with prospective business relations and won
a $6.6 million judgment. A receiver was appointed, and he used the
association's regular and special assessments to pay the contractor,
leaving the association without any money to pay for its essential
services. The Committee noted conflicting concerns about (1) the six
million California residents who belong to homeowners associations and
the effect on our housing market "if consumers become frightened to
purchase condominiums and townhouses due to the potential personal
risk," and (2) "the potential impact of whether contractors will shy
away from conducting repairs if they are left with little remedy in the
event a [homeowners association] breaches a contract." (Assem. Com. on
Housing and Community Development, Analysis of Assem. Bill No. 1859
(1999-2000 Reg. Sess.) as amended April 26, 2000, p. 5.)
3.
Recognizing these problems, the author amended the bill to provide (in
the new subdivision (c) of section 1366) that, "to the extent the total,
nonexempt assessments collected by the association are insufficient to
satisfy the judgment of a judgment creditor, the association shall
impose a special assessment sufficient to satisfy that judgment."
(Assem. Amend. to Assem. Bill No. 1859 (1999-2000 Reg. Sess.) § 1, May
3, 2000.) As noted in a report to the Assembly Committee on Judiciary
(May 9, 2000), at "the Committee staff's recommendation, the author
agreed to limit the assessments exempted from execution by a judgment
creditor . . . to only those assessments required for 'essential
services.' This amendment seeks to address the concern that, by
exempting regular assessments from judgment, a judgment creditor
would be unable to collect. For example, it would be unfair to deny a
plaintiff who successfully sued an association for discrimination
because the association denied him or her an opportunity to purchase a
condominium based on his or her race the ability to collect. The bill, by limiting the assessments protected to only those necessary for [126 Cal.App.4th 558] essential
services, now strikes a reasonable balance between ensuring that such
plaintiffs will be able to recover and ensuring that homeowner
associations will not be forced to turn the lights off in order to pay a
judgment." (Assem. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Assem. Bill No.
1859 (1999-2000 Reg. Sess.) as amended May 3, 2000, p. 5, emphasis
added.)
4.
The next amendment (May 16, 2000) expanded the first definition of an "emergency situation" justifying a special assessment
by changing it from "[a]n extraordinary repair or maintenance expense
that arises from an order of a court" back to the original language --
"[a]n extraordinary expense required by an order of a court" -- and, at
the same time, limited the exemption in subdivision (c) to regular
assessments: "Regular assessments imposed or collected to perform
the obligations of an association under the governing documents or this
title shall be exempt from execution by a judgment creditor of the
association only to the extent necessary for the association to perform
essential services, such as paying for utilities and insurance. . . ."
(Assem. Amend. to Assem. Bill No. 1859 (1999-2000 Reg. Sess.) § 1, May
16, 2000, emphasis added.) As later described in one of the legislative
reports, this meant the "bill would provide that regular assessments
collected to perform the obligations of a homeowner association are
exempt from execution by a judgment creditor of the association to the
extent necessary for the association to perform essential services . . .
." (Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Assem. Bill No. 1859 (1999-2000
Reg. Sess.) as amended May 16, 2000, p. 3, emphasis added.)
As the Senate Judiciary Committee noted in regard to the May 16
amendment, the case that triggered legislative interest did so because a
court had authorized a receiver to levy against both regular and
special assessments, leaving the residents of that development without
money to provide for essential services, and that the problem in that
case was both "unusual and complex." As amended on May 16, the idea was
that the "bill would re-balance the interests of the various parties and
provide limited protection to homeowners against creditors to assure
that essential services are exempt from the execution by a judgment
creditor in the event that the association or the members have not
provided themselves with adequate protection from such situations. Any
attempt to further protect homeowners in associations from judgment
creditors would, undoubtedly, tip the scales and possibly [126 Cal.App.4th 559]
provide for unintended consequences." (Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis
of Assem. Bill No. 1859 (1999-2000 Reg. Sess.) as amended May 16, 2000,
pp. 4-6.)
5.
By June, there had been more amendments and the author himself admitted the only purpose of the bill was "to exempt a limited portion of the regular assessments
from execution by a judgment creditor in order to assure that
'essential services' are provided to the homeowners from the regular
assessment income even while a judgment is being paid off." (Sen. Rules
Com., Analysis of Assem. Bill No. 1859 (1999-2000 Reg. Sess.) as amended
in Sen. June 15, 2000, p. 5.) It was in this form that the bill was
adopted, and that subdivision (c) came to provide that: "Regular assessments
imposed or collected to perform the obligations of an association under
the governing documents or this title shall be exempt from execution by
a judgment creditor of the association only to the extent necessary for
the association to perform essential services, such as paying for
utilities and insurance. In determining the appropriateness of an
exemption, a court shall ensure that only essential services are
protected under this subdivision. [¶] This exemption shall not apply to
any consensual pledges, liens, or encumbrances that have been approved
by the owners of an association, constituting a quorum, casting a
majority of the votes at a meeting or election of the association, or to
any state tax lien, or to any lien for labor or materials supplied to
the common area." (Stats. 2000, ch. 125 (A.B. 1859) § 1, emphasis
added.)
Quite plainly, the Legislature did exactly what it set out to do -- it
protected regular assessments to the extent necessary to insure that
homeowners were not deprived of essential services, and at the same time
protected the rights of judgment creditors (such as O'Toole) by
allowing them to execute against an association's special emergency assessments and, where available, an association's excess (non-exempt) regular assessments. That is precisely what happened in this case, where the trial court granted the Association's request for an exemption covering all of its regular assessments and limited O'Toole's right of recovery to a fund to be created out of a special emergency assessment. As we said, the legislative history defeats rather than supports the Association's position. [126 Cal.App.4th 560]
D.
We summarily reject the Association's remaining contentions.
First, the Association's refusal to impose a special emergency
assessment was not a "business decision" of the sort to which the courts
must defer under Lamden v. La Jolla Shores Clubdominium Homeowners Assn., supra, 21 Cal.4th 249.
Generously construed, the Association's refusal to levy a special
emergency assessment is a simple refusal to pay a final judgment long
since due. While that refusal may in some sense constitute a "business
decision," it is not one to which a court must defer by refusing to
enforce a valid judgment.
Second, these proceedings do not in any manner violate the homeowners'
rights. The imposition of a special emergency assessment will not
transform the homeowners into judgment debtors or otherwise make them
personally liable for the debts of the Association. This was and will
remain an action against the Association, not an action against the
homeowners. As we explained in ECC Construction, Inc. v. Ganson (2000) 82 Cal.App.4th 572, an action by a contractor against a homeowners association and the individual homeowners
to recover for repairs necessitated by the Northridge earthquake, the
homeowners were not parties to the contract, and the contractor's
contractual remedies had to be pursued against the Association, not the
homeowners. (Id. at pp. 575-576.)
[5] O'Toole is doing precisely what he is by law obligated to do. He has
obtained a judgment against the Association, and is now compelling the
Association to look to its members, the homeowners, to create a fund to
pay the debt incurred for their common benefit. When the special
assessment is levied, the homeowners will be liable to the Association,
not to O'Toole, and it will be up to the Association to collect the
money that is owed to it. (ECC Construction, Inc. v. Ganson, supra, 82 Cal.App. 4th at pp. 576-577; and see Park Place Estates Homeowners Assn. v. Naber (1994) 29 Cal.App.4th 427,
431-432 [assessments become the debt of the homeowner at the time the
assessment is levied; if the homeowner defaults, the association may
file a lien on the homeowner's interest; if the default is not corrected
the association may pursue any legal remedy, including judicial
foreclosure].)
It follows that the trial court correctly ordered the Association to
impose a special emergency assessment and, in light of the Association's
refusal to do so, correctly decided to appoint a receiver to carry out
the court's order. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 187, 128, subd. (a)(4); Potomac Oil Co. v. Dye (1910) 14 Cal.App. 674, 679-680.) [126 Cal.App.4th 561]
DISPOSITION
The order is affirmed. O'Toole is awarded his costs of appeal.
Mallano, Acting P. J., and Suzukawa, J., fn. * concurred.
FN *.
Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
FN 1.
To be precise, this appeal arises from a cross-complaint -- and our
references to "plaintiff" are, in reality, references to a
cross-complainant.
FN 2.
Undesignated section references are to the Civil Code, primarily to the
Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act, section 1350 et seq.,
which applies "whenever a separate interest coupled with an interest in
the common area or membership in the association is, or has been,
conveyed" under specified circumstances that include most homeowners'
associations. (§ 1352.) Assessments and exemptions are discussed at
length below.
FN 3.
We summarily reject O'Toole's contention that the appeal, filed on
January 7, 2004, to challenge an order made on November 14, 2003, is
untimely. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 2.) The fact that the Association
purported to appeal from an earlier interim order, then withdrew its
appeal, does not affect the fact that (as O'Toole concedes) the November
14, 2003, order is a final, appealable order.
FN *.
Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.