Bellevue Farms,et Al., Appellants/cross-respondents v. Chad Stevens, Respondent/cross-appellant ( 2020 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION ONE
    BELLEVUE FARM OWNERS                          )   No. 77830-7-I
    ASSOCIATION, a non-profit corporation;        )   (consolidated with No.
    LAUREN BARRETT and WILLIAM                    )   78300-9)
    BARRETT, husband and wife, trustees of        )
    the Laurie Barrett Residential Trust and of   )
    the Bill Barrett Residential Trust;           )
    WEBSTER AUGUSTINE III, an individual;         )
    HOOPOE LLC, a Washington Limited              )
    Liability Company; GIGI BIRCHFIELD and        )
    MARK BAUTE, husband and wife;                 )
    TIMOTHY DOHERTY and CHRISTINE                 )
    DOHERTY, husband and wife; PATRICK            )
    DOHERTY, an individual; GLEN CORSON           )
    and KIM KYLO-CORSON, husband and              )
    wife; JANTANA KUPPERMANN and                  )
    BARUCH KUPPERMANN, husband and                )
    wife; RODNEY SMITH and MARY                   )   UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    MARGARET SMITH, husband and wife;             )
    MATTHEW STRAIGHT and VERONICA                 )
    STRAIGHT, husband and wife; TOM               )
    TUCCI and DIANE TUCCI, husband and            )
    wife; and DANA PIGGOT, an individual,         )
    )
    Respondents,              )
    )
    v.                               )
    )
    CHAD STEVENS and “Jane Doe”                   )
    STEVENS, husband and wife,                    )
    )
    Appellants,               )
    )
    PETE FINDLEY and “Jane Doe”                   )
    FINDLEY, husband and wife; CASCADE            )
    MOUNTAIN RENTALS LLC, a                       )
    )
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/2
    Washington Limited Liability Company;         )
    and DOES 1 to 10, Inclusive,                  )
    )
    Defendants.               )
    )
    )
    BELLEVUE FARM OWNERS                          )   No. 77401-8-I
    ASSOCIATION, a non-profit corporation,        )   (consolidated with No.
    LAUREN BARRETT and WILLIAM                    )   77603-7)
    BARRETT, husband and wife, trustees of        )
    the Laurie Barrett Residential Trust and of   )
    the Bill Barrett Residential Trust;           )
    WEBSTER AUGUSTINE III, an individual;         )
    GIGI BIRCHFIELD and MARK BAUTE,               )
    husband and wife; TIMOTHY DOHERTY             )
    and CHRISTINE DOHERTY, husband and            )
    wife; PATRICK DOHERTY, an individual;         )
    GLEN CORSON and KIM KYLO-                     )
    CORSON, husband and wife; JANTANA             )
    KUPPERMANN and BARUCH                         )
    KUPPERMANN, husband and wife;                 )
    RODNEY SMITH and MARY MARGARET                )
    SMITH, husband and wife; MATTHEW              )
    STRAIGHT and VERONICA STRAIGHT,               )
    husband and wife; TOM TUCCI and               )
    DIANE TUCCI, husband and wife; and            )
    DANA PIGGOT, an individual,                   )
    )
    Respondents/Cross Appellants,           )
    )
    HOOPOE LLC, a Washington Limited              )
    Liability Company,                            )
    )
    Plaintiff,         )
    )
    v.                               )
    )
    CHAD STEVENS and “Jane Doe”                   )
    STEVENS, husband and wife,                    )
    )
    Appellants/Cross Respondents,           )
    )
    PETE FINDLEY and “Jane Doe”                   )
    FINDLEY, husband and wife; CASCADE            )
    MOUNTAIN RENTALS LLC, a                       )
    )
    -2-
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/3
    Washington Limited Liability Company;          )
    and DOES 1 to 10, Inclusive,                   )
    )
    Defendants.         )
    )
    )
    BELLEVUE FARM OWNERS                           )   No. 78430-7-I
    ASSOCIATION, a non-profit corporation;         )
    LAUREN BARRETT and WILLIAM                     )
    BARRETT, husband and wife, trustees of         )
    the Laurie Barrett Residential Trust and of    )
    the Bill Barrett Residential Trust;            )
    WEBSTER AUGUSTINE III, an individual;          )
    GIGI BIRCHFIELD and MARK BAUTE,                )
    husband and wife; TIMOTHY DOHERTY              )
    and CHRISTINE DOHERTY, husband and             )
    wife; GLEN CORSON and KIM KYLLO-               )
    CORSON, husband and wife; JANTANA              )
    KUPPERMANN and BARUCH                          )
    KUPPERMANN, husband and wife;                  )
    RODNEY SMITH and MARY MARGARET                 )
    SMITH, husband and wife; MATTHEW               )
    STRAIGHT and VERONICA STRAIGHT,                )
    husband and wife; TOM TUCCI and                )
    DIANE TUCCI, husband and wife; AND             )
    DANA PIGOTT, an individual,                    )
    )
    Appellants/Cross Respondents,            )
    )
    v.                         )
    )
    CHAD STEVENS and “Jane Doe”                    )
    Stevens, husband and wife,                     )
    )
    Respondents/Cross Appellants,            )
    )
    and                        )
    )
    ROBERT STEVENS and DOES 1-10,                  )
    Inclusive,                                     )
    Defendants.                      )
    -3-
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/4
    ANDRUS, A.C.J. — Twenty homeowners in a San Juan Island development
    known as Bellevue Farm have spent the better part of a decade fighting—both
    literally and figuratively—over the meaning of a set of restrictive covenants
    governing the use of their land and a waterfront parcel owned by the homeowners
    as tenants in common. They have also fought over the boundaries between
    privately owned lots and the waterfront parcel, the erection of a spite fence in front
    of property owned by Chad Stevens, and the management and operation of their
    homeowner association, Bellevue Farm Owners Association (BFOA).
    After four years of summary judgment rulings, a prior appeal to this court, 1
    a 2016 bench trial, and a 2017 jury trial, no one came away happy with the result.
    The record reveals a level of animosity between Stevens and his neighbors and
    incivility between some of the parties and the attorneys that surpasses anything
    this court has ever seen.         With the exception of one decision on certain
    homeowners’ entitlement to an award of attorney fees under the restrictive
    covenants, we affirm the trial court.
    I.    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    A. Bellevue Farm
    Bellevue Farm is a 54-acre development consisting of 14 separate lots
    located on San Juan Island’s Westcott Bay. The farm was originally short-platted
    in 1994 into four residential lots (BF Lots #1 through #4) and one waterfront lot
    approximately 2000 feet in length (common waterfront). The short plat declared
    1
    Bellevue Farm Owners Ass’n v. Stevens, 
    198 Wn. App. 464
    , 
    394 P.3d 1018
     (Bellevue Farm I),
    review denied, 
    189 Wn.2d 1038
    , 
    413 P.3d 565
     (2017).
    -4-
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/5
    that “the shoreline common area shall be owned in common by all owners of lots
    within the plat.”
    In 1994, Bellevue Farm’s former owner incorporated BFOA as a
    Washington non-profit corporation and adopted bylaws and a set of covenants,
    conditions, and restrictions (1994 CC&Rs).      The owners amended the 1994
    CC&Rs in 1997 (1997 CC&Rs).
    In 1995, Brad Augustine and some investors purchased BF Lot #4 and
    short-platted it into eight smaller residential lots. These eight lots—each between
    -5-
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/6
    one and one-half and two acres in size—became known as South Bellevue Farm
    and are governed by a separate homeowner association, South BFOA, subject to
    restrictive covenants recorded against the South Bellevue Farm lots. The South
    Bellevue Farm lots (South BF Lots #1 through 8) share a water well, a tennis court,
    and a pond. Within South Bellevue Farm, there are four lots that face the common
    waterfront and four upslope lots. In 1997, the lot owners in Bellevue Farm and
    South Bellevue Farm agreed to combine the two groups’ meetings and to study
    the issue of functioning as one homeowner association in the future. From that
    point forward, while BFOA and South BFOA were two separate entities, each
    board was composed of the same members so that, in effect, BFOA and South
    BFOA were considered to be one entity.
    B. The Protagonists in this Saga
    Every owner in Bellevue Farm and South Bellevue Farm was a party to this
    lawsuit. The following photograph shows the relative locations of the parcels and
    their owners:
    -6-
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/7
    Chad Stevens. Stevens, a full-time Cle Elum resident, purchased BF Lot
    #3, a total of 10 acres, in June 2005. He later short-platted the lot into two five-
    acre parcels, BF Lots #3A and #3B. 2 When Stevens purchased the property, the
    2
    BF Lot #3A is identified in the aerial photograph as Parcel No. 462421002000. BF Lot #3B is
    identified as Parcel No. 462421007000.
    -7-
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/8
    upslope portion, now BF Lot #3A, had a three-bedroom farmhouse, constructed in
    1889, and a two-bedroom “hatch house,” constructed around 1996.
    BF Lot #3B borders the common waterfront. The widest and most usable
    section of the entire common waterfront sits in front of Stevens’s parcel. Stevens
    later constructed a four-bedroom beach house on BF Lot #3B facing this waterfront
    area, completing it in July 2012.            BF Lot #3B also has a 100-year-old apple
    orchard. According to Stevens, the apples are primarily the type used in making
    hard cider. Stevens also planted a vineyard on the upslope parcel.
    Stevens purchased the property for its waterfront access and he knew he
    would have to rent out the property to afford its mortgage. He obtained transient
    rental permits for both lots and, starting in 2008, began marketing the properties
    to vacation renters. This short-term rental activity, along with his subsequent open
    hostility toward and lack of candor with his neighbors, contributed to serious
    conflicts before and during this lawsuit.
    Mark Baute and Gigi Birchfield. Baute and Birchfield, a married couple, are
    attorneys who live in California. They initially purchased South BF Lot #1, with a
    home facing the waterfront, from Brad Augustine in 2005. 3 This lot is adjacent and
    to the south of Stevens’s BF Lot #3B. Baute and Birchfield obtained a transient
    rental permit for short-term vacation rentals and hired a local property manager to
    rent this house. They have rented out this house since they purchased it in 2005.
    3
    South BF Lot #1 is identified in the aerial photograph as “154,” which refers to its address at 154
    Bellevue Farm Road.
    -8-
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/9
    Five years later, BF Lot #2B, also facing the waterfront and adjacent to and
    north of Stevens’s lots, came up for sale. 4 Baute and Birchfield purchased the
    land with their close friends, Jantana and Dr. Baruch Kupperman. The two couples
    subsequently built a large, joint home on the property.
    As a result of these acquisitions, Baute and Birchfield currently have an
    ownership interest in the lots on both sides of Stevens’s lots. The relationship
    between Baute and Stevens and Stevens’s attorneys became particularly
    adversarial throughout this litigation, with Baute leading the BFOA members into
    taking certain actions that contributed significantly to the escalation of disputes
    with Stevens. 5 Baute was a BFOA officer for the years relevant to this lawsuit.
    Jantana and Dr. Baruch Kupperman. The Kuppermans, who reside in
    California, joined Baute and Birchfield in purchasing BF Lot #2B and building a
    large, multi-family home on that lot in 2011. They visit between two and six weeks
    each year. Together, Baute and Dr. Kupperman obtained a transient rental permit
    for the large house. The parties disagreed about the frequency of vacation rentals
    for the home on BF Lot #2B. Baute testified they rarely rent out the larger home.
    4
    BF Lot #2B is identified in the aerial photograph as Baute/Kupperman, Parcel No. 462421009000.
    It is also known by its address of 78 Husky Lane.
    5
    Baute was initially admitted pro hac vice to participate as counsel for BFOA and the 19 owners,
    of which he is one, in its lawsuit against Stevens. After years of complaints regarding Baute’s
    misconduct toward Stevens at Bellevue Farm and misconduct within the litigation, the trial court
    took the extraordinary step of revoking Baute’s pro hac vice admission, disallowing him from
    representing anyone other than himself and his wife, Birchfield. The court found that Baute’s
    personal interest in the matter “consistently and substantially interfered with his ability and/or
    willingness to serve as an attorney for the other Plaintiffs in a manner that is appropriately respectful
    of the Defendants, their attorneys, and this [c]ourt.” The court also found that the litigation had
    been conducted “with unacceptable levels of personal invective, inappropriately emotional and
    sometimes unnecessary pleadings, and an overall lack of the focus and civility necessary for the
    efficient use of judicial resources.”
    -9-
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/10
    Stevens disputed that testimony, contending the house had been completely
    booked by short-term renters in the summers.
    Glen Corson and Kim Kyllo-Corson. The Corsons purchased South BF Lot
    #8, one of the upslope lots without direct waterfront access, 6 in 1997. They built
    their first home on the lot shortly after purchase and subsequently built a larger
    home on the same parcel in 2015. Before moving into the home as their full-time
    residence when they retired, the Corsons used their Bellevue Farm property as a
    vacation home.
    Corson held the position of BFOA president, a volunteer position, for
    roughly a decade—from 2006 or 2007 to 2017. His role in enforcing what he
    believed were reasonable restrictions on renter use of the common waterfront led
    to Stevens filing counterclaims against him. Corson took significant direction from
    Baute in his management of BFOA’s day-to-day operations.
    Veronica and Matthew Straight. The Straights own South BF Lot #4, a
    waterfront lot. 7 When they purchased their land, only one lot in Bellevue Farm had
    a home constructed on it. The Straights built their home in 1998.
    Matthew Straight, like Baute, is an attorney. Straight practices real estate
    law in Seattle and has extensive experience drafting homeowner association
    governing documents. Because of his legal expertise, he was intimately involved
    in the management of BFOA and South BFOA and in reviewing and proposing
    amendments to the 1997 CC&Rs—actions at the heart of the dispute with Stevens.
    6
    The Corsons’ parcel is identified as 105 Webster Drive in the photograph.
    7
    The Straights’ South BF Lot #4 is identified as 234 Bellevue Farm Road, or Parcel No.
    462452004000.
    - 10 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/11
    Lauren and William Barrett. The Barretts reside full time in Seattle. They
    purchased South BF Lot #2 in 1995 or 1996, 8 and built a house in 2000.
    Hoopoe LLC. During the relevant period of this lawsuit, Hoopoe LLC owned
    BF Lot #1 (now divided into BF Lot #1A and BF Lot #1B). 9 San Juan Island
    residents Charles R. Anderson and Pamela R. Gross formed Hoopoe to acquire
    BF Lot #1 in early 2009. Geographically isolated from the rest of the Bellevue
    Farm properties, BF Lot #1 is undeveloped.
    Mary Margaret and Rodney Smith. The Smiths own BF Lot #2A, which
    borders the common waterfront. 10 The Smiths, residents of Washington, D.C.,
    built a home on their lot after they purchased it.
    Dana Pigott. Pigott, who resides full time in the Seattle area, owns South
    BF Lot #3. 11 She had a home built on her lot, which also borders the common
    waterfront. Pigott did not rent her San Juan Island home to vacationers, but she
    did make it available to non-family members through charity auctions.
    Diane and Thomas Tucci. The Tuccis own the upslope parcel, South BF
    Lot #5. 12 The Tuccis use the home on their lot relatively infrequently, as it is their
    second vacation home. They have applied for a transient rental permit, but it is
    unclear if they have actually ever rented the home to vacationers.
    8
    The Barrett parcel is located at 178 Bellevue Farm Road in the photograph.
    9
    The Hoopoe lots are Parcel Nos. 462421008000 and 462421005000 in the photograph.
    10
    The Smiths’ parcel is identified in the photo as Parcel No. 462421004000.
    11
    Pigott’s parcel is located at 208 Bellevue Farm Road and is identified on the photo as Parcel No.
    462452003000.
    12
    The Tucci lot is identified on the photo as Parcel No. 462452005000.
    - 11 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/12
    Web Augustine. Web Augustine’s brother, Brad, was the original developer
    of Bellevue Farm. Web Augustine has owned the upslope lot, South BF Lot #6,
    since 2000. 13 Two years later, he began renting the home on the lot to short-term
    vacation renters. He resides off island and visits, approximately, eight days a year.
    Christine and Timothy Doherty. Christine and Timothy Doherty purchased
    South BF Lot #7 in 2010. 14 Like most of the other owners in Bellevue Farm, they
    built a house after purchasing the lot. The Dohertys live off island, and like
    Stevens, Baute, and Web Augustine, the Dohertys rent their home to vacationers.
    C. The Summers of 2011 and 2012
    The major events leading to this lawsuit occurred in the summers of 2011
    and 2012. In 2011, Stevens booked three weddings to occur on BF Lots #3A and
    #3B. After the first wedding party, with 125 guests in attendance, several Bellevue
    Farm and South Bellevue Farm owners complained to Stevens about the number
    of people on the waterfront, the traffic, and the noise that lasted well into the night.
    There was evidence that the wedding participants and guests brought shuttle
    buses, diesel trucks, portable toilets, and kitchen catering equipment onto Bellevue
    Farm. The vehicle traffic blocked Bellevue Farm Road, preventing owners from
    entering or leaving their property. Loud music played late into the night, disrupting
    the owners’ solitude.
    Several owners questioned whether the wedding was allowed under
    Stevens’s transient rental permits. When Stevens realized weddings were not a
    13
    Web Augustine’s South BF Lot #6 is identified in the photo as Parcel No. 462452006000.
    14
    The Dohertys’ parcel is located at 145 Bellevue Farm Road and identified as Parcel No.
    462452007000.
    - 12 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/13
    good fit for the quiet Bellevue Farm community, he apologized for the disruption
    and offered to cancel his two other bookings. Corson, BFOA’s then-president, said
    there was no need to cancel the two weddings but asked that Stevens be present
    during the weddings and receptions to ensure the music ended at 9:00 p.m.
    Stevens ceased marketing his property for weddings that summer, and he booked
    no other weddings.
    Despite Stevens’s agreement not to rent his property for weddings, several
    owners grew concerned about how regularly such events might occur at Bellevue
    Farm. According to Glen Corson, the weddings “kind of woke everybody up—and
    got them talking with each other . . . it woke everybody up to the fact that we were
    having more people there more often[,] and it looked like it was going to get more
    and not less.” The owners felt Stevens’s rentals might threaten the low density,
    quiet, private nature of Bellevue Farm.
    In April 2012, several of the owners discovered that Stevens was in arears
    on his mortgage for BF Lots #3A and #3B by over $120,000 and that the lender
    had issued a foreclosure notice. A notice of a trustee’s sale was set for July 6,
    2012. In the short term, some owners became concerned because the Barretts
    had rented Stevens’s farmhouse and hatch house for their son’s wedding in late
    July 2012. From a long-term standpoint, Baute and Straight were concerned that
    if a lender purchased the property in foreclosure, BFOA could lose control over the
    use of the residences on the lots, and the lender might not maintain the property
    or pay homeowner association dues.
    - 13 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/14
    Stevens’s neighbors alerted him to the notice of foreclosure.     Stevens
    himself was unaware that his business partner had stopped paying the mortgage
    on the property. When he learned of the problem, he paid off the outstanding
    balance and refinanced the property.
    While Stevens was in the midst of avoiding foreclosure, Baute told Stevens
    he thought Stevens was violating BFOA’s 1997 CC&Rs by allowing renters to use
    the common waterfront. Several owners agreed with Baute that the 1997 CC&Rs
    precluded any renters from accessing the common waterfront. Stevens disagreed
    with their interpretation.
    Baute also questioned whether Stevens was following county requirements
    for transient rental permits. In early May 2012, Baute told Stevens that a county
    ordinance prevented Stevens from renting both the hatch house and the nearly
    completed beach house at the same time. Baute’s understanding of the transient
    rental permit ordinance caused Stevens to reconsider his agreement, made almost
    a year earlier, to rent his farm house, hatch house, and beach house to Blake
    Barrett, the son of Lauren and William Barrett, for Blake’s July 28, 2012 wedding.
    Stevens called Barrett to cancel the reservation because he was unsure if he was
    legally able to rent both residences at the same time under his transient rental
    permit. Although Stevens ultimately concluded he had the permits to rent the farm
    house and the newly constructed beach house to the Barretts, he refused to allow
    them to hold the wedding reception on his property. Although the Barretts could
    have held the reception on the common waterfront in front of Stevens’s lot, they
    were unsure where the common waterfront boundary was located and, thus, could
    - 14 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/15
    not guarantee everyone would stay off of BF Lot #3B. They scrambled to find an
    alternative location and ultimately used the waterfront area in front of the
    Baute/Kupperman house.
    Stevens’s refusal to allow the Barretts to use his land for the wedding, less
    than two months before it was scheduled to occur, caused an extremely negative
    backlash from Stevens’s neighbors. Blake believed Stevens was holding the rental
    over his parents’ heads to punish them for not agreeing with Stevens on the issue
    of renter access to the common waterfront. The Barretts were understandably
    angry at Stevens over this incident, as were most of the other owners, who
    believed their children should be permitted to use the waterfront for wedding
    ceremonies. As Kyllo-Corson testified, “who would do that to a bride? . . . I don’t
    want Bellevue Farm[] to be known as somebody that’s going to cancel the
    bride’s . . . wedding weeks or even a month before hand.” Stevens’s refusal to let
    the Barretts use his land for their son’s wedding, at such a late date, was a “pivotal
    point” with the owners, causing them to band together against him. Stevens
    appears not to have appreciated the consequences of his actions.
    At BFOA’s annual meeting on May 12, 2012, the owners discussed whether
    renters had the right to access the common waterfront and a floating dock.
    Stevens, who participated in that meeting, took the position that renters had
    historically always been permitted on the waterfront and should be treated as
    guests of the owners. Stevens relied on the language of paragraph 4(a) of the
    1997 CC&Rs, which allowed guests of owners to use that area. Stevens argued
    the word “guests” in article 4(a) meant both houseguests of owners and short-term
    - 15 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/16
    vacation renters. Most of the owners—who were, by that point, already disinclined
    to agree with any position Stevens took—disagreed with his broad interpretation
    of the word “guests.”
    Although there was no resolution to the issue at this meeting, Corson
    suggested the county transient rental permits required owners to provide a code
    of conduct for renters. Stevens offered to draft a proposed set of rules for renters
    and to disseminate the draft to the owners. In early June 2012, Stevens circulated
    a proposed set of “Rules and Regulations Regarding Common Land and Common
    Dock of Bellevue Farm Owners Association.” These proposed rules would have
    permitted waterfront access to short-term renters if the homeowners obtained
    insurance to cover damages caused by those renters and agreed to indemnify
    BFOA and the other owners for any injuries the renters sustained.
    On June 13, 2012, Stevens circulated a proposed “Agreement Regarding
    Respect of Property Rights and Use of Common Areas in Bellevue Farm.” This
    document would have, if signed by Bellevue Farm and South Bellevue Farm
    owners, allowed renters to use both the tennis courts in South Bellevue Farm and
    Bellevue Farm’s common waterfront. Stevens received less than enthusiastic
    feedback on his interpretation of the 1997 CC&Rs and his proposed agreement.
    According to Corson, after Stevens discovered his neighbors did not support his
    interpretation of the 1997 CC&Rs, Stevens began complaining to Corson about
    children driving golf carts on his property, people trespassing and picking his
    apples in his orchard, and people using his property as a picnic ground.
    - 16 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/17
    Straight and Baute prepared an alternative proposal, which Straight
    circulated via e-mail on June 20, 2012. Straight proposed what he labeled as a
    “clarification” of article 4(a) and an “Interim License Agreement.” The proposed
    additional language for article 4(a) read:
    As provided in the first two sentences of this Article 4a, the common
    land (including but not limited to the common waterfront) and
    common dock is not to be used by tenants (whether short term or
    long term), and is to be reserved for and used only by owners, as
    described and limited above in this Article 4a. However, owners may
    seek permission from [BFOA] and its Board to be allowed to use a
    limited and specified area of the common waterfront, in the form of a
    written and signed revocable license agreement, and such
    permission and the terms of any such revocable license, if any, will
    be determined in the sole and absolute discretion of [BFOA] and the
    Board. Tenants are not considered to be guests.
    And under the proposed license agreement, owners with transient rental permits
    could allow renters limited access to the common waterfront. Accompanying the
    proposed license agreement was a hand-drawn map of Bellevue Farm and the
    common waterfront with three small areas designated for renters’ use.
    On June 21, 2012, Corson distributed the Straight/Baute proposal to the
    owners with a notice of a July 5, 2012 special meeting. In this notice, Corson
    stated that if any owner refused to approve the article 4(a) clarification or the
    proposed license agreement, the owners would also discuss “whether BFOA
    should sue any such owner for declaratory relief, quiet title and a permanent
    injunction.” Corson also asked for owners to submit their votes via e-mail ahead
    of the meeting if they could not attend. Stevens objected, contending it was
    inappropriate for Corson to solicit votes ahead of the meeting. Baute, in response,
    told Stevens the “results were in” before the special meeting began.
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/18
    Stevens attended the July 5, 2012 special meeting to register his opposition
    to any change to the 1997 CC&Rs that restricted renters’ use of the common
    waterfront and to any license agreement that could be revoked on the whim of
    BFOA. During the meeting, the owners voted to approve the clarification to article
    4(a) of the 1997 CC&Rs. Stevens voted against the proposal and Web Augustine
    abstained.
    The next major dispute arose over Stevens’s proposed construction of a
    5,600 square foot barn on BF Lot #3A. In mid-July 2012, Stevens submitted final
    plans to the county for a building permit for a large barn. Stevens refused to tell
    his neighbors the purpose for the barn, but based on notations on the plans, they
    concluded he intended to use it to process alcohol—specifically, wine and hard
    cider. The plans, in fact, bore the notation:
    Building use note: This mixed use building is proposed to be used
    as a personal, small scale winery & storage for farm equipment on
    the first floor with an ADU office on the second floor. In the future
    the facility may sell wine.
    The drawings called out resting tanks, fermentation tanks, barrel storage, a bottling
    area, a large area for staging and fruit storage, racking facilities, and a “wine/cider
    making lab.” Although Stevens testified he planned to use the barn only to store
    farming equipment, the plans showed a very small area for equipment storage in
    comparison to the area designated for wine- or cider-making. Given the size of
    the barn and the number and size of fermentation tanks, resting tanks, and wine
    barrels shown on the plans, Corson, a retired brew master at Rainier Brewery,
    believed Stevens intended to start a “moderate sized commercial winery.” The
    - 18 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/19
    Bellevue Farm owners disbelieved Stevens when he tried to assure them he had
    no intention to start a commercial business on BF Lot #3A.
    Fearing that Stevens intended to open an alcohol processing facility or
    commercial winery in the barn, the owners—who wanted to protect the seclusion,
    privacy, and tranquility of Bellevue Farm—decided they needed to amend the 1997
    CC&Rs to prevent this commercial activity.       Corson called a second special
    meeting for August 4, 2012 to consider an amendment to article 5 of the 1997
    CC&Rs. This proposed amendment, also drafted by Straight, identified allowable
    and prohibited agricultural uses and activities.    Activities explicitly prohibited
    included “the sale of liquor, wine, beer, hard cider or other alcoholic beverages,”
    and the “use of industrial, manufacturing or processing equipment for distilling or
    making wine, liquor, beer, hard cider or alcoholic beverages for sale.”
    The day before the special meeting, August 3, 2012, Baute testified he went
    to Stevens’s property to try to talk to Stevens about the proposal. Stevens told
    Baute he was trespassing, told him to “get the [f—k] off of his property,” and
    threatened to call the police. Corson testified he too went to speak to Stevens and
    found him inside the beach house finishing some construction work. Stevens told
    Corson he was trespassing and “to get off of his property.”
    At the August 4, 2012 special meeting, the members of BFOA adopted
    Straight’s proposed article 5(g) to the 1997 CC&Rs. Stevens refused to attend the
    meeting but cast his votes against the amendment by e-mail.
    While the Bellevue Farm owners fought over renter access rights and
    permissible agricultural activities, some owners observed Stevens and his father
    - 19 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/20
    removing an apple tree on a part of what those owners believed to be the common
    waterfront. Stevens, who had maintained the apple tree for the entire time he had
    owned BF Lot #3B, assumed it was his tree.
    To resolve this conflict, Corson commissioned a survey of the boundary line
    between the common waterfront and Stevens’s BF Lot #3B. Corson and Stevens
    both assumed the boundary ran in a straight line approximately 75 feet back from
    the ordinary high watermark. In fact, the survey revealed the boundary line was
    crooked, and it turned out the apple tree Stevens cut down was on the common
    waterfront, not on BF Lot #3 as he had assumed based on the previously
    understood, but improper, boundary line.       Stevens apologized to the owners
    afterward for mistakenly cutting down the tree. His apology did little to mend his
    relationship with his neighbors.
    After the owners concluded their special meeting on August 4, 2012, several
    attendees voiced concern over what they perceived as Stevens’s unreasonable
    behavior. Apparently they came to believe that the best way to assert control over
    the situation was to build a fence at the boundary of the common waterfront and
    Stevens’s lot.    Corson testified there was a general agreement amongst the
    owners that it was a good idea to build the fence, although they took no official
    vote on whether to construct such a fence. Corson, as president of BFOA, decided
    to install the fence.
    Other incidents allegedly occurred that summer. According to Baute and
    Dr. Kupperman, after the tense special meetings in July and August 2012, they
    became afraid of Stevens after he fired a shotgun over their heads near the
    - 20 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/21
    waterfront. Baute thought Stevens shot at them as an act of intimidation or to
    “mark[] his territory.” Several owners testified that once they heard about this
    alleged incident, they were uninterested in approaching Stevens to talk to him
    about any of the disputes. They were outraged that Stevens would fire a shotgun
    in such close proximity to the houses.
    D. BFOA Lawsuit against Stevens and the Spite Fence
    Several things occurred in September 2012. First, BFOA and all of the
    owners (Owner Plaintiffs) initiated this lawsuit against Stevens on September 11,
    2012. BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs sought declaratory relief as to the validity of
    article 4(a) and 5(g) of the 1997 CC&Rs. They sought an injunction to prohibit
    Stevens’s renters from using the common waterfront.                    BFOA and the Owner
    Plaintiffs, except Hoopoe, alleged Stevens had committed trespass by destroying
    the apple tree they had learned was on the common waterfront and not on
    Stevens’s lot.      And Owner Plaintiffs Baute, Birchfield, and the Kuppermans
    asserted a claim against Stevens for timber trespass under RCW 4.24.630 relating
    to Stevens’s 2011 removal of a willow grove that spanned the parties’ joint
    boundary. 15
    Second, Stevens held his own wedding on BF Lot #3B on September 15,
    2012.    The Owner Plaintiffs were aware of his intended nuptials, as he had
    informed Baute, Corson, and Straight of the planned event months earlier. Corson,
    in turn, informed some of the Owner Plaintiffs about the planned event.
    15
    Dr. Kupperman also asserted a negligent infliction of emotional distress claim arising out of the
    alleged August 2012 shotgun incident. This claim was presented to a jury in 2017 but dismissed
    pursuant to CR 50(a) at the close of Dr. Kupperman’s case-in-chief.
    - 21 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/22
    Third, on either September 16 or 17, 2012, Corson’s contractor began
    digging post holes and built a split rail cedar fence on the boundary line between
    the common waterfront and Stevens’s BF Lot #3B. Corson did not ask the BFOA
    Board of Directors (Board) for permission to build the fence, but he used BFOA
    funds to do so. The fence was originally built with five openings along the boundary
    line to allow people to walk through to the waterfront. Corson was not present
    when the fence was built, and Baute gave the contractor direction on where to
    place the openings. Of the five openings in the fence, the one available for
    Stevens’s renters—had he signed the license agreement—was partially blocked
    by a large tree. There were no openings in the fence in front of Stevens’s beach
    house. Baute testified he decided to spread out openings, with an emphasis on
    openings on the right side of Stevens’s lot. No one from BFOA notified Stevens of
    the intent to erect the fence. And no one consulted with Stevens as to the
    placement of the openings in the fence.
    E. Stevens’s Counterclaims
    In response to the suit and the fence, Stevens asserted several
    counterclaims against BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs. He alleged BFOA and the
    Owner Plaintiffs had violated the 1997 CC&Rs by “clarifying” article 4(a) and
    amending article 5 through the adoption of article 5(g) to restrict his property rights
    (counterclaim 1). 16 He also contended BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs violated the
    1997 CC&Rs by erecting a spite fence blocking his access to the common
    16
    Stevens voluntarily dismissed several counterclaims before the 2017 jury trial. The trial court
    dismissed other counterclaims on summary judgment that are not the subject of this appeal. The
    counterclaim numbering referenced here reflects Stevens’s Fifth Amended Counterclaims, as that
    document is the most relevant for this appeal.
    - 22 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/23
    waterfront (counterclaim 2). He further asserted constructing the fence to block
    his access to the common waterfront was a violation of RCW 7.40.030 17
    (counterclaim 3). Stevens also claimed BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs further
    violated the 1997 CC&Rs because the changes to the 1997 CC&Rs and erection
    of the fence constituted a nuisance (counterclaim 7).
    Stevens later added a counterclaim alleging BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs
    had breached a duty of good faith toward him by amending articles 4(a) and 5(g),
    by adopting a series of unreasonable license agreements for renter waterfront
    access, and by constructing the fence (counterclaim 10). He also sought partition
    of the common waterfront based on the significant operational disagreements he
    had with the Owner Plaintiffs (counterclaim 11).
    Finally, Stevens added a counterclaim alleging BFOA and its Board were
    violating the statute governing homeowner associations, chapter 64.38 RCW, in
    several different ways, including breaching fiduciary duties he claimed they owed
    to him (counterclaim 12). 18 This counterclaim 12, as modified over the course of
    the lawsuit, alleged statutory violations against only BFOA, “acting through its
    directors, and not against those directors individually or against [BFOA’s]
    members.” 19 Stevens alleged BFOA failed to give the required statutory notice of
    17
    RCW 7.40.030 provides in pertinent part: “An injunction may be granted to restrain the malicious
    erection, by any owner or lessee of land, of any structure intended to spite, injure or annoy an
    adjoining proprietor.”
    18
    Stevens also alleged Baute had committed abuse of process in his litigation conduct toward
    Stevens and Stevens’s attorneys and in attempting to use the lawsuit to force Stevens out of
    Bellevue Farm (counterclaim 13). Stevens voluntarily dismissed this claim in November 2017, after
    this court issued its decision in Bellevue Farm I. We do not address counterclaim 13 any further.
    19
    The trial court granted Stevens’s CR 41 motion to voluntarily dismiss any portion of counterclaim
    12 that was based on the litigation conduct of BFOA or its Board.
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/24
    all meetings, failed to make those meetings open to all Bellevue Farm lot owners,
    failed to keep minutes of all actions it took, failed to make its minutes and other
    records available to lot owners, and failed to make financial information available
    in a timely and organized manner. He also alleged BFOA failed to comply with its
    duties of good faith and fair dealing by, among other things, constructing a fence
    between his property and the common waterfront.
    The trial court resolved the parties’ claims and counterclaims through
    summary judgment orders, a 2016 bench trial, and a 2017 jury trial. The details of
    its decisions and the parties’ arguments on appeal are addressed below.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. BFOA Changes to Articles 4(a) and 5(g) of the 1997 CC&Rs
    1. Relevant Facts
    Article 1 of the 1997 CC&Rs recognizes that Bellevue Farm is “a unique and
    irreplaceable parcel of land” with “exceptional natural beauty and unusual
    diversity.” By purchasing a lot within Bellevue Farm, the owners agreed that the
    land is “desirable primarily for low density residential use and a wide variety of
    related rural and recreational activities.” They also agreed that only designated
    portions of Bellevue Farm could be used for “certain commercial uses.”
    The purpose of the 1997 CC&Rs was to:
    a. Permit the broadest possible use of both individual lots
    and the common land for all the usual and desirable rural,
    recreational and residential activities which are not in conflict with a
    high degree of privacy and seclusion for individual Owners and which
    do not conflict with maintenance of the natural qualities and beauty
    of the area.
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/25
    b. Provide a reasonable basis for use of the common land for
    the fullest enjoyment of all the residential lot Owners.
    c. Maintain and enhance the material value and quality of
    [Bellevue Farm] of each individual lot Owner and all lot Owners
    collectively.
    d. Provide a reasonable means of allowing certain
    designated portions of [Bellevue Farm] to be used for commercial,
    multi-family and mixed uses while minimizing conflicts with the
    primary use of [Bellevue Farm] by single-family residential lot
    Owners.
    Article 1 further provides, “Interpretation of specific provisions of these covenants
    shall be made in keeping with these general purposes.”
    Article 2 gives BFOA the authority to “[s]et reasonable rules for the use of
    the common land in keeping with these covenants and their general purposes.”
    BFOA can levy annual assessments against each owner to cover the cost of
    maintenance and operation of the common facilities and roads. Every owner within
    the Bellevue Farm short plat is automatically a member of BFOA. Voting rights,
    consisting of 16 votes, are allocated among the various lots. The owner of BF Lots
    #1A and #1B, holds 2 votes. Stevens, as the owner of BF Lots #3A and #3B, is
    entitled to 4 votes. The owners of every other lot hold one vote each. The annual
    maintenance dues are similarly allocated. As a result, Stevens paid 25 percent of
    the homeowner association’s annual assessments.
    a. Renter Access to Common Waterfront under Article 4(a)
    Article 4 gave to each owner “an equal right to enjoyment of the common
    land” and access to a common dock. This right was subject to the restrictive
    covenants laid out in articles 4(a) through (e) and “such other rules as [BFOA] may
    prescribe from time to time.” When adopted in 1997, article 4(a) provided:
    - 25 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/26
    Use of the common land and any common dock by guests
    who are actual house guests of Owners, or who are specifically
    accompanied by an Owner is permitted. Use of the common land
    and any common dock by persons not a guest in the household of
    an Owner, or not accompanied by an Owner or a member of an
    Owner’s family, is not permitted. Lot Owners who have not built a
    house may not permit guests to make use of the common land or
    any common dock unless they are accompanied by the Owner, nor
    may they lease or rent their unimproved land for the purpose of
    conferring use of such facilities upon a third party.
    At the July 5, 2012 special meeting, the owners approved, by a vote of 11
    to 4, 20 a document entitled “Clarification of Article 4a of the Conditions, Covenants
    and Restrictions of the Bellevue Farm Owners’ Association.”                  This document
    provided:
    WHEREAS Article 4a of the Bellevue Farm Owners’
    Association (“BFOA”) Conditions, Covenants and Restrictions
    (“CCRs”) states that the common waterfront land and common dock
    is reserved for use by owners and their actual house guests and
    visitors accompanied by owners, and further provides that paying
    tenants not accompanied by owners are not allowed to use the
    common waterfront land or the common dock;
    WHEREAS one BFOA member, Chad Stevens (“Stevens”) is
    operating a three home rental business . . . and Stevens has argued,
    erroneously, that Article 4a of the CCRs allows tenants the same
    unrestricted rights to use the common waterfront land and common
    dock as owners;
    THE MEMBERS SIGNING BELOW WISH TO RESOLVE
    THE ISSUE QUICKLY, CHEAPLY AND INFORMALLY, WITHOUT
    HAVING TO SUE STEVENS, and believe that signing this document
    is the friendlier and more cost-effective way to end any controversy
    about the meaning of Article 4a, and thus, have signed below to
    indicate that sixty (60%) percent of BFOA’s voting members have
    clarified Article 4a of the CCRs as follows:
    Three new sentences are added to Article 4a of the CCRs, as
    follows: “As provided in the first two sentences of this Article 4a, the
    20
    Article 11 of the 1997 CC&Rs authorizes amending the covenants by a vote of 60 percent of the
    authorized votes. With 16 total voting units, the amendment passed by more than the requisite 60
    percent.
    - 26 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/27
    common land . . . is not to be used by tenants . . . and is to be
    reserved for and used only by owners . . . . However, owners may
    seek permission from [BFOA] and its Board to be allowed to use a
    limited and specified area of the common waterfront, in the form of a
    written and signed revocable license agreement . . . . Tenants are
    not considered to be guests.”
    Straight recorded the amended 1997 CC&Rs with the county auditor on August
    23, 2012.
    The trial court denied, on summary judgment, Stevens’s motion to invalidate
    the language that BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs added to article 4(a). In an oral
    ruling, the court stated that article 4(a) did not impose a new or different restriction
    on Bellevue Farm owners. It concluded that the 1997 CC&Rs, as originally drafted,
    did not permit renters to use the waterfront because the article restricted that use
    to actual house guests or guests accompanied by an owner.
    Stevens then sought to enjoin enforcement of the renter access restrictions
    pending trial, claiming the prohibition, to the extent it existed, had been abandoned
    by the owners over the years. He also argued BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs
    should be estopped from seeking to enforce it against him because he had
    purchased BF Lots #3A and #3B based on representations of BFOA’s then-
    president, Brad Augustine, that renter access to the waterfront was permissible.
    In May 2013, after Baute confronted Stevens’s attorney, who was staying
    in one of Stevens’s residences, about walking unaccompanied on the common
    waterfront and subsequently verbally accosted some young children whose
    parents were renting Stevens’s beach house, the trial court stayed BFOA’s
    enforcement of clarified article 4(a) until it could rule on Stevens’s abandonment
    and estoppel arguments. In August 2013, the court ruled that Stevens’s renters
    - 27 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/28
    could use the common waterfront until all issues regarding article 4(a) were
    resolved, as long as Stevens maintained insurance covering his tenants’ and
    guests’ use of the property, provided the names of his renters to BFOA, and agreed
    to indemnify BFOA for any damages claimed by guests or tenants.
    Two years later, BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs moved to dismiss Stevens’s
    abandonment and estoppel claims. Stevens filed a cross motion for summary
    judgment, arguing that even if the 1997 CC&Rs prohibited renter access to the
    waterfront parcel, equity did not allow BFOA or any of the Owner Plaintiffs to
    enforce this restriction under the doctrines of abandonment, equitable estoppel,
    and laches.
    Stevens testified Brad Augustine, who sold BF Lot #3 to him, told him that
    renters could have unrestricted access to the waterfront parcel. Stevens claimed
    he had relied on these representations when deciding to purchase BF Lot #3. Brad
    Augustine, the author of the 1997 CC&Rs, confirmed he told Stevens that BF Lot
    #3 could be used for transient rentals when Stevens purchased the property. Brad
    Augustine testified that renters were quite rare before he left Bellevue Farm in
    2005. Furthermore, he understood that the 1997 CC&Rs gave the owners the right
    to impose restrictions on renters’ use of the waterfront if rentals became a problem.
    Stevens provided declarations from several people who had rented property
    in Bellevue Farm over the years, all of whom testified they had used the waterfront
    area to dig clams, play in tide pools, fly kites on the beach, or walk the shoreline.
    Other renters stated they had been told by Brad or Web Augustine that renters
    - 28 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/29
    could use the waterfront without restriction. Web Augustine confirmed he never
    told renters they could not use the waterfront.
    But many of the renters saw no one other than members of their own party
    while there, and none of them had any interaction with any Bellevue Farm owners.
    This testimony was consistent with the testimony of the Owner Plaintiffs, many of
    whom testified they had only occasionally seen renters on the waterfront, or
    because the lots are so large and far apart from each other, and not all of the
    owners knew each other, they could not recognize someone as a renter or owner.
    Some owners testified they did not know the other owners well enough to know
    whether the people on the waterfront were authorized to be there or not. For many
    who lived off island and were present infrequently, their knowledge of tenant usage
    was limited. Anderson and Grosse, Hoopoe’s owners, were not even aware that
    other lot owners were renting their homes to vacationers.
    To be sure, some owners knew renters were using the waterfront. These
    Owner Plaintiffs asked renters to leave the waterfront area or asked renters if they
    were house guests of any Bellevue Farm owner before asking them to leave.
    Based on this factual record, the trial court issued a letter ruling granting the
    summary judgment motion brought by BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs on
    September 22, 2015. The court reasoned:
    It is undisputed that a few of the owners at Bellevue Farm[]
    have regularly rented out their properties during a few months each
    year and that, to some unknown extent, renters have been seen on
    the common area waterfront by at least a few of the other owners. It
    is also undisputed that the majority of the owners have not rented
    their properties and were either unaware that Article 4(a) was being
    violated or were not sufficiently concerned to instigate an
    enforcement action until recently. Despite that evidence the [c]ourt
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/30
    is not persuaded that the history of non-enforcement of Article 4(a)
    manifests a subjective intent by the vast majority of the owners to
    abandon their rights under Article 4(a). The violations evidenced by
    Defendant’s pleadings are not so substantial and habitual that the
    [c]ourt could fairly conclude that Article 4(a) has been abandoned.
    Nor does the [c]ourt believe that any reasonable and fair-minded
    finder of fact could do so.
    The court concluded that, on that record, Stevens’s defenses of abandonment,
    equitable estoppel, and laches failed. It entered its written summary judgment
    order, incorporating by reference its September 22, 2015 letter ruling.
    b. Permissible Commercial Agricultural Uses under Article 5
    Article 5 restricts the activities in which individual private lot owners can
    engage. Unless authorized by article 6’s provisions on commercial development,
    the individual lots are limited to private single-family use. Article 5(b) provides, “No
    commercial use of any residential lot will be permitted other than for agricultural
    purposes.” When adopted in 1994 and amended in 1997, the CC&Rs did not
    define the phrase “agricultural purposes.” But a conservation easement granted
    to the San Juan Preservation Trust in 1991 permitted “agricultural uses” and
    defined that term as:
    “Agricultural uses” shall be held to mean breeding, raising, pasturing,
    and grazing livestock of every nature and description; beekeeping;
    breeding and raising fish, poultry, and other fowl; planting, raising,
    harvesting, and producing agricultural, horticultural, and forestry
    crops and products of every nature and description; and the primary
    processing, storage and sale, including direct retail sale to the public,
    of crops and products harvested and produced principally on the
    Property.
    Article 6 states, “except as specifically provided in Article 5 and this Article
    6, no lot shall be used for commercial or multi-family residential purposes.”
    However, article 6(a) allows the owner of BF Lot #1 to develop it for “commercial
    - 30 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/31
    or townhouse condominium residential purposes.” The permitted commercial uses
    listed in the 1997 CC&Rs include retail, office, or a mix of such uses. And article
    6(b) provides that a portion of BF Lot #3, can be “developed and used as a small,
    country inn-type restaurant with seating for no more than eighty-four (84) persons
    and/or a bed and breakfast facility.”
    When the Owner Plaintiffs became concerned about Stevens’s plans for a
    commercial winery, Straight and Baute drafted a second proposed amendment to
    article 5 to add a new article 5(g). They left intact the provisions of article 6
    permitting the previously designated permissible commercial activities on BF Lot
    #3. But they identified those agricultural purposes deemed to be consistent with
    the 1997 CC&Rs and the 1991 conservation easement and those deemed
    inconsistent and therefore impermissible for all Bellevue Farm lots:
    (i) Agricultural Purposes Consistent With These Covenants and with
    the Conservation Easement.
    The following agricultural purposes are allowed as a commercial use:
    1.     Breeding, raising, pasturing and grazing of livestock.
    2.     Beekeeping.
    3.     Planting, raising and harvesting fruits, vegetables and other
    agricultural crops that are grown on the Property. Such crops may
    be sold, but pick-up of home grown crops are to be done in the
    quietest way possible, so as to not disturb or annoy neighbors.
    4.     Breeding and raising fish, poultry and other fowl.
    5.      Maintaining a “home office” within a single family residence
    that does not involve retail customers on site. The only allowed retail
    sales are for crops grown on the Property, in a “farm stand” facing
    Roche Harbor Road not to exceed 400 square feet with proper sound
    reduction and privacy landscaping so that the “farm stand” is not
    visible to any neighbors.
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/32
    6.     Making hard cider or wine for consumption by a single Owner
    (not for retail sale to customers on site).
    ....
    (ii) Agricultural Purposes Which Conflict With These Covenants and
    Conflict With The Conservation Easement.
    The following uses or activities are prohibited as a commercial use:
    1.     The retail sale of goods or services to customers on site (other
    than crops grown on the Property, sold via a “farm stand” via Article
    5g(i)(5) above), which would bring cars, trucks, traffic and noise on
    to and in to a residential neighborhood which places a priority on
    privacy, quietude and seclusion.
    2.    The use of processing equipment or industrial equipment for
    the purpose of making alcoholic beverages for more than just
    personal consumption by the Owners. The sale of liquor, wine or
    alcohol on the Property is prohibited.
    ....
    5.     The processing of crops, fruits and/or vegetables that were
    not grown on the Property . . . .
    The proposed amendment also included several provisions restricting the size of
    any barn and its warehouse doors, restricting the size and number of any
    accessory dwelling units or guest quarters on the parcels, and setting noise limits.
    At the August 4, 2012 special meeting, the Owner Plaintiffs voted to adopt
    this change by a 12 to 4 vote, with Stevens casting the 4 “no” votes. Corson
    recorded the amendment on August 24, 2012.
    Stevens moved for summary judgment, contending that article 5(g) was
    invalid in its entirety because it placed new restrictions on the use of private
    property without the consent of all property owners as required by Washington
    case law. The court, in a February 6, 2013 oral ruling, concluded that the 1997
    - 32 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/33
    CC&Rs permit “amendments” with less than 100 percent of the property owners’
    approval but do not allow new restrictions to be imposed in that fashion. Article
    5(g) included some new and different restrictions, such as the building height
    limitations, the location of any buildings, and the limits on noise levels. Based on
    the existence of a severability clause, the court struck these new provisions from
    article 5(g).
    As to the other provisions of article 5(g), the court concluded that the
    prohibition on the sale of alcohol or the making of alcoholic beverages for resale
    was consistent with Bellevue Farm’s original plan of development as laid out in the
    1997 CC&Rs. It determined that the 1991 conservation easement did not grant to
    Stevens or any other property owner any rights; it merely set use limitations that
    the San Juan Island Preservation Trust could enforce. And the 1994 CC&Rs were
    more restrictive than the conservation easement, making it of little relevance in
    interpreting the restrictive covenants. The court granted in part and denied in part
    Stevens’s summary judgment motion.
    In the court’s written summary judgment order, it attached a revision to
    article 5(g), deleting provisions it found to be void as a matter of law and modifying
    provisions to make them legally valid. 21 Article 5(g) now provides:
    g. Allowed and Prohibited Agricultural Purposes, and Uses
    and Activities that Are Not Agricultural. Article 1.a herein states that
    the primary purpose of these Covenants is to permit the use of
    individual lots for rural, recreational and residential activities which
    do not conflict with a high degree of privacy and seclusion for
    individual Owners. These Covenants also expressly acknowledge
    that the development restrictions and view protections of the August
    22, 1991 Conservation Easement (the “Conservation Easement”)
    21
    No party challenged the trial court’s changes to article 5(g).
    - 33 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/34
    bind the Property, which states that its purpose, in Section 1, is to
    “assure that the agricultural, wetlands and scenic values of the
    Property will be protected forever in their current condition”, and to
    “prevent any use of the Property that will significantly impair or
    interfere with the conservation values of the Property”, and to ensure
    the “protection of wetlands” and the “maintenance of views”, and to
    prevent the “construction, occupancy and use of more than one (1)
    single-family residence and appurtenance” per lot. Further Article
    5.b of these Covenants limits the commercial use of any lot solely to
    undefined agricultural purposes, and provides that there is to be no
    commerce conducted which involves the regular reception of
    customers on site and, similarly, no advertisements identifying any
    residential lot as a business location. Finally, Article 8 of these
    Covenants prohibits anything being done on an individual lot which
    becomes an annoyance or nuisance to the neighbors. Article 5 of
    these Covenants does not provide any definition or description of
    allowed or prohibited agricultural purposes. Accordingly, this new
    Article 5.g will allow and prohibit “agricultural purposes” consistent
    with these Covenants and the Conservation Easement, and will
    define what is not an agricultural purpose.
    (i) Agricultural Purposes Allowed by and Consistent with
    these Covenants and with the Conservation Easement.
    (a) The following farming, forestry and ranching uses are
    allowed for agricultural purposes:
    1.     Breeding, raising, pasturing and grazing of
    livestock on the Property;
    2.     Beekeeping;
    3.     Planting, raising and harvesting fruits,
    vegetables and crops that are grown on the Property; and
    4.     Breeding and raising fish, poultry and other fowl.
    (b) The following uses may be done for agricultural
    purposes:
    1.     Making hard cider or wine as a recreational
    activity for personal consumption by the Owner;
    2.     [barn restrictions deleted by the court]
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/35
    3.    Maintaining a home office that does not involve
    retail customers on site; and
    4.     Sale of crops grown on the Property in their
    natural post-harvest condition (without processing) at a “farm
    stand.” [remaining language regarding size and visibility to
    neighbors deleted by court]
    (ii) The following are prohibited uses and are not allowed,
    and/or are not agricultural purposes:
    (a) The sale of liquor, wine, beer, hard cider or other
    alcoholic beverages. Put simply, selling alcoholic beverages is
    not an agricultural purpose;
    (b) The use of industrial, manufacturing or processing
    equipment for distilling or making wine, liquor, beer, hard cider
    or alcoholic beverages for sale. Making alcoholic beverages for
    resale is not an agricultural purpose;
    (c) The processing or slaughtering of cattle, crops or
    livestock which were not raised or grown on the Property;
    (d) [noise restrictions deleted by court]
    (e) [warehouse door restrictions deleted by court]
    (f) If an Owner seeks to include residential living quarters
    within or as part of a barn, appurtenance or agricultural building,
    then all Owners must adhere to these Covenants, and to the
    Conservation Easement. [remaining language regarding limits
    to dwellings on parcels deleted by court]
    (iii) None of the provisions of this Article 5.g shall modify,
    change or limit the provisions of Article 6 of these Covenants.
    [remaining language regarding commercial use and sound
    restrictions deleted by court]
    2. Standard of Review
    Stevens challenges the trial court’s summary judgment determinations
    regarding the validity of articles 4(a) and 5(g) of the 1997 CC&Rs. We review
    summary judgment orders de novo, performing the same inquiry as the trial court.
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/36
    Wilkinson v. Chiwawa Cmtys. Ass’n, 
    180 Wn.2d 241
    , 249, 
    327 P.3d 614
     (2014).
    A court may grant summary judgment if the evidence, viewed in a light most
    favorable to the nonmoving party, establishes that there is no genuine issue of any
    material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    CR 56(c); Wilkinson, 180 Wn.2d at 249.
    Interpreting restrictive covenants is a question of law, and we employ rules
    of contract interpretation to determine the drafter’s intent, which is a question of
    fact. Wilkinson, 180 Wn.2d at 249-50. “‘[I]nterpretation of a particular covenant is
    largely dependent upon the facts of the case at hand.’” Id. at 253 (quoting Mains
    Farm Homeowners Ass’n v. Worthington, 
    121 Wn.2d 810
    , 827, 
    854 P.2d 1072
    (1993)). Where the dispute is between homeowners who are jointly governed by
    the covenants, “‘[t]he court’s goal is to ascertain and give effect to those purposes
    intended by the covenants.’” Id. at 250 (quoting Riss v. Angel, 
    131 Wn.2d 612
    ,
    623, 
    934 P.2d 669
     (1997)).
    In determining the drafter’s intent, we give covenant language its
    ordinary and common use and will not construe a term in such a way
    so as to defeat its plain and obvious meaning. We examine the
    language of the restrictive covenant and consider the instrument in
    its entirety. The lack of an express term with the inclusion of other
    similar terms is evidence of the drafters’ intent. Extrinsic evidence is
    used to illuminate what was written, not what was intended to be
    written. We, however, do not consider extrinsic evidence that would
    vary, contradict or modify the written word or show an intention
    independent of the instrument.
    Id. at 250-51 (quotations, citations, and alterations omitted). This “context rule”
    applies even when the disputed provision is unambiguous. Shafer v. Bd. of Trs.
    of Sandy Hook Yacht Club Estates, Inc., 
    76 Wn. App. 267
    , 275, 
    883 P.2d 1387
    (1994). Special emphasis is placed on “arriving at an interpretation that protects
    - 36 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/37
    the homeowners’ collective interests.” Wilkinson, 180 Wn.2d at 250 (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (quoting Riss, 
    131 Wn.2d at 623-24
    ). “[W]here
    reasonable minds could reach but one conclusion, questions of fact may be
    determined as a matter of law.” Id.
    3. Validity of Article 4(a)
    Stevens argues the trial court erred in declaring article 4(a) valid. He relies
    on Wilkinson to argue that because the language added to article 4(a) imposed
    new restrictions on his property rights, a unanimous vote of BFOA members was
    legally required. We reject this argument because we conclude, as did the trial
    court, that BFOA did not impose new restrictions on renter access to the
    waterfront.
    In Wilkinson, our Supreme Court addressed when homeowner associations
    may enact new restrictive covenants without unanimous approval of the
    homeowners. There, owners in the Chiwawa residential community had rented
    their homes to unrelated persons on a short-term, for-profit basis for decades
    without controversy. Id. at 247. As the number and frequency of rentals increased,
    a majority of the owners voted to make vacation rentals of less than one month a
    prohibited commercial use under the community’s covenants. Id. at 247-48. The
    trial court ruled that the bar on short-term rentals was unenforceable. Id. at 248.
    The homeowner association appealed, arguing that under the terms of its
    covenants, a majority of the owners could amend the covenants to prohibit short-
    term vacation rentals. Id. at 249. Our Supreme Court rejected that argument. The
    court recognized that an express reservation of power authorizing less than 100
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/38
    percent of property owners to adopt new restrictions is valid, “‘provided that such
    power is exercised in a reasonable manner consistent with the general plan of the
    development.’” Id. at 255-56 (quoting Shafer, 
    76 Wn. App. at 273-74
    ). But “when
    the general plan of development permits a majority to change the covenants but
    not create new ones, a simple majority cannot add new restrictive covenants that
    are inconsistent with the general plan of development or have no relation to
    existing covenants.” Id. at 256. It concluded that the prohibition on short-term
    rentals was unrelated to any existing covenant and could not be adopted by a
    simple majority vote. Id. at 256-57.
    Under Wilkinson, the first question is whether the 1997 CC&Rs granted
    BFOA the power to adopt new restrictions unrelated to any existing covenants or
    simply to make changes to existing restrictions. If BFOA only has the power to
    change existing restrictions, the second question is whether the changes are
    consistent with BFOA’s general plan of development and have a relation to existing
    covenants.
    Article 11 of the CC&Rs provides, “These covenants may be amended at
    any time by a vote of sixty percent (60%) of the authorized votes.” This language
    is almost identical to the provision at issue in Wilkinson, which the Supreme Court
    found insufficient to constitute an authorization to enact new restrictions unrelated
    to existing covenants. We therefore hold that article 11 permits only changes to
    existing covenants and does not authorize the enactment of new restrictions.
    Article 4(a), then, is valid only if it imposes no new restrictions unrelated to existing
    - 38 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/39
    covenants and the changes are consistent with BFOA’s general plan of
    development.
    We conclude the change made to article 4(a) did not impose new
    restrictions on Stevens or any other Bellevue Farm owners. Article 4 conferred on
    each owner the right to use the common waterfront. But that right was always
    subject to the limitations specified in articles 4(a) through (e) and article 4’s express
    reservation for “such other rules as [BFOA] may prescribe from time to time.”
    The 1997 CC&Rs, the applicable restrictions when Stevens purchased BF
    Lot #3, limited use of the common waterfront and dock to “actual house guests”
    and “guest[s] in the household” of owners. And a “person” who is not a “guest in
    the household of an Owner” or “not accompanied by an Owner or a member of an
    Owner’s family” may not use these common areas. Vacation renters clearly fall
    into this latter category because they are not actual house guests of an owner or
    guests in an owner’s household. Adding language stating that a tenant is not an
    “actual house guest” is not the imposition of a new restriction. It is, as the Owner
    Plaintiffs argue, a mere clarification of a pre-existing prohibition.
    Nevertheless, Stevens argues we must broadly construe the phrase “actual
    house guests” to include his paying short-term vacation renters. This argument is
    not textually based or based in common sense.               We “impute an intention
    corresponding to the reasonable meaning of the words used. . . . [and,] generally[,]
    give words in a contract their ordinary, usual, and popular meaning unless the
    entirety of the agreement clearly demonstrates a contrary intent.”               Hearst
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/40
    Commc’ns, Inc. v. Seattle Times Co., 
    154 Wn.2d 493
    , 503-04, 
    115 P.3d 262
    (2005).
    Webster’s defines “houseguest” as “a guest staying overnight or longer.”
    WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 1096 (1993). 22                      “Guest” is
    primarily defined as “a person entertained in one’s house or at one’s table,” or “a
    person to whom hospitality is extended,” especially someone “invited to participate
    in some activity at the expense of another.” Id. at 1008; see also BLACK’S LAW
    DICTIONARY 852 (11th ed. 2019) (“Someone who is entertained or to whom
    hospitality is extended.”). The common meaning of the word “houseguest” does
    not include paying clients.
    A guest can include “a person who lodges, boards, or receives refreshment
    for pay (as at a hotel, boardinghouse, restaurant) whether permanently or
    transiently.” WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY at 1008. A “guest
    in the household,” however, has a completely different meaning. A “household”
    includes individuals “who dwell under the same roof and compose a family.” Id. at
    1096. More specifically, it is a “social unit comprised of those living together in the
    same dwelling place.” Id.; see also BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY at 888 (a “family living
    together,” or a “group of people who dwell under the same roof”).
    Based on these definitions, “actual house guest” and “guest in the
    household,” as those terms are used in article 4(a), are meant to differentiate
    vacation renters from family guests. Article 4(a)’s plain language and intent always
    22
    We cite to Webster’s 1993 edition as that was the edition available when the 1997 CC&Rs were
    adopted.
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/41
    protected the common areas for owners’ use and for use by guests actually staying
    with the owners’ families.
    4. Stevens’s Defenses of Abandonment, Estoppel, and Laches
    Stevens next argues that if article 4(a)’s restriction on tenant use of the
    waterfront is a valid covenant, the trial court erred in rejecting his equitable
    defenses to enforcement of that covenant under the doctrines of abandonment,
    equitable estoppel, and laches. He contends there were genuine issues of fact
    warranting a trial on these equitable defenses. We reject this argument as well.
    a. Abandonment
    Stevens argues that both BFOA, as a corporate entity, and the Owner
    Plaintiffs abandoned their right to prohibit renters from using the waterfront. He
    contends the deposition testimony of many of the Owner Plaintiffs and past renters
    demonstrates a history of non-enforcement of the prohibition, rising to the level of
    the abandonment of article 4(a)’s restrictions.
    Property owners have a right in equity to enforce restrictive covenants.
    Mountain Park Homeowners Ass’n v. Tydings, 
    125 Wn.2d 337
    , 341, 
    883 P.2d 1383
    (1994). Article 9 of the 1997 CC&Rs explicitly provides that either BFOA or any
    individual owner may institute a lawsuit to enjoin non-compliance with the
    covenants.     But a number of equitable defenses are available to prevent
    enforcement of a covenant, including abandonment, estoppel, and laches.
    Mountain Park, 
    125 Wn.2d at 341
    .
    The defense of abandonment requires evidence that prior covenant
    violations have “so eroded the general plan as to make enforcement useless and
    inequitable.” 
    Id. at 342
    ; see also Mt. Baker Park Club, Inc. v. Colcock, 45 Wn.2d
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/42
    467, 471, 
    275 P.2d 733
     (1954); Ronberg v. Smith, 
    132 Wash. 345
    , 352-53, 
    232 P. 283
     (1925). “If a covenant applying to an entire tract has been habitually and
    substantially violated so as to create an impression that it has been abandoned,
    equity will not enforce the covenant.” Green v. Normandy Park Riviera Section
    Cmty. Club, 
    137 Wn. App. 665
    , 697, 
    151 P.3d 1038
     (2007), amended on
    reconsideration (Apr. 6, 2007). But a few violations of covenants do not constitute
    abandonment. Peckham v. Milroy, 
    104 Wn. App. 887
    , 890, 
    17 P.3d 1256
     (2001).
    “Violations must be material to the overall purpose of the covenant”; minor
    violations are insufficient to support abandonment. Mountain Park, 
    125 Wn.2d at 342
    .
    Generally, whether evidence supports a finding of abandonment is a
    question of fact. Green, 137 Wn. App. at 697; see also White v. Wilhelm, 
    34 Wn. App. 763
    , 770, 
    665 P.2d 407
     (1983) (“Applicability of [the abandonment] doctrine,
    which is based on estoppel, is a factual determination.”).         But at summary
    judgment, questions of fact may be determined as a matter of law when reasonable
    minds can reach only one conclusion. Miller v. Likins, 
    109 Wn. App. 140
    , 144, 
    34 P.3d 835
     (2001).
    Stevens presented evidence that the Owner Plaintiffs knew a few owners
    were renting their homes to vacationing families. He also presented evidence that
    Baute and Web Augustine did not restrict their renters’ use of the waterfront until
    2012. But it is undisputed that most of the Owner Plaintiffs who lived off island full
    time spent only a few days or weeks each year on Bellevue Farm. Many of the
    Owner Plaintiffs testified they infrequently visited the waterfront to monitor the
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/43
    frequency of its use, or they had trees blocking their views of the waterfront, or
    they were too far away to observe who was strolling the waterfront. The Owner
    Plaintiffs stated they rarely saw anyone on the waterfront or when they did, they
    had no idea whether the individuals were family members, actual houseguests of
    owners, or paying tenants. And Anderson and Gross, the owners of Hoopoe, were
    not even aware that some of the owners were renting their property to vacationers.
    Even if there was sufficient evidence to create a question of fact as to
    whether Baute and Web Augustine abandoned their right to enforce article 4(a),
    there is no evidence to suggest that any of the other Owner Plaintiffs did. Given
    that article 9 of the 1997 CC&Rs permits any of the owners to seek to enjoin
    violations, Stevens would have to establish that each and every Owner Plaintiff
    knew of and acquiesced in habitual violations by tenants. He did not do so here.
    Stevens points to testimony from one or two Owner Plaintiffs who testified
    they considered tenant use of the waterfront a necessary evil and “let things slide.”
    But their testimony also made it clear that what they observed was isolated in
    nature and occurred infrequently.      These same Owner Plaintiffs, when they
    realized tenant use was increasing and interfering with their own use of the
    waterfront, sought to clarify article 4(a) to ensure that any ambiguity in how tenants
    could use the common areas was alleviated. Stevens failed to show that violations
    of article 4(a) between 1997 and 2012 were so prevalent, habitual, and substantial
    that they constituted an abandonment of article 4(a).
    Stevens also argues BFOA effectively abandoned enforcement of article
    4(a) when Brad Augustine, the former BFOA president, actively marketed the
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/44
    waterfront to his renters and represented to future buyers, like Stevens, that their
    renters could use the waterfront. He maintains that regardless of whether those
    Owner Plaintiffs who bought their lots more recently were aware of violations, the
    knowledge, acts, and representations of BFOA’s former president must be imputed
    both to BFOA and to all the Owner Plaintiffs as members of BFOA who authorized
    BFOA and its president to act on their behalf.
    Stevens relies on Deep Water Brewing, LLC v. Fairway Res. Ltd., 
    152 Wn. App. 229
    , 
    215 P.3d 990
     (2009), for the proposition that Brad Augustine’s
    representations to Stevens and his non-enforcement of article 4(a) must be
    imputed to BFOA and to each individual Owner Plaintiff.          We find Stevens’s
    reliance on Deep Water Brewing to be misplaced.
    In that case, a restaurant owner entered into an easement and right-of-way
    agreement with a developer in exchange for the developer’s promise to restrict
    house heights to protect the restaurant’s lake view. Id. at 238. The trial court found
    that the developer breached its agreement with the restaurant owner and that the
    developer’s president and the homeowner association had tortiously interfered
    with the agreement. Id. On appeal, the court affirmed the imposition of liability
    against the president because he ignored provisions of the easement and right-of-
    way agreement by recording covenants that allowed house heights greater than
    the 16-feet he had promised to the restaurant owner. Id. at 266-67.
    The court also affirmed the trial court’s ruling that the homeowner
    association was jointly and severally liable for the tortious interference committed
    by the developer’s president. Id. at 270. The court concluded that the homeowner
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/45
    association had failed in its duty to evaluate building plans for compliance with the
    restrictions the developer had promised to the restaurant owner.           Id.   The
    homeowner association allowed lot owners to build homes in violation of that
    agreement and impaired the views from the restaurant.            Id.   Under those
    circumstances, the court concluded that the homeowner association was subject
    to joint and several liability to the restaurant owner. Id.
    Deep Water Brewing did not address the issue of whether statements by a
    homeowner association president can constitute the abandonment of a restrictive
    covenant by the community as a whole or whether the president’s non-
    enforcement of that covenant between 1994 and his departure from the community
    in 2005 (the year Brad Augustine sold his Bellevue Farm lot) can be imputed to
    Owner Plaintiffs who purchased their lots years later. We deem that case to be of
    little analytical help here.
    Under these circumstances, we agree with the trial court that Brad
    Augustine’s statement to Stevens that renters may use the waterfront cannot be
    imputed to the homeowners unless they were aware of the statement and took
    some action to indicate their subjective intent to abandon their right to enforce the
    1997 CC&Rs. Under article 9 of the CC&Rs, “any person owning land in the
    subdivision” may prosecute a civil action against anyone for violating or attempting
    to violate the covenants. (Emphasis added.) As experts in Washington property
    law noted:
    While courts sometimes discuss abandonment of restrictive
    covenants in a subdivision, there are serious problems with applying
    such a theory. First, if a court really means abandonment, analogous
    to the doctrine of abandonment that we see in the law of chattels,
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/46
    then a subjective intent to abandon must be found. Indeed,
    subjective intent is usually the greatest stumbling block in finding
    abandonment of a chattel. Second, how could a covenant, created
    in a formally adopted and recorded subdivision plat, be relinquished
    by something so informal and amorphous as a wish that it not be
    enforced, implied by some number of departures from it? In the
    subdivision cases, it is hard to imagine that one could prove that the
    many (how many?) owners of lots in a subdivision had subjectively
    intended to abandon the covenant. Subdivision covenants may be
    terminated by agreement if the owners of lots burdened and
    benefited by them agree to terminate them—but, in the absence of a
    covenant allowing termination by a smaller percentage, all must
    agree. Why, then, should it not require an “abandonment” by all
    owners to work termination by abandonment?
    17 WILLIAM B. STOEBUCK & JOHN W. WEAVER, WASHINGTON PRACTICE: REAL ESTATE:
    PROPERTY LAW § 3.8, at 144-45 (2004). In the analogous context of an alleged
    abandonment of an easement, the act evidencing abandonment must be
    “unequivocal and decisive and inconsistent with the continued existence of the
    easement.” Heg v. Alldredge, 
    157 Wn.2d 154
    , 161, 
    137 P.3d 9
     (2006). Nonuse,
    in the easement context, is not proof of an intent to abandon. 
    Id.
    The same standard of proof to establish abandonment of a restrictive
    covenant on a commonly owned parcel should apply here. An easement is a
    property right that gives its holder limited rights to use, but not to possess, the
    owner’s land. Admasu v. Port of Seattle, 
    185 Wn. App. 23
    , 36, 
    340 P.3d 873
    (2014). The 1997 CC&Rs grant property rights to Bellevue Farm lot owners that
    confer to each owner the right to use the common waterfront parcel. Indeed,
    Stevens and the Owner Plaintiffs all hold an ownership interest in the common
    waterfront, a property right conferring more rights than an easement. Because
    Stevens seeks to eliminate a significant property right—the right to exclude others
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/47
    from the common waterfront—we conclude that proof of abandonment must rise
    to the same level as evidence of abandonment of an easement.
    Under this formulation of the abandonment defense, mere non-enforcement
    of article 4(a)—analogous to nonuse of an easement—would be insufficient as a
    matter of law. Instead, Stevens must have proof that each of the Owner Plaintiffs
    took an unequivocal and decisive act inconsistent with the existence of a restriction
    on renter access to the waterfront.         Brad Augustine’s representations to
    prospective owners become irrelevant unless those owners, like Stevens,
    affirmatively granted unrestricted access to paying tenants.
    With perhaps the exception of Baute and Web Augustine, Stevens’s
    evidence did not meet this test. While most of the Owner Plaintiffs knew Stevens,
    Baute, and Web Augustine were renting their homes to short-term vacationers and
    some of them saw people on the waterfront who may have been renters, the
    evidence does not show that all of them took an unequivocal and decisive step to
    forgo their rights under article 4(a). Indeed, Stevens conceded below that Hoopoe
    did not abandon its rights to enforce article 4(a). Summary judgment on this
    defense was appropriate.
    b. Equitable Estoppel
    Stevens argues, alternatively, that BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs should
    be estopped from enforcing tenant restrictions in article 4(a) because former BFOA
    president Brad Augustine represented to him that tenants were permitted access
    to the common waterfront.
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/48
    Courts do not favor equitable estoppel, and the party claiming estoppel must
    prove each of its elements by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence. Wilhelm v.
    Beyersdorf, 
    100 Wn. App. 836
    , 849, 
    999 P.2d 54
     (2000). “Equitable estoppel is
    based on the notion that ‘a party should be held to a representation made or
    position assumed where inequitable consequences would otherwise result to
    another party who has justifiably and in good faith relied thereon.’” Lybbert v. Grant
    County, 
    141 Wn.2d 29
    , 35, 
    1 P.3d 1124
     (2000) (quoting Wilson v. Westinghouse
    Elec. Corp., 
    85 Wn.2d 78
    , 81, 
    530 P.2d 298
     (1975)). Stevens must demonstrate
    (1) BFOA or the Owner Plaintiffs made an admission or statement, or committed
    an act inconsistent with the claim they are now asserting; (2) he reasonably relied
    on BFOA’s or the Owner Plaintiffs’ admission, statement, or act; and (3) he would
    be injured if BFOA or the Owner Plaintiffs are allowed to contradict or repudiate
    the admission, statement, or act. Wilhelm, 100 Wn. App. at 849.
    Again, even if Brad Augustine’s statements can be imputed to BFOA,
    Stevens has not demonstrated how those statements can be imputed to every
    Owner Plaintiff, including many who purchased property in Bellevue Farm after
    Brad Augustine left the community. The trial court properly struck the equitable
    estoppel defense on summary judgment.
    c. Laches
    Lastly, Stevens contends the trial court erred in rejecting his laches defense.
    “‘Laches consists of two elements: (1) inexcusable delay and (2) prejudice to the
    other party from such delay.’” 23 United Trades Org. v. State, 
    175 Wn.2d 537
    , 542,
    23
    Earlier versions of laches included a third element—“knowledge or reasonable opportunity to
    discover on the part of a potential plaintiff that he has a cause of action against a defendant.” United
    - 48 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/49
    
    286 P.3d 377
     (2012) (quoting State ex rel. Citizens Against Tolls v. Murphy, 
    151 Wn.2d 226
    , 241, 
    88 P.3d 375
     (2004)). Laches is based on estoppel. Newport
    Yacht Basin Ass’n of Condo. Owners v. Supreme NW, Inc., 
    168 Wn. App. 56
    , 76,
    78, 
    277 P.3d 18
     (2012). The “main component of laches is prejudice to the other
    party.” Murphy, 
    151 Wn.2d at 241
    . Prejudice is not presumed; rather, Stevens
    bears the burden of showing “whether and to what extent he . . . has been
    prejudiced by the delay.” Clark County Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1 v. Wilkinson, 
    139 Wn.2d 840
    , 849, 
    991 P.2d 1161
     (2000). Laches must be proved by clear and
    convincing evidence. Arnold v. Melani, 
    75 Wn.2d 143
    , 148, 
    449 P.2d 800
     (1968).
    Stevens argues he has allowed renters to use the waterfront since 2005
    and the Owner Plaintiffs waited six years to enforce article 4(a). He contends the
    delay was inexcusable and prejudicial because he is now prohibited from renting
    to people who want a waterfront vacation experience—“the very reason that he
    purchased the property in the first place.”
    But this argument is based on the same erroneous premise as his
    abandonment and estoppel defenses—that anything former-president Brad
    Augustine told Stevens in 2005 has to be imputed to all of the Owner Plaintiffs.
    There is no legal basis for such an imputation.
    Additionally, at least three Owner Plaintiffs purchased their Bellevue Farm
    lots four to five years after Stevens purchased his lot. Hoopoe bought its property
    in 2009; the Dohertys bought their property in 2010, and the Kuppermanns
    Trades Org., 
    175 Wn.2d at
    542 n.3 (quoting Buell v. City of Bremerton, 
    80 Wn.2d 518
    , 522, 
    495 P.2d 1358
     (1972)).
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/50
    purchased their property in 2009. Furthermore, it was undisputed that tenant use
    of the waterfront area was infrequent until around 2011 when many realized that
    tenant traffic may increase as a result of construction of large homes by Baute and
    Kupperman on BF Lot #2B and Stevens’s construction of a large beach house on
    BF Lot #3B. Laches “cannot apply where a plaintiff has no reason to believe that
    legal action is necessary.” Newport Yacht Basin, 168 Wn. App. at 79. The
    evidence does not create a genuine issue of fact that each of the Owner Plaintiffs
    had a reason to believe it necessary to bring an enforcement action any earlier
    than September 2012.        We conclude the trial court did not err by rejecting
    Stevens’s laches defense. Accordingly, we conclude the clarification to article 4(a)
    is valid and enforceable.
    5. Permissible Commercial Agricultural Activities under Article 5(g)
    Stevens contends the trial court erred in validating article 5(g)’s prohibition
    on the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages, arguing that the prohibitions
    are new restrictions that cannot be imposed absent unanimous consent of all
    homeowners. We conclude article 5(g) is enforceable because it relates to pre-
    existing covenants and is consistent with Bellevue Farm’s general plan of
    development.
    First, the 2012 amendment explicitly referenced multiple related
    covenants—article 1(a)’s statement of the covenants’ primary purpose to allow
    rural uses not conflicting with owners’ privacy and seclusion; article 7’s
    requirement that owners comply with the terms of the 1991 conservation easement
    and limit construction to one single-family residence per lot; article 5(b)’s limitation
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/51
    on commercial uses other than for agricultural purposes; and article 8’s prohibition
    on annoyances and nuisances.
    Specifically, article 5(b) provided:
    No commercial use of any residential lot will be permitted
    other than for agricultural purposes. However, use of the property
    for business purposes (such as a home office) shall not be
    considered commercial use provided the work does not involve the
    regular reception of business clients and provided that the residence
    location shall not be advertised in any fashion as the business
    location of such person.
    Article 5(g) clearly related to article 5(b) because it defined what is and is not a
    permissible agricultural purpose. Stevens conceded this point below.
    Second, article 5(g) is consistent with Bellevue Farm’s general plan of
    development. The primary purpose, as set out in article 1 of the 1997 CC&Rs, is
    to ensure the privacy and seclusion for the owners living there.            Article 5(a)
    provides that, unless specifically authorized in article 6, the use of individual lots is
    limited to private, single-family residential use. Article 6 states that no lot may be
    used for commercial purposes, except for certain specified permissible commercial
    activities on BF Lot #1, belonging to Hoopoe, and BF Lot #3, belonging to Stevens.
    Article 6(b) provides:
    Lot 3. That portion of Lot 3 of the Bellevue Farm Short Plat
    comprising approximately two (2) acres . . . may be developed and
    used as a small, country inn-type restaurant with seating for no more
    than eighty-four (84) persons and/or a bed and breakfast facility.
    Such development and use shall be consistent with the type and
    quality of similar facilities in the area, such as the Duck Soup
    Restaurant on Roche Harbor Road.[24]
    24
    https://www.ducksoupsanjuans.com/.
    - 51 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/52
    There is nothing in article 6 permitting the construction and operation of a
    commercial hard cider or alcohol manufacturing facility or distillery on BF Lot #3.
    Stevens contends that article 5(b) permitted him to use his property for any
    “agricultural purpose” and that making and selling hard cider and wine is such an
    agricultural purpose. But this argument ignores article 5(b)’s explicit prohibition on
    any commercial use that involves the “regular reception of business clients” or the
    advertising of a business location on that property. It is difficult to see how a
    commercial winery or distillery could operate and abide by these restrictions. It
    also ignores the explicit description of the only type of commercial activity deemed
    appropriate for BF Lot #3—a small restaurant or a bed and breakfast facility.
    Stevens next argues his use of the property as a winery or distillery is
    permissible under the 1991 conservation easement.           The easement defines
    permissible “agricultural uses” as including the “primary processing, storage, and
    sale,” and the “direct retail sale to the public, of crops and products harvested and
    produced principally” on Bellevue Farm. One could argue that making hard cider
    or wine is not the “primary processing” of apples or grapes and, thus, not
    permissible under the conservation easement. But we need not reach that issue
    here because the Bellevue Farm short plat, recorded after the 1991 easement,
    expressly provided that “[i]f any private deed restrictions are in conflict with the
    restrictions which appear on the plat map, the more restrictive provisions shall
    govern.” Nothing prevented BFOA from defining permissible agricultural uses
    more narrowly than defined in the easement, and under the terms of the short plat,
    the more restrictive provisions apply.
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/53
    Unlike the prohibition on short-term rentals in Wilkinson, article 5(g)’s
    provisions defining permissible and impermissible agricultural activities are not
    unrelated to pre-existing covenants and are consistent with the general
    development plan for Bellevue Farm. Article 5(g) was thus validly adopted by
    majority vote, making it permissible under Wilkinson. See 180 Wn.2d at 255-57.
    B. Partition of the Common Waterfront
    1. Relevant Facts
    Stevens asked the trial court to partition the common waterfront so that each
    Bellevue Farm owner received fee title to some portion of that parcel. Stevens
    argued that because he owned a 25 percent interest in Bellevue Farm’s common
    waterfront parcel as a tenant in common with other owners, he had an absolute
    right to partition under RCW 7.52.010. The trial court rejected this argument,
    concluding that while the waterfront common area is owned by Bellevue Farm
    owners as tenants in common, the owners accepted title with full knowledge that
    the 1997 CC&Rs precluded partition.
    2. Standard of Review
    RCW 7.52.010 permits any person holding real property as tenants in
    common to bring an action for partition of the land in kind or for partition by sale if
    “partition cannot be made without great prejudice to the owners.” A partition action
    is an equitable action. Kelsey v. Kelsey, 
    179 Wn. App. 360
    , 365, 
    317 P.3d 1096
    (2014). Because a trial court has broad discretion and great flexibility to determine
    whether partition is appropriate, we review an order denying partition for abuse of
    discretion. Friend v. Friend, 
    92 Wn. App. 799
    , 804-05, 
    964 P.2d 1219
     (1998).
    - 53 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/54
    3. Analysis
    Stevens argues the trial court erred in denying him the right to partition the
    waterfront because his right to partition is absolute. This argument was firmly
    rejected by our Supreme Court in Carter v. Weowna Beach Community Corp., 
    71 Wn.2d 498
    , 
    429 P.2d 201
     (1967). In that case, the original grantor split the first
    tract into 81 residential lots (Tract 1), and deeded to each residential lot owner an
    undivided share in a second tract (Tract 2). 
    Id. at 499
    . The deeds provided that
    Tract 2 and the grantees’ interests in it were subject to covenants, reservations,
    and restrictions requiring Tract 2 be used as a private community park and
    watershed. 
    Id. at 499-500
    .
    Several decades later, Carter filed a partition action against the other
    landowners and the Weowna Beach Community Corporation, seeking the sale of
    Tract 2. 
    Id. at 501
    . At the conclusion of Carter’s case-in-chief at trial, the court
    dismissed his partition action, concluding that the sale of Tract 2 “free and clear of
    deed restrictions would be inconsistent with the intention of the original grantor,
    and would be contrary to the deeded interests of the purchasers to use the entire
    tract subject only to the rights of the 80 others to use it similarly.” 
    Id.
    The Supreme Court affirmed, holding that partition in kind was improper
    because the printed deeds were clear and unambiguous in expressing the
    grantor’s intent that the park be held in common for the use of all owners and that
    the purchasers understood their right in the land on which the park was built was
    subject to the rights of the other purchasers to use it at the same time. 
    Id.
     It further
    held that partition by sale was similarly improper:
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/55
    The right to sale, as a remedy guaranteed by statute, is not absolute
    in all cases of partition. It is not available where a cotenant, by his
    own acts, is estopped or has waived his right by express or implied
    agreement; or where his cotenant’s equitable rights will be minimized
    or defeated; or in violation of a condition or restriction imposed upon
    the estate by one through whom he claims.
    
    Id. at 502
     (citations omitted). The court concluded that because Carter purchased
    his property with full knowledge of the rights and privileges held by the other
    owners within the community, he could not claim the right to partition in a manner
    that would destroy those rights.
    Carter is analogous to this case. At the time Bellevue Farm was created,
    the San Juan County Code Chapter 16.40 Shoreline Master Program 25 (Ordinance
    No. 161-1976) provided:
    All waterfront subdivisions should include provision for
    common shoreline area. Common area should be provided at least
    from the line of ordinary high tide to the top of the bank. If tidelands
    are privately owned they should be included in common area.
    Access to common area should be provided to all lot owners.
    Pursuant to this program, the Bellevue Farm short plat’s dedications declared that
    “the shoreline common area shall be owned in common by all owners of lots within
    the plat,” and the plat map expressly identified the common area of the waterfront.
    The short plat also contained beach access restrictions:
    Any future application for a dock, other moorage structure,
    and/or access to the beach, shall provide for the common ownership
    and use by all lot owners. . . . If a moorage facility and/or access to
    the beach is approved by the county, all lot owners shall hold an
    undivided interest in the facility. . . .
    And article 4 of the 1997 CC&Rs provides:
    25
    The Shoreline Master Program is now recodified as Chapter 18.50.
    - 55 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/56
    Each lot Owner shall have an equal right to enjoyment of the
    common land shown on the face of the plat and to access any
    common dock, and such right shall be appurtenant to and pass with
    the title of each lot. Said right shall be subject to the following
    covenants, and such other rules as [BFOA] may prescribe from time
    to time[.]
    Stevens purchased BF Lot #3 subject to these restrictions. He took title to
    BF Lot #3 pursuant to a statutory warranty deed. The deed was explicitly made
    “[s]ubject to covenants, conditions and restrictions of record” described in an
    attached exhibit.   Included in the exhibit list were the 1997 CC&Rs and the
    provisions set out in the dedication of the Bellevue Farm short plat.
    This record is essentially undisputed. At the inception of Bellevue Farm,
    the clear intent was to set aside the waterfront for the use of all owners within the
    community. Stevens purchased BF Lot #3 with full knowledge of the rights and
    privileges that his fellow Bellevue Farm owners have in the waterfront. Partitioning
    the common waterfront now would destroy the rights of these owners, contravene
    the short plat’s declaration of intent, and violate article 4’s restriction of equal use
    and enjoyment.
    Stevens argues that even if a partition in kind could cause substantial
    prejudice to the Owner Plaintiffs, the court could ameliorate that prejudice by
    granting the Owner Plaintiffs an easement over any portion of the waterfront
    granted to Stevens. But we see no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s rejection
    of this proposal. Owners may agree not to partition land for a reasonable period
    of time. Schultheis v. Schultheis, 
    36 Wn. App. 588
    , 590-91, 
    675 P.2d 634
     (1984).
    Here, in the 1997 CC&Rs, the parties agreed to maintain the common ownership
    of the waterfront parcel for a period of 25 years. Under Carter, courts may enforce
    - 56 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/57
    this agreement and refuse to partition in kind or by sale when the doing so would
    contravene restrictions imposed in deeds, short plats, and restrictive covenants.
    The trial court did not err by dismissing Stevens’s partition claim.
    C. Stevens’s Motion to Disqualify Counsel for BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs
    and the Order Sealing Conflict Waivers
    1. Relevant Facts
    In October 2015, Stevens moved to disqualify the attorneys who
    represented both BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs. 26 Stevens contended his claims
    created a non-waivable conflict of interest such that joint representation was
    impermissible under the Rules of Professional Conduct (RPC). The trial court
    denied Stevens’s motion to disqualify counsel after an in camera review of written
    conflict waivers executed by BFOA’s Board and the Owner Plaintiffs. The trial
    court subsequently granted a motion to seal the conflict waiver letters. The court
    found that the conflict waivers were protected by the attorney-client privilege; that
    the public had no interest in seeing these documents; that under GR 15(c) and
    Seattle Times Co. v. Ishikawa, 
    97 Wn.2d 30
    , 
    640 P.2d 716
     (1982), BFOA and the
    Owner Plaintiffs had a compelling interest in protecting their privileged
    communications; and that the Owner Plaintiffs’ interest outweighed any public
    interest in access to those communications. The court further found that redacting
    the documents would not ensure that privileged information was fully protected.
    26
    Hoopoe retained separate counsel in May 2013.
    - 57 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/58
    2. Standard of Review
    Stevens challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion to disqualify and its
    decision to seal, rather than redact, the conflict waivers. We review de novo a
    court’s decision to grant or deny a motion to disqualify counsel. Plein v. USAA
    Casualty Ins. Co., 9 Wn. App. 2d 407, 412, 
    445 P.3d 574
    , review granted, 
    194 Wn.2d 1009
    , 
    452 P.3d 1233
     (2019). We also review de novo a determination
    whether an attorney has violated the RPC. 
    Id.
     A trial court’s decision to seal
    records is reviewed for abuse of discretion. Dreiling v. Jain, 
    151 Wn.2d 900
    , 907,
    
    93 P.3d 861
     (2004). 27
    3. Analysis
    a. Disqualification
    Stevens argues the trial court should have disqualified the attorneys who
    represented both BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs because there was a non-
    waivable conflict of interest between these parties. We conclude Stevens lacked
    standing to seek disqualification of counsel.
    “[T]he majority, if not universal, rule is that only a party who has been
    represented by the conflicted attorney has standing” to seek disqualification of that
    attorney. Burnett v. Dep’t of Corr., 
    187 Wn. App. 159
    , 170, 
    349 P.3d 42
     (2015).
    “The standing rule draws its strength from the logic of the rule itself, which is
    designed to protect the interests of those harmed by conflicting representations
    rather than serve as a weapon in the arsenal of a party opponent.” 
    Id.
     The
    27
    Whether the court used the proper standard governing the sealing of records is a legal question
    we review de novo. Bennett v. Smith Bundy Berman Britton, PS, 
    176 Wn.2d 303
    , 307, 
    291 P.3d 886
     (2013). Stevens does not contend the trial court used an incorrect legal standard in evaluating
    whether to seal these conflict waivers.
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/59
    attorneys representing BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs never represented Stevens.
    Accordingly, he did not have standing to bring a motion to disqualify, and the trial
    court did not err in denying the motion.
    b. Sealing Conflict Waiver Letters
    Stevens maintains the trial court erred in sealing, rather than redacting,
    attorney-client communications in the conflict waiver letters that BFOA and the
    Owner Plaintiffs executed. 28
    Article I, section 10 of our state constitution requires that “[j]ustice in all
    cases shall be administered openly.” Hundtofte v. Encarnación, 
    181 Wn.2d 1
    , 7,
    
    330 P.3d 168
     (2014). Under GR 15(c)(2), a court may seal records filed with that
    court if it enters written findings that the specific sealing is justified by identified
    compelling privacy or safety concerns that outweigh the public interest in access
    to the court records. Our Supreme Court has held that to comply with article I,
    section 10, courts must analyze a motion to seal under GR 15(c)(2) and the five-
    step framework for evaluating a courtroom closure under Ishikawa. Hundtofte, 
    181 Wn.2d at 7
    .
    First, the party seeking to seal court records must show a need. 
    Id. at 8
    . If
    sealing is meant to protect a right other than the right to a fair trial, the proponent
    must show a “serious and imminent threat to some other important interest.” 
    Id.
    (quoting Ishikawa, 
    97 Wn.2d at 37
    ). In this case, BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs
    28
    BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs contend Stevens did not preserve this issue for appeal because
    he did not designate the trial court’s order granting the motion to seal in his notice of appeal. Under
    RAP 2.4(a), Stevens did not need to designate that order in his notice of appeal if “the order or
    ruling prejudicially affects the decision designated in the notice.” We choose to reach the merits of
    the sealing order because the documents were clearly important to the trial court’s decision on the
    motion to disqualify counsel, which Stevens designated in his notice of appeal.
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/60
    demonstrated that the documents—letters from trial counsel to their clients—
    constituted attorney-client privileged communications and that disclosure of these
    communications would jeopardize their litigation strategy. The threat of losing this
    privilege was serious and imminent.
    Second, anyone present when BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs moved to
    seal documents must be given an opportunity to object. 
    Id.
     The trial court afforded
    Stevens, and any member of the general public present at the hearing, this
    opportunity.
    Third, the court and the parties must analyze whether sealing is both the
    least restrictive means available and effective in protecting the interests
    threatened. 
    Id.
     (quoting Ishikawa, 
    97 Wn.2d at 38
    ). The court undertook this
    analysis when it rejected Stevens’s request to redact rather than seal the
    documents in their entirety:
    The public’s interest, other than the fact that they always have some
    interest, that’s the whole point of the constitution[al] provision. Other
    than that for these particular documents, I see no unique specific
    individualized need on the part of the public to see this.
    On the other hand, I see a great need to protect what’s in these
    documents from the defendants having access to it. And while some
    of this information might be appropriate to be allowed to be seen by
    going through a redaction, in this case, given the way this case has
    gone, I would be unable to confidently go through these documents
    and think that I could redact them in a way that what was unredacted
    would not in some fashion be used in a way that it shouldn’t be used.
    That’s just the way this case has gone.
    In its written order, the court concluded, “Because the documents contain attorney-
    client privileged information, redacting the documents would not assure [BFOA and
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/61
    the Owner Plaintiffs] that privileged information has been fully protected.” The
    record supports this conclusion.
    Stevens argues that the identity of the individuals signing the conflict
    waivers and the dates on which they each signed is not information protected by
    the attorney-client privilege. The identity of an attorney’s client is generally not
    privileged information. State v. Mendez, 
    157 Wn. App. 565
    , 585, 
    238 P.3d 517
    (2010). But each client submitted a signed declaration under oath in which they
    informed the court and Stevens that they had been advised of potential conflicts of
    interest regarding the joint representation, did not believe a conflict existed, and
    had signed waivers on three separate occasions. They identified the dates on
    which they each signed the waivers. The clients’ identities are in the record,
    unsealed, at the end of the declarations. In light of this record, it is unclear how
    Stevens was harmed by the trial court’s decision not to disclose the individuals’
    signatures as they appear on the waiver forms. 29
    Fourth, the court must weigh the competing interests of the party seeking
    sealing and the public, and it must consider alternative methods to protect that
    interest. Hundtofte, 
    181 Wn.2d at 8
    . The court conducted this weighing process
    and held, in its written order, that “the compelling interest in protecting [BFOA’s
    and the Owner Plaintiffs’] privileged communications far outweighs any public
    interest in access to those communications.”
    29
    Stevens also argues the order sealing the conflict waivers precluded him from verifying that
    BFOA, the corporate entity, properly waived any conflict of interest. Given that Stevens lacks
    standing to challenge any joint representation, we need not address this argument. We note,
    however, that there is a conflict waiver executed by BFOA Board members in the record.
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    Finally, the order should be no broader than necessary to protect the
    interest involved. 
    Id.
     “If the order involves sealing of records, it shall apply for a
    specific time period with a burden on the proponent to come before the court at a
    time specified to justify continued sealing.” Ishikawa, 
    97 Wn.2d at 39
    . The order
    in this case does not contain any such time deadline. But Stevens does not argue
    that the court erred in failing to specify an end date to the order. Given the unique
    nature of attorney-client privileged communications, these communications retain
    their privileged status unless or until affirmatively waived by the clients themselves.
    It was thus within the trial court’s discretion to not specify an end date in the order.
    We conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in sealing the written conflict
    waiver forms signed by BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs.
    D. Stevens’s Claims under Chapter 64.38 RCW
    1. Relevant Facts
    Stevens alleged 10 separate violations of chapter 64.38 RCW by BFOA and
    its Board. The trial court conducted a bench trial on these 10 claims and, in its
    written findings of fact and conclusions of law, ruled in BFOA’s favor in whole or in
    part on most of these allegations.
    Relevant to this appeal, the trial court concluded that BFOA and its Board
    did not violate either RCW 64.38.020 or 64.38.025(1) by delegating authority to
    Corson, the homeowner association president, to conduct BFOA business without
    prior direction or authorization from the Board. With regard to the installation of
    the fence, the court found that in September 2012, Corson arranged for and
    directed the installation of a fence along the boundary line between Stevens’s
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/63
    property and the common waterfront parcel. He took this action after BFOA
    members and BFOA’s attorney discussed the matter with him during, and
    immediately following, the August 2012 special meeting of the membership. There
    was no formal vote by the membership to install the fence, but a majority of the
    members agreed with BFOA’s attorney that the fence was advisable. Corson, in
    reliance on the direction he received from the members and BFOA’s attorney,
    arranged to have the fence installed. The trial court explicitly found that the
    installation of the fence was the act of BFOA’s members, and not the action of
    BFOA’s directors. Stevens did not assign error to any of these findings and we,
    therefore, accept them as true on appeal. See RAP 10.3(a)(4).
    Based on these findings, the court concluded that BFOA had no liability
    under RCW 64.38.025(1) for the installation of the fence because that statute did
    not apply to decisions made by the corporation or by individual association
    members. It further concluded the statute did not require officers and directors to
    control decisions made by the members. Because Stevens asserted his statutory
    claims against only BFOA—and not against any member or individual director—
    and it was the members and not the directors who decided to erect the fence, the
    court concluded Stevens failed to establish that a director violated any duty
    imposed under RCW 64.38.025(1).
    2. Standard of Review
    When we evaluate evidence in a bench trial, our review is limited to
    determining whether substantial evidence supports any findings properly
    challenged on appeal and whether the findings support the conclusions of law.
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    Jensen v. Lake Jane Estates, 
    165 Wn. App. 100
    , 104, 
    267 P.3d 435
     (2011). We
    accept the unchallenged findings as true on appeal. Id. at 105. All reasonable
    inferences are reviewed in the light most favorable to the prevailing party, in this
    case, BFOA. Id. at 104. Questions of law are reviewed de novo. Sunnyside Valley
    Irrig. Dist. v. Dickie, 
    149 Wn.2d 873
    , 880, 
    73 P.3d 369
     (2003).
    3. Analysis
    a. Stevens’s Alleged Violations of RCW 64.38.025(1)
    Stevens argues the trial court erred when it failed to conclude that BFOA
    violated RCW 64.38.025(1) when BFOA allowed Corson to build the fence along
    Stevens’s property line. But Stevens’s argument is based on a misinterpretation
    of this statute.
    Homeowner association directors must exercise the same degree of care
    and loyalty as an officer or director of a non-profit corporation under chapter 24.03
    RCW.      Riss, 
    131 Wn.2d at
    632 n.5; see also RCW 64.38.025(1) (“In the
    performance of their duties, the officers and members of the board of directors
    shall exercise the degree of care and loyalty required of an officer or director of a
    corporation organized under chapter 24.03 RCW.”). RCW 24.03.127 provides that
    a director shall perform the duties of a director “in good faith, in a manner such
    director believes to be in the best interests of the corporation, and with such care,
    including reasonable inquiry, as an ordinarily prudent person in a like position
    would use under similar circumstances.” These statutes define the duties that
    individual corporate directors owe to the corporation and to its members. Waltz v.
    Tanager Estates Homeowners Ass’n, 
    183 Wn. App. 85
    , 91, 
    332 P.3d 1133
     (2014).
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    Therefore, the trial court correctly concluded that RCW 64.38.025(1) does not
    impose any obligation or duty on BFOA, the corporation.
    Stevens did not allege at trial that any individual director violated RCW
    64.38.025(1). Instead, he chose to allege that BFOA, the corporation, violated this
    statute by installing the fence along his boundary line without any lawful
    justification for doing so.   Stevens argues on appeal that Corson, as the
    homeowner association’s president, violated a duty he owed to Stevens when he
    erected the fence and that Corson’s liability under RCW 64.38.025(1) should be
    imputed to BFOA because Corson acted as BFOA’s agent. Certainly, under
    general tort law principles, the tortious conduct of an agent may be imputed to the
    principal. City of Vancouver v. Pub. Emp’t Relations Comm’n, 
    180 Wn. App. 333
    ,
    351-52, 
    325 P.3d 213
     (2014). But this argument was not advanced below. Under
    RAP 2.5(a), we generally will not consider arguments raised for the first time on
    appeal. Cameron v. Atl. Richfield Co., 8 Wn. App. 2d 795, 811, 
    442 P.3d 31
    (2019). We decline to review this claim here.
    The trial court correctly concluded that BFOA was not liable under RCW
    64.38.025(1) for the construction of the fence along Stevens’s boundary with the
    common waterfront.
    b. Stevens’s Alleged Violations of RCW 64.38.035(4)
    Stevens also argues the trial court erred in rejecting his claim that BFOA
    violated RCW 64.38.035(4)’s notice and meeting requirements by failing to notify
    Stevens of the Board’s intent to delegate to Corson the authority to construct the
    boundary line fence.
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    RCW 64.38.035(4) requires a homeowner association board to conduct all
    board of director meetings in the open for observation by all homeowners. If the
    board wishes to meet in a closed session to take a vote on any issue, the board
    must notify the homeowners of its intention to do so and state the purpose for the
    closed session. If the board of directors holds a closed session, it must limit its
    discussion to the topics set out in the notice to homeowners. No motion approved
    in closed session is effective until the board reconvenes in open session and votes
    in open session.
    Stevens contends BFOA effectively acted in “closed session” by authorizing
    Corson to erect the fence along his boundary line and, in doing so, violated the
    open meeting requirement of RCW 64.38.035(4).            The trial court disagreed,
    concluding BFOA did not violate any open meeting requirement in the statute. It
    based this conclusion on its finding that the Board simply did not meet, in either
    open or closed session, in the years 2010 to 2013. And while the failure to meet
    as a Board at least once annually violated BFOA’s bylaws and therefore violated
    RCW 64.38.025(1), it did not violate RCW 64.38.035(4)’s requirements by failing
    to meet on any other occasion.
    We reject Stevens’s contention that BFOA violated RCW 64.38.035(4) by
    failing to hold a board meeting to discuss erecting the fence. The trial court found
    that this small homeowner association had a practice of allowing the president to
    conduct all of BFOA’s business without prior affirmative direction or authorization
    from the Board. It concluded that BFOA’s bylaws expressly provided for this
    delegation of authority. And the court explicitly found that the Owner Plaintiffs, not
    - 66 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/67
    the Board, decided they wanted a boundary fence installed. Stevens did not
    challenge these factual findings or legal conclusions. The trial court did not err in
    rejecting Stevens’s argument that BFOA’s directors should have held a meeting
    before allowing Corson to erect the fence. Accordingly, we uphold the trial court’s
    conclusion that the Board did not violate the notice and meeting requirements of
    RCW 64.38.035(4).
    E. Hoopoe’s Award of Attorney Fees
    1. Relevant Facts
    On November 20, 2015, Hoopoe moved to dismiss Stevens’s counterclaims
    against it. The trial court granted the motion on March 26, 2016, awarding Hoopoe
    $114,600.95 in attorney fees and $1,177.33 in costs on August 11, 2016. Stevens
    does not challenge the dismissal of his claims against Hoopoe but argues the trial
    court erred in awarding attorney fees to Hoopoe.
    2. Standard of Review
    Whether a party is entitled to an award of attorney fees is a question of law
    reviewed de novo on appeal. Durland v. San Juan County, 
    182 Wn.2d 55
    , 76, 
    340 P.3d 191
     (2014). The general rule in Washington is that attorney fees will not be
    awarded for costs of litigation unless authorized by contract, statute, or a
    recognized ground in equity. 
    Id.
     The trial court deemed Hoopoe legally entitled to
    an award of attorney fees under article 9 of the 1997 CC&Rs 30 and RCW
    30
    Article 9 of the 1997 CC&Rs provides that BFOA or any person owning land in Bellevue Farm
    may prosecute a civil action against another for violating or attempting to violate any covenants.
    Any party bringing such an action is “entitled to recover from the violator all attorney fees, court
    cost and other costs reasonably incurred.”
    - 67 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/68
    4.84.330. 31 Whether a particular statutory or contractual provision authorizes an
    award of attorney fees is also a legal question. Tradewell Grp., Inc. v. Mavis, 
    71 Wn. App. 120
    , 126, 
    857 P.2d 1053
     (1993); see also Gander v. Yeager, 
    167 Wn. App. 638
    , 647, 
    282 P.3d 1100
     (2012) (reviewing de novo whether there is a legal
    basis for awarding attorney fees through statute or contract). If the award of
    attorney fees depends on a determination of who substantially prevailed, we
    review that determination de novo as well. Hawkins v. Diel, 
    166 Wn. App. 1
    , 10,
    
    269 P.3d 1049
     (2011).
    3. Analysis
    Stevens argues Hoopoe was not entitled to an award of attorney fees
    because the trial court did not find Hoopoe to be the substantially prevailing party
    and because article 9 of the 1997 CC&Rs did not apply to the claims he asserted
    against Hoopoe. We reject both arguments.
    First, the trial court made the requisite prevailing party finding. To allow
    meaningful appellate review, an award of attorney fees must be accompanied by
    findings of fact and conclusions of law establishing the fee award’s justification and
    reasonableness. Leda v. Whisnand, 
    150 Wn. App. 69
    , 86-87, 
    207 P.3d 468
    (2009). It is undisputed that the court dismissed all of Stevens’s counterclaims
    against Hoopoe on summary judgment. In a letter ruling dated July 1, 2016, the
    court expressly found that Hoopoe was the prevailing party on its motion for
    summary judgment. And it laid out its reasoning as to why it had reached this
    31
    RCW 4.84.330 provides that if a contract allows for an award of attorney fees to one of the
    parties, then the prevailing party will be entitled to reasonable attorney fees, whether specified in
    the contract or not. “An award of attorney fees under RCW 4.84.330 is mandatory, with no
    discretion except as to the amount.” Hawkins v. Diel, 
    166 Wn. App. 1
    , 10, 
    269 P.3d 1049
     (2011).
    - 68 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/69
    conclusion. The court’s ruling was incorporated by reference into Hoopoe’s final
    judgment against Stevens. The final judgment included an explicit conclusion of
    law that “Hoopoe is the prevailing party on its Motion for Summary Judgment of
    Dismissal.” Stevens’s contention that the court failed to find Hoopoe to be the
    prevailing party lacks merit.
    Second, the trial court did not err in concluding that Stevens’s claims against
    Hoopoe fell within the scope of article 9. The language of Stevens’s counterclaims
    1 and 2 unambiguously alleged violations of the 1997 CC&Rs. In Stevens’s
    counterclaim 1, he alleged Hoopoe violated the 1997 CC&Rs by voting to adopt
    the proposed clarification to article 4(a).            In counterclaim 2, Stevens alleged
    Hoopoe violated the 1997 CC&Rs by approving the construction of the fence along
    his boundary with the common waterfront.                  Stevens specifically titled these
    counterclaims as “Violations of Declaration.” 32 (Emphasis added.) In counterclaim
    7, Stevens asserted that Hoopoe’s alleged violations constituted a nuisance under
    article 9 of the 1997 CC&Rs. Finally, in counterclaim 10, Stevens incorporated by
    reference the covenant violations alleged in counterclaim 1.
    The trial court’s conclusion is further supported by Stevens’s own pleadings.
    In summary judgment pleadings relating to article 4(a), Stevens explicitly argued
    that the clarification to article 4(a) passed by the Owner Plaintiffs, including
    Hoopoe, was “inconsistent” with the 1997 CC&Rs. And in Stevens’s own request
    32
    Stevens defined “Declaration” as the Declaration of the Amended and Restated Protective
    Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions of Bellevue Farm Owners Association—essentially the
    1997 CC&Rs. Although Stevens’s complaint referred, at times, to the 1997 CC&Rs as “CC&Rs”
    rather than as the “Declaration,” the trial court was satisfied that the counterclaims alleging
    violations of the “Declaration” were, in fact, alleging violations of the 1997 CC&Rs. We agree with
    this conclusion.
    - 69 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/70
    for relief, he sought “reasonable attorney fees and costs as allowed by the
    [CC&Rs] and Washington law.” As the trial court noted, “by alleging that Hoopoe
    violated the CC&Rs, [Stevens] created a risk that Hoopoe could be ordered to pay
    [his] attorney’s fees and costs under Article 9 of the CC&Rs. Having created that
    risk, [Stevens] cannot now seek to avoid an award to Hoopoe under Article 9 of
    the CC&Rs.” The trial court did not err in concluding that Hoopoe was entitled to
    an award of attorney fees under article 9 of the 1997 CC&Rs.
    In the alternative, Stevens maintains his counterclaims simply mirrored the
    Owner Plaintiffs’ request for declaratory and injunctive relief. But article 9 explicitly
    permits parties to seek injunctive relief for violations of the 1997 CC&Rs. That is
    exactly what Stevens did here.         Based on the plain language of Stevens’s
    counterclaims, he alleged violations of the 1997 CC&Rs, thus triggering article 9’s
    attorney fee provision. We affirm the attorney fees awarded to Hoopoe.
    F. Order Certifying Hoopoe’s Judgment as Final under CR 54(b)
    1. Relevant Facts
    A year after the trial court dismissed all counterclaims against Hoopoe,
    Hoopoe moved to certify its judgment against Stevens as final under CR 54(b).
    The trial court granted the motion on November 3, 2017, finding that delaying entry
    of a final judgment would cause Hoopoe to suffer substantial hardship and injustice
    because the litigation had been pending for nearly five years, and although all
    claims against Hoopoe had been dismissed, tort claims still remained to be
    adjudicated between Stevens and other Owner Plaintiffs. It further found Hoopoe
    was incurring legal expenses because it had to retain legal counsel to monitor
    - 70 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/71
    events in the case even though Hoopoe was no longer a party. It also found
    Hoopoe had listed its lots for sale and had demonstrated a need to sell them. The
    continuing lawsuit, however, impeded Hoopoe’s ability to sell the property, and the
    delay was forcing it to pay property taxes, insurance, and other fees that it would
    not incur if it could sell the lots. The trial court determined that delaying entry of
    final judgment “pending resolution of peripheral issues is unjust and will continue
    to inflict substantial hardship on Hoopoe.” It expressly concluded that “[t]here is
    no just reason for delay in entry of Hoopoe’s final judgment.” The court entered
    judgment in favor of Hoopoe and determined that post-judgment interest would
    begin to accrue as of the date of judgment.
    On March 2, 2018, after the 2017 jury trial, the court entered final judgment
    on all remaining claims and counterclaims between Stevens, BFOA, and the
    Owner Plaintiffs other than Hoopoe.
    2. Standard of Review
    Stevens argues the trial court erred in certifying Hoopoe’s judgment as final
    under CR 54(b). “A trial court’s decision to enter judgment under CR 54(b) is
    reviewed for abuse of discretion.” William G. Hulbert, Jr. v. Port of Everett, 
    159 Wn. App. 389
    , 404, 
    245 P.3d 779
     (2011).
    3. Analysis
    “CR 54(b) makes an immediate appeal available in situations in which it
    could be unjust to delay entering a judgment on a distinctly separate claim until the
    entire case has been fully adjudicated.” Nelbro Packing Co. v. Baypack Fisheries,
    - 71 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/72
    L.L.C., 
    101 Wn. App. 517
    , 522, 
    6 P.3d 22
     (2000). A trial court may certify a
    judgment as final under CR 54(b) when there is:
    (1) more than one claim for relief or more than one party against
    whom relief is sought; (2) an express determination that there is no
    just reason for delay; (3) written findings supporting the
    determination that there is no just reason for delay; and (4) an
    express direction for entry of the judgment.
    Id. at 523. Stevens appears to challenge only the trial court’s finding that there
    was no just reason to delay entry of judgment in Hoopoe’s favor.
    We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s decision.        We have
    previously indicated that courts should consider the following factors to determine
    whether there was no just reason for delay:
    “(1) [T]he relationship between the adjudicated and the
    unadjudicated claims, (2) whether questions which would be
    reviewed on appeal are still before the trial court for determination in
    the unadjudicated portion of the case, (3) whether it is likely that the
    need for review may be mooted by future developments in the trial
    court, (4) whether an immediate appeal will delay the trial of the
    unadjudicated matters without gaining any offsetting advantage in
    terms of the simplification and facilitation of that trial, and (5) the
    practical effects of allowing an immediate appeal.”
    Hulbert, Jr., 159 Wn. App. at 406 (alterations in original) (quoting Lindsay Credit
    Corp. v. Skarperud, 
    33 Wn. App. 766
    , 772, 
    657 P.2d 804
     (1983)). “‘[T]here must
    be some danger of hardship or injustice through delay which would be alleviated
    by immediate appeal.’” Doerflinger v. N.Y. Life Ins. Co., 
    88 Wn.2d 878
    , 882, 
    567 P.2d 230
     (1977) (alteration in original) (quoting Campbell v. Westmoreland Farm,
    Inc., 
    403 F.2d 939
    , 942 (2d Cir. 1968)).
    The record reveals the trial court considered these factors. As to the first
    factor, the court found that all claims involving Hoopoe had been “fully and finally
    dismissed,” and the remaining general tort claims had nothing to do with Hoopoe.
    - 72 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/73
    It correctly concluded that the adjudicated claims and the remaining claims were
    distinct and unrelated.
    The second and fourth factors also weighed in favor of certification. The
    court found that “[a]n immediate appeal of this judgment would not delay trial on
    the tort claims” and that the tort claims “would be appealed on entirely different
    grounds and involve different issues.” Although the trial court did not explicitly
    address the potential for mootness, the third factor, it did not seem likely that the
    need for appellate review would be affected by future trial court rulings.
    The court also evaluated the practical effects of allowing an immediate
    appeal of the Hoopoe judgment, the final factor. It found that by allowing an
    immediate appeal, Hoopoe could avoid incurring attorney fees for monitoring a
    case in which it was no longer a party. And Hoopoe demonstrated it had listed its
    Bellevue Farm lots for sale and needed to sell them to avoid further property taxes,
    insurance, and other costs to hold the properties.
    Under these circumstances, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    certifying Hoopoe’s judgment as final under CR 54(b).
    G. Stevens’s Voluntary Dismissal of Fence Claims against BFOA and Owner
    Plaintiffs, except Glen Corson
    1. Relevant Facts
    Stevens, BFOA, and the remaining Owner Plaintiffs proceeded to a jury trial
    on the remaining claims and counterclaims in November 2017. The claims at the
    start of trial were: (a) BFOA’s timber trespass claim against Stevens based on his
    July 2012 removal of an apple tree from the common waterfront parcel; (b) a timber
    trespass claim alleged by Baute, Birchfield, and the Kuppermans against Stevens
    - 73 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/74
    based on his removal of a willow grove on their joint boundary in January 2011;
    (c) Dr. Kupperman’s negligent infliction of emotional distress claim against
    Stevens arising out of the alleged shotgun incident in August 2012; and
    (d) Stevens’s three counterclaims against BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs relating
    to the boundary fence—namely the allegations that the boundary fence violated
    his right to equal access to the common waterfront in violation of the 1997 CC&Rs,
    that the fence constituted a nuisance, and that the fence was a “spite fence” in
    violation of RCW 7.40.030.
    Before opening statements, Stevens moved to voluntarily dismiss, without
    prejudice, all of the remaining counterclaims against BFOA and the Owner
    Plaintiffs, with the exception of Corson. Stevens explained:
    The [c]ourt – at the last hearing there was this debate about
    who were proper parties on the fence. The [c]ourt has already ruled
    that the fence was built by Mr. Corson and that he built that on his
    own, not as a, you know, [it] wasn’t the HOA’s fence. So we had this
    discussion at the last hearing about who is a proper defendant.
    We looked closely at that issue, and given the [c]ourt’s prior
    ruling on Mr. Corson and the fact that Article 9 allows Mr. Stevens to
    prosecute a claim against any owner for a nuisance to bring the fence
    down, Mr. Corson is the only defendant that we need, and that’s
    essentially it. 33
    The trial court indicated that if it granted Stevens’s motion, it would do so
    only with prejudice. It asked Stevens if he wanted to withdraw the motion; Stevens
    declined to do so but acknowledged that “the statute [of limitations] is past on being
    able to refile.” The trial court dismissed the claims with prejudice.
    33
    By voluntarily dismissing the counterclaims against all Owner Plaintiffs except Corson, Stevens
    argued that the trial court should preclude Baute from participating as counsel in any portion of the
    trial on his counterclaims “because he’ll no longer be a defendant.” The decision thus appears to
    have been strategic on Stevens’s part.
    - 74 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/75
    2. Standard of Review
    Stevens appeals the trial court’s decision to dismiss the parties with
    prejudice. We review an order granting a CR 41 motion to dismiss with prejudice
    for manifest abuse of discretion. Escude v. King County Pub. Hosp. Dist. No. 2,
    
    117 Wn. App. 183
    , 190, 
    69 P.3d 895
     (2003). Such abuse occurs when the ruling
    is manifestly unreasonable or discretion was exercised on untenable grounds. 
    Id.
    CR 41(a)(4) states that in the context of voluntary dismissals, “[u]nless otherwise
    stated in the order of dismissal, the dismissal is without prejudice.” “Under the
    plain language of the rule it is evident that a trial court may dismiss a claim with
    prejudice, otherwise the language of the rule would be superfluous.” Escude, 117
    Wn. App. at 191. Thus, “a trial court has the discretion to grant a nonsuit with or
    without prejudice, especially as a part of the court’s inherent power to impose a
    sanction of dismissal in a proper case.” Id.
    3. Analysis
    Stevens argues the trial court abused its discretion in dismissing his claims
    with prejudice because the dismissal did not fall within the limited circumstances
    in which a dismissal with prejudice is warranted. We disagree. A trial court does
    not abuse its discretion when it dismisses claims with prejudice that would be time-
    barred if refiled. See, e.g., id. (dismissal with prejudice appropriate when the
    applicable statute of limitations has run on the claims). Stevens informed the trial
    court that the statute of limitations on his fence claims had expired.
    Moreover, when parties have litigated claims extensively for over five years,
    the court has ruled on multiple motions for summary judgment, the parties have
    - 75 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/76
    been through a bench trial, and a party chooses for strategic reasons to dismiss
    claims against multiple parties on the eve of a subsequent jury trial, it is not a
    manifest abuse of discretion for a court to dismiss the claims with prejudice, even
    if the statute of limitations has not run. The trial court properly exercised its
    discretion to grant Stevens’s motion to dismiss but to do so with prejudice.
    H. The Jury’s Spite Fence Findings
    1. Relevant Facts
    During pretrial motions in limine, Stevens asked the trial court to exclude
    any evidence and all argument that BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs had a legitimate
    reason for constructing the boundary fence. He argued that because the fence
    interfered with his right to use his property and the common waterfront, there could
    be no valid justification for erecting the fence. Corson argued the jury had to decide
    whether any interference was unreasonable, making his reasons for constructing
    the fence relevant to defend against Stevens’s claims. The trial court granted in
    part and denied in part Stevens’s motion, but it ultimately allowed Corson to offer
    extensive evidence regarding the reason he originally erected the fence and the
    reasons other Owner Plaintiffs wanted the fence to remain.
    At trial, Stevens testified that on September 16 or 17, 2012, contractors
    began building a fence along the common waterfront boundary with his property.
    Corson testified he was the person who made the decision to build the fence. He
    used BFOA funds to construct the fence but did not seek Board approval before
    he spent the money because the bylaws gave him the authority to incur these kinds
    - 76 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/77
    of expenses. Corson admitted he knew the fence would make it harder for Stevens
    to rent his property.
    The cedar split rail fence was originally built with five openings. According
    to Corson, Baute decided where to place the fence openings, depicted on the
    image below with yellow dots:
    These openings, however, did not allow Stevens to roll his trailered dinghy boat
    into the water. When Corson heard, in the course of this lawsuit, that Stevens was
    challenging the adequacy of the openings, he removed a nine-foot section at the
    far corner of the property line, on the south side of Stevens’s orchard. But Stevens
    could not pull his boat across his lot and through the orchard to reach that opening.
    - 77 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/78
    And one of the openings nearest to the beach house was partially blocked by a
    large tree:
    Stevens testified that the fence was erected in retaliation for his refusal to
    sign a revocable license agreement, the document that BFOA members approved
    at the August 4, 2012 special meeting, which was intended to allow renters limited
    waterfront access.
    The Owner Plaintiffs who testified had differing reasons as to why they
    thought the fence was appropriate, but their credibility was hotly contested at trial.
    Matthew Straight, for example, testified the fence was a “fair, reasonable
    and appropriate way” of defeating any adverse possession claim Stevens asserted
    to the common waterfront. But he acknowledged that Stevens had attempted to
    adversely possess only a small part of the apple orchard in response to being sued
    by BFOA for timber trespass after removing an apple tree. Birchfield testified she
    felt the fence was appropriate to resolve disputes with Stevens over mowing the
    - 78 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/79
    common waterfront, abating mosquitos, and preventing children driving golf carts
    from traversing Stevens’s land.
    Pigott testified the fence helped her special needs teenage son understand
    that he is not allowed to walk onto Stevens’s property. She also felt the fence was
    an important “symbol” that “we value the common waterfront” in response to
    Stevens’s partition claim. Tom Tucci testified the fence was an appropriate step
    to demarcate the boundary after Stevens refused to allow Blake Barrett’s wedding
    to occur on the waterfront in front of Stevens’s BF Lot #3B. And Christine Doherty
    thought the fence was installed to resolve trespass issues and to protect the
    waterfront parcel from Stevens’s adverse possession and partition claims.
    But there was significant evidence to demonstrate that erecting the fence
    was retaliatory in nature. For example, the fence does not run the entire length of
    the waterfront; it is only in front of Stevens’s parcel. There is no fence separating
    the Baute/Kupperman property or any other Bellevue Farm or South Bellevue
    Farm lot from the waterfront, despite the fact that many of these owners rent their
    properties to short-term vacationers.
    When jurors asked Baute why he felt it was appropriate to decide where to
    place openings in the fence without input from Stevens, Baute testified he did so
    because Stevens had “recently fired a shotgun at me, refused to meet with me,
    and told me to get off his property.” Baute had to concede that an opening directly
    in front of Stevens’s beach house would have been much more convenient and
    practical than the locations he selected.
    - 79 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/80
    Additionally, the way in which Corson and Baute maintained the fence after
    it was erected also raised issues regarding their true motives. Stevens explained
    to the jury that during the lawsuit, he obtained a court order allowing his renters to
    access the waterfront, pending the outcome of the case. But while the stay was in
    place, Stevens discovered someone had placed “Owners Only” signs along the
    fence and had installed chains across all of the openings.
    Corson testified he did not install the chains or tape, but he told Baute that
    he could do so “if they were necessary.” Corson could not say how long the chains
    had been across the openings, indicating Baute was the person “given the
    assignment of dealing with the chains.” But he knew ahead of time that Baute
    intended to install both chains and duct tape to keep Stevens’s renters off the
    waterfront.
    Baute confirmed he installed the chains across four of the openings in the
    fence in the summer of 2016 as a way of enforcing article 4(a). But Stevens’s
    renters were hopping over the chains and leaving items on the common dock. So
    he added more chains.
    - 80 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/81
    After Stevens removed the chains to allow his young son to get through, someone
    replaced the chain, put up more “No Trespassing” signs, and even used duct tape
    to prevent people from walking through the opening.
    Baute confirmed he was the one who added the “No Trespassing” sign and the
    duct tape because the tenants continued to breach the barrier.
    - 81 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/82
    Stevens testified that someone removed the chains and tape just before the
    jury traveled to Bellevue Farm for a site inspection in December 2017. Baute
    disputed this testimony, claiming Stevens removed the chains and tape
    approximately 10 days after Baute put them up. Corson conceded the chains and
    tape were “a horrible idea.”
    The jury returned a verdict for Stevens and against Corson on December
    14, 2017. 34 It found that the fence violated Stevens’s rights under the 1997 CC&Rs
    to equal and non-exclusive access, use, and enjoyment of the common waterfront,
    that the fence was installed for the purpose of interfering with Stevens’s usage
    rights, that the fence was a nuisance, and that the fence was a spite fence under
    RCW 7.40.030.
    In March 2018, the trial court entered final judgment on the jury’s verdict,
    decreeing that the fence between Stevens’s property and the common waterfront
    was a nuisance in violation of article 9 of the 1997 CC&Rs and a spite fence under
    RCW 7.40.030. The trial court ordered Corson to remove the fence.
    2. Standard of Review
    Corson challenges several rulings from the jury trial. He argues the trial
    court erred in giving Instruction 18 and in excluding evidence regarding the
    reasons Corson and other Owner Plaintiffs supported the installation of the fence.
    Stevens cross appeals, arguing the trial court erred in allowing Corson to introduce
    34
    The jury awarded monetary damages of $1,800 to BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs for the cost to
    replace the apple tree Stevens inadvertently cut down in 2012 and awarded $10,000 to Baute,
    Birchfield, and the Kuppermans to replace a willow grove Stevens removed in 2011. Stevens has
    not appealed these jury awards.
    - 82 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/83
    any evidence that he and the other Owner Plaintiffs had legitimate reasons for
    constructing the fence.
    This court reviews jury instructions de novo and evidentiary rulings for
    manifest abuse of discretion. Cox v. Spangler, 
    141 Wn. 2d 431
    , 439, 442, 
    5 P.3d 1265
     (2000).       A trial court abuses its discretion “[w]hen it takes a view no
    reasonable person would take, or applies the wrong legal standard to an issue.”
    Id. at 439.
    3. Analysis
    a. Instruction 18
    Corson argues Instruction 18 misstated the law and misled the jury. We
    conclude Corson failed to properly object to this instruction below and has not
    preserved the issue on appeal.
    CR 51(f) requires each party to submit proposed instructions and to object
    to any instructions proposed by any other party: “The objector shall state distinctly
    the matter to which counsel objects and the grounds of counsel’s objection,
    specifying the number, paragraph or particular part of the instruction to be given or
    refused and to which objection is made.” This requirement allows the trial court to
    remedy any error before instructing the jury. Washburn v. City of Federal Way,
    
    178 Wn.2d 732
    , 746-47, 
    310 P.3d 1275
     (2013). “The pertinent inquiry on review
    is whether the exception was sufficient to apprise the trial judge of the nature and
    substance of the objection.” Crossen v. Skagit County, 
    100 Wn.2d 355
    , 358, 
    669 P.2d 1244
     (1983). If the trial court understands the reasons a party objects to an
    - 83 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/84
    instruction, the party has preserved the objection for review. Washburn, 
    178 Wn.2d at 747
    .
    Corson objected to Instruction 18 but merely said, “Plaintiffs object to use
    of this instruction in its entirety.” There is nothing in the record to indicate Corson
    adequately informed the trial court of the grounds for the objection. We conclude
    Corson’s objection to Instruction 18 was inadequate under CR 51(f) to preserve
    this error for appeal.
    b. Evidentiary Rulings
    Stevens argues the trial court abused its discretion in admitting evidence
    that Corson or any other Owner Plaintiff had a legitimate reason for putting up the
    fence. Corson argues the trial court erred in excluding some of the evidence he
    felt was relevant for why he and the other Owner Plaintiffs wanted to erect the
    fence. We reject both evidentiary arguments.
    Stevens moved to exclude any evidence that BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs
    had a reason for interfering with his use and enjoyment of the common waterfront,
    arguing that one co-tenant has no right to interfere with the use and enjoyment of
    property by another co-tenant. He maintained that the reasons Corson had for
    building the fence were irrelevant; the only issue was the effect of the fence on his
    access or use of the common waterfront. The trial court rejected this argument:
    I think they have the right to put up the fence, to begin with, because
    co-tenants, any co-tenant has the right to put an improvement on the
    commonly owned property, and that’s what they did. Now the
    question is: Did that fence unreasonably interfere? So I’m going to
    deny [Stevens’s] motion. . . .
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/85
    But I will deny the motion of that [sic] that the reasons for the fence
    are to be – that there should be no mention or testimony or evidence
    as to the reasons for putting the fence up.
    The trial court’s reasoning was correct.
    Under the spite fence statute, RCW 7.40.030, Stevens had to prove that the
    fence (1) damaged his enjoyment of the property, (2) was designed as the result
    of malice or spitefulness, and (3) served no useful or reasonable purpose.
    Baillargeon v. Press, 
    11 Wn. App. 59
    , 66, 
    521 P.2d 746
     (1974). The jury was
    instructed on these elements of this claim. To rebut Stevens’s evidence of malice
    or spitefulness, or evidence that the fence had no useful purpose, Corson had the
    right to present evidence of the purpose he and the other Owner Plaintiffs believed
    the fence served. The jury was then tasked with evaluating the credibility of both
    parties’ evidence. Because the evidence was relevant, the trial court did not abuse
    its discretion in denying Stevens’s motion to exclude the evidence.
    Corson makes the opposite argument—that the court erred in excluding
    some of the evidence he wanted to offer to justify the fence. Corson maintains
    that exclusion of the following evidence prejudiced him at trial: (1) Stevens’s 2009
    e-mail stating he no longer wanted to be a part of BFOA, (2) evidence that Stevens
    refused to sign a tenancy in common agreement as to the waterfront property,
    (3) evidence that Stevens fired his shotgun at other homeowners near the
    boundary fence, 35 (4) testimony from BFOA’s real estate expert, Sam Buck, as to
    the lawful purposes of the fence and the positive effect of the fence on Stevens’s
    property values, (5) evidence of a contemporaneous boundary line and usage
    35
    There was extensive evidence regarding this shotgun incident before the jury.
    - 85 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/86
    dispute involving a communal tennis court, (6) evidence that Stevens provided
    watercraft to his rental tenants, and (7) evidence that the San Juan Preservation
    Trust approved of the boundary line fence.
    But Corson does not explain why the trial court’s rulings were an abuse of
    discretion or what effect, if any, this evidence would have had on the outcome of
    the case. Corson merely states that had the evidence been included, “the jury may
    not have returned the same verdict” because it affected his ability to present his
    case.
    We refuse to address this issue because Corson did not adequately brief it.
    RAP 10.3(a)(6) requires an argument “together with citations to legal authority and
    references to relevant parts of the record.” Corson presented no authority to
    support his claimed error. And the only citations to the record are to Stevens’s
    motions in limine seeking to exclude the evidence, not to the court rulings being
    challenged. Stevens pointed out the inadequacy of the briefing in his response
    brief, but Corson did not remedy the insufficient argument in his reply. Because
    the inadequate briefing prevents meaningful review, we decline to review Corson’s
    evidentiary arguments. See Hernandez v. Stender, 
    182 Wn. App. 52
    , 60, 
    358 P.3d 1169
     (2014) (court will decline to review alleged evidentiary error where party fails
    to cite to any portion of record to support argument).
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/87
    I. The Injunction Requiring Removal of the Spite Fence
    1. Relevant Facts
    After the jury rendered its verdict, Stevens noted for presentation a
    proposed final judgment that included an injunction requiring Corson to remove the
    fence. The language Stevens proposed read:
    [T]he [c]ourt hereby [o]rders a mandatory injunction compelling the
    abatement and removal of the fence in front of Chad Stevens’s
    property at Bellevue Farm. The [c]ourt further [o]rders a permanent
    injunction against the future erection of a fence or similar structure
    along any portion of the boundary line between Chad Stevens’s
    property and the common waterfront at Bellevue Farm. This Decree
    is binding on all parties in this matter.
    BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs, including Corson, opposed this requested
    injunctive relief. Mathew Straight, now BFOA’s president, submitted a declaration
    in which he asked the court to order nothing more than the removal of a small
    section of the fence. Corson testified he had been instructed by Straight not to
    touch the fence, and Corson indicated he “will not disregard his instructions.”
    At a February 2, 2018 hearing, the trial court stated its intention to enter an
    order requiring Corson to remove the fence, but it rejected Stevens’s proposed
    language imposing a permanent injunction on future fences. Corson argued that
    when Stevens chose to dismiss his fence claims against all Owner Plaintiffs, other
    than Corson, the court lost jurisdiction over them and could not order them to
    remove the fence. The court agreed that because the other Owner Plaintiffs had
    been dismissed, it could not enter an order obligating them to do anything. But it
    reasoned that because both Corson and Stevens are part owners of the common
    waterfront, the court could think of no other way in which to enforce the jury’s
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/88
    verdict other than to issue an injunction against Corson.                   From the court’s
    perspective, Corson put the fence up so he should be the one to tear it down. The
    final judgment thus included an order compelling Corson to remove the fence.
    Corson challenges this injunction.
    2. Standard of Review
    We review a trial court’s issuance of an injunction for abuse of discretion.
    Lenhoff v. Birch Bay Real Estate, Inc., 
    22 Wn. App. 70
    , 74, 
    587 P.2d 1087
     (1978).
    “Where the decision or order of the trial court is a matter of discretion, it will not be
    disturbed on review except on a clear showing of abuse of discretion, that is,
    discretion manifestly unreasonable, or exercised on untenable grounds, or for
    untenable reasons.” Id. at 75 (quoting State ex rel. Carroll v. Junker, 
    79 Wn.2d 12
    ,
    26, 
    482 P.2d 775
     (1971)).
    3. Analysis
    Corson argues the trial court erred in issuing the injunction because it failed
    to conduct an analysis of the factors set out in Lenhoff. 36 Stevens contends
    Lenhoff is inapplicable because an injunction is “mandatory” under RCW 7.40.030.
    We disagree with both arguments.
    RCW 7.40.030 provides that “[a]n injunction may be granted to restrain the
    malicious erection . . . of any structure intended to spite, injure or annoy an
    adjoining proprietor.” (Emphasis added.) The statute further provides that when
    an owner has maliciously erected a spite structure with this intent, “a mandatory
    36
    We reject Corson’s argument that a “tasteful boundary line fence” cannot be a spite fence as a
    matter of law. First, Corson cites no authority for this proposition. Second, under Baillargeon, a
    fence can be a spite fence under RCW 7.40.030 if maliciously erected, even if tasteful or erected
    along a boundary. 
    11 Wn. App. at 66
    .
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    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/89
    injunction will lie to compel its abatement and removal.” RCW 7.40.030. The
    phrase “mandatory injunction” is a term of art. It does not mean that the trial court
    lacks discretion to deny injunctive relief. Rather, a mandatory injunction is “an
    injunction that orders an affirmative act or mandates a specified course of
    conduct.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY at 937-38. Whether a court issues a mandatory
    injunction—for instance, compels a party to take some specified action—is
    discretionary. Lenhoff, 
    22 Wn. App. at 74-75
    ; see also Holmes Harbor Water Co.
    v. Page, 
    8 Wn. App. 600
    , 603, 
    508 P.2d 628
     (1973). In exercising this discretion,
    the court should evaluate:
    (a) the character of the interest to be protected, (b) the relative
    adequacy to the plaintiff of injunction in comparison with other
    remedies, (c) the delay, if any, in bringing suit, (d) the misconduct of
    the plaintiff if any, (e) the relative hardship likely to result to the
    defendant if an injunction is granted and to the plaintiff if it is denied,
    (f) the interest of third persons and of the public, and (g) the
    practicability of framing and enforcing the order or judgment.
    Lenhoff, 
    22 Wn. App. at 75
    .
    The trial court explicitly discussed the Lenhoff factors in analyzing Stevens’s
    requested injunctive relief. First, the trial court evaluated the nature and character
    of Stevens’s interest in the removal of the fence. It concluded that his interest was
    high in light of the jury’s findings that the fence was erected for the purpose of
    interfering with his rights under the 1997 CC&Rs to equal and exclusive access,
    use, and enjoyment of the common waterfront. The trial court also reasoned that
    if Corson and the Owner Plaintiffs have an interest in demarcating the boundary
    between Stevens’s property and the waterfront, Corson could have done so in
    much less restrictive ways.
    - 89 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/90
    Second, the trial court looked at options other than injunctive relief and
    concluded that there really was no alternative method to enforce the jury’s verdict.
    The evidence at trial supports the jury’s finding that the fence denies Stevens the
    same access and use of the waterfront that other homeowners enjoy.
    Third, the court considered Corson’s argument that Stevens had “unclean
    hands” by committing timber trespass, but it also found that Corson, BFOA, and
    the Owner Plaintiffs had similarly committed misconduct by blocking the fence
    openings with “No Trespassing” signs, chains, and tape at a time when the court
    had stayed enforcement of article 4(a). It concluded that not enforcing the jury’s
    verdict would diminish the impropriety of their actions.
    Fourth, the trial court was aware of and considered BFOA’s contention that
    the removal of the fence contravened the wishes of the Owner Plaintiffs. But article
    9 of the 1997 CC&Rs, to which all Owner Plaintiffs are bound, explicitly gives the
    court the authority to enjoin any nuisances and violations of the 1997 CC&Rs.
    Because the jury found that the fence violated the 1997 CC&Rs and was a
    nuisance, article 9 gave the court the legal authority to order the fence’s removal,
    regardless of the wishes of BFOA or the Owner Plaintiffs.
    Fifth, the trial court noted that the interests of BFOA’s members, as tenants
    in common, were not affected by the removal of the fence because the boundary
    line can, and should, be demarcated by other means. This was supported by
    Corson’s testimony that the boundary lines on other properties were demarcated
    in other ways, such as by privacy hedges and fence posts.
    - 90 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/91
    Finally, the trial court understood that Corson, the only remaining defendant
    and the only person it could order to remove the fence, was no longer BFOA’s
    president. But it did not find that this fact justified not issuing an injunction because
    Corson, as a Bellevue Farm owner, has a property interest in the common
    waterfront. He has an obligation to refrain from committing nuisance and violating
    the 1997 CC&Rs. Practically speaking, as the trial court noted, Corson erected
    the fence, so he can take it down. 37 Thus, the trial court reasoned that an injunction
    requiring removal of the fence could have been enforced against Corson.
    We conclude the trial court engaged in a sufficient inquiry under Lenhoff
    and did not abuse its discretion when it issued the injunction because such relief
    was explicitly authorized by article 9 of the 1997 CC&Rs. 38
    J. Order Denying Fees to BFOA and Owner Plaintiffs under Article 9 of the
    1997 CC&Rs
    1. Relevant Facts
    At the conclusion of the 2016 bench trial, the trial court found BFOA to be
    the prevailing party. BFOA then moved for an award of attorney fees under RCW
    64.38.050.      The trial court denied the request, concluding the case was not
    appropriate for such an award.
    37
    Corson argues that because he has no legal authority to remove the fence, the trial court’s
    injunction is improper. Counsel for BFOA told this court at oral argument that, despite the jury’s
    finding that the fence violates the 1997 CC&Rs, BFOA intends to interfere with Corson’s
    compliance with the court’s injunction. Corson and BFOA should carefully consider the
    ramifications of disobeying or aiding and abetting another in disobeying a lawful court order.
    38
    BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs also assert on appeal that an injunction was inappropriate
    because the trial court stated that there were lawful reasons for the fence. They argue that if true,
    the fence cannot be a spite fence as a matter of law. This argument ignores the jury’s finding that
    the fence was a nuisance, a spite fence, and violated the 1997 CC&Rs. The trial court was bound
    by this factual determination whether it agreed or not.
    - 91 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/92
    After Stevens voluntarily dismissed all remaining claims against BFOA and
    the Owner Plaintiffs during the jury trial in 2017, BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs
    again moved for an award of attorney fees under article 9 of the 1997 CC&Rs,
    arguing that they—like Hoopoe—were the prevailing parties on those
    counterclaims alleging violations of the 1997 CC&Rs. The trial court denied the
    request for attorney fees, finding that no party substantially prevailed and that each
    party prevailed on major issues throughout the litigation.
    BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs appeal the denial of their request for attorney
    fees against Stevens.
    2. Analysis
    a. Fees under RCW 64.38.050
    BFOA argues the trial court erred in denying its claim for attorney fees
    under RCW 64.38.050.         RCW 64.38.050 provides that “[t]he court, in an
    appropriate case, may award reasonable attorneys’ fees to the prevailing party.”
    The statute gives the trial court the authority to award attorney fees to a
    homeowner association “to recoup expenses incurred in defending against
    nonprevailing homeowners.” Casey v. Sudden Valley Cmty. Ass’n, 
    182 Wn. App. 315
    , 333 n.16, 
    329 P.3d 919
     (2014). But such an award is not mandatory. The
    term “may” in a statute generally confers discretion. Freeman v. Freeman, 
    169 Wn.2d 664
    , 671, 
    239 P.3d 557
     (2010); see also Hernandez v. Edmonds Memory
    Care LLC, 10 Wn. App. 2d 869, 875-76, 
    450 P.3d 622
     (2019) (attorney fee statute
    - 92 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/93
    providing that court “may” award fees to prevailing party gives the court discretion
    to do so).
    We review a discretionary decision to award attorney fees for an abuse of
    discretion. Eagle Point Condo. Owners Ass’n v. Coy, 
    102 Wn. App. 697
    , 715, 
    9 P.3d 898
     (2000). A trial court abuses its discretion if its decision is “‘manifestly
    unreasonable, or exercised on untenable grounds, or for untenable reasons.’”
    Tribble v. Allstate Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 
    134 Wn. App. 163
    , 170, 
    139 P.3d 373
    (2006) (quoting State ex rel. Carroll, 
    79 Wn.2d at 26
    ).
    In Roats v. Blakely Island Maintenance Commission, Inc., 
    169 Wn. App. 263
    , 284, 
    279 P.3d 943
     (2012), the trial court denied a homeowner’s request for
    attorney fees under RCW 64.38.050, despite finding 18 violations of RCW
    64.38.035. This court affirmed, reasoning:
    Here, the trial court determined that the Roatses had proved 18 of
    the 28 purported open meetings violations. However, it determined
    that an affirmative grant of relief was not warranted on these 18
    claims. Under these circumstances, the trial court’s denial of the
    Roatses’ request for an award of attorney fees was within the range
    of acceptable choices available to the court. Thus, the trial court did
    not abuse its discretion by denying the Roatses’ request.
    
    Id.
    In this case, the trial court ruled in favor of BFOA on 7 of Stevens’s 10
    claimed violations of chapter 64.38 RCW. But, as in Roats, the trial court decided
    the case was not an appropriate one for an award of fees because although BFOA
    prevailed on some claims, it did not prevail on all of them. The court found that
    BFOA’s directors failed to meet regularly in violation of its bylaws, violating RCW
    64.38.025(1).   And the court was troubled by the homeowner association’s
    - 93 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/94
    “undocumented practice” of allowing its president to conduct BFOA business
    without direction from or authorization by the Board or BFOA members. These
    reasons for denying BFOA’s request for attorney fees were within the range of
    acceptable choices available to the court. Therefore, it did not abuse its discretion
    in denying BFOA’s request.
    b. Fees under Article 9 of the 1997 CC&Rs
    BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs, excluding Corson, argue that they became
    the substantially prevailing party on all counterclaims covered by article 9 of the
    1997 CC&Rs when Stevens voluntarily dismissed his remaining claims against
    them on the eve of trial. We agree.
    Whether a party is a prevailing party is a mixed question of law and fact and
    is reviewed under the error of law standard. Eagle Point Condo., 102 Wn. App. at
    706. “As a general rule, a prevailing party is one who receives an affirmative
    judgment in its favor.” Cornish Coll. of the Arts v. 1000 Virginia Ltd. P’ship, 
    158 Wn. App. 203
    , 231, 
    242 P.3d 1
     (2010). “If neither party wholly prevails then the
    party who substantially prevails is the prevailing party, a determination that turns
    on the extent of the relief afforded the parties.” Transpac Dev., Inc. v. Oh, 
    132 Wn. App. 212
    , 217, 
    130 P.3d 892
     (2006). If neither party obtains a final judgment
    against the other, neither party is entitled to attorney fees. Wachovia SBA Lending,
    Inc. v. Kraft, 
    165 Wn.2d 481
    , 492, 
    200 P.3d 683
     (2009).
    When evaluating whether BFOA or the Owner Plaintiffs were the
    substantially prevailing party, the trial court considered the outcome of all the
    claims and counterclaims—some of which fell within the scope of article 9’s
    - 94 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/95
    attorney fee provision and some which did not. Article 9 authorizes an award of
    attorney fees only to the party who prevails in an action for violations of the 1997
    CC&Rs. Under RCW 4.84.330, “prevailing party” means the party in whose favor
    final judgment is rendered.    When article 9 is read in conjunction with RCW
    4.84.330, the prevailing party is the party in whose favor judgment was entered on
    claims falling within the scope of article 9. Here, judgment was entered in favor of
    BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs on Stevens’s dismissed article 9 counterclaims.
    For this reason, the trial court erred in concluding that BFOA and the Owner
    Plaintiffs were not the prevailing party on these counterclaims. We therefore
    reverse the trial court’s order denying an award of attorney fees to BFOA and the
    Owner Plaintiffs and remand for a determination as to which claims fell under
    article 9 and for which the Owner Plaintiffs may recover attorney fees.
    We note, however, that attorney fees are recoverable strictly for those
    services related to the causes of action which allow for fees. Travis v. Wash. Horse
    Breeders Ass’n, 
    111 Wn.2d 396
    , 410, 
    759 P.2d 418
     (1988). BFOA and the Owner
    Plaintiffs are entitled to attorney fees incurred in defending Stevens’s
    counterclaims for violations of the 1997 CC&Rs. But they are not entitled to
    attorney fees incurred in prosecuting their claims against Stevens or the fees
    incurred in defending Corson from Stevens’s fence claims. Given that the same
    attorneys represented BFOA, the Owner Plaintiffs, and Corson, the trial court must
    determine on remand if BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs can segregate recoverable
    attorney fees from non-recoverable fees. And if BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs
    interfere with Corson’s obligation to remove the spite fence, the trial court is also
    - 95 -
    No. 77830-7-I, 77401-8-I & 78430-7-I/96
    free to evaluate whether these parties have forfeited their claim to attorney fees by
    interfering with Corson’s duty to abate a violation of the 1997 CC&Rs.
    III. ATTORNEY FEES ON APPEAL
    Article 9 and RCW 4.84.330 provided for attorney fees at trial, and these
    same provisions support an award on appeal. Atlas Supply, Inc. v. Realm, Inc.,
    
    170 Wn. App. 234
    , 241, 
    287 P.3d 606
     (2012). Because Hoopoe prevailed on
    appeal, it is entitled to reasonable fees and costs subject to its compliance with
    RAP 18.1. Because we reverse the trial court’s denial of attorney fees to BFOA
    and to the Owner Plaintiffs under article 9 of the 1997 CC&Rs, we award these
    parties attorney fees incurred on this single issue, subject to their compliance with
    RAP 18.1. We deny Stevens’s request for attorney fees.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the jury’s verdict and trial court’s rulings, with the exception of the
    order denying attorney fees to BFOA and the Owner Plaintiffs for the fees incurred
    in defending against Stevens’s counterclaims for violations of the 1997 CC&Rs.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    WE CONCUR:
    - 96 -