The Montecito Country Club Easement Dispute
Property fights can be very complicated. They often involve two sides who both believe they are right. One recent fight in Santa Barbara, California, shows this clearly. It was between the Montecito Country Club (owned by Ty Warner) and two homeowners, Kevin and Jeannette Root.
The issue was about an easement—a legal right to use another person’s land. The Roots changed their land in ways that the Club said blocked this easement. After three years in court, a judge ruled on July 30, 2024 that the Club’s easement was valid and that the Roots had to remove their changes and return the land to its old condition.
Who Was Involved?
Party | Role | What They Wanted |
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Montecito Country Club, LLC (owned by Ty Warner) | Plaintiff (the side bringing the case) | To keep its easement clear for golf carts and maintenance work |
Kevin & Jeannette Root | Defendants (the side being sued) | To keep their new landscaping for privacy and looks |
Santa Barbara Superior Court (Judge Donna Geck) | Court | To decide if the Roots broke the law by blocking the easement |
What is an Easement?
An easement means one property owner gives another property the right to use part of their land.
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The land that benefits is called the dominant estate.
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The land that is burdened is called the servient estate.
In this case:
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The Club had the benefit (dominant estate).
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The Roots owned the land that was burdened (servient estate).
The easement let the Club use a strip of the Roots’ land for things like building a cart path and letting workers reach the golf course.
Read also: Openhouseperth.net Lawyer
What Did the Roots Change?
The Roots made several changes to their land inside the easement area:
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Took out an old hedgerow
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Regraded the land (changed the slope and surface)
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Built a retaining wall
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Planted new privacy hedges
Why the Club Complained
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The changes made it hard to use the easement.
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Future plans like a cart path or maintenance access could not work with the wall and hedges in place.
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Only Ty Warner had the right to approve changes, and he never gave approval.
Why the Roots Defended Themselves
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They said the changes made their property safer and more private.
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They believed they had the right to improve their own land.
Legal Questions the Court Looked At
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Is the easement real and enforceable?
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The Club said it was properly recorded and legally binding.
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The Roots argued it was not as wide or strong as the Club claimed.
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Did the landscaping block the easement?
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The court had to decide if the Roots’ changes made it too hard for the Club to use the land.
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Who can approve changes?
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The Club said only Ty Warner could approve new landscaping.
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The Roots acted without asking him.
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Timeline of the Case
Date | Event |
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June 4, 2021 | The Club filed the lawsuit in Santa Barbara Superior Court |
2021–2024 | Many motions and hearings were held, including motions to limit what evidence could be shown |
July 30, 2024 | The judge ruled in favor of the Montecito Country Club |
The case stretched over three years before a final decision was reached.
What the Court Decided
The judge made three main findings:
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The easement is valid and belongs to the Club.
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The Roots’ landscaping interfered with the easement and blocked its use.
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Only Ty Warner had the authority to approve changes, and he had not approved any.
The Court’s Order
The judge gave a clear order, called a mandatory injunction. The Roots had to:
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Remove the retaining wall, regrading, and new hedges.
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Restore the land to how it looked before the changes.
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Pay all costs of the restoration themselves.
This meant the Roots had to undo expensive work they had done over several years.
Why This Case Matters
For Homeowners
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Owning land does not always mean you can do anything you want with it.
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Easements must be respected, even if they limit your choices.
For Clubs and HOAs
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Easements can be defended in court.
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Approval rules (like Warner’s authority here) are legally enforceable.
For Property Law
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Easements protect future uses too, not just what is happening right now.
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Even “improvements” can count as interference if they block an easement.
Lessons to Take Away
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Check property records before changing land that may have an easement.
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Get written approval if the easement requires it.
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Understand the risks—you may have to remove changes and pay for it.
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Think long-term—courts protect both current and future uses of an easement.
Comparing Both Sides
Point | Montecito Country Club | Kevin & Jeannette Root |
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Main Goal | Protect cart path and maintenance access | Improve privacy and looks |
Easement View | Valid and binding | Too limited or not really blocked |
Landscaping Changes | Blocked the easement | Normal improvements |
Authority | Only Ty Warner could approve | Thought they could act as owners |
Result | Court victory, easement enforced | Lost improvements, must restore land |
How the Media Covered It
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Local news and press releases reported the Club’s victory and the Roots’ obligation to restore the land.
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The Club’s lawyers emphasized that the ruling protected future operations.
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Some blogs repeated the story but sometimes got facts wrong, like claiming different costs or saying no ruling had happened.
Conclusion
The Montecito Country Club Easement Dispute is a clear example of how strong easement rights are. The case shows:
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Easements are serious legal rights that cannot be ignored.
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Property owners who interfere can be forced to remove improvements.
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Courts protect not just present use, but also future possible use of an easement.
For the Roots, the outcome was costly—they lost their landscaping and had to pay to fix the land. For the Club, it was a big win that secured its rights. For everyone else, it is a warning: always respect easements, or you may face the same result.