Riverside County's zoning ordinance does not govern cost-sharing for boundary fences. California Civil Code Section 841 (the Good Neighbor Fence Act) controls: adjoining landowners are presumed equally responsible for a shared boundary fence, and a 30-day written notice is required before incurring shared costs.
For fences on a shared property line in unincorporated Riverside County, the governing rule is state law, not Ordinance No. 348. California Civil Code Section 841, the Good Neighbor Fence Act of 2013, provides that 'Adjoining landowners are presumed to share an equal benefit from any fence dividing their properties and...shall be presumed to be equally responsible for the reasonable costs of construction, maintenance, or necessary replacement of the fence.' Before a landowner incurs shared costs, the statute requires that 'the landowner shall give 30 days' prior written notice to each affected adjoining landowner.' That notice must include notification of the presumption of equal responsibility, a description of the problem with the shared fence, the proposed solution, the estimated costs, the proposed cost-sharing approach, and a proposed timeline. The equal-share presumption can be rebutted in court by a preponderance of the evidence, in which case a judge may order a lesser contribution or none. Boundary-line and tree disputes are civil matters between neighbors; the County's role is limited to zoning and building-permit compliance, not enforcing private cost-sharing. Owners with a disagreement should document the notice and seek civil remedies rather than expecting code enforcement to intervene.
Failure to give the required 30-day written notice, or disputes over cost-sharing, are resolved through civil court, not County code enforcement. A neighbor who builds without proper notice may face reduced ability to recover shared costs.
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