Sonoma County's Zoning Code (Ch. 26) governs fence height and placement, but cost-sharing for a shared boundary fence is set by California Civil Code 841, the 'Good Neighbor Fence Law.' Adjoining owners are presumed to share equally in the cost of a division fence, and a landowner must give 30 days' written notice before building or replacing one.
Sonoma County's ordinance addresses how tall and where a fence may be built (Zoning Code Section 26-88-030(a) and the PJR-133 objective standards), but it does not set who pays for a fence on a shared property line. That is governed by state law. California Civil Code 841 (the Good Neighbor Fence Law) provides that adjoining landowners shall share equally in the responsibility for maintaining the boundaries between them, and are presumed to share equally in the reasonable costs of construction, maintenance, or necessary replacement of a fence dividing their properties, unless they agree otherwise in writing. A landowner who intends to incur costs for a division fence must give 30 days' prior written notice to each affected adjoining landowner, describing the problem, the proposed solution, the estimated cost, and how cost-sharing will be handled. The equal-sharing presumption can be overcome by a preponderance of evidence that equal responsibility would be unjust - for example, where the cost would be substantially disproportionate to the benefit one owner receives. A fence built entirely on your own land, set back from the boundary, is your sole responsibility. The county recommends confirming the property line (a survey) before building, and fences must sit at least 6 inches outside any public right-of-way or easement.
Disputes over a shared boundary fence are civil matters resolved under Civil Code 841, not by county code enforcement. Failing to give the required 30-day written notice, or building over the property line, can lead to civil liability, a cost-recovery claim, or a trespass/encroachment action by the neighbor.
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