Ventura County's zoning ordinance does not assign cost responsibility between neighbors. That is governed by California's Good Neighbor Fence Act (Civil Code 841), which presumes adjoining owners share fence costs equally and requires 30 days' written notice before incurring expense.
The Non-Coastal Zoning Ordinance sets fence heights, setbacks, and permit rules but does not address who pays for a boundary fence shared by two neighbors. That question is governed by California Civil Code section 841, the Good Neighbor Fence Act, which applies statewide including unincorporated Ventura County. Under section 841, adjoining landowners are presumed to share an equal benefit from any fence dividing their properties and, unless they agree otherwise in writing, are presumed equally responsible for the reasonable costs of construction, maintenance, or necessary replacement of the fence. A landowner who intends to incur costs for a shared fence must give 30 days' prior written notice to each affected adjoining landowner. That notice must describe the nature of the problem, the proposed solution, the estimated cost, the proposed cost-sharing approach, and the proposed timeline. The equal-cost presumption can be rebutted in court by a preponderance of the evidence, after which a judge may order a lesser share or no contribution based on the circumstances. The County's measurement rule (Section 8106-8.1.4) addresses fences between lots at different grade levels: where grades differ, height is measured from the higher grade, provided the distance from the lower grade to the top does not exceed 10 feet.
Fence-cost disputes between neighbors are civil matters resolved under Civil Code 841, not enforced by the County. Failing to give the required 30-day notice can weaken a claim for cost-sharing in small claims or civil court.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Ventura County, CA
Outdoor music at homes in unincorporated Ventura County is limited at night by Ordinance No. 4124, which bars amplified or instrumental sound audible 50 feet...
Ventura County, CA
Ventura County's nighttime noise ordinance uses an audibility-at-50-feet test rather than a decibel number. Numeric dBA limits come from the General Plan's n...
Ventura County, CA
On county roads, painted curbs set parking rights under Traffic Ordinance Sec. 7200: red means no stopping, standing, or parking at any time; green allows 24...
Ventura County, CA
On county roads, yellow curbs are for loading freight or passengers and white curbs for brief passenger loading or mail (Sec. 7200). For new development, the...
Ventura County, CA
Designated communities ban oversized vehicles from county roads. Oak Park (Sec. 7251) bars vehicles over 25 ft long, 80 in wide, or 82 in high. Oak View and ...
Ventura County, CA
The Non-Coastal Zoning Ordinance lets operative, licensed, registered vehicles park in a driveway leading to a garage or carport, plus a paved strip up to 10...
See how Ventura County's neighbor fence rules rules stack up against other locations.
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