In unincorporated Sonoma County, neighbor fence disputes are governed by California state law: Civil Code Section 841 (the Good Neighbor Fence Act) presumes adjoining landowners are equally responsible for the reasonable costs of building, maintaining, or replacing a shared boundary fence, and Civil Code Section 841.4 makes a malicious 'spite fence' over 10 feet a private nuisance.
California Civil Code Section 841 (repealed and re-added by Stats. 2013, Ch. 86 (AB 1404), effective January 1, 2014) provides that adjoining landowners 'shall share equally in the responsibility for maintaining the boundaries and monuments between them' and are 'presumed to share an equal benefit from any fence dividing their properties.' Unless the parties agree otherwise in writing, they are presumed equally responsible for the reasonable costs of construction, maintenance, or necessary replacement of the fence. A landowner who intends to incur such costs must give each affected adjoining landowner 30 days' prior written notice describing the problem with the shared fence, the proposed solution, the estimated costs, the proposed cost-sharing approach, and the proposed timeline. The equal-share presumption can be overcome by a preponderance of the evidence showing that equal responsibility would be unjust, considering factors such as disproportionate financial burden, whether the cost exceeds the resulting change in property value, undue financial hardship, and the reasonableness of the project. Separately, Civil Code Section 841.4 declares that any fence or fence-like structure unnecessarily exceeding 10 feet in height that is maliciously erected or maintained to annoy an adjoining owner or occupant is a private nuisance. These state rules apply throughout unincorporated Sonoma County; the county's own fence height and permit standards (see Permit Sonoma BPC-023) apply in addition to, not instead of, these civil obligations between neighbors.
Civil Code 841 disputes are resolved in civil court rather than by county code enforcement: a court may order a neighbor to contribute an equal share of reasonable shared-fence costs, or, if the presumption is rebutted, order a contribution of less than an equal share or no contribution at all. A spite fence unnecessarily exceeding 10 feet that is maliciously erected or maintained is a private nuisance, and the injured adjoining owner or occupant may sue to abate it using the nuisance remedies in Title 3, Part 3, Division 4 of the Civil Code.
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