Ventura has no local 'good-neighbor fence' ordinance — the matter is governed by California Civil Code §841 (Good Neighbor Fence Act of 2013), which presumes adjoining landowners equally share the reasonable cost of constructing, maintaining, and replacing a boundary fence. A neighbor who wants to incur costs must give 30 days' prior written notice with a problem description, proposed solution, cost estimate, cost-sharing approach, and timeline. Cal. Civ. Code §841.4 separately makes any fence over 10 feet maliciously erected to annoy a neighbor a private nuisance ('spite fence').
California Civil Code §841 (the Good Neighbor Fence Act of 2013) governs cost-sharing on boundary fences statewide and preempts the need for a local ordinance. The law presumes adjoining landowners share an equal benefit from any fence dividing their properties and are equally responsible for the reasonable cost of construction, maintenance, or necessary replacement, unless a written agreement says otherwise. A landowner intending to incur costs must serve 30 days' prior written notice on each affected adjoining owner that includes: (1) notice of the equal-cost presumption, (2) a description of the nature of the problem, (3) the proposed solution, (4) estimated construction or maintenance costs, (5) the proposed cost-sharing approach, and (6) the proposed timeline. A neighbor who disputes the presumption may rebut it with evidence that equal sharing would be unjust (e.g., disproportionate benefit, financial hardship, prior contributions). Civil Code §841.4 separately makes any fence or fence-like structure 'unnecessarily exceeding 10 feet in height maliciously erected or maintained for the purpose of annoying the owner or occupant of adjoining property' a private nuisance, giving the affected neighbor a cause of action for abatement and damages. Property-line disputes themselves (encroachment, survey error) are handled in Ventura County Superior Court civil division. Ventura's SBMC adds local zoning constraints (height, setbacks, materials) but does not displace the Civil Code cost-sharing framework.
Failure to give the 30-day notice required by Civ. Code §841 can defeat a cost-recovery claim against an adjoining neighbor. Spite-fence claims under §841.4 are pursued as private nuisance suits in Ventura County Superior Court, with remedies including injunctive relief (forced abatement) and damages. Encroachment over a property line can also support trespass and ejectment claims.
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