600 North Frederick Road, LLC v. Burlington Coat Factory

19 A.3d 837, 419 Md. 413, 2011 Md. LEXIS 211
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 22, 2011
Docket89, September Term, 2010
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 19 A.3d 837 (600 North Frederick Road, LLC v. Burlington Coat Factory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
600 North Frederick Road, LLC v. Burlington Coat Factory, 19 A.3d 837, 419 Md. 413, 2011 Md. LEXIS 211 (Md. 2011).

Opinion

HARRELL, J.

“Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres....” 1 As the tribes of the three parts of ancient Gaul presented unique problems for Julius Caesar, an owner and a tenant, among the three *417 parcels comprising the subject real property of this case, present us with a matter of first impression in Maryland law.

This case requires us to determine if and when a declaration of covenants regarding real property (essentially a contract), which requires the owner(s) to be signatories to any modification in order to be effective, may be modified by the written consent of less than all of the owners. 600 North Frederick Road, LLC (“Petitioner”)—owner of one parcel of the three-parcel tract of land in Montgomery County—appeals here from the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals affirming the judgment of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County approving such a modification. The Circuit Court held that Petitioner’s predecessor in interest and the owner of one of the other parcels could modify bilaterally an earlier declaration executed and recorded by a single predecessor owner at a time when all three parcels were under single ownership—a modification that now limits Petitioner’s development rights on its later-acquired parcel—notwithstanding that the earlier of the two declarations provided that any purported modification required the consent of the owner(s) of all three parcels. Further, the Circuit Court ruled that the revised declaration applied not only to any third-party (i.e., non-owner) developer of the restricted parcel, but to Petitioner as owner of the proposed-for-development restricted parcel.

Petitioner claims here, as it did before the trial and intermediate appellate courts, that, because the original declaration required expressly the consent of the owner or owners of all of the parcels, an attempt to modify the agreement in a writing executed by less than all of the owners (or their successors or assigns) is ineffective, and, as such, the revised declaration is invalid and unenforceable. In response, Burlington Coat Factory of Maryland, LLC (“Burlington” or “BCF”), assigneeleaseholder on one of the parcels and an express beneficiary of the revised declaration, relies on authorities from other jurisdictions which hold effectively that two parties to a tripartite agreement may modify that agreement, in writing, provided that the modifications do not prejudice the non-signatory party. We hold, for reasons to be explained more fully infra, *418 that, because the foreign authorities upon which Burlington relies are consistent with Maryland appellate courts’ longstanding jurisprudence regarding modification of contracts, the modifications in the revised declaration are valid and enforceable absent an adequate showing of prejudice by the non-consenting parcel’s owners. Further, we hold that the restrictions contained in the revised declaration apply, not only to third-party developers of the restricted parcel, but also to Petitioner as owner of that parcel. Accordingly, although we agree with virtually everything held by the Court of Special Appeals, this case must be remanded to the Circuit Court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

I. FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

This case involves a tract of land in Gaithersburg, Montgomery County, Maryland. At some point prior to 1976, the tract was subdivided into three parcels, denominated as “Parcel One,” “Parcel Two,” and “Parcel Three.” Parcel One, the smallest of the three lots (approximately 2.47 square acres in area), is situated on the northeast corner of the tract, at the intersection of Perry Parkway and North Frederick Avenue (Maryland Route 355). Parcel Two (approximately 7.53 square acres) is west of Parcel One, and also abuts Perry Parkway and Route 355. Parcel Three, the largest of the lots, is west of Parcels One and Two, and abuts Perry Parkway on the south, Montgomery Village Avenue on the northwest, and Route 355 on the northeast.

In 1976, all of the parcels were owned by Danac Real Estate Investment Corporation (“Danac”). On 22 April 1976, Danac entered into a thirty-year lease with Montgomery Ward & Co, Inc. (“Ward”) involving Parcels One and Two. Pursuant to the lease, Ward constructed a retail store on Parcel One (the Leasehold) and the majority of its supporting surface parking on Parcel Two (the easement). Ward’s use of Parcel Two for parking was subject expressly to Danac’s right to develop Parcel Two. Ward’s need for parking on Parcel Two would be accommodated in any development proposal by Danac, pre *419 sumably by a parking structure or structures. The lease provided further that Danac was required to seek and obtain Ward’s consent before commencing development on Parcels Two and/or Three, which consent was not to be withheld unreasonably. The lease was silent as to the precise location or types of any such future development. At the end of the original thirty-year lease term, Ward had the option, provided it was not in default at the time of its obligations under the Lease, to extend the lease for a period of ten additional years, with two additional options, each for a like period.

In 1980, 2 Danac entered into a contract with Realty Dealership Corporation (“RDC”), by which RDC was to acquire fee-simple title to Parcels One and Two, in the name of a wholly-owned subsidiary, Eretz Land Corporation (“Eretz”). Danac, prior to closing on the sale, agreed (and was permitted) to execute and record covenants reserving to itself development rights to Parcel Two. On 30 January 1981, Danac executed a “Declaration of Easement and Covenant” (“1981 Declaration”). The 1981 Declaration provided that, should Danac cease to be the fee simple owner of Parcel Two, Danac reserved the right, until 1 January 2001, to enter into a fifty-year ground lease with the owner, for an annual rent of $1,000.00. The proposed ground lease would grant Danac development rights on Parcel Two, provided that Danac would agree that “at the time [it] commences construction of any improvement on Parcel 2 ..., then such construction shall not commence until the owner of Parcel [One] shall have given its written consent to such construction, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld.” 3 Further, the 1981 Declaration re-affirmed expressly *420 the rights in Parcel Two of the tenant on Parcel One as granted by the 1976 Lease. Of particular importance to the present case, the 1981 Declaration provided that “[t]his declaration may be modified or canceled only by written instrument signed by the owners of the Parcels.” 4 Danac conveyed Parcels One and Two to Eretz on 30 January 1981. The 1981 Declaration and the deed were recorded on 13 February 1981.

In October 1983, Danac sought Ward’s consent (as required under the 1976 Lease and affirmed in the 1981 Declaration) to develop Parcel Two with an office complex.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 A.3d 837, 419 Md. 413, 2011 Md. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/600-north-frederick-road-llc-v-burlington-coat-factory-md-2011.