Association of Owners of Regency Park Condominiums v. Thomasson

878 S.W.2d 560, 1994 Tenn. App. LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 4, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 878 S.W.2d 560 (Association of Owners of Regency Park Condominiums v. Thomasson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Association of Owners of Regency Park Condominiums v. Thomasson, 878 S.W.2d 560, 1994 Tenn. App. LEXIS 44 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

LEWIS, Judge.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Chancery Court which issued a mandatory injunction to the defendant/appellant to re *561 move a partially completed deck and stairs she had constructed from the second floor of her condominium unit. The injunction also required her to reinstall preexisting windows in place of doors she had installed. In the alternative, Defendant was allowed to “retain the one door leading from her master bedroom and construct a small balcony with no stairs in place of the deck.”

The Chancellor, following a two day evi-dentiary hearing, filed his “Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.” Following a review of this record, we adopt those findings of fact which are as follows:

1. Construction of the Regency Park Condominiums on Timber Lane in Nashville was begun in late 1964 pursuant to a recorded Master Deed and according to plans approved by the Planning Board of Nashville.
2. A total of 60 units were completed in successive phases. Included were a number of two bedroom houses, three bedroom houses and four bedroom houses, grouped in clusters in several separate buildings. Only the two bedroom units, which were slightly recessed because of their smaller size, were equipped with balconies attached to the main wall at the back of the units at the second floor level.
3. The condominiums were designed by Robert M. Street, a Nashville architect, in compliance with the various construction codes in effect in 1964.
4. Defendant and her husband, the late I.C. Thomasson, purchased Unit No. 658 in January, 1971. It contained three bedrooms but no balcony. Mr. Thomasson served as President of the plaintiff association for three years but died on February 8, 1989.
5. In November 1989, defendant, a licensed architect, orally requested Paul Hargis, President of plaintiffs Board of Directors, to determine whether the Board would approve her construction of a balcony at the rear second floor level of her unit. Mr. Hargis promptly assembled four members of the Board in an informal meeting since no regular meeting was scheduled until the following January. The four Board members were unanimously opposed to defendant’s proposal and Mr. Hargis telephoned defendant and so advised her.
6. Without further notice to the Board defendant, during the last of December 1989 or the first of January 1990, proceeded to commence construction by removing two windows from the back wall of her unit and replacing them with doors.
7. On January 3, 1990 at the Board’s direction, Frank Ghertner, the Managing Agent, telephoned and wrote defendant, requesting that she submit written plans of her proposed construction for the Board’s further consideration and suggesting the doors might present a problem.
8. About March 5, 1990 defendant submitted a colored drawing of a proposed deck, rather than a balcony, spanning the rear wall of her unit at the second floor level. The existing balconies on the two bedroom units were cantilevered, being supported only by brackets attached to the wall. The deck, on the other hand, was to be supported by posts resting on the concrete floor of the patio at the rear of the unit.
9. On March 7, 1990 Mr. Ghertner wrote defendant acknowledging receipt of the drawing and stating that the Board of Directors had not approved the work but had taken the matter under advisement and would advise defendant as to their decision at a later date.
10. At the Board’s direction, Mrs. Alfred T. Adams, Jr. and Charles C. Tra-bue, Jr., consulted Robert H. Street and requested his recommendation. Following their conference, Mr. Street was out of the country for two weeks but, on May 1,1990, wrote Mr. Trabue that he could not approve the proposed deck addition and suggested instead that defendant be given permission to construct a small balcony conforming to those previously installed outside bedroom windows of two other three bedroom units. He recommended that defendant be allowed to retain the door installed in the wall of her bedroom but that she be required to restore the bathroom window. On May 7, 1990, plaintiffs attorney wrote defendant that the *562 Board had adopted the architect’s recommendation and that she should proceed accordingly. A copy of Mr. Street’s letter was enclosed.
11. Defendant did not respond to the letter or communicate further with the Board but employed counsel who negotiated unsuccessfully with the Boards representatives.
12. In early August 1991, without notice to either the Board or her counsel, defendant employed a contractor, obtained a building permit and commenced construction of a second floor deck addition which was much larger and more elaborate than that pictured in the colored drawing submitted to the Board and also contained a circular stairway. Construction was suspended by the issuance of the Court’s temporary restraining order on August 8, 1991 and has not been resumed.
13. The rear wall of defendant’s unit is located on the 50 foot setback line from the boundary of the condominium property. The drawing prepared by defendant’s engineer indicated that the proposed deck would extend some ten feet beyond the setback line and defendant’s expert witness testified that such an encroachment would require a variance. Also, from the dimensions shown on the drawing, it appears that the proposed deck would have an area of 204 square feet, as contrasted with the area of the balcony authorized by the Board which would be on 8.75 square feet. Defendant’s application for a building permit was based on the March 5,1990 colored drawing, not the plan prepared by her engineer.

We reiterate that these findings of fact are supported by the record and the preponderance of the evidence and therefore adopted by this court.

Defendant/appellant has presented two issues for our consideration. They are as follows:

I. DOES THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF A CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION ACT ARBITRARILY, CAPRICIOUSLY AND UNREASONABLY, WHEN IT PROHIBITS A UNIT OWNER FROM CONSTRUCTING A DECK AND STAIRS TO SERVE AS A FIRE EXIT FROM HER UNIT, UNDER THE FOLLOWING CIRCUMSTANCES:
A. The Prohibition Was Not Made Pursuant To Any Specific Architectural Or Other Standard, But Was Made Pursuant To A Provision Of The Condominium Documents Permitting The Construction Of Improvements Unless Objected To By The Board.
B. The Board Had In The Past Permitted The Construction Of Balconies That Did Not Conform To The General Architecture Of The Condominium.
C. It Is Undisputed That The Deck And Stairs Can Be Seen From No Vantage Point, Except From A Small, Relatively Inaccessible Area Immediately Behind The Unit.
D. Due To The Uniquely Inaccessible Location Of The Unit, The Deck And Stairs Are Required In Order To Provide A Reasonable Second Egress From The Unit In The Event Of A Fire.
E.

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Bluebook (online)
878 S.W.2d 560, 1994 Tenn. App. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/association-of-owners-of-regency-park-condominiums-v-thomasson-tennctapp-1994.