Bay Breeze Estate Homeowners Association Inc. v. Charles E. Dunham and Lynda R. Dunham

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 27, 2017
DocketCA 12048-MA
StatusPublished

This text of Bay Breeze Estate Homeowners Association Inc. v. Charles E. Dunham and Lynda R. Dunham (Bay Breeze Estate Homeowners Association Inc. v. Charles E. Dunham and Lynda R. Dunham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bay Breeze Estate Homeowners Association Inc. v. Charles E. Dunham and Lynda R. Dunham, (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

) Bay Breeze Estate Homeowners Assoication, Inc. ) C.A. No. 12048-MA Plaintiff, ) v. ) ) Charles E. Dunham and Lynda R. Dunham ) Defendants. )

MASTER’S REPORT

Date Submitted: November 7, 2016 Draft Report: February 13, 2017 Final Report: February 27, 2017

A homeowners association (“HOA”) filed a complaint under 10 Del. C. § 6501

et seq. and 10 Del. C. § 348 alleging that two homeowners are in violation of an

amended deed restriction because they parked a motor home in their driveway for

more than 15 consecutive days and more than a total of 45 days in 2015. The

homeowners denied the complaint, alleging that the recent amendment to the

community’s deed restrictions was invalid and, in any event, their motor home did

not fit the description of the type of motor home governed by the amended deed

restriction. Pending before me are the homeowners’ motion to compel discovery, the

HOA’s motion for partial summary judgment and the homeowners’ cross-motion for

summary judgment. For the reasons stated below, I recommend that the Court grant

Page 1 of 11 the homeowners’ cross-motion for summary judgment and dismiss the remaining

motions as moot.

Factual Background Defendants Charles and Lynda Dunham own a house in the Bay Breeze

Estates, a subdivision located within the City of Lewes, Delaware. They also own a

large motor home that cost in excess of $200,000. The Dunhams use their motor

home for vacationing in the north during the summer and in the south during the

winter. When not away on four-month long trips, the Dunhams reside in Lewes and

park their motor home in the driveway of their lot in Bay Breeze Estates, evidently to

the annoyance of some neighbors.

The lots and common areas within this subdivision are subject to certain

restrictive covenants under a Declaration and Restrictions of Bay Breeze Estates (“the

Declaration”) that was originally recorded on December 8, 1986 in the Recorder of

Deeds Office in Sussex County. Section 10(E) of the Declaration states in relevant

part that:

No camper, trailer, recreational vehicle, truck (other than a pick up truck), or any vehicle or any principal component thereof shall be parked stored, or maintained for more than three consecutive days per month on any lot or street unless the vehicle is used and designed principally for personal transportation and is not capable of or principally designed for temporary or permanent habitation.1

1 Complaint, Ex. 1 at *7. Docket Item (“DI”) 1. Page 2 of 11 The Declaration was amended on April 4, 1992, and Section 10(E) was revised

in relevant part to state:

No vehicle designed for permanent or temporary habitation, be it camper, trailer or recreational vehicle shall be parked or maintained on the streets at any time except for temporary duration not to exceed forty-eight (48) hours. Any owner’s guests [sic] vehicles for vacation, i.e., camper trailer or recreational vehicle shall not be allowed to be parked in a driveway for more than seven (7) days without express written consent of the Board. Parking of commercial vehicles over two axles is prohibited at all times.2 Another amendment to the Declaration on September 5, 1992, modified

Section 10(E) by deleting the words “over two axles” and inserting in its place “larger

than a conventional pick-up truck.”3

In June 2014, members of the HOA voted to amend the Declaration a fourth

time. The Fourth Amendment to Declaration and Restrictions for Bay Breeze Estates

(“Fourth Amendment”) was passed by a total of 61 affirmative votes and was

executed on August 5, 2014.4 The Fourth Amendment revised Section 10(E) so that

it now states:

2 Id., Ex. 2 at 8. 3 Id., Ex. 3 at ¶11. This amendment also added language limiting the amount of time a motor vehicle with an expired license or one which is disabled could be parked on the streets and authorizing the HOA to have such vehicle removed and stored. The amendment also added a new Paragraph 10(U) restricting the parking of boats to driveways or garages and limiting boat parking in driveways to no more than three consecutive days between December 1 and March 15 of any year. Id., Ex. 3 at ¶12. 4 Id., Ex. 5. According to the document, a vote of all lot owners was by ballot sent via first class mail by the President of the HOA, and returned to John E. Henriksen, Esq. The ballots were tabulated in the presence of the President, the HOA’s counsel, Page 3 of 11 No motorized vehicle designed for permanent or temporary habitation, referred to as a camper, recreational vehicle or motor home, but only those vehicles designed for permanent or temporary habitation installed on a commercial truck or commercial bus chassis, shall be parked or maintained on the streets at any time except for temporary duration not to exceed forty-eight (48) hours. Any motorized vehicle referred to as a camper, recreational vehicle or motor home, but only those vehicles designed for permanent or temporary habitation installed on a commercial truck or commercial bus chassis shall not be parked within any residential lot for more than fifteen (15) consecutive days and for no more than forty-five (45) days annually after January 1, 2015. No commercial vehicle over two (2) axels [sic] is allowed on the streets or within any lot of the Subdivision. Further, no stripped down, partially wrecked, or junk motor vehicle or sizable part thereof, shall be permitted to be parked on any street in the Subdivision or any lot in such manner as to be visible to the occupants or owners of other lots in the Subdivision. Further, no motorized vehicle designed for permanent or temporary habitation, referred to as a camper, recreational vehicle or motor home, shall be parked in any common area not part of the streets within the Bay Breeze Subdivision. No trailer or camper, being a non-motorized vehicle designed for permanent or temporary habitation is allowed in any part of the Bay Breeze Subdivision, whether it is a street, common area or lot within the subdivision.5 By letter dated November 13, 2015, the HOA notified the Dunhams that they

had violated Section 10(E) three times by parking their motor home in their driveway

in excess of 15 consecutive days on two separate occasions and by parking their

motor home in their driveway for a total of 47 days, in excess of the 45-day limit.6 In

this letter, the HOA also notified the Dunhams that they would be assessed a fine of

not less than $25.00 per day for each further violation of the motor home restrictions.

and counsel for certain residents who were opposed to the amendment. More than 60% of the then owners of lots in the subdivision were in favor of the amendment, as required by the Declaration. 5 Id., Ex. 4 at 1-2. Page 4 of 11 The Dunhams refused to accept the letter that had been sent to them by priority mail

express.7 A copy of the November 13th letter was then sent to the Dunhams by first

class mail.8

Procedural Background On February 25, 2016, the HOA filed its complaint in this Court, seeking a

declaratory judgment against the Dunhams, declaring that they are bound by the

Declaration and specifically mandated to follow the Fourth Amendment’s revised

Section 10(E) regarding parking motor homes “subject to the criteria of such Section

in 2016 and in each year thereafter under the Declaration unless amended[,]” and are

liable for violations of the restrictions in an amount to be determined, with interest at

the Delaware legal rate from November 27, 2015, and attorney’s fees and costs.9

On April 14, 2016, the Dunhams responded to the HOA’s complaint by

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Related

Gibson v. Main
129 A. 259 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1925)
Daniels Gardens, Inc. v. Hilyard
49 A.2d 721 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
Bay Breeze Estate Homeowners Association Inc. v. Charles E. Dunham and Lynda R. Dunham, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bay-breeze-estate-homeowners-association-inc-v-charles-e-dunham-and-delch-2017.