Beesley v. Hanish

521 A.2d 1235, 70 Md. App. 482, 1987 Md. App. LEXIS 275
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 6, 1987
Docket761, September Term, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 521 A.2d 1235 (Beesley v. Hanish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beesley v. Hanish, 521 A.2d 1235, 70 Md. App. 482, 1987 Md. App. LEXIS 275 (Md. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

ROSALYN B. BELL, Judge.

Originally owned and developed by Martingham Inn, Inc. (M.I.I.), Martingham is a pleasant, semi-rural subdivision located just outside St. Michaels in Talbot County, Mary *485 land. Section No. Three of Martingham encompasses, among others, 15 inland lots, namely, lots 25 through 31 and lots 33 through 40. These lots surround four acres called the pond parcel although there is no pond presently located there. This case is about a suit in the Circuit Court for Talbot County by the owners of lots 25 and 39, the Hanishes and the Kroegers, respectively, appellees, for declaratory and injunctive relief against the remaining lot owners, including the two appellants, Beesley and Driscoll, because in September, 1985 Beesley and Driscoll commenced construction of a pond on the pond parcel.

M.I.I. purchased the tract of land now developed as Martingham in 1969. A plat of Section No. Three of Martingham, recorded July, 1971, indicated a pond on the four-acre parcel. 1 M.I.I.’s first conveyance of the inland lots in Section No. Three was lot 25 in 1971. The last five of these lots were not sold until January, 1976. The 15 deeds conveying the lots bordering on the pond parcel were by no means consistent in reference to the pond parcel. In the deed to lot 25, known as the Welton deed, M.I.I. conveyed a one-fifteenth undivided interest in the pond parcel, covenanted to build a pond, covenanted to transfer the remaining one-fifteenth interests to other lot owners, and imposed restrictions on the management and use of the pond. The Hanishes, appellees, are successors to the Welton deed. Beesley and Driscoll, appellants, jointly own several lots. The deed to one of those lots, lot 36, includes a transfer of a one-fifteenth undivided interest in the pond parcel and a reference to the covenants and restrictions listed in the Welton deed. Other deeds transferred to the inland lot owners either contain similar provisions to those in the deed to lot 36, provide no mention of the pond parcel or, like appellees Kroegers’ deed to lot 39, reference the *486 covenants and restrictions in the Welton deed without a conveyance of an interest in the pond parcel. 2

In a deposition entered into evidence at trial, Sidney Peters, the president and sole director of M.I.I. in the early 1970s, testified that in an effort to sell Martingham’s inland lots, M.I.I. did some preliminary excavation of the pond parcel. M.I.I. hoped to show prospective buyers that a pond would in fact be built, but M.I.I. delayed completion of the pond until a majority of the lots could be sold. Only six of the 15 lots were sold by May 1, 1975, the date M.I.I. promised in the Welton deed to complete construction of the pond. Soon thereafter, M.I.I. encountered financial difficulties in completing Martingham’s development and forfeited its charter in 1976 without completing the pond’s construction. Except for some additional excavating undertaken by a non-party during 1982 in an attempt to test the pond parcel for use as a sewage lagoon, no further organized activity occurred on the parcel until the current controversy-

*487 The pond parcel contains an excavation of approximately three-and-one-half acres that ranges in depth from four to eight feet. Beesley and Driscoll presented extensive evidence that the pond parcel is dangerous and unsightly in its partially excavated state. In contrast, Hanish and Kroeger each expressed his pleasure in the unrefined character of the pond parcel and the habitat it provides for wildlife. 3 The only known active use of the pond parcel was by a local teenager who rode his three-wheeled motorized vehicle in the excavation.

Single family residences have been built on only six of the 15 lots that surround the pond parcel. Three of the homes are off the northern end of the pond parcel and are visually screened from other more intensely developed areas of Martingham by loblolly pine trees located on the pond parcel. Two of these houses, on lots 39 and 25, are owned by the Kroegers and the Hanishes, respectively. Beesley and Driscoll presented expert testimony, unrefuted at trial, that although the unimproved lots are otherwise in an attractive portion of Martingham, they have been difficult to resell and the condition of the pond parcel has had a negative influence on the appreciation of all the lots that surround it.

During the early months of 1985, Beesley and Driscoll purchased four of the lots that adjoin the pond parcel and one lot which adjoins an access strip to the parcel. They believed that with the consent of a simple majority of the owners of the lots surrounding the pond parcel they could complete the construction of the pond on the pond parcel. They sent letters to the owners of the other lots explaining their proposal to pay for and conduct the construction in compliance with M.I.I.'s original plan and requested each *488 owner to return a ballot indicating his or her approval or disapproval. Most of the other lot owners consented to Beesley’s and Driscoll’s plan. Beesley and Driscoll also obtained the approval of Sidney Peters, as trustee of M.I.I., to complete the pond in M.I.I.’s place. 4

In September of 1985, Beesley and Driscoll began removing the scrub vegetation on the pond parcel. About eight days later, the Kroegers and the Hanishes obtained an ex parte injunction stopping the work. Later, an interlocutory injunction issued. Following a hearing, the trial judge permanently enjoined further construction on the pond parcel because Beesley and Driscoll had failed to obtain the unanimous consent of the owners of the lots adjacent to the pond parcel. The court then required Beesley and Driscoll to clear the debris created by their pre-injunction activities.

Beesley’s and Driscoll’s first appeal from this order was dismissed by this Court. 5 They have appealed again claim *489 ing that they are entitled to complete construction of the pond because of their status as tenants in common of the pond parcel. They further contend that they do not need the unanimous consent of their co-tenants because their proposed construction of the pond will not prejudice either the co-tenants’ common law rights to prevent waste or the co-tenants’ rights under their deeds. Finally, Beesley and Driscoll assert that their right to complete construction of the pond has not been abandoned or waived, and they are not estopped or barred by laches. The Hanishes and the Kroegers, naturally, dispute all these contentions.

I. BEESLEY’S AND DRISCOLL’S RIGHT TO CONSTRUCT POND

Beesley and Driscoll contend that they have the right to construct the pond because of their status as lot owners of properties adjacent to the pond parcel. 6 The court concluded that Beesley and Driscoll needed the unanimous consent of all the owners of lots bordering the pond parcel to construct a pond on that parcel.

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Bluebook (online)
521 A.2d 1235, 70 Md. App. 482, 1987 Md. App. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beesley-v-hanish-mdctspecapp-1987.