Behar v. Johnson

2024 UT App 129, 557 P.3d 607
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedSeptember 12, 2024
Docket20230455-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2024 UT App 129 (Behar v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Behar v. Johnson, 2024 UT App 129, 557 P.3d 607 (Utah Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 UT App 129

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

JACQUES BEHAR, Appellee, v. BRAD JOHNSON, SAM CLARK, SARA VIGH, AND GREEN HILL ESTATES HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, Appellants.

Opinion No. 20230455-CA Filed September 12, 2024

Second District Court, Ogden Department The Honorable Joseph M. Bean No. 210902938

Zane S. Froerer, Attorney for Appellant Taylor R. Jones, Attorney for Appellee

JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES RYAN D. TENNEY and AMY J. OLIVER concurred.

HARRIS, Judge:

¶1 In 2020, Jacques Behar was elected to be one of five members of the board of trustees (Board) of the Green Hill Estates Homeowners Association (HOA). But in 2021, his fellow Board members, without consulting the rank-and-file HOA members, voted him off the Board. Behar took issue with his removal and filed this lawsuit, asserting that he had been wrongfully removed from the Board because, in his view, only HOA members (and not the Board) have the right to elect or remove Board members. In addition, Behar claimed that the other Board members had been improperly elected. As remedies, he sought his own reinstatement as well as a judicial order limiting the other Board members to mere day-to-day HOA governance until a new election could be held. The district court entered a preliminary Behar v. Johnson

injunction order in which it interpreted the HOA’s governing documents in Behar’s favor, and in which it reinstated Behar to the Board and ordered that an election be held for the other members. Later, the court entered summary judgment on the merits in favor of Behar, and in addition ordered the Board to pay some of Behar’s attorney fees.

¶2 The HOA and three affected Board members (collectively, Appellants) now appeal various aspects of the district court’s rulings, including the attorney fees award. But subsequent to those rulings, three developments have taken place that Behar contends have rendered this appeal moot. First, Behar was voted off the Board by the HOA members in an election whose validity is not contested on appeal, and Behar no longer claims any right to hold a seat on the Board. Second, a new election was held for the other Board seats, and no party now claims that any of the current Board members were improperly elected. And third, the HOA paid in full the attorney fees judgment that had been entered in favor of Behar.

¶3 We agree with Behar that these new developments have rendered moot all of Appellants’ complaints about the district court’s rulings regarding the interpretation of the HOA’s governing documents and about the makeup of the Board. And Appellants make no argument for application of any exception to the mootness doctrine. Thus, because no live controversy remains to be decided between these parties on these issues, that part of Appellants’ appeal is moot, and we dismiss it on that basis.

¶4 But we reach a different mootness conclusion with regard to the attorney fees award: we conclude that Appellants’ challenge to that award has not been rendered moot by the HOA’s payment of the judgment. After examination of the merits of this part of Appellants’ appeal, however, we discern no abuse of discretion in the district court’s attorney fees award, and we affirm it on that basis.

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BACKGROUND

¶5 The Green Hill Country Estates is a community of residential property owners located in Huntsville, Utah. Like many similar communities, this one is governed by a set of covenants, conditions, and restrictions (the CC&Rs) and is managed by a homeowners association. The HOA, in turn, is run by a five-member board of trustees whose members are supposed to be elected to staggered three-year terms. Behar was elected to the Board in 2020; at the time, the other Board members included appellants Brad Johnson, Sam Clark, and Sara Vigh.

¶6 In 2021, a debate arose among the HOA members, and among the Board, about whether to turn Green Hill Country Estates into a “gated community” by installing a gate at the entrance. Behar was adamantly opposed to installing a gate, but other Board members were in favor. Over a period of several weeks, disputes arose between Behar and the other Board members and, at a Board meeting in May 2021, the Board voted to remove Behar from the Board, with Johnson, Clark, and Vigh all voting in favor of Behar’s expulsion.

¶7 The HOA’s governing documents are not entirely clear about whether the Board—as distinct from the HOA membership—has the ability to remove a Board member. Its articles of incorporation—drafted in 1982—provide that “new Trustee[s]” are to be “elected by a majority of the members” of the HOA, but also state as follows:

Members of the Board of Trustees may be removed at any time with or without cause, by a three-fourth vote at a meeting called with or without cause, by a vote of a majority of the Board of Trustees.

The HOA’s bylaws—drafted in 1996—state that Board “Trustees may be removed at any time by a vote of the Members holding seventy-five (75%) percent of the members entitled to vote.” The

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bylaws also state that “[e]ach Trustee shall hold office until his [or her] successor shall have been elected and qualified.” Finally, a Utah statute—first enacted in 2000 and amended several times since—states that, “[u]nless otherwise provided in the bylaws,” a director “elected by the voting members” may be removed “only if a majority of the voting members votes to remove the director.” Utah Code § 16-6a-808(1)(c).

¶8 Behar’s interpretation of these authorities is that only the HOA members—and not the Board—have the right to remove a Board member. Based on this interpretation, Behar filed a complaint (later amended) against the HOA and against Johnson, Clark, and Vigh; the complaint included derivative claims purportedly stated on behalf of the HOA. Behar’s main grievance was that the Board did not have the authority to remove him; instead, he asserted that only the HOA members did. Secondarily, he pointed out that the other Board members had all been elected more than three years earlier and had not officially been reelected, and he therefore took the position that their terms had expired. Based on these complaints, Behar asked the court for three forms of relief: (1) an order reinstating him to the Board; (2) an order commanding the HOA to hold a new election for the other Board seats, and in the meantime to limit the Board to mere “day-to- day” HOA decisions; and (3) attorney fees.

¶9 Contemporaneously with the filing of his complaint, Behar asked the district court for a preliminary injunction reinstating him to the Board and ordering new elections for the other Board members. After full briefing and argument, the district court determined that Behar’s interpretation of the HOA’s governing documents was correct and that the Board did not have “authority to remove another member of the Board.” The court also determined that the other members of the Board had “not been elected to the Board by the members of the [HOA] within the last three (3) years,” as required by the HOA’s governing documents. Based on this interpretation of the documents, the court issued a

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preliminary injunction ordering the HOA to reinstate Behar to the Board and to hold a new election for the other Board members “as soon as reasonably possible.”

¶10 The HOA complied with the order. It reinstated Behar to the Board.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 UT App 129, 557 P.3d 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/behar-v-johnson-utahctapp-2024.