Catawba Orchard Beach Assn. v. Basinger

685 N.E.2d 584, 115 Ohio App. 3d 402, 1996 Ohio App. LEXIS 4649
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 25, 1996
DocketNo. OT-95-066.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 685 N.E.2d 584 (Catawba Orchard Beach Assn. v. Basinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Catawba Orchard Beach Assn. v. Basinger, 685 N.E.2d 584, 115 Ohio App. 3d 402, 1996 Ohio App. LEXIS 4649 (Ohio Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This case is before the court on appeal from a judgment of the Ottawa County Court of Common Pleas, which, after a trial on a request for a permanent *404 injunction, dismissed the complaint filed by plaintiff-appellant, the Catawba Orchard Beach Association, Inc. (“the Association”). Appellant now raises the following assignment of error:

“The Trial Court erred to the prejudice of the Plaintiff by granting judgment to the Defendants at the close of the Plaintiffs case as the same was against the manifest weight of the evidence and the law of Ohio, and the Court failed to rule on all matters properly before it, and further, the Trial Court erred in failing to grant Plaintiffs motion for a new trial based on the same issues.”

The relevant facts of this case are as follows. In 1922, the Catawba Orchard Company (“Company”) created Catawba Orchard Beach, a subdivision, on land located in Catawba Island Township, Ottawa County, Ohio. The deed conveying the entire tract of land to Willard G. Farnsworth, the president of the Company, was filed by the county recorder on June 8, 1922, and contained the following provisions:

“WHEREAS, in order to make certain covenants, agreements, easements, restrictions, provisions, conditions, and charges benefit and bind all of the land contained in Plat One (1) of Catawba Orchard Beach, and also benefit and bind all present and future holders and occupants of said land, the Company and the Purchaser have agreed to enter into this Deed and Agreement, whereby the Company will convey to the Purchaser all the lots and parcels of land as shown on said Plat one (1) of Catawba Orchard Beach, and immediately thereafter, the purchaser will reconvey to the Company (charged with all the covenants, agreements, easements, restrictions, provisions, conditions and charges) hereinafter set out, all of the lots so conveyed to him.
“ARTICLE 4. RESTRICTIONS.
“The lots in said The Catawba Orchard Beach shall be used for private residences only. No building or other structures shall be erected or maintained on any lot other that [sic] a single residence, designed for the use of one family, and a private garage for the use of the owner of said lot.
U * * *
“ARTICLE 8. STREETS AND PARKS.
“It is expressly agreed that nothing herein contained or indicated or expressed on said Plat one (1) of Catawba Orchard Beach shall constitute a dedication of any street, road, way, lane, path, easement, water front and right, harbor, right of way or park, but the title to all property so shown, designated, or described, is expressly reserved to the company and neither this deed nor any deed hereafter made by the Company conveying any of the land in said plat shall be held to *405 convey the title to or dedicate the bed of or land covered by any street, road, way, lane, waterfront and right, harbor, easement, right of way or park.
“The Company hereby gives and grants to each owner hereafter acquiring title to any of the land included in said plat the right to such use of the streets shown on said plat, as may be necessary for reasonable and convenient ingress and egress to and from the land belonging to such owner, and also the right to use in common with other owners, those portions of said land indicated on said plat as water front and ‘park’ for recreation, bathing, and similar proposes; but subject to such uses by said owners.”

The plat referred to in the deed contains the following statement:

“We the undersigned Owners and Trustees of the above described premises do hereby adopt this subdivision into lots as shown hereon, Lot Number 1 and Lot Number 126 are reserved for parks. No part or parts of said premises shown hereon as streets[,] roads, lanes, ways, paths, rights of way, parks, haven, or reservations are dedicated or granted to public use, the title being reserved by the undersigned for the use of the lot owners in the above subdivision and any subsequent subdivision developed by the Catawba Orchard Company.”

In August 1949, the Association, a nonprofit corporation composed of owners of property in Catawba Orchard Beach, was formed. The Association’s articles of incorporation state the purpose of the Association in part as “[t]o accept and hold title to roads, parks, boat basin or lagoon, and other community property, real or personal, for the owners of the lots in Catawba Orchard Beach.” Moreover, Article XI defines members as owners of a lot or lots in Catawba Orchard Beach, and reads in part: “Privileges of members in good standing shall be defined as the right to use, in common with other members in good standing, the parks, beaches, playgrounds, and lagoon or boat basin in the allotment of Catawba Orchard Beach * *

Subsequently, Audrey G. Blade obtained title to the common areas and to lot numbers 1 and 126, referred to above. Then, on September 8, 1949, Blade conveyed by quitclaim deed her interest in those properties to the Association. That deed described the property as follows:

“[L]and, situated in the Township of Catawba Island County of Ottawa and State of Ohio: known as and being all those portions of Catawba Orchard Beach, a subdivision in said township, designated on the plat thereof as roads, streets, walks, parks, lagoon, boat basin, rights of way and beaches; the above mentioned park and boat basin being designated on said plat as Lot One (1) and the playground designated as Lot One Hundred Twenty-six (126). Subject to the rights of the grantor and other lot owners in said subdivision, their heirs and *406 assigns, to use the same under and subject to the rules and regulations of grantee corporation, its successors and assigns.”

The deed further contained the following restrictions:

“It is further stipulated and agreed and a part of the consideration hereof, and the following shall be covenants running with the land:
“1. Said premises shall never be used for commercial purposes of any kind, nor for any other purpose, except boating, dockage, recreation, bathing, ingress and egress and noncommercial park purposes, it being understood that in being hereby conveyed to the grantee herein, said premises are at the same time dedicated to the joint and community use of the lot owners in Catawba Orchard Beach, their heirs and assigns forever, for the uses and purposes hereinabove set forth.”

On July 16, 1990, defendants-appellees, Rick L. and Claudia A. Basinger, purchased lots four, five and thirty-nine in Catawba Orchard Beach. In 1993, the Basingers built single-family homes on lots four and five for the express purpose of leasing the properties to renters. At the time of the construction, the Basingers informed Thomas K. Higgins, the president of the Association, that they intended to use the homes as rental properties. Despite his belief that the deed restrictions did not allow for such rentals, Higgins did not dissuade the Basingers or inform them of his understanding of the restrictions.

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Bluebook (online)
685 N.E.2d 584, 115 Ohio App. 3d 402, 1996 Ohio App. LEXIS 4649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catawba-orchard-beach-assn-v-basinger-ohioctapp-1996.