Colley v. Wood

99 So. 3d 334, 2012 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 153, 2012 WL 2161632
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 2012
Docket2101095
StatusPublished

This text of 99 So. 3d 334 (Colley v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colley v. Wood, 99 So. 3d 334, 2012 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 153, 2012 WL 2161632 (Ala. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

PITTMAN, Judge.

William Eric Colley appeals from a summary judgment entered by the DeKalb Circuit Court that declared “valid and enforceable” a restriction appearing on a recorded plat of the L.S. and Novie Jane Barton Subdivision (“the subdivision”) stating that “[t]his land will not be and can not be further divided into parcels of less than five acres until such lots have access to a public sewer system.” We reverse and remand.

The civil action in which the summary judgment under review was entered began in July 2007, when Ladon Willingham, who owned a lot in the subdivision, filed a complaint seeking a declaratory judgment concerning the validity and enforceability of the restriction appearing on the face of the plat; named as defendants were all the other owners of real property in the subdivision. The complaint asserted that the restriction appearing on the plat was “erroneous” because, Willingham said, the restriction was not intended as a covenant that would run with the land and that the restriction was due to be stricken because, Willingham said, other lots in the subdivision had originally encompassed less than five acres or had been resubdivided into parcels of less than five acres in contravention of the restriction. The complaint further recited that a number of owners of lots in the subdivision had executed documents waiving service of process and consenting to a judgment in Willingham’s favor, including Colley.

After the complaint was filed, certain other owners of lots in the subdivision who had been named as defendants in the action executed documents waiving service of process and consenting to a judgment in Willingham’s favor; those defendants were dismissed as parties. Other owners named as defendants were determined to be in default for having failed to respond to the complaint. However, a number of defendants filed answers objecting to the relief that Willingham had sought. Among those objecting defendants were the parties that have filed an appellees’ brief in this appeal: Martha Wood; Peter Wood; E. Lamar Thomas; Carol Thomas; Edward H. Buelow, Jr.; Charlotte Boatright; James Baker; Margaret Baker; Richard [336]*336E. Preziosi; Carole S. Preziosi; Alesia Justice; Edward Dempsey Millican; Ronald Merrill; and Marsha Merrill.1

In September 2007, Willingham moved to set the case for a final hearing, averring that service would be complete upon the remaining unserved defendants by October 2007. The trial court granted that motion and set the case for a final hearing that ultimately took place on November 28, 2007. At that hearing, only Willingham, Peter Wood, counsel for Willingham and for Wood, and three other owners of lots in the subdivision appeared. The trial court entered a judgment after that hearing (but on the same date), opining, in pertinent part, that, although “the plat restriction ha[d] neither been observed nor enforced” and although “various lots ha[d] been subdivided in apparent contravention of [the] plat restriction since 1983,” the restriction was “valid and enforceable”; the trial court also ruled that “[n]o parcel” in the subdivision “shall henceforth be further subdivided into parcels of less than five acres until such lots have access to a public sewer system.” Colley and three other owners of lots in the subdivision (who were, at all times, represented by counsel other than Willingham’s counsel) timely filed a postjudgment motion pursuant to Rule 59, Ala. R. Civ. P., in which they averred that the judgment had been entered without a trial and without consulting all owners of subdivision lots; the trial court, after a hearing, granted that motion, vacated its judgment on March 12, 2008, and set the case for a new final hearing.

In October 2008, Willingham filed an amended complaint adding certain owners of lots in the subdivision as additional plaintiffs and other owners as “necessary defendants,” but otherwise he did not significantly alter the substantive allegations he had made in the original complaint. A number of objecting defendants filed an answer to the amended complaint asserting, among other affirmative defenses, that the claims of the plaintiffs were barred by the “rule of repose.” Those objecting defendants then filed a summary-judgment motion, attaching as exhibits copies of the original and amended complaints, the recorded subdivision plat, and an affidavit of Peter Wood; the movants asserted in their supporting brief that the rule of repose barred the plaintiffs’ claims because the plat had been recorded over 20 years before the action seeking reformation of the plat was brought by Willingham. Before that motion could be heard, however, the trial judge recused himself, and the case was reassigned; orders were thereafter entered aligning Colley and certain other owners of lots in the subdivision as plaintiffs rather than defendants.

In May 2010, the plaintiffs represented by Willingham’s counsel filed a motion seeking a summary judgment “reforming the subdivision plat of the Burton subdivision, striking and removing the restrictive notation from the subdivision plat of the Burton subdivision, and adjudging such notation to be null and void.” That motion was supported by the recorded plat; by copies of deeds to a number of the subdivision lots; and by affidavits given by a surveyor, a manager of a developer of two of the subdivision lots, one of the original grantors of the subdivision, the president of the auction house that had conducted the 1983 auction of the subdivision lots, and a spectator at that auction. Those [337]*337plaintiffs’ brief posited (a) that the plat restriction was ambiguous; (b) that the pertinent deeds did not specifically incorporate the restriction; (c) that the doctrine of relative hardship required that the restriction not be prospectively enforced; (d) that the objecting defendants’ position was barred by principles of equitable estoppel and/or by the rule of repose; and (e) that changes in conditions in the subdivision warranted a conclusion that the original purpose of the restriction could no longer be served. The plaintiffs represented by Willingham’s counsel and Colley also filed a response in opposition to the objecting defendants’ summary-judgment motion; that response largely reiterated the arguments in the plaintiffs’ summary-judgment motion, but it additionally contended that the objecting defendants had recognized the existence of the plaintiffs’ claim so as to toll the rule of repose. The objecting defendants filed a response in opposition to the plaintiffs’ motion, attaching certificates of title issued to the purchasers of the subdivision lots at the 1983 auction as well as affidavits tending to show that the original subdivision owners were counseled by their predecessor in title to restrict resubdivision of the platted lots and that the resubdivision restriction appearing on the plat was publicized at the 1983 auction.

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Bluebook (online)
99 So. 3d 334, 2012 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 153, 2012 WL 2161632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colley-v-wood-alacivapp-2012.