Council of Dorset Condominium Apartments v. Gordon

787 A.2d 723, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 44, 2001 WL 379575
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 10, 2001
DocketC.A. No. 18476
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 787 A.2d 723 (Council of Dorset Condominium Apartments v. Gordon) 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
Council of Dorset Condominium Apartments v. Gordon, 787 A.2d 723, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 44, 2001 WL 379575 (Del. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

LAMB, Vice Chancellor.

This is an action by the governing body of a condominium association against three of its unit owners for a declaration that [725]*725they are obliged to pay their share of a special assessment. The complaint also seeks permanent injunctive relief allowing plaintiff and its agents access to the units owned by the defendants to permit the completion of work covered by the assessment.

I conclude that the defendants are liable to pay a portion of the special, assessment relating to work that was properly authorized by the governing body of the association. I also conclude, however, that a major portion of the assessment was for work that was not properly authorized either by the governing body or by vote of the unit holders of the association. Thus, the relief granted will be limited to an order requiring defendants to pay the valid portion of the assessment.

I.

The Council of the Dorset Condominium Apartments (“Council”), plaintiff, is an unincorporated condominium council organized and established pursuant to 25 Del. C. § 2201 (“the Act”) to manage the business operation and affairs of The Dorset Condominium Apartments (the “Dorset”) located at 1301 N. Harrison Street, Wilmington, Delaware. The Dorset is a mixed use condominium, established under the Act by virtue of an Enabling Declaration dated December 22, 1983 (the “Declaration”). The Council is elected at an annual meeting of the association of unit owners (“Association”) and is charged with the management and operation of the Dorset. The Council is empowered to prosecute actions for the enforcement of the Declaration and the related Code of Regulations for the Dorset (the “COR”).

The Council brings this action against Edward 0. Gordon, Peggy S. Pranzo and Drucilla D. Wetzel, as Trustee U/A/D October 27, 1998. Defendant Gordon is the owner of Units 507 and 1402 at the Dorset. Defendant Pranzo is the owner of Unit 502. Defendant Wetzel is trustee of a trust that is the owner of Unit 901. Pursuant to Article 1 of the COR and Article 11 of the Declaration, the defendants are subject to the terms, conditions and provisions of the Declaration and the COR, including those relating to the imposition and collection of assessments.

A. Spring 2000 Special Assessment

Two aspects of the assessment at issue are in contention. First, the Council authorized the expenditure of $200,000 to replace a concrete parking deck without first submitting the matter to a vote of the unit owners. Second, the Council solicited a vote of unit owners to approve the expenditure of not more than $600,000 to pay for the installation of all new windows and sliding glass doors in the building and then assessed the cost of doing so as a “Common Expense.”1

1. Concrete parking deck

On January 26, 2000, at the annual meeting of the Association, The Breck-stone Group, Inc. presented a proposal to replace the rear parking deck, which was said to have reached the end of its useful life. Its report appears in the minutes of the meeting. Thereafter, the Council contracted to have the parking deck replaced and related work performed on the parking garage, for a total of $200,000. The Council did not submit the issue of the parking deck contract to a vote of the Association. The new decking is more or less the same as the old, although it has [726]*726somewhat superior water proofing qualities due to advances in technology.

2. Window replacement

In November 1998, the Council recommended that the installation of new windows and sliding glass doors throughout the building and called for a special meeting of the Association to vote on that issue. The Council estimated the cost of the project at $520,000 and stated that it would also save $80,000 on other work needed to caulk and re-set the existing frames. Fewer than a majority of the ballots were returned, and the proposal failed.

In February 2000, the Council again proposed replacing all of the windows and sliders in the building and called another special meeting for that purpose. In soliciting votes in favor of this project (estimated to cost no more than $600,000), the Council reported that the project would avert the need “to spend between $160,000 and $200,000 on caulking and sill realignment to halt water penetration around our present obsolete windows.” The ballot results, as of April 1, 2000, reported that unit owners representing 52.3 percent of the aggregate proportionate interest in the Dorset had voted in favor of the proposal.

In response to the passage of this proposal, defendants solicited signatures on a petition calling for a special meeting of the Association “for the purpose of debate, review and vote on the issue of window replacement; and to institute a super majority vote requirement on special assessments.” The petition was signed by the requisite percentage of unit owners and was considered by the Council at its regular meeting on May 15, 2000. Although the Council did not support either of the initiatives in the petition, it gave notice of a special meeting of the Association to be held on May 31, 2000.

The first two paragraphs of the notice sent by the Council report that a meeting was being called in response to the petition and state the time, place and purpose of the meeting. Thereafter, the notice reports the Council’s opposition to the proposed agenda items and states that “Council also feels obligated to advise you that, even if a quorum is achieved and even if a majority of attendees vote in favor of petitioner’s proposals, neither of the proposals will be effective.” (Emphasis in original.) The notice continued, as follows: “The window replacement project has been approved, its cost assessed, and the work is being bid.” The notice also reported the Council’s view that the proposal to impose a supermajority vote requirement for special assessments was inconsistent with the Unit Property Act and stated that “Council must reject any initiative to institute petitioners’ unworkable and counter-statutory scheme at the Dorset.”2

The special meeting was convened on May 31, 2000 but was adjourned until June 14, 2000, for lack of a quorum. The Council met immediately thereafter and entered into a contract for the replacement of all windows and sliders at the Dorset for a total price of $579,250.3 Defendants thereafter refused to admit workmen into their respective units and refused to pay any part of the special assessment. As a consequence, the original windows and sliders remain in their units, creating a lack of [727]*727uniformity in the exterior appearance of the building that is visible upon close inspection.4

B. The Reserve

The total amount of the special assessment in the spring of 2000 was $940,000. This amount reflects a total of $1,005,000 in work authorized, minus a transfer of $65,000 from the Dorset’s reserve accounts.5 The amount of reserves available to be applied against this work was a matter of some confusion to defendants and, no doubt, other residents of the Dorset. They believed, for example, that there was a reserve of $200,000 available to pay for the work on the concrete parking deck.

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787 A.2d 723, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 44, 2001 WL 379575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/council-of-dorset-condominium-apartments-v-gordon-delch-2001.