Council of Unit Owners of Pilot Point Condominium v. Realty Growth Investors

436 A.2d 1268, 1981 Del. Ch. LEXIS 452
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 22, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 436 A.2d 1268 (Council of Unit Owners of Pilot Point Condominium v. Realty Growth Investors) 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 Unit Owners of Pilot Point Condominium v. Realty Growth Investors, 436 A.2d 1268, 1981 Del. Ch. LEXIS 452 (Del. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

BROWN, Vice Chancellor.

The primary issue posed by this litigation is whether the recorded documents by means of which a parcel of real estate has been submitted to the provisions of the Delaware Unit Property Act can be amended without the consent of those persons who have already acquired real estate interests in the condominium project under the terms of the documents as originally recorded.

The facts of this matter are complex almost to the point of absurdity. The mess that has been created is difficult to believe. The situation represents another example of what can happen when real estate developers are given the unfettered power by statute to create real estate interests out of that which is not real estate in the traditionally accepted meaning of the term.

Because of this circumstance, I make no effort to set forth all of the relevant facts in any detail. To do so would cause anyone attempting to read this decision to lose interest long before arriving at the result to be reached herein. Accordingly, in recognition of the fact that counsel are aware of the particulars of the problem, I shall simply state the resulting conditions with which the Court must work in summary form, filling in such details as may be necessary wherever appropriate.

What has happened is that a 17.35 acre parcel of land has been leased for a term of 99 years and thereafter the entire tract has been submitted to condominium status pursuant to the Delaware Unit Property Act found at 25 Del.C. § 2201 et seq. The original developer and lessee, pursuant to documents filed and recorded with the Sussex County Recorder of Deeds in compliance with the Act, gave notice to all that the condominium project was to be developed in four stages, with only the plans for the first stage being finalized as of the time that the documents were recorded. The condominium project in issue is known as Pilot Point and it is located on the Delaware Bay in the City of Lewes. The City of Lewes is said to be the owner of the land. The City is the lessor under the 99-year lease and, in apparent compliance with 25 Del.C. § 2240, it executed the recorded documents along with the developer lessee so as to submit the property to the provisions of the Act.

Under what was designated as Phase I of the recorded plan, the original developer, Anderson-Stokes, Inc. (“Anderson-Stokes”), was to construct 32 town house units situated in five separate buildings. In fact it has done so and all 32 units have been sold and/or subleased, as the case may be, to various individuals. At the time that the condominium documents were recorded it was the intention of Anderson-Stokes to complete the project by constructing one 100-unit, high rise motel and two 50-unit garden court apartment buildings. The recorded documents so indicated, showing the location on the property of the initial five buildings which were to contain the 32 Phase I town houses and the tentative location of the other three buildings that thereafter were to contain the motel and apartment units.

The document which must be recorded in order to submit real estate to the Unit *1271 Property Act is defined by the statute as the “declaration.” 25 Del.C. § 2202(6); § 2203. The declaration must be accompanied by a “declaration plan” showing the property and the location of the buildings thereon, 25 Del.C. § 2219(4); § 2220, and the declaration plan must also be recorded. 25 Del.C. § 2225. Furthermore, the declaration must contain, among other things, a description of the common elements contained in the condominium and must contain also a designation of the proportionate undivided interests in the common elements expressed as a percentage assigned to each condominium unit, which percentages must aggregate 100 per cent. 25 Del.C. § 2219(5). In addition, the declaration must contain a statement that “the proportionate undivided interest in the common elements may be altered by the recording of an amendment duly executed by all unit owners affected thereby.” 25 Del.C. § 2219(6).

In compliance with these statutory requirements, the declaration recorded by Anderson-Stokes apportioned the entire 100 per cent interest in the common elements initially between the 32 town house units that were to comprise Phase I. The declaration provided, however, that notwithstanding this initial assignment, the proportionate undivided interest in the common elements of the “unit owners” could be amended and reduced “for the sole purpose of including in said percentages the additional construction of not more than two hundred (200) units as herein contemplated.” In this regard, the declaration also provided that such reduction or change was to be accomplished “by the recording of an amendment to the Declaration duly executed by all unit owners affected by such changes pursuant to the provisions of 25 Del.C. § 2205 and 25 Del.C. § 2219(6) However, this same provision of the declaration also provided that

“[A]ll unit owners, by the acceptance of a leasehold interest in Pilot Point, hereby consent to and do hereby appoint irrevocably Anderson-Stokes, Inc., or its successors, to change, amend, reduce or increase the proportionate undivided interest in the common elements by the recording of an amendment to this Declaration executed by Anderson-Stokes, Inc., or its assigns, as attorney-in-fact for the unit owners, . . ..” (Emphasis added.)

With reference to the construction of additional units “as herein contemplated” the declaration indicated that Phase II, Phase III and Phase IV were in the planning stage and to this end the declaration expressly reserved to Anderson-Stokes

“. .. the right to erect not more than three additional buildings consisting of not more than a total of two hundred (200) units contained in said buildings . . ..” (Emphasis added.)

The right was further expressly reserved to Anderson-Stokes

“. . . to construct the additional buildings and the additional units, as set forth herein, and to amend and supplement this [sic] Declaration Plan to establish the exact site of each building ....” (Emphasis added.)

Finally, in describing the common elements in the condominium project as required by 25 Del.C. § 2219(6), the declaration recited, among other things, that the common elements included all of the 17.35 acres

“. . . not occupied by Phase I units, subject to a decrease in cubic area by virtue of the right of the Declarant to add three additional buildings ....” (Emphasis added.)

Subsequent to the construction and sale and/or sublease of the 32 town house units in Phase I, Anderson-Stokes either changed its name or was succeeded in interest by a corporate entity known as ASCO, Ltd. Thereafter, ASCO proceeded to develop Phase II of the Pilot Point complex. In so doing, however, it deviated from the original plan of Anderson-Stokes. Specifically, it built neither a high rise motel nor garden court apartments. Rather, on another nine acre portion of the tract it proceeded to construct four more buildings containing an additional 28 town house units.

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436 A.2d 1268, 1981 Del. Ch. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/council-of-unit-owners-of-pilot-point-condominium-v-realty-growth-delch-1981.