Countryside Proprietary, Inc. v. King

30 Va. Cir. 527, 1991 Va. Cir. LEXIS 350
CourtLoudoun County Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1991
DocketCase No. (Chancery) 12815
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 Va. Cir. 527 (Countryside Proprietary, Inc. v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Loudoun County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Countryside Proprietary, Inc. v. King, 30 Va. Cir. 527, 1991 Va. Cir. LEXIS 350 (Va. Super. Ct. 1991).

Opinion

By Judge James H. Chambón

In this suit, The Countryside Proprietary, Inc. (the “Proprietary”) asks this Court to restrain and enjoin permanently the Defendants, Thomas W. King and Susan L. King from allowing a flagpole to remain on their property because the flagpole was not approved by the Design Review Committee (“DRC”), and the Board of Directors of the Proprietary (the “Board”) as required by the governing documents of Countryside. The Court heard evidence ore tenus and argument of counsel on December 18,1990, and took the matter under advisement.

For the reasons hereinafter set forth, the request for a permanent injunction is denied, and the bill of complaint is dismissed with prejudice. To the extent consistent with this opinion, the Cross-Bill for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief is granted.

Flagpoles are not specifically prohibited in the covenants and restrictions applicable to the property of the Kings as set forth in the Amended Declaration and Consent to Amended Declaration dated October 16,1980 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1). Article VI, Section 1, of the Declaration provides in pertinent part as follows:

no building, fence, wall or other improvements or structures shall be commenced, directed, placed, moved, altered or maintained upon the Property... until the complete plans and [528]*528specifications showing the location, nature, shape, height, material, color, type of construction and any other proposed form of change... shall be submitted tó and approved in writing as to safety, harmony of external design, color and location in relation to surrounding structures and topography and conformity with the design concept for the community by a Design Review Committee designated by the Board of Directors. (Emphasis mine.)

An examination of the attachments to the Kings’s application for the flagpole {see Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2) and the photographs admitted into evidence (Plaintiff’s Exhibits No. 11, 12 and 13; and Defendant’s Exhibits No. 1,2 and 3) clearly shows that the flagpole is an “improvement” and a “structure.” This Court so finds. Therefore, the Kings were required to apply for approval of the flagpole, and the Court, therefore, does not accept their argument that the flagpole is not an improvement or a structure.

When the Kings applied, the DRC could only base its decision on the criteria set forth in the portion of Article VI, Section 1, quoted above. In fact, its denial was based on this criteria. See the “Remarks” of the DRC on the application (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2). Although the Proprietary had previously promulgated “Architectural Guidelines” (Plaintiff's Exhibit No. 9) for the benefit of the homeowners in Countryside and the DRC, it did not specifically provide guidelines for a flagpole. The “Guidelines” do provide “DRC Review Criteria” which “represent in more specific terms the general standards of the Covenants and Restrictions.” See p. 4 of “Guidelines.”

I am of the opinion that the criteria set forth in Article VI, Section 1, of the Declaration and in the “DRC Review Criteria” of the “Architectural Guidelines” do not provide sufficient objective guidelines to insure that a decision can be made on a reasonable basis. All of the criteria allow tire members of the DRC or the Board to make a decision using subjective judgment. Safety, harmony of external design, color and location without the specifics of what is prohibited or what is allowed are subjective standards. They are even more subjective if they are to be considered “in relation to surrounding structures and topography and conformity with the design concept of the community.” The “DRC Review Criteria” of the relation to the Countryside Open Space Concept, design compatibility, location and impact on neighbors, color, materials, workmanship and timing are also subjec[529]*529tive. Such general subjective standards could lead to arbitrary and capricious rejections without a rational basis.

A lot owner should not be at the mercy of a majority of the DRC who are of the opinion that, for example, the color or location of the structure are appropriate in relation to the surrounding structures and topography and conformity with the design concept of the community. Such a determination cannot be objectively quantified. A lot owner should be able to know within a reasonable degree of certainty what he can or cannot construct on his lot just as much as the other lot owners should be able to know within the same degree of certainty what another lot owner can or cannot construct on his lot.

Considering the criteria to be applied by the DRC and the criteria actually applied in denying the Kings’s application, the denial was based purely on the personal opinion of the individual members of the DRC. No specific guidelines were available to the members, as there would have been, for example, in an application for a swimming pool. The lack of an objective standard is not present where the Proprietary has set forth specific guidelines. The lack of an objective standard problem would be equally applicable to any application not specifically addressed in the “Architectural Guidelines.” Such an application could be for a fish pond, a water fountain or a large bird feeding station (e.g., for martins), and the Proprietary would have the same problem.

Further, it is of concern to this Court that other houses in Countryside have flagpoles attached to walls or pillars. The Proprietary does not even require an application for a flagpole (no matter how many) attached to a house. Mr. King’s testimony of a free-standing metal flagpole on another lot in Countryside was not refuted.

The Court rejects the Kings’s argument that their application should have been acted upon by their Neighborhood Advisory Council (“NAC”). The Declaration does not require that the NAC act on an application. The NAC can act as the designated representatives of the DRC, and there are provisions for an appeal by an aggrieved party of a NAC decision to the DRC and for the right of the DRC to rescind an application granted by the NAC. See Article VI, Section 3, of the Declaration. However, Article VI, Section 2, of the Declaration makes it clear that an affirmative vote of a majority of the DRC is needed for an approval. The provisions of Section 3 of the same Article allow the NAC to act on behalf of the DRC, but it does not require the NAC to act on any application. There is nothing in the Declaration giving a lot [530]*530owner the right to have his application acted on by the NAC. At most, the Proprietary has a duty to refer all applications to the appropriate NAC for action. If the NAC takes action, then it merely has a duty to report its actions within 72 hours to the DRC. There is no provision that the DRC must have input from the NAC before the DRC acts. The Bylaws of the proprietary give the NAC the duty to propose to the Board rules of operation and conduct related to guidelines for design review (Article VIII, Section 2(d)(2). The actions of the NAC are merely advisory in nature. See Article VIII, Section 2(d)(5), of the Bylaws. Therefore, the failure of the applicable NAC to act is not a ground to attack the decisions of the DRC and the Board. The Court finds from the evidence presented that the application was forwarded (before the DRC acted) to the chairperson of the applicable NAC but that the DRC received no response from the NAC before it acted.

May 23, 1993

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Bluebook (online)
30 Va. Cir. 527, 1991 Va. Cir. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/countryside-proprietary-inc-v-king-vaccloudoun-1991.