December Corp. v. Wild Meadows Home Owners Association

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 22, 2015
DocketCA 10635-VCG
StatusPublished

This text of December Corp. v. Wild Meadows Home Owners Association (December Corp. v. Wild Meadows Home Owners Association) 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
December Corp. v. Wild Meadows Home Owners Association, (Del. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

DECEMBER CORPORATION, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 10635-VCG ) WILD MEADOWS HOME OWNERS ) ASSOCIATION and DELAWARE ) MANUFACTURED HOME ) RELOCATION AUTHORITY, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: September 25, 2015 Date Decided: December 22, 2015

Michael P. Morton, of MICHAEL P. MORTON, P.A., Greenville, DE, Attorney for the Plaintiff.

James G. McGiffin, Jr., of COMMUNITY LEGAL AID SOCIETY, INC., Dover, DE, Attorney for Defendant Wild Meadows Home Owners Association.

William A. Denman, of PARKOWSKI, GUERKE & SWAYZE, P.A., Dover, DE, Attorney for Defendant Delaware Manufactured Home Relocation Authority.

GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor This matter involves the construction of a statute as a matter of first

impression. The statute is 25 Del. C. § 7043(c), a portion of the Rent Justification

Act, which involves “manufactured homes” on leased land in “manufactured home

communities”; it provides a right to arbitration for any home owner, or “the home

owners’ association” acting on behalf of any home owner, to contest certain

ground rent increases. The remaining Defendant here is a home owners’

association (“HOA”) representing tenants in a community covered by the act, and

it purported to demand arbitration on behalf of many home owners in that

community. It is not, however, the sole HOA in the community, and another

HOA, not the Defendant, is registered as the community HOA with a state

authority, the Delaware Manufactured Home Relocation Authority. The Plaintiff,

the community owner, argues that the “registered” HOA is “the home owners’

association” referred to by statute, and seeks a declaratory judgment that the

Defendant lacks standing under the statute and thus that its arbitration demand was

a nullity. The Defendant contends it had standing and properly compelled

arbitration under the statute. The parties have filed cross Motions for Summary

Judgment. For the following reasons, the Defendant’s motion is granted and the

Plaintiff’s is denied.

1 I. BACKGROUND FACTS

A. The Parties

Plaintiff December Corporation (“December Corp.”) is a Pennsylvania

corporation whose principal business is to manage and maintain housing

communities.1 December Corp. manages the Wild Meadows manufactured housing

community (“Wild Meadows”), which is an “active adult manufactured housing

community”2 located in Dover, Delaware.3

Defendant Wild Meadows Home Owners Association (“WMHA”) is an

incorporated association made up of a group of residents of Wild Meadows.4

Defendant Delaware Manufactured Home Relocation Authority (the “Authority”) is

a statutorily created authority of the State of Delaware.5

B. The Rent Justification Act

In 2013, the Delaware General Assembly enacted the Rent Justification Act

1 Compl. ¶ 8. 2 In this Memorandum Opinion, I use the statutory terms “manufactured housing” and “manufactured housing community” to refer, generally, to what most speakers of American English would call “house trailers” and “trailer parks.” As a former resident of a trailer park— Camelot (the Rehoboth-area park, not the once-and-future kingdom)—I see no stigma in using the vernacular terms, but I use the statutory terms for purposes of clarity. In any event, I note that Wild Meadows seems to be an upscale park, and that the homes there in no way resemble traditional house trailers. 3 Compl. ¶ 8. 4 Id. at ¶ 9. WMHA was unincorporated during many of the relevant events described herein. WMHA incorporated on February 11, 2015 at the direction of an arbitrator’s decision, which said that WMHA could incorporate to cure a “procedural defect” identified therein. Def. WMHA’s Supp. Letter 2–3. Nonetheless, WMHA is an incorporated association as of the date of this Memorandum Opinion. 5 Compl. ¶ 10.

2 (the “Act”).6 The Act requires the owners of manufactured home communities

(“Community Owners”) to “justify” certain increases in annual rents that

Community Owners charge to manufactured home owners who lease the land.7

Pursuant to the Act, if a Community Owner seeks to increase annual rents by an

amount greater than the three-year average increase in the Consumer Price Index

(the “CPI-U”),8 the Community Owner must justify the increase by meeting one of

eight statutory justifications.9

In order to perfect any increase in rent, the Act requires that Community

Owners follow specific procedures to notify its residents. At least 90 days before

the effective date of a proposed rent increase, the Community Owner must send a

notice to three parties: the affected home owners, the HOA, and the Authority.10 If

the proposed rent increase exceeds the three-year average increase in the CPI-U, the

Community Owner must also schedule a meeting between the parties to “discuss the

reasons for the increase.”11 The meeting must be held within 30 days of sending the

notice of the proposed rent increase.12 Finally, within 30 days of the meeting, any

6 25 Del. C. § 7040. 7 Id. § 7042. 8 Specifically, the Act refers to the “the average annual increase of the Consumer Price Index For All Urban Consumers in the Philadelphia-Wilmington-Atlantic City area ("CPI-U'') for the most recently available preceding 36-month period.” Id. § 7402. 9 Id. § 7042. 10 Id. § 7403(a). 11 Id. § 7403(b). 12 Id. § 7403(b).

3 dissenting home owner or the HOA representing any dissenting home owner may

petition the Authority to appoint an arbitrator to conduct nonbinding arbitration

proceedings.13

C. December Corp. Increases Rents in Wild Meadows

In 2014, December Corp. contemplated raising the rents at Wild Meadows by

an amount greater than the three-year average increase in CPI-U. On October 24,

2014, December Corp. sent a letter to each Wild Meadows home owner that included

a notice of the rent increase and set forth an upcoming meeting to discuss its

justification.14 In addition, December Corp. sent a notice to Wild Meadows Land

Owners, Inc.—an entity separate from WMHA—which was the only HOA

registered with the Authority.15

December Corp. held the meeting of home owners on November 10, 2014.16

At the meeting, December Corp. directed home owners to provide information on a

sign-in sheet. The sign-in sheet included a field to indicate whether the home owner

was represented by an HOA, but it did not specify a particular HOA. Approximately

191 participants of the meeting checked the “HOA” column.17

13 Id. § 7403(c). 14 Compl. ¶ 25. 15 Id. at ¶ 25. 16 Id. at ¶ 26. 17 Def. WMHA’s Opening Br., App. A, at 34–49.

4 WMHA, which was not registered with the Authority,18 submitted a petition

for arbitration to the Authority within 30 days of the meeting.19 Thereafter, the

Authority assigned the matter Docket No. 5-2014 and appointed Ciro Poppiti,

Esquire (the “Arbitrator”), to arbitrate the rent increase.20 During an initial telephone

conference between the Arbitrator and the parties, December Corp. objected to the

exercise of jurisdiction because WMHA was not properly registered with the

Authority.21 Following briefing on the issue, the Arbitrator issued a written ruling

on February 6, 2015, in which he concluded that he had jurisdiction to arbitrate the

matter.22 Later that day, the Arbitrator notified the parties that he would proceed

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December Corp. v. Wild Meadows Home Owners Association, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/december-corp-v-wild-meadows-home-owners-association-delch-2015.