Dueck v. Clifton Club Co.

2017 Ohio 7161, 95 N.E.3d 1032
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 10, 2017
Docket103868 & 103888
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 2017 Ohio 7161 (Dueck v. Clifton Club Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dueck v. Clifton Club Co., 2017 Ohio 7161, 95 N.E.3d 1032 (Ohio Ct. App. 2017).

Opinions

ANITA LASTER MAYS, J.:

{¶ 1} Plaintiffs-appellants Arthur P. Dueck ("Dueck"), Todd Gilmore ("Gilmore"), Nancy Binder ("Binder"), and William R. Keller ("Keller," collectively "appellants") appeal the trial court's grant of summary judgment in a declaratory judgment action, interpreting a trust agreement in favor of defendants-appellees Clifton Park Trust Trustees ("Trustees") and The Clifton Club Company ("Clifton Club"). This is a consolidated appeal. In Dueck v. Clifton Club Co. , 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 103888, appellant Dennis F. Butler states that his interests are aligned with the appellants, and that he adopts the arguments asserted. 1 After a thorough review of the record, we find that the nonresident members of the Clifton Club are not beneficiaries of the Trust and, as a result, have no legal rights. The matter is reversed and remanded as instructed herein for a hearing on the amount of sanctions.

I. FACTS AND BACKGROUND

{¶ 2} Appellants are lot owners in the Clifton Park Allotment in Lakewood, Ohio ("Clifton Park"), a residential area owned and developed in the 1800s by the Clifton Park Association ("Clifton Park Association"), predecessors in interest to the Clifton Park Land & Improvement Company ("Land Company"). In 1912, the Land Company placed the Clifton Park private park and beach area (collectively the "Beach") into a trust ("Trust") for the use and enjoyment of all Clifton Park lot owners, vesting lot owners with the legal status of Trust beneficiaries ("Beneficiaries"). The Clifton Club, a social club operating in Clifton Park since 1902, is a members-only establishment. Membership is open to the lot owner Beneficiaries, as well as nonresidents of Clifton Park ("Club Members"). While the Clifton Club's membership is comprised of both resident lot owners and nonresidents, the focus of this case is whether Club Members, due to their status as Club Members, are Beneficiaries under the Trust and entitled to Beach access.

{¶ 3} Several months after the creation of the Trust, the Clifton Club succeeded the Land Company as owners to sublots 38, 39, 40, and 41 (the "Club Lots") in Clifton Park. Over the years, the Clifton Club membership has grown, creating crowded beach conditions. As a result, appellants seek a declaration that the Club Members are not lot owners; therefore, (1) they are not Beneficiaries of the Trust, and (2) they do not have the same legal rights as the lot owner Beneficiaries to access the Beach.

A. History and Formation

{¶ 4} Clifton Park Association began development of Clifton Park in 1893 with the vision of establishing an exclusive residential community in a beach and park setting for the use and enjoyment of the Clifton Park lot owners. The 1897 deeds issued by Clifton Park Association to shareholders and founders William Starkweather and Henry Coffinberry included covenants and restrictions establishing that the beach and park areas were intended to be for the exclusive use of Clifton Park lot owners.

{¶ 5} Upon Starkweather's death in 1899, the remaining parcels in Clifton Park were conveyed from Clifton Park Association to the Land Company, constituting approximately 143.23 acres of land. The deed provides that it is:

[M]ade and accepted subject to the covenants of The Clifton Park Association in the certain deeds, to [Starkweather] and [Coffinberry] above named as to conveyances of said premises thereafter to be made and the grantee assumes and agrees to [illegible word] form to and abide by said covenants in like manner and with like effect as if the same had been entered into by it as the grantor named in said conveyances.

{¶ 6} The deed dictates that the lots be used exclusively for private residences, and the "covenants, agreements and provisions shall run with the land for a period of fifty (50) years from the date hereof," excepting property sold for:

[S]tables, canal slips, boat houses casinos or clubhouses, ice houses or bathing houses for the use of the owners of the lots in said allotment, and that portion lying along Rocky River and bordering on the lake, known as the Flat Land, being a triangular piece not subdivided into separate lots, and containing about twenty (20) acres, more or less.

B. The Club Lease

{¶ 7} Defendant-appellee the Clifton Club was incorporated in 1902 as a for-profit corporation, formed for the purpose of building a clubhouse and to operate as a social club. The Clifton Club initially leased the Club Lots from the Land Company from 1902-1912 ("Club Lease").

{¶ 8} The Club Lease provisions include: (1) lots are to be used solely for a social club or private residence; (2) any residence erected shall not cost less than $12,000; (3) minimum required lot frontage; (4) a requirement that all other lot deeds or leases will contain similar restrictions that run with the land, for a period of 50 years; and (5) that the Land Company will convey the fee interest:

[I]n the reserved and dedicated for park purposes * * * to a Board of Trustees of not less than three members who shall be property owners in said allotment with power to perpetuate said Board of Trustees and with power to hold said property for the use and benefit of persons owning land in said allotment.

{¶ 9} The Club Lease includes a purchase option:

[T]he first party will also give, grant and make to second party without further consideration and for same period of time a lease of a certain strip of land upon the Easterly bank of Rocky River for a boat house, and also a strip of land for the purpose of a stable, together with the right to use the approaches to the same. The location and size of the last three pieces of property to be hereafter agreed upon between the parties hereto.

The Club Lease limits Clifton Club membership to 250 members unless the Land Company or its successors give consent to increase membership.

C. The Trust Deed

{¶ 10} In March 1912, the Land Company conveyed the private beach and park to five trustees ("Trustees") via a trust deed ("Trust Deed"). The Trust Deed references the Beach for the sole use and benefit of all the owners of sub lots, or parts of lots, in the Clifton Park Allotment. * * * (Emphasis added.)

[B]eing the parts and parcels of land in the grantor's said allotment, or lying adjacent thereto, which have been reserved for the use and benefit of the owners of land in said allotment .
* * *
To have and to hold the premises aforesaid, with the appurtenances thereunto belonging, unto the said grantees and their successors in trust and assigns, and the survivors or survivor thereof, and the heirs of such survivor, so that neither said grantor, nor its successors, nor any other person claiming title through or under it, shall or will hereafter claim or demand any right or title to the premises, or any part thereof, but they and every one of them shall be by these presents excluded and forever barred, in trust, nevertheless,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 Ohio 7161, 95 N.E.3d 1032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dueck-v-clifton-club-co-ohioctapp-2017.