Eagleview Corporate Center Ass'n v. Citadel Federal Credit Union

150 A.3d 1024, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 520
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 2, 2016
Docket547 C.D. 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 150 A.3d 1024 (Eagleview Corporate Center Ass'n v. Citadel Federal Credit Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eagleview Corporate Center Ass'n v. Citadel Federal Credit Union, 150 A.3d 1024, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 520 (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION BY PRESIDENT

JUDGE LEAVITT

Citadel Federal Credit Union (Citadel) appeals an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County (trial court) directing it to screen its roof-mounted air-conditioning equipment. The trial court also ordered Citadel to reimburse Eagle-view Corporate Center Association (Association) for the attorneys’ fees and costs that it incurred to enforce a prior order of the trial court. Citadel contends that the trial court erred. It notes, first, that the prior order, which granted Citadel’s request for a declaration that its air-conditioning equipment could be placed on the roof, did not order Citadel to do anything. Citadel further notes that the trial court specifically found in the prior proceeding that the visual intrusion of Citadel’s equipment was de minimis, suggesting that separate screening was neither required nor necessary. We reverse and remand.

Background

In April 2010, Citadel purchased an office building located in the Eagleview Corporate Center, which center was developed pursuant to the Uniform Planned Community Act, 68 Pa. C.S. §§ 5101-5414. An “Amended and Restated Declaration of Easements and Protective Covenants and Restrictions for the Center” (Declaration) imposes duties upon, and creates rights in, property owners in the Center. The Association is charged with the management of the Eagleview Corporate Center and enforcement of the covenants in the Declaration.

In September of 2010, Citadel installed air-conditioning condensing units that were necessary to cool its data processing equipment located inside the building. The Association claimed that the equipment violated Article VIII, Section 8.3(c) of the Declaration, which states as follows:

(e) Exterior Equipment. Exterior mechanical and electrical equipment, including, without limitation, air conditioning equipment, air handling equipment, transformers, transclosures, pump houses, communication towers, vents and fans, whether mounted on the roof or walls of any building or on the ground, shall be placed or screened so that the predominant design lines of the building or structure continue without visual distraction or interruption. If any such equipment is not screened from the view of any interior roadway, such equipment shall be separately screened as approved by the Committee. The height of any such screening shall be at least equal to the height of the equipment to be screened.

Declaration, Art. VIII, § 8.3(c) (emphasis added); Reproduced Record at 63a-64a (R.R-). The Association contended that Citadel’s equipment presented a “visual distraction” and demanded that Citadel remove the equipment and place it on the ground. Citadel refused.

In February of 2011, the Association initiated a suit in equity against Citadel seeking to have Citadel remove the equip *1027 ment and to-be enjoined from making any future alteration to its building without Association approval. Citadel counterclaimed, seeking a declaratory judgment that the Association had no authority under the Declaration to require the placement of air conditioning equipment on the ground.

On January 23, 2014, after a bench trial, the trial court denied the Association’s" request for an injunction because it did not establish the requisite elements for an injunction. The Association did not establish a clear right to an injunction because the Declaration authorized the installation of equipment on the roof. Because the visual impact of the equipment was de minimis, the Association did not establish harm, let alone that greater harm would result from the denial of an injunction than from its grant.

On these factual findings and legal conclusions, the trial court entered an order that stated as follows:

1. Plaintiffs Petition for Permanent Injunction is DENIED;
2. Defendant’s request for Declaratory Judgment is GRANTED;
3. Declaratory Judgment is entered in favor of Defendant and against Plaintiff, and consistent therewith, Defendant’s existing roof-mounted mechanical equipment is hereby authorized and approved and is subject to the screening requirement found in the Declaration at Article VIII, § 8.3(c);
4. Defendant’s request for counsel fees is DENIED.

Trial Court op., 1/23/2014, at 10.

In May 2014, the Association asked Citadel about its plans for screening the rooftop equipment. When Citadel declined to discuss the matter, the Association filed a “petition to compel” Citadel’s compliance with the trial court’s January 23, 2014, order. In connection therewith, the Association requested attorney fees and costs. The trial court conducted a hearing on January 7, 2016, at which both parties presented evidence.

The Association presented the testimony of Lance Hillegas, the vice-president of design at the Hankin Group, who provides consulting services to the Association’s Architectural Control Committee (Committee). Hillegas testified-that after the entry of the January 23, 2014, order, Citadel did not send him proposed plans for screening its rooftop equipment. Carl-Holden, an architect engaged by the Association to consider screening options for Citadel’s rooftop equipment, also testified. Working with a structural engineer and a general contractor, Holden came up with several options with varying costs depending on whether the rooftop equipment remained in its current location or would be relocated. Were the rooftop equipment to be relocated, the cost would range between $169,081 and $176,021, depending on the type of screen. Were the rooftop equipment to remain in its current location, the cost would range between $196,000 and $204,000.

Citadel presented the testimony of its architect, Lee Casaccio, who generally agreed with Holden’s cost estimates. However, he was uncertain about the cost to relocate the equipment, noting that it could be significant because of the need to re-route electrical and other utility services inside the building. He doubted that “investing $200,000 would be a prudent decision” because the visual impact of the screening “could be greater than the de minimis impact of the individual units that are there now.” Notes of Testimony, 1/7/2016, at 83-85 (N.T. _); R.R. 1265a-67a.

On March 8, 2016, the trial court granted the Association’s petition to compel. *1028 The trial court was troubled that Citadel had adopted a “reversal of its trial position” by asserting that the equipment should not be screened. Trial Court op., 3/8/2016, at 5. Accordingly, the trial court entered the following order:

1. Defendant is directed to comply with the January 14, 2014 Order in that the Equipment is subject to the screening requirements of § 8.3(c) of the Declaration and must be separately screened as approved by the Architectural Control Committee consistent with Exhibits P-11, P-12 and D-l, and
2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 A.3d 1024, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eagleview-corporate-center-assn-v-citadel-federal-credit-union-pacommwct-2016.