Ex Parte Smokerise Homeowners Ass'n

962 So. 2d 793, 2007 WL 80833
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 12, 2007
Docket1050168
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 962 So. 2d 793 (Ex Parte Smokerise Homeowners Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Smokerise Homeowners Ass'n, 962 So. 2d 793, 2007 WL 80833 (Ala. 2007).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 795

This petition for a writ of certiorari challenges the judgment entered by the Elmore Circuit Court in favor of Melvin Wayne Abernathy, Neda J. Abernathy, Smokerise, LLC, and James M. Scott, individually and as a, general partner of Smokerise, LLC, the defendants in the proceeding below (hereinafter referred to collectively as "the respondents"). The Smokerise Homeowners Association, Anthony and Linda McLeod, Cecil and Adrienne Brendle, and Brenda and Frederick Sides (hereinafter referred to collectively to as "the petitioners") filed an action involving certain restrictive covenants applicable to Smokerise, a residential subdivision in Elmore County. After the trial court entered a summary judgment for the respondents, the petitioners appealed the judgment to the Court of Civil Appeals. That Court affirmed the judgment without an opinion, SmokeriseHomeowners Ass'n v. Abernathy (No. 2021002, May 6, 2005),945 So.2d 494 (Ala.Civ.App 2005) (table); the petitioners subsequently petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari to review that decision. We granted the petition, issued the writ, and directed the parties to submit briefs. After reviewing those briefs and the record, we now quash that writ.

I. Facts and Procedural History
The events underlying this proceeding span 15 years. The Smokerise subdivision was developed in the early 1990s by Smokerise, LLC, and James M. Scott (hereinafter referred to collectively as "the developer"). Before the subdivision development began, the developer in 1987 conveyed to the Abernathys approximately 75 acres that are contiguous to, and lie generally east of, the Smokerise subdivision ("the Abernathy tract").

By 1991 the developer had begun marketing the residential lots in the Smokerise subdivision. According to the subdivision plat, many of the lots were configured along streets terminating in cul-de-sacs, over which through traffic could not travel. In March 1991 the Sideses contracted with the developer to purchase lot 13 in the Smokerise subdivision. The developer executed a similar contract with the McLeods in April 1991 to buy lot 12. Both lots 12 and 13 are on a cul-de-sac.

Three filings relating to the Smokerise subdivision were made in the Elmore County Probate Court and are pertinent here. The first was the developer's filing in August 1991; in that filing, it recorded plat 4 and the restrictive covenants for the subdivision ("the August 1991 filing"). That plat reflected a 15-foot-wide access road ("the 15-foot road") between lots 12 *Page 796 and 13 of the subdivision. The 15-foot road, which wasoutside the subdivision boundary, provided access between the Abernathy tract and the cul-de-sac serving lots 12 and 13.1 The pertinent restrictive covenants in the August 1991 filing stated:

"2.(B). Dwelling Site: . . . Parcels may be subdivided into smaller lots or parcels if said parcel contains at least 2-1/2 acres with suitable road frontage.

". . . .

"9. Nuisances: . . . All parcels covered by these restrictions shall be limited to residential use only and no noxious or offensive trade or activity shall be conducted upon this parcel nor shall anything be done thereon which may be or become an annoyance or nuisance to the neighborhood.

"12. Driveways and Road: . . . There shall be no easements or rights of access granted across any platted lot to any contiguous lands except as shown on the plat, and, except as may, in the future, be granted across lot 6 and lot 12."

(Emphasis supplied.)

By September 1991, the developer and the Abernathys were in disagreement concerning access to the Abernathy tract. In anticipation of defending against a claim by the Abernathys, the developer negotiated with the Sideses and the McLeods to acquire additional access across their lots to the Abernathy tract. In connection with those negotiations, on September 10, 1991, the developer filed the second of the three pertinent probate records, a modification to the August 1991 filing entitled "Correction to Restrictive and Protective Covenants for Smokerise Subdivision, Plat 4" ("the covenant modification"). The developer did not refile a subdivision plat in September 1991. The covenant modification stated:

"There shall be no easements or rights of access granted across any platted lot, to any contiguous lands except as shown on the plat, and, except as may, in the future, be granted across lot 6 and across a 45-foot wide parcel of land on the southern end of lot 13, the same being parallel to the 15-foot strip between lots 12 and 13."

(Emphasis supplied.) This modification thus replaced the original language in covenant 12, which contemplated access "across lot 6 and lot 12," with language allowing access "across lot 6 and across a 45-foot wide parcel of land on the southern end of lot 13. . . ." The modification also stated that the developer was "the current owner of all the lots comprising [the] plat [filed in August 1991]."

The developer drafted, but did not sign, the following letter to the McLeods dated September 19, 1991, concerning the negotiations for additional access:

"[We] have amended the plat on Smokerise to eliminate any possibility of easements or roads being granted through Lot 12 to the [Abernathy tract] behind you. This means we will be conveying you the entire interest in [lot 12] and will not be asking you to take the 45' strip we earlier talked about.

"I worked out with Captain Sides that any road which could possibly go to the [Abernathy tract] behind you would come through his Lot 13 instead."

(Emphasis supplied.) The McLeods attested that they never received this letter.

The McLeods closed on their purchase of lot 12 on October 2, 1991. The Sideses purchased lot 13 the following day. When *Page 797 the developer conveyed lot 13 to the Sideses, it excepted and retained title to the 45-foot-wide strip of land on the southern end of lot 13 that was parallel to the 15-foot road between lots 12 and 13 — the same parcel referenced in the covenant modification ("the 45-foot parcel").2 Mr. Sides attested that, when he agreed that the developer could retain title to the 45-foot parcel, he understood that the Abernathys owned the land behind his lot, that the Abernathys planned to build a home there in which to retire, that three or four homes would be built on the Abernathy tract for members of their family, and that the 45-foot parcel would be used as a private drive for that family.

During 1992 the Sideses embarked on their plans to build a house on lot 13. To assist the Sideses in positioning the house on lot 13, in August 1992 the developer sold them an additional 20 feet of property that was north of and contiguous to lot 13. Because that 20-foot parcel was not in lot 13 of the plat filed in August 1991, yet another recording in the probate court — the third of those pertinent here — was made in probate court in August 1992 to reflect that boundary change to lot 13 ("the second amendment").

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Bluebook (online)
962 So. 2d 793, 2007 WL 80833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-smokerise-homeowners-assn-ala-2007.