Lake Monticello Owners’ Ass’n v. Lake

463 S.E.2d 652, 250 Va. 565, 1995 Va. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 3, 1995
DocketRecord 950256
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 463 S.E.2d 652 (Lake Monticello Owners’ Ass’n v. Lake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake Monticello Owners’ Ass’n v. Lake, 463 S.E.2d 652, 250 Va. 565, 1995 Va. LEXIS 125 (Va. 1995).

Opinion

SENIOR JUSTICE WHITING

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves the validity, construction, and application of bylaw provisions of a nonstock corporation that is subject to the Property Owners’ Association Act.

Lake Monticello, a large residential community in Fluvanna County, is an essentially self-controlled community with its own private utilities, roads, security force, and common amenities, including a lake, golf course, swimming pool, and tennis courts. Access to the community is controlled by private security officers at the main gate and by magnetic cards at other gates.

Control of these facilities is vested in Lake Monticello Owners’ Association (LMOA), a nonstock corporation that is subject to the provisions of the Property Owners’ Association Act, Code §§ 55-508 to -516.2. By its very terms, this Act has restricted and limited application.

The Act does not apply

to the (i) provisions of documents of, (ii) operations of any association governing, or (iii) relationship of a member to any association governing condominiums created pursuant to the Condominium Act ([Code] § 55-79.39 et seq.), cooperatives created pursuant to the Virginia Real Estate Cooperative Act ([Code] § 55-424 et seq.), time-shares created pursuant to the Virginia Real Estate Time-Share Act ([Code] § 55-360 et seq.), or membership campgrounds created pursuant to the Virginia Membership Camping Act ([Code] § 59.1-311 et seq.).

*568 Code § 55-508(B). Additionally, this Act does not apply “to any nonstock, nonprofit, taxable corporation with nonmandatory membership which, as its primary function, makes available golf, ski, and other recreational facilities both to its members and the general public.” Id.

LMOA’s corporate purpose is set out in the various documents that create and regulate LMOA and the community it controls. The declaration provides that LMOA “shall operate and maintain the club, lake, roads, parks, and other recreational facilities.” The declaration also subjects each lot owner, as a member of LMOA, to LMOA’s “Articles [of Incorporation] and By-laws, including the payment of such charges and levys as may properly be made by the Association.”

The articles of incorporation charge LMOA with responsibility for the “common welfare and safety of the residents of Lake Monticello.” The bylaws charge LMOA to “provide for the necessary operation, administration, and government of Lake Monticello . . . and ... to provide machinery for the interpretation, application, administration and enforcement of certain restrictions and covenants affecting all lots.” LMOA’s published “policy manual” contains its rules, regulations, and policies and states that “LMOA Rules and Regulations are defined in LMOA Documents (Covenants and Restrictions, Articles of Incorporation, By-Laws, Policies, Rules and Regulations). “Pursuant to LMOA’s articles of incorporation and bylaws, each lot owner is a member of LMOA with voting rights in the election and removal of directors and in the amendment, alteration, or repeal of its bylaws.

Additionally, the Property Owners’ Association Act vests in a majority of LMOA members, as members of a property owners’ association, the right to “repeal or amend any rule or regulation adopted by the board of directors” if such rule or regulation has been adopted by the board “with respect to use of the common areas [or] such other areas of responsibility assigned to the association by the declaration.” Code § SS-S^A). 1 There is no similar statutory right given to shareholders, under the Virginia Stock *569 Corporation Act, Code §§ 13.1-601 to -800, or to members, under the Virginia Nonstock Corporation Act, Code §§ 13.1-801 to -980. See Code §§ 13.1-624, -662, -823, and -846.

Jared L. Lake and some other members in LMOA were dissatisfied with a number of the bylaws, rules, regulations, and policies adopted by LMOA’s board of directors and contained in LMOA’s policy manual. Section 4.08 of the bylaws gives LMOA members the right to make proposals “appropriate for member action” for inclusion in the proxy statement and notice for an annual meeting. Acting pursuant to this bylaw provision, Lake and those other property owners filed a number of proposals to amend certain of LMOA’s bylaws, rules, regulations, and policies at the next annual meeting of LMOA members.

A summary of the proposed amendments pertinent to this appeal follows:

1. Repeal of a requirement that a lot owner’s invitee obtain a guest card or pass before entering the subdivision, even though they possess one of the lot owner’s magnetic cards.
2. Imposition of a limitation on the board’s discretion in fixing annual green fees by exempting property owners who do not play golf from payment of such fees, and by specifying the minimum green fees to be fixed by the board.
3. Repeal of a provision for LMOA’s compliance committee’s assessment of “penalties, including the assessing of charges and similar sanctions,” by transferring that function to the courts.
4. Repeal of a provision authorizing the appointment of members of LMOA’s security force as special policemen under the provisions of Code § 15.1-144.
5. Amendment of provisions restricting access by prospective purchasers of properties in Lake Monticello by providing for a two-hour pass to be issued by the guards at the main gate.

Bylaw § 4.08(c)(1) and (6), respectively, provide that a member proposal “may be disqualified” from inclusion in LMOA’s proxy statement and notice of meeting if “it is not a proper subject for action by members” or if “it deals with a matter relating to the ordinary business operations of the Association.” Relying *570 on these bylaw provisions and on other bylaw provisions which LMOA has since waived, the board ruled that the proposals “d[id] not qualify for inclusion on the LMOA proxy/ballot” and refused to include them in the proxy.

Lake filed this action as a motion for declaratory judgment seeking a construction of the provisions of Code § 55-513 and § 4.08 of the bylaws and a declaration that the proposals were proper for inclusion in LMOA’s proxy statement. 2 Following an ore tenus hearing, the trial court invalidated the provisions of § 4.08(c)(1) and (6) because they were “overly broad, arbitrary and in violation of [Code] § 55-513.” Thereafter, the court ruled that the association members were entitled to have these proposed amendments included in the proxy statement for appropriate action at the next LMOA members’ meeting. We granted LMOA an appeal. 3

LMOA contends that the trial court erred in invalidating § 4.08(c)(1) and (6) of the bylaws. Specifically, LMOA argues that those provisions are not inconsistent with Code § 55-513. We agree.

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Bluebook (online)
463 S.E.2d 652, 250 Va. 565, 1995 Va. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-monticello-owners-assn-v-lake-va-1995.