Lakewood Property Owners' Ass'n v. Kyle

183 So. 3d 780
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 2015
DocketNos. 2014-CA-1376, 2015-CA-0178
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 183 So. 3d 780 (Lakewood Property Owners' Ass'n v. Kyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lakewood Property Owners' Ass'n v. Kyle, 183 So. 3d 780 (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinions

EDWIN A. LOMBARD, Judge.

|, The Appellants, Kyle and Christine Smith (“the Smiths”), seek review of two district court judgments: a September 8, 2014 judgment granting an injunction in favor of the Appellees, Lakewood Property Owners Association (“LPOA”)1 and Mark Samuels (“Mr. Samuels”); and a December 16, 2014 judgment granting the Appellees’ costs in the amount of $3,960. Furthermore, the Appellees have filed an Answer to the Appeal asserting that the amount of costs awarded to them should be increased. Finding that the district court did not err in granting injunctive relief to the Appellees, we affirm. However, we reverse the district court’s judgment ordering the demolition of the Smiths’ carport and remand for further proceedings as set forth herein. The Answer to the Appeal is denied.

Facts and Procedural History

In 2006, the Smiths purchased a home located in New Orleans at 5269 Marcia Ave. in the Lakewood subdivision. Their home is adjacent to 5301 Marcia Ave., which is owned by Mr. Samuels. Both properties are specifically located in j^Lakewood South, Section Two.2 The [783]*783Smiths planned to construct a carport attached to their home and located near the side property line bounding Mr. Samuels’ property.

. The Appellees learned of the Smiths’ carport construction plans by receiving a notice from the Zoning Board of the City of New Orleans explaining that the Smiths wanted to construct a carport that would be located within three inches of the side property line and that their request for a variance needed to be approved by the Board, of Zoning Adjustments. The Ap-pellees objected to the Smiths’ request for a variance. Furthermore, the Appellees advised' the Smiths that the Building Restrictions for Lakewood South, Section Two, (“Building Restrictions”) were applicable to their plans, which the Appellees stated needed to be submitted to the LPOA’s Architectural Control Committee for approval. The Smiths’ variance request was ultimately denied without prejudice by the City of New Orleans.

The Smiths contacted A1 Ledner, a person allegedly designated on the LPOA website at that .time as their architectural point person. The Smiths contend that Mr. Ledner approved their plans. However, this is contested by the LPOA. Eventually, in July 2007, Juli Echols, the LPOA’s Architectural Control Committee chair, and the Smiths began communicating. The LPOA’s Architectural Control Committee reviewed the carport plans and advised the Smiths via correspondence dated August 28, 2007, that their plans were non-compliant with the Building Restrictions. The Smiths’ plans were rejected because their proposed [^attached carport was going to be located within five feet from the side property line between the Smiths’ and'Mr. Samuels’ properties, which was in violation of Restriction 43 of the Building Restrictions requiring such a structure to be at least five feet from the property line.

Following two months of communicating with the. LPOA’s Architectural Control Committee — later renamed the Architectural Review Committee . (“ARC”) — regarding the carport’s construction, the Smiths resolved to construct their carport without ARC approval: They began construction in early Octpber 2007.

Thereafter, on October 16, 2007, the Ap-pellees sued the Smiths seeking mandatory 'and prohibitive injunctive relief. • The Appellees sought the enforcement of certain portions of the Building Restrictions and the removal of the Smiths’ carport. Mr. Samuels further sought damages un[784]*784der various theories due to the location of the carport relative to his home.

|4The Smiths filed several exceptions to the lawsuit, including an Exception of No Right of Action. The Smiths additionally filed Exceptions of No Cause of Action, Vagueness and Ambiguity against Mr. Samuels. Furthermore, the Smiths filed a Motion for Summary Judgment requesting dismissal of the Appellees’ lawsuit on the grounds that the: 1) the Building Restrictions were abandoned as a matter of law; 2) Mr. Samuels was precluded from filing suit against them under the unclean hands doctrine because the carport on his property has the same side lot line violation he seeks to enforce against the Smiths; 3) the Appellees were not authorized to approve, disapprove, or enforce the restrictions at issue; and 4) Mr. Samuels was not entitled damages under any theory.

The district court granted the Smiths’ Exceptions of No Cause of Action and Vagueness, but denied their Exception of No Right of Action and Motion for Summary Judgment. Thereafter, the Appel-lees filed their Second Amended Petition, which the Smiths answered and raised affirmative defenses of abandonment of the Building Restrictions and the unclean hands of Mr. Samuels. The Appellees later filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment to limit the Smiths’ defense to only abandonment of the side lot line restriction, and to preclude raising the defense that the entire restrictive plan was abandoned. The district court granted the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment.

A two-day trial was held in mid-July 2014, on the issues of: 1) abandonment of the side lot line restriction; 2) the unclean hands of Mr. Samuels, and 3) Mr. Samuels’ damages claim. The district court granted the Appellees’ injunctive relief and awarded them costs in its September 8, 2014 judgment. The Smiths were ordered to remove their carport. Lastly, the district court denied Mr. Samuels’ damages claim.

IsThe Smiths later filed a Motion for New Trial, which the district court denied. Thereafter, the Smiths timely filed their suspensive appeal of the September 8, 2014. The district court, on December 16, 2014, granted in part and denied in part the Motion to Tax Costs of the Appellees, awarding them $3,960 in costs. The Smiths timely suspensively appealed the December 16, 2014 judgment, and moved to consolidate the two appeals. Following our consolidation of the appeals, bearing Docket Nos. 2014-CA-1376 and 2015-CA-0178, on February 27, 2015, the Appellees filed an Answer to the Appeal asserting that their award of costs should be increased.

The Smiths raise six (6) assignments of error on appeal:

1. The district court committed legal error when it denied the Smiths’ Exception of No Right of Action;
2. The district court committed legal error when it denied the Smiths’ Motion for Summary Judgment to dismiss the lawsuit based on abandonment and the unclean hands of Mr. Samuels;
3. The district court committed legal error when it granted summary judgment to limit the Smiths’ affirmative defense regarding general abandonment of the entire restrictive plan;
4. The district court committed legal error when it misapplied the law to stipulated facts and unrebutted evidence proving the restrictions were abandoned for non-enforcement and that Mr. Samuels had unclean hands;
5. The district court committed legal error when it ordered the Smiths to [785]*785tear down their entire carport when less drastic measures were available to achieve compliance with the Building Restrictions; and
6. The district court erred in awarding costs to the Appellees.

| ^Exception of No Right of Action

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Bluebook (online)
183 So. 3d 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakewood-property-owners-assn-v-kyle-lactapp-2015.