Larry N. Mendelson v. Bert H. Bornblum

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 8, 2005
DocketW2004-02549-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Larry N. Mendelson v. Bert H. Bornblum (Larry N. Mendelson v. Bert H. Bornblum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larry N. Mendelson v. Bert H. Bornblum, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Submitted On Brief March 17, 2005

LARRY N. MENDELSON v. BERT H. BORNBLUM, ET AL.

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Shelby County No. CH-03-1810-3 D.J. Alissandratos, Chancellor

No. W2004-02549-COA-R3-CV - Filed July 8, 2005

This case involves a dispute over the subdivision of a lot within a residential neighborhood restricted by protective covenants. The plaintiff purchased a lot within a neighborhood in Memphis. Although not required under the then-existing protective covenants, he obtained majority consent of the other neighborhood lot owners to subdivide his lot into two separate lots. The Land Use Control Board denied the side-by-side configuration as well as a previously recommended flag-lot configuration. The plaintiff appealed to the Memphis City Council, and the council overturned the Land Use Control Board’s rejection of the plaintiff’s application. Before the council’s decision was formally issued, however, the lot owners amended the neighborhood’s restrictive covenants so that the plaintiff’s proposed re-subdivision, as well as any further subdivision of lots within the neighborhood, would be prohibited. The plaintiff filed an action for declaratory judgment. At the hearing on cross-motions for summary judgment, the parties agreed to submit the case on stipulated evidence, and the trial court denied the plaintiff’s request for declaratory relief. The plaintiff appeals. We reverse.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed; and Remanded

DAVID R. FARMER , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., and ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., joined.

Joseph T. Getz and Charles A. Ray, IV, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Larry N. Mendelson.

Allan J. Wade, Lori Hackleman Patterson and Brandy S. Parrish, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellees, Bert H. Bornblum, Joshua G. Brown, III, Trudy R. Brown, Lucile B. Buchignai, Adriana Cervetti, Lawrence R. Cervetti, Donna Clark, Isabel Coulter, Ronald Coulter, Stephen R. Davis, Charles W. Dean, Eleanor G. Dean, George Dupont, II, Rosalie W. Epstein, Anthony J. Evangilisti, Charles Fisher, III, Nancy H. Fisher, Stephen J. Ford, Kathy R. Ford, Bettie W. Golwen, Howard L. Golwen, Cynthia R. Gratz, John F. Gratz, Jr., Charles R. Hardee, Gayle W. Hardee, Luanne Harris, Helen Hoffman, Jan Jasper, Jeffrey Jasper, Frank P. Lamanna, Kelly F. Lamanna, Carol I. Lynn, William R. Lynn, Flinn Maxwell, Gwen Maxwell, Robert McBurney, Vivian McBurney, Linda Montgomery, June M. Parker, Lloyd V. Parker, Daniel D. Pendergrass, Christopher S. Pettit, Suzanne Pettit, Rebecca B. Phillips, Anna S. Prest, Robert R. Prest, Jr., Basil Ratiu, Delores Ratiu, Leroy Sanes, Sonja Sanes, Michael S. Seligman, Mona Seligman, The Raymond D. Lovvorn Revocable Trust and Frances Tate.

OPINION

Factual Background and Procedural History

This matter involves a dispute between Plaintiff/Appellant Larry N. Mendelson (“Plaintiff”) and several lot owners within Norfleet Estates Subdivision (“Defendants”), who opposed Plaintiff’s proposed re-subdivision of a single residential lot within their neighborhood. At the hearing on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the parties agreed to convert this matter into a trial on the merits based upon stipulated facts. Therefore, we will state the facts of this case as presented in the technical record and as submitted by the parties in support of their respective summary judgment motions.

In 1952, R. Vance Norfleet (“Mr. Norfleet”) subdivided a tract of property within the City of Memphis, which he named Norfleet Estates Subdivision (“Norfleet Estates,” or the “neighborhood”). Mr. Norfleet initially subdivided the neighborhood into thirty-two (32) lots.1 The original protective covenants for Norfleet Estates (the “Protective Covenants”) did not prohibit the further re-subdivision of lots within the neighborhood. The Protective Covenants provided, however, that amendments may be made to the covenants upon the majority approval of the neighborhood’s lot owners.

On two separate occasions in 1954, different property owners re-subdivided lots within Norfleet Estates. On one occasion, a neighborhood property owner recorded a subdivision plat that moved the boundary lines that existed between Lots twenty-six (26) and twenty-seven (27) (the “Hunter Re-subdivision”). Shortly thereafter, Mr. Norfleet subdivided Lots twenty-nine (29) though thirty-three (33) by reducing the size of each lot to allow for the addition of a new parcel, Lot thirty- four (34) (the “Marshall Re-subdivision”). Additionally, in 1998, a majority of the lot owners recorded an amendment to the Protective Covenants that reduced the minimum front-yard setback line for Lot eight (8).

On or about August 30, 2002, Plaintiff purchased Lot five (5) (“Lot 5”). Simultaneously, he began plans to re-subdivide Lot 5 into two single-family residential lots. With the exception of one lot owner, Plaintiff met with each lot owner or a representative of each lot owner within Norfleet Estates and discussed his re-subdivision plans. In those discussions, Plaintiff made the following representations: (1) that he intended to re-subdivide Lot 5 into two lots approximately equal in size;

1 The Norfleet Estates plat contained lots numbered 1–33. Lot number three (3) was omitted in the plat, leaving 32 lo ts.

-2- (2) that he intended to build a 4,500 square foot home on each lot; (3) that he intended for each lot to be substantially parallel so that the homes built thereon would sit side-by-side; and (4) that he would not subdivide Lot 5 without the majority consent of the lot owners within Norfleet Estates. Prior to meeting with the lot owners and purchasing Lot 5, Plaintiff also delivered to “a few” of the lot owners a document entitled “Memorandum of Intent,” wherein he set forth his plans regarding the re-subdivision of Lot 5. Within this Memorandum of Intent, Plaintiff stated that the purpose of the letter was to inform the neighbors of his plan for Lot 5 and to answer any of their questions. In the memorandum, Plaintiff stated that “[e]ach respective lot would have 22,297 square feet.” However, Plaintiff did not specifically state in the memorandum that the lots would be parallel with the houses being situated in a side-by-side configuration, although he did include a diagram indicating a side-by-side, or “split-lot,” configuration. Rather, Plaintiff stated in the memorandum that “[he] intend[ed] to build single family dwellings that will reflect and retain the quality and character of the neighborhood.”

Plaintiff obtained the consent of at least seventeen (17) of the Norfleet Estates lot owners, and on September 5, 2002, he recorded an amendment to the Protective Covenants showing the re- subdivision of Lot 5 (the “Lot 5 Amendment”). In that instrument, a majority of the lot owners consented to amend the Protective Covenants to provide that, “[t]he Protective Covenants are hereby amended to allow the resubdivision of Lot 5 into two residential lots, and there may be erected on each new lot one single family residential dwelling.”

After filing the Lot 5 Amendment, Plaintiff retained the services of SR Consulting, LLC (“SRC”), a subdivision design, engineering, and consulting firm, to assist him with obtaining government approval for the re-subdivision of Lot 5. On Plaintiff’s behalf, SRC submitted an application for the approval of the proposed re-subdivision with the Shelby County Office of Planning and Development (the “OPD”). In a November 14, 2002 meeting with the Memphis and Shelby County Land Use Control Board (the “Board”), the Board recommended a “flag-lot” configuration rather than the proposed split-lot configuration.

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Bluebook (online)
Larry N. Mendelson v. Bert H. Bornblum, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larry-n-mendelson-v-bert-h-bornblum-tennctapp-2005.