MANHUI LIU v. MYSTERY, LLC, & Others.

CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 27, 2023
Docket22-P-0886
StatusUnpublished

This text of MANHUI LIU v. MYSTERY, LLC, & Others. (MANHUI LIU v. MYSTERY, LLC, & Others.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MANHUI LIU v. MYSTERY, LLC, & Others., (Mass. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NOTICE: Summary decisions issued by the Appeals Court pursuant to M.A.C. Rule 23.0, as appearing in 97 Mass. App. Ct. 1017 (2020) (formerly known as rule 1:28, as amended by 73 Mass. App. Ct. 1001 [2009]), are primarily directed to the parties and, therefore, may not fully address the facts of the case or the panel's decisional rationale. Moreover, such decisions are not circulated to the entire court and, therefore, represent only the views of the panel that decided the case. A summary decision pursuant to rule 23.0 or rule 1:28 issued after February 25, 2008, may be cited for its persuasive value but, because of the limitations noted above, not as binding precedent. See Chace v. Curran, 71 Mass. App. Ct. 258, 260 n.4 (2008).

COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS

APPEALS COURT

22-P-886

MANHUI LIU 1

vs.

MYSTERY, LLC, & others. 2

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 23.0

The dispute before us has to do with where the property

boundary between two commercial condominium units is located.

Defendant Mystery, LLC (Mystery), which owns unit 202, claims

that the existing devising walls separating that unit from unit

204 3 mark the property boundary. The plaintiff, who owns unit

1 Liu brought this action in her capacity as trustee of the 389 Main Street Trust, and she is listed as such in the operative complaint (referred to by the trial judge as the "second amended complaint"). According to Liu's appellate brief, however, she was substituted into the case in her personal capacity, and the judgment refers to her in that capacity. Nothing ultimately turns on this.

2 Kirstin Amaral, Jonathan Chase, Lisa Gallatin, David Hornung, and Hamid R. Tabrizi, as trustees of the City Center Office Condominium Trust, and Breton LLC.

3 Adding some confusion is the fact that the unit now known as unit 204, was originally known as unit 201. In 2004, unit 201 was redesignated unit 204, and vice versa. For simplicity, we 204, asserts a different boundary, which if accepted, would

render her unit approximately 200 square feet larger. Following

a bench trial, a Land Court judge ruled in the defendants' favor

with respect to the location of the boundary. Judgment entered

declaring that the boundary between the units "is the wall

physically separating the Units as depicted on [an attached as-

built plan]." Mystery was ordered to execute amendments to the

master deed and trustee's certificate to reference that

boundary. 4 On Liu's appeal, we affirm.

Background. The condominium was created in 1983.

Originally, units 202 and 204 were held in common, and there

were no devising walls separating them. There was, however, a

boundary shown as a dashed line on a floor plan incorporated

into the master deed. In 1999, while the units remained in

common ownership, devising walls separating the units were

constructed to accommodate a tenant who wanted to rent only one

side of the combined space. However, the devising walls were

will refer to the unit now known as unit 204 as unit 204, even when referring to the period in which it was known as unit 201.

4 Liu claimed that as a result of the judge's ruling, her unit became smaller than she and others may have previously thought, and that this had the effect that she overpaid her property taxes and condominium fees. The judge allowed her to add two counts to her complaint to try to recover any such damages. In the judgment, the judge ordered Mystery to pay Liu $2,447.59 in excess property taxes, while dismissing her claim that she paid excess condominium fees. Neither side has challenged this aspect of the judgment.

2 not built along the original intended boundary between the

units. Notably, the geometric relationship between the

originally contemplated boundary line and the devising wall as

built is a complicated one. While the original contemplated

boundary was a simple straight line, the devising wall takes

many "jogs" that follow the interior rooms that were built out.

In addition, the two lines cross each other. As a result, part

of unit 202 as it was built out falls on the unit 204 side of

the originally contemplated boundary, while part of the newly

configured unit 204 falls on the unit 202 side of that line.

The net effect was that unit 202 was about 200 square feet

larger than was originally contemplated, and unit 204 about the

same amount smaller. For years, this discrepancy was of no

apparent consequence, because the two units remained in common

ownership.

In 2004, the then-common owner of the two units, Breton LLC

(Breton), sold Unit 202 to Mystery. However, the parties to

that sale did not at that time follow the proper procedures set

forth in the master deed for redrawing the unit boundaries in

the event a unit was subdivided for the purpose of combining

part of it with another unit. Instead, the 2004 deed for unit

202 referenced the floor plan attached to the 1983 master deed,

which no longer accorded with how the units were built out.

3 In 2006, Breton advertised unit 204 for sale. The real

estate listing erroneously stated that unit 204 contained 1,569

square feet of office space. After viewing the unit personally,

and apparently finding it to her liking for her dental practice,

Liu entered into a purchase and sale agreement to buy unit 204

and a 6.6842 percent share of the condominium's common areas.

That percentage share corresponded with the square footage of

the unit referenced in the listing, and both figures appear to

derive from the size that unit 204 would have been if it were

laid out consistent with the floor plans attached to the master

deed.

Sometime prior to the scheduled closing, an attorney hired

by Liu discovered the discrepancy between the boundary shown in

the floor plan attached to the master deed, and the boundary

established by the actual devising walls separating the units.

In addition, a contractor that Liu had hired for the "fit-up"

discovered that the actual size of unit 204 was about 200 square

feet smaller than had been listed. As the judge noted, the

discrepancies that Liu's lawyer and contractor had uncovered

provided her with a basis for backing out of the purchase and

sale contract. However, rather than asserting Liu's right to do

so, her attorney focused instead on going through with the sale

while first having the legal documents modified to conform to

the conditions on the ground. The closing was delayed to allow

4 this to happen. 5 The unit deed was modified to reflect that Liu

was receiving only a 5.6 percent share of the common property, a

percentage that apparently corresponded with the parties'

understanding of the reduced square footage that she was

obtaining. 6 In addition, a new floor plan showing the as-built

boundaries of unit 204 was prepared, and Breton took steps to

modify the master deed to reflect the new boundary. As the

judge found, Liu's attorney was aware of and deeply involved in

these efforts; indeed, the attorney was the one insisting that

the legal documents reflect the conditions on the ground and

that this be cleared up prior to the closing. The amendments to

the master deed to clarify the boundaries of unit 204 were

recorded prior to the recording of the unit deed that Liu had

accepted at the closing.

Alas, the joint efforts to put things in order did not meet

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