Mannering Condominium Association v. David A. Schulte

462 S.W.3d 830, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 583, 2015 WL 3485599
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 2015
DocketED101734
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 462 S.W.3d 830 (Mannering Condominium Association v. David A. Schulte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mannering Condominium Association v. David A. Schulte, 462 S.W.3d 830, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 583, 2015 WL 3485599 (Mo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Kurt S. Odenwald, Presiding Judge

Introduction

Appellant David Schulte (“Schulte”) appeals from the judgment of the trial court, *831 following a bench trial, ordering Schulte to pay Mannering Condominium Association (“the Association”) $7,888.74 in delinquent assessments and attorneys’ fees. On appeal, Schulte argues the trial court erred in entering judgment in favor of the Association because the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction due to the plaintiffs’ lack of standing. Schulte contends that because a quorum was not present at the Association Board Meeting authorizing Efthim Company Realtors (“Efthim”) and attorney Robert Jones (“counsel”) to file the lawsuit against him, Efthim and counsel lacked authority to act on the Association’s behalf, and correspondingly, lacked standing to bring the action. Similar to his first point on appeal, Schulte additionally claims the trial court erred in entering judgment because the real party in interest, the Association, was not a party in the case. Because a quorum was present at the Association Board Meeting as defined by the Association’s By-laws, and because the record reflects that Efthim and counsel were authorized to act on behalf of the Association in filing the lawsuit against Schulte, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Factual and Procedural History

The Association is a Missouri nonprofit corporation governed by the Mannering Condominium Declaration of Condominium By-laws and Indenture (“Declaration”). Attached as Exhibit D to the Declaration are the By-laws of Mannering Condominium (“By-laws”). Under the Declaration, the Association serves as the “governing body for all of the Unit Owners for the maintenance, repair, restoration, reconstruction, replacement, administration, regulation and operation of the Property.” The Association is comprised of six condominiums, each owned by a “Unit Owner.” The Declaration defines a Unit Owner as “the person or persons whose estates or interests, individually or collectively, aggregate a fee simple ownership of a Unit.” Each Unit Owner is a member of the Association, as well as a member of the Board of Managers (“the Board”) which governs the Association. Each of the six units in the Association receives one vote on the Board.

The Board is empowered by the Declaration to provide for the maintenance, repair, and replacement of the common elements of the Association, and to levy and collect assessments from the Unit Owners to cover their respective shares of the Association’s expenses. The Declaration also provides the Board with broad authority to retain the services of a Manager to manage the affairs and operation of the Association, to hire attorneys, and to pursue all remedies for unpaid assessments, including authorizing the Manager to do so on its behalf.

The Declaration requires each Unit Owner to pay his or her assessments. When a Unit Owner fails to pay the assessment, the unpaid amount constitutes a lien upon the unit, and the Association is authorized to pursue all remedies in correcting the default. Further, Article IV, Section 8 of the By-laws provides that any Unit Owner with unpaid assessments “shall relinquish all voting rights in the Association until. the time all delinquent assessments (plus interest allowed by law) are paid.”

As a prerequisite to Board action, a quorum must be present at a Board meeting. Article I, Section 5 of the By-laws provides that “[a] quorum of Unit Owners for any meeting shall be constituted by Unit Owners of 4 units represented in person or by proxy.” Article I, Section 5 further specifies that “any action may be taken at any meeting of the voting members at which a quorum is present upon *832 the affirmative vote of a majority of the voting members present at such meeting.”

The Board levied certain assessments against Schulte, a Unit Owner, which Schulte failed to pay. A lien automatically attached to Schulte’s unit and was recorded. On February 18, 2014, the Board held a meeting (“the Board Meeting”) at which four Unit Owners were present either physically or electronically. One of the four Unit Owners present at the Board Meeting had unpaid assessments at the time of the meeting and therefore was ineligible to vote; the other three Unit Owners were current on their assessments and eligible to vote. The owner of Efthim, Frank Efthim (“Frank”), 1 was present at the Board-Meeting. The minutes from the Board Meeting show that Frank briefed the Board on the status of several ongoing projects within the Association, including tuck pointing and roof repair for the units, maintenance of the heating system, and deck repairs. Frank also updated the Board on the status of Schulte’s delinquent assessments, recommended filing suit against Schulte to collect the amount owed by Schulte to the Association, and recommended using counsel to file the lawsuit. The four Unit Owners present at the Board Meeting voted unanimously to have counsel file suit against Schulte for the unpaid assessments.

Efthim and counsel subsequently filed a lawsuit on behalf of the Association seeking a judgment against Schulte in the amount of the delinquent assessments. A bench trial was held on May 7, 2014, at which Frank testified as to Efthim’s involvement with the Association and the lawsuit against Schulte. The trial court also took judicial notice of a 2005 consent judgment (“the 2005 Consent Judgment”) that was binding upon the Association. The 2005 Consent Judgment appointed Efthim to serve as the Association’s Manager for a term of five years, until June 9, 2010. The 2005 Consent Judgment directed that, at the expiration of the five-year term, “management of Mannering Condominium shall revert back to the individual owners and shall occur in accordance with the Indentures and By-laws of Mannering Condominium Association.” The trial court entered judgment in favor of the Association, ordering Schulte to pay the Association $7,888.74 in delinquent assessments and attorneys’ fees.

Schulte filed a motion for relief from judgment or a new trial alleging that, because Efthim’s authority to act as the Association’s Manager had expired in 2010, Efthim had no authority to bring suit against Schulte on the Association’s behalf. The trial court denied the motion. This appeal follows.

Points on Appeal

Schulte presents two points on appeal. In his first point on appeal, Schulte contends that because the Association did not authorize the lawsuit filed against Schulte, the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the action and erred in entering judgment in favor of the Association instead of dismissing the action. Specifically, Schulte maintains that the lawsuit filed by Efthim and counsel against him was not authorized by the Association because (1) the meeting at which the lawsuit against Schulte was purportedly authorized lacked a quorum as required by the By-laws; and (2) Efthim and counsel lacked any other authority to act on the Association’s behalf because Efthim’s *833 agency relationship with the Association expired before the lawsuit against Schulte was filed.

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Bluebook (online)
462 S.W.3d 830, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 583, 2015 WL 3485599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mannering-condominium-association-v-david-a-schulte-moctapp-2015.