Maybank 2754, LLC v. Eugene J. Zurlo

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 7, 2024
Docket2020-001030
StatusPublished

This text of Maybank 2754, LLC v. Eugene J. Zurlo (Maybank 2754, LLC v. Eugene J. Zurlo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maybank 2754, LLC v. Eugene J. Zurlo, (S.C. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

Maybank 2754, LLC, Appellant,

v.

Eugene J. Zurlo, Individually and as Co-Trustee of the Eugene J. Zurlo Living Trust Dated December 11, 1997; 1776, LLC; Beach Fenwick, LLC; The Beach Company; Seamon, Whiteside & Associates, Inc.; Penny Creek Associates, LLC; John Doe and Mary Roe, Respondents.

Appellate Case No. 2020-001030

Appeal from Charleston County Bentley Price, Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 6081 Heard March 4, 2024 – Filed August 7, 2024

REVERSED AND REMANDED

Scarlet Bell Moore, of Greenville, and Jason M. Tarokh, of Tampa, Florida, for Appellant.

Brian C. Duffy, Patrick Coleman Wooten, and Blake Abernethy McKie, all of Duffy & Young, LLC, of Charleston, for Respondent Eugene J. Zurlo.

Cheryl D. Shoun and Alexandra Harrington Austin, both of Maynard Nexsen, PC, of Charleston, and Chase Caleb Keibler, of Keibler Law Group LLC, of Irmo, for Respondent The Beach Company. Kent Taylor Stair and Jordan N. Teich, both of Copeland, Stair, Valz & Lovell, LLP, of Charleston, for Respondent Seamon, Whiteside & Associates, Inc.

Jason S. Smith and Brian A. Hellman, both of Hellman & Yates PA, of Charleston, for Respondent 1776, LLC.

Thomas Bacot Pritchard, of Vernis & Bowling of Columbia, LLC, of Charleston, for Respondent Penny Creek Associates, LLC.

Chase Caleb Keibler, of Keibler Law Group LLC, of Irmo, and Cheryl D. Shoun, of Maynard Nexsen, PC, of Charleston, for Respondent Beach Fenwick, LLC.

GEATHERS, J.: Appellant Maybank 2754, LLC (Maybank) argues the circuit court erred by (1) referring the underlying matter to the master-in-equity, (2) granting Respondents' motions for summary judgment, and (3) denying Maybank's motion to amend its complaint. Maybank also argues that the circuit court did not have subject matter jurisdiction over the motions for summary judgment because Maybank had appealed the order referring the matter to the master and that appeal was pending. We reverse the order of reference and the order granting summary judgment and denying the motion to amend. We remand for further proceedings.

FACTUAL/PROCEDURAL HISTORY The underlying action centers around two lots along Maybank Highway and a purported easement. The servient estate is a lot that comprised sixty acres (Property) 1 and was initially purchased by Penny Creek Associates—a company equally owned by Michel LaPlante (Michel) and Respondent the Eugene J. Zurlo Living Trust Dated December 11, 1997 (Zurlo Trust). 2 The dominant estate is the lot adjacent to Property. According to Maybank, the adjacent lot has on it a building

1 Penny Creek hired Respondent Seamon, Whiteside & Associates (Seamon) to prepare planned unit development guidelines for Property. 2 Eugene Zurlo is named in this action as an individual and as a co-trustee for Zurlo Trust. For clarity, we refer to Zurlo and Zurlo Trust collectively as Zurlo Trust. with office spaces for lease, and, during all relevant times, the office spaces had been leased.

The dominant estate has been owned, at all relevant times, by Maybank—a limited liability company (LLC). Initially, Penny Creek owned all of Maybank's membership interests. In 2013, Penny Creek transferred all of its membership interests to the LaPlante Family. 3 Shortly after Penny Creek transferred its membership interests, Zurlo Trust and others commenced a derivative and judicial dissolution action against Penny Creek. The matter was settled in 2016 with an agreement for Penny Creek to wind up its business, sell its real estate, and terminate its LLC status. The LaPlante Family currently retains all membership interests in Maybank. In its complaint, Maybank alleged that as part of the transfer of membership interests, Penny Creek granted the LaPlante Family a thirty-foot right-of-way easement over Property, and that the LaPlante Family assigned the easement to Maybank. Importantly, Zurlo Trust and Michel each owned fifty-percent of Penny Creek at the time of the transfer.

In 2017, Property was sold as part of a foreclosure action Wells Fargo brought against Penny Creek. The master issued a judgment of foreclosure (Foreclosure Order) that provided the "sale [of Property] shall be subject to taxes, assessments, existing easements, and easements and restrictions of record." The Foreclosure Order also provided, "[T]he defendants named herein and all persons whosoever claiming under the defendants [shall] be forever barred and foreclosed of all right, title, interest[,] and equity of redemption in . . . Property, or any part thereof." Finally, the Foreclosure Order provided the master would retain jurisdiction for "all necessary acts incident to this foreclosure and to hear any post-judgment matters, including, but not limited to, the issuance of a Writ of Assistance." Respondent 1776, LLC—an entity Maybank alleges is owned entirely by Zurlo Trust—purchased Property at the foreclosure sale and subsequently sold the portion of Property on which the purported easement sits to Respondent Beach Fenwick, LLC. Beach Fenwick is an affiliate or subsidiary of co-Respondent The Beach Company (collectively, Beach Entities).4

3 Michel, John H. LaPlante, Peter F. LaPlante, and Marianne LaPlante-Scarlata composed the LaPlante Family. John served as Maybank's manager from 2013 to 2019. Michel was a minority shareholder in Maybank until 2019 when he took over as manager following John's death. 4 Seamon continued developing the planned unit guidelines with 1776 and Beach Entities. In January 2020, Maybank commenced the underlying action against Respondents in which Maybank (1) sought declaratory judgment that it has a thirty-foot, private right-of-way easement across Property or, in the alternative, that the private right-of-way is a restrictive covenant; (2) alleged civil conspiracy; and (3) requested a temporary injunction to stop development on the easement.

All Respondents—except for Seamon—filed motions for reference to the master on the ground that the Foreclosure Order required the master to retain jurisdiction over "all necessary acts incident to this foreclosure and to hear any post-judgment matters." Seamon filed a motion to dismiss. Maybank opposed the motions for reference on the ground that it had requested a trial by jury on all triable issues and the issues raised in its complaint were actions at law that entitled Maybank to a right to trial by jury. Maybank asserted that it was not a named party nor was it served process in the foreclosure action and, therefore, its rights and interests in Property were never extinguished or otherwise impacted by the Foreclosure Order. Following a hearing, the circuit court issued an order referring the entire case and all pending motions to the master (Reference Order). Maybank filed a Rule 59(e), SCRCP, motion that the circuit court denied. Maybank filed a notice of appeal from the Reference Order to the court of appeals on July 15, 2020 (the First Appeal). Maybank asserted the Reference Order was immediately appealable because it affected the mode of trial, a substantial right. See Creed v. Stokes, 285 S.C. 542, 542–43, 331 S.E.2d 351, 352 (1985) (holding an order referring the matter to the master was immediately appealable when the petitioner challenged the order on the ground that it violated his right to a trial by jury).

While the First Appeal was pending, Respondents requested a status conference before the master. Maybank filed a formal objection to the status conference on the ground that the First Appeal was pending.

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Maybank 2754, LLC v. Eugene J. Zurlo, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maybank-2754-llc-v-eugene-j-zurlo-scctapp-2024.