McElligott v. Lukes
This text of 674 N.E.2d 1108 (McElligott v. Lukes) 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.
Opinion
Soon after purchasing a residential condominium in Boston in October, 1988, the plaintiffs discovered that the free-standing garage adjacent to the building housing their unit was being advertised for rent by a bank. The bank claimed to be a successor lessee under a ninety-nine year lease written in 1980. By the time the plaintiffs filed an action in the Housing Court in July, 1989, seeking a declaration that they are entitled to use and occupy the garage, the defendant [62]*62had purchased the leasehold interest in the garage from an assignee of the bank. A December, 1994, judgment of the Housing Court declares the lease void, and enjoins the defendant from exercising any control over the garage. We address the three principal issues raised by the defendant in his appeal from that judgment.
1. Jurisdiction of the Housing Court. The defendant claims the Housing Court exceeded its jurisdiction and that its judgment should be reversed and the case dismissed. In their pleadings, the plaintiffs sought a determination of their “right to [the] use and occupancy of [the] garage,” claiming it as adjunct to their residential condominium. The jurisdiction of the Housing Court, G. L. c. 185C, § 3, as appearing in St. 1987, c. 755, § 3, includes civil actions “under the provisions of common law and of equity and any other general or special law . . . as is concerned directly or indirectly with the health, safety, or welfare, of any occupant of ... a place of human habitation and the possession ... or use of any particular housing accommodations . . . furnished in connection therewith.” When viewed in the contemporary urban context, an on-site garage as is here involved, is a housing accommodation of significance. Such an amenity confers upon the housing occupants entitled to its use, benefits closely related to their welfare and safety.2 Even construing the term welfare in a narrow sense, see and compare Isakson v. Vincequere, 33 Mass. App. Ct. 281, 282-285 (1992), we think the provision of this kind of adjunct housing accommodation objectively improves the quality of the use of the dwelling by the occupants. It is a matter of common knowledge that such off-street parking, in an urban setting and proximately located to the dwelling unit, enhances the occupants’ personal safety and convenience and also provides a perceptible public benefit. Cf. Radcliffe College v. Cambridge, 350 Mass. 613, 617 (1966). Because these considerations of safety and welfare are integral to the use and possession of a residential dwelling and its accommodations, they bring the plaintiffs’ action within the jurisdiction of the Housing Court. See Commonwealth v. Lappas, 39 Mass. App. Ct. 285, 288-289 (1995). Compare Worcester Heritage Soc., Inc. v. Trussell, 31 Mass. App. Ct. 343, 347 n.3 (1991).
[63]*632. Right to exclusive use of the garage. The “184-190 Commonwealth Condominium” was established pursuant to G. L. c. 183A by a master deed recorded in 1979. The first owner of the plaintiffs’ unit, on the day of his receipt of a deed from the declarants of the condominium in June, 1980, leased the garage back to one of the declarants. The lease document, duly recorded, provided for ninety-nine years at a rental of one dollar per year and included the right to sublease. Less than a month later, the unit was conveyed by that first owner by a deed which, unlike the later deeds in the plaintiffs’ chain of title, expressly refers to the conveyance as being subject to the lease. The succeeding deed, and the deed into the plaintiffs, contain only references to prior deeds.
In 1988, the declarant lessee of the garage assigned his interest in the lease. There followed three other assignments of the lessee’s interest, the last of which was to the defendant in March, 1989, for a consideration of $140,000. All of the assignments were duly recorded.
In allowing the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, the judge stated: “The granting of a ninety-nine (99) year lease is the equivalent of a fee simple, and thus is a severance from the unit of a portion of its interest in the common areas . . . in violation of G. L. c. 183 A, § 5[,] and the by-laws of the condominium.” The judge subsequently issued an order enjoining the defendant from exercising any control over the garage. Based on our review of the summary judgment materials, consisting principally of the condominium documents, and on the authority of Schwartzman v. Schoening, 41 Mass. App. Ct. 220 (1996), we conclude there is no error.
The master deed describes the garage as part of the common elements of the condominium, and provides “that [the] Unit. . . shall have an easement for the exclusive use of said garage” (emphasis supplied). It also expressly requires all owners to comply with its provisions and those of the bylaws, declaring these provisions to be covenants running with the land. The by-laws, duly recorded with the master deed, prohibit a unit owner from excluding any appurtenant interest in any conveyance of a unit, and specifically define “Appurtenant Interests” as including “easements for the exclusive use of Common Elements.” They express the “intention . . . to prevent any severance of such combined ownership.” The by-laws also prohibit the transfer of any appurtenant interest [64]*64of any unit “except as a part of’ the disposition of that unit. The lease here constituted an attempt to transfer an appurtenant interest apart from a disposition of the unit. Accordingly, we conclude, as we did in Schwartzman v. Schoening, supra, and conformably with the general objectives of a residential condominium and consistently with real property law, that the provisions in the relevant condominium documents prohibit such a severance, and that the lease, therefore, is void.3
3. Other issues. We reject the defendant’s argument that the plaintiffs should be estopped from attacking the validity of the lease simply because they took their title with knowledge of the outstanding lease.4 We discern nothing in the record indicating that the plaintiffs in any way induced the defendant to act to his detriment, thereby giving rise to an estop-pel. See Cleaveland v. Malden Sav. Bank, 291 Mass. 295, 297 (1935); Ecclesiastes 3:1, Inc. v. Cambridge Sav. Bank, 10 Mass. App. Ct. 377, 383 (1980). To the contrary, the record shows the plaintiffs claimed their right to use the garage approximately two months before the defendant acquired his interest in the lease. No recent Massachusetts appellate decision has been brought to our attention that so clearly declares the principle here involved as Cleveland Boat Serv., Inc. v. [65]*65Cleveland, 102 Ohio App. 255, 260-261 (1955), aff'd, 165 Ohio St. 429 (1956), in which the court stated:
“The question before us thus becomes: Is a party that accepts a deed to real estate containing a provision that the property acquired is subject to an existing lease of part of the land conveyed estopped from challenging the validity of the lease on the ground that the same is void? Putting it more succinctly: Does estoppel by deed apply to an instrument that is void? We hold that the answer to that question must be in the negative for to hold otherwise would in effect be saying that a right can be created by the mere recitation that it exists. Estoppel by deed presupposes that some interest in land exists by sanction of law.
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674 N.E.2d 1108, 42 Mass. App. Ct. 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcelligott-v-lukes-massappct-1997.