Newport West Condominium Ass'n v. Veniar

350 N.W.2d 818, 134 Mich. App. 1
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 1984
DocketDocket 69278
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 350 N.W.2d 818 (Newport West Condominium Ass'n v. Veniar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newport West Condominium Ass'n v. Veniar, 350 N.W.2d 818, 134 Mich. App. 1 (Mich. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Seymour and Florence Veniar (defendants), owners of a condominium unit in the Newport West condominium project, appeal as of right from a bench trial ruling requiring them to pay $2,678.61 in overdue general assessments, $778.92 in interest, and $5,000 in attorney fees to plaintiff association.

In 1975, defendants purchased a condominium unit in the Newport West condominium project located in Ann Arbor. As part of the purchase agreement defendants were required to pay $60 a month to the plaintiff as an "association fee”. The purpose of these fees is to cover the operation, management, and maintenance of the condominium project. The fees are determined by the association’s board of directors in accordance with the budgetary needs of the project. Each year’s assessment may fluctuate, depending upon the operational needs of the condominium project. One of the factors which the board of directors must consider when establishing the project’s annual budget is the creation of an adequate "reserve fund” to cover the depreciation and obsolescence of *7 the project’s capital assets, e.g., to replace such capital items as roofs, sidewalks, driveways, etc. This reserve is funded by a percentage of the total monthly assessments paid by the association’s condominium unit owners.

Between 1976 and 1977, the adequate maintenance of the reserve fund became a great concern to the residents of Newport West. Apparently Amurcón Corporation, the project’s developer, had failed to properly maintain the reserve fund as required. Instead, it had used the money from the reserve account to pay for general operating expenses. Consequently, a three-person financial subcommittee was appointed by plaintiffs advisory committee to investigate the financial straits of the project. Defendant Seymour Veniar was selected as the subcommittee’s chairperson. The other two members appointed to the subcommittee were Walter Albers, an entrepreneur, and Jim Attaway, a certified public accountant. After reviewing the developer’s books and records, Mr. Veniar discovered that the developer had not established the reserve fund, as was required under the association’s bylaws, nor had it provided audited statements of the association’s finances to the Newport West residents, as was also required by the bylaws. The subcommittee made various recommendations to the residents; one such recommendation was that each unit owner withhold part of his or her monthly assessment fee until the problems were straightened out. Some of the members adopted this recommendation and began to withhold a portion of their monthly assessment payments. Subsequently, an agreement was reached between plaintiffs advisory committee and the developer regarding the developer’s actions and inactions. Specifically, the developer *8 agreed to contribute $13,230 to the reserve account, $50,000 towards the repair and paving of the main road through the Newport West project, $30,000 to the operating account, and it also forgave a debt it was claiming against plaintiff in the amount of $21,000. Defendants, however, refused to concur with this agreement and continued to withhold a portion of their assessment fee. Defendants’ main concern was that they were being subjected to an unknown financial exposure due to the absence of a properly maintained reserve fund. Defendants, however, were willing to make up their arrearage if the association would cause a "physical” audit of the project’s capital assets, along with an audit of the project’s books.

In early 1977, the association raised defendants’ monthly assessment fee from $60 a month to $97 a month. Despite this increase, defendants continued to pay the association a reduced amount ($49.80). On the front of each of their checks, in the "memo” portion of the checks, defendants placed words to the effect that "payment was being made in full” for the month dated on the check. Defendants sent a letter to each new management group that took over the management of Newport West, explaining the dispute they had with the association. Usually, the back of defendants’ checks would be rubber-stamped "for deposit only” and the checks placed in the association’s bank account. On October 10, 1978, however, the "payment-in-full” inscription was, for the first time, crossed out and on the back side of the check was written: "Deposit as partial payment against balance of $1,577.89”. Thereafter, plaintiff began to return defendants’ checks without cashing them. Accordingly, upon the advice of counsel, defendants stopped making monthly assessment pay *9 ments altogether between March, 1979, and August, 1979. Starting in September, 1979, and until the date of trial, defendants made full payments of their monthly assessment obligations to the association.

On May 6, 1979, a lien was filed against defendants’ condominium unit. Nevertheless, defendants remained adamant in their refusal to pay their, delinquent assessment obligations. Defendants persisted in their belief that all was not right with the reserve fund and that the association was wrongfully refusing to cause an independent audit of the books. Subsequently, defendants’ neighbors began to ostracize defendants because of defendants’ refusal to pay their delinquent assessment fees. Someone placed a notice on the project’s tennis court sign-up board telling defendants that until they paid their assessment fees they could not use the tennis courts. Likewise, defendants were no longer invited to community get-togethers and defendants’ immediate neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Langer, built a deck, allegedly encroaching into the project’s common area, blocking defendant’s view of the rolling lawn around their unit.

On May 31, 1979, plaintiff began the instant action against defendants to collect the delinquent assessment fees plus interest, costs, and attorney fees. Plaintiff filed an amended complaint against defendants on August 3, 1979. Defendants counterclaimed, alleging that there had been an accord and satisfaction, that plaintiff had malice towards defendants, that there were encroachments constructed into the common areas of the project to defendants’ damage, that defendants were entitled to an injunction to prohibit future special assessments, and that defendants were entitled to an injunction against the association to *10 prevent the impending termination of utility services to defendants’ condominium unit.

Following a bench trial, the trial court issued an opinion and order in plaintiffs favor in the following amounts: (1) $2,678.61 for "overdue assessments”; (2) $778.92 for "interest to July 20, 1982” at the rate of 7%; and (3) $5,000 for "attorneys’ fees”.

Defendants filed a motion for a new trial or for an amendment of the judgment against them. The motion was denied.

The initial question raised in this appeal is whether plaintiffs failure to provide audited financial statements to the co-owners and to maintain a proper reserve fund, as required by its bylaws, may be asserted by a co-owner as a defense against an action for overdue assessments. In arguing that it may not, plaintiff relies upon certain provisions of the Condominium Act, MCL 559.101 et seq.; MSA 26.50(101) et seq.

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Bluebook (online)
350 N.W.2d 818, 134 Mich. App. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newport-west-condominium-assn-v-veniar-michctapp-1984.