Park Village West Ass'n ex rel. Canter v. Sugar

11 Mass. L. Rptr. 76
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1999
DocketNo. 9800631
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Mass. L. Rptr. 76 (Park Village West Ass'n ex rel. Canter v. Sugar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Park Village West Ass'n ex rel. Canter v. Sugar, 11 Mass. L. Rptr. 76 (Mass. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Fecteau, J.

This is an action by which the plaintiff, a cooperative apartment association, seeks to enforce a house rule which prohibits the harboring of dogs in the apartment complex by obtaining a permanent injunction that orders the defendants to remove the dog, and a judgment imposing the fines and legal fees that the plaintiff has assessed against the defendants. The defendants contend that the rule is unreasonably restrictive, that they have never received notice of the rule that the plaintiff seeks to enforce and that the plaintiffs’ enforcement of the rule is arbitrary, capricious, unconscionable, amounts to selective enforcement and would lead to extreme emotional distress. In addition, the defendants assert counterclaims that allege retaliatory eviction, rent withholding, a failure to provide adequate hot water, abuse of process, defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress and claim miscellaneous expenses in relation to the [77]*77plaintiffs’ prosecution of a summary process action that ended in a dismissal.

This matter came on for trial before me, sitting without a jury, on November 17 and 18, 1999. Upon consideration of the credible evidence, I make the following findings of fact and rulings of law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. The plaintiff corporation, Park Village West Association, Inc., (herein “Park Village”), and its directors are engaged in the operation of Park Village West, a cooperative formed in 1982, with approximately 250 apartments and that is located near Route 9, Westborough. The defendants are tenants and owners of shares in the corporation. They have resided since approximately 1993, in Unit V-l, in Building V. They first signed a purchase and sale agreement during 1985, for this unit but were unable to acquire it until June 25, 1987, signing a “proprietary lease” on that date. They had intended to move into that unit as soon as practicable thereafter, but were delayed, for various reasons, from being able to do so. They had owned at least one other unit prior to their acquisition of the unit in question, acquiring it in 1984 and in which they resided.

2. Paragraph 13 of the proprietary lease states:

The lessor has adopted house rules which are appended hereto. The Board may alter, amend or repeal such House Rules and adopt new House Rules at any time and from time to time. The lease shall be in all respects subject to such House Rules, as the same may be amended from time to time, so that when a copy thereof has been furnished to the lessee, it shall be taken to be part hereof. The lessee hereby covenants to comply with all such House Rules and to see that they are faithfully observed by the family, guests, employees and sub-tenants of the lessee. Breach of the House Rules shall be a default under this lease. The lessor shall not be responsible to the lessee for the non-observance or violation of House Rules by any other lessee or person.

(Ex. 1.) The copy of the proprietary lease introduced into evidence does not have appended to it any house rules.

3. At the time the cooperative was formed, the creators attached House Rules to the proprietary lease and recorded same in the Worcester District Registry of Deeds. Rule 15 of the House Rules at that time stated, in pertinent part:

No bird, or animal shall be kept or harbored in the building unless the same in each instance shall have been expressly permitted in writing by the lessor. Such permission shall be revocable by the lessor . . .

(Ex. 4.)

4. On July 22, 1986, the board of directors amended the House Rules. In connection with animals or pets, the following rule was created:

24. No dogs allowed unless registered on or before July 2, 1986. Customary household pets will be allowed as defined as indoor cats, gerbils, birds, hamsters, fish and turtles.

(Ex. 3.)

5. In addition, a House Rule was added that allowed the imposition of fines in connection with the enforcement of the rules regarding pets:

28. Action will be taken to remove all unauthorized pets and further penalties including fines of $10.00 per day shall be levied against the Unit Owner.
6. Paragraph 28 of the proprietary lease states:
If the lessee shall at any time be in default hereunder and the-lessor shall incur any expense (whether paid or not) in performing acts that the lessee is required to perform, or instituting any action or proceeding based upon such default, or in defending, or asserting a counterclaim in any action or proceeding brought by the lessee, the expense thereof to the lessor, including reasonable attorneys fees and disbursements, shall be paid by the lessee to the lessor, on demand, as additional maintenance charges (rent).

7. At the time that the defendants first acquired and occupied any unit, they did not have a dog or other pet. They did not acquire any pet until approximately March 1995, when they obtained a “shi tzu” dog.

8. The custom and practice that the plaintiffs employed to inform unit owners and occupants of the approval and applicability of the House Rules amended in July 1986 was to attach a copy to each new owner’s proprietary lease upon signing after that date and to distribute, by hand, a copy to each apartment, leaving it at the door. The plaintiff offered no direct evidence of the defendants having received actual notice to them of the 1986 House Rules, such as a signed acknowledgment or proof of service. The defendant Robert Sugar admits, however, having received a copy of the original House Rules but denies they ever received any notice of the 1986 House Rules prior to the first enforcement letter from the board to them in June 1995. To the extent that he testified that prior to their having obtained the dog in March 1995, he and his family had not received notice of the 1986 change of the House Rules, he is believed. However, upon obtaining the dog and bringing it into the apartment complex, and harboring it in their apartment, they were knowingly violating the original House Rules in that they failed to receive express permission. Whatever reason the defendants may have had in not having requested permission is not relevant.

9. The defendants are not being selectively singled out for the enforcement of House Rules concerning dogs. Upon amending the rules in 1986, the board [78]*78allowed for the “grandfathering” of dogs that had been previously and expressly permitted. At that time, there were four such dogs. At the present time, there is only one. Therefore, the defendants’ dog, not having been present and permitted as of July 22, 1986, is not “grandfathered. ”

10. The defendants contend that the board’s enforcement of this rule is being done with an ulterior motive, namely, to force a “distress sale” of the defendants’ unit whereby persons favored by the board would be able to obtain their unit at an attractive, below-market-value cost. The defendant has failed to produce credible evidence concerning this issue but rather has argued innuendo and assigned speculative motives to the board.

11.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Mass. L. Rptr. 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-village-west-assn-ex-rel-canter-v-sugar-masssuperct-1999.