Parker v. T & C Development Corp.

381 A.2d 679, 281 Md. 704, 1978 Md. LEXIS 347
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1978
Docket[No. 103, September Term, 1977.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 381 A.2d 679 (Parker v. T & C Development Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. T & C Development Corp., 381 A.2d 679, 281 Md. 704, 1978 Md. LEXIS 347 (Md. 1978).

Opinion

Orth, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Crystal Beach Manor (Manor) is located on the Elk River in Cecil County, Maryland. It consists of a portion of some 500 acres which was acquired in 1926 by Crystal Beach Manor, Inc. and developed under a uniform plan and scheme of development for a waterfront and recreational community. Appellants, who are hereinafter referred to as “Parker, et al.,” became, at various times, the owners of lots in Manor. The grants to them were subject to the same conditions in limitation, designated as “covenants, restrictions, rights and reservations.” They were to be taken “to be real covenants running with the land and binding upon the heirs, successors, executors, administrators and assigns of the Grantor or Grantee for a period of ninety-nine years,” and to “be kept by all parties owning, occupying or using said lot, lots or property----” The grantor reserved the right “to the fee in all park land as laid out and plotted or shown on said plans now recorded or hereafter to be recorded, to be used by said Grantor for such purpose as they may determine, including erection of boardwalks, stores, theatres, dance halls, carousels, places of amusement, amusement piers, bath *706 houses, and all such other attractions and structures as are ordinarily found and constructed and enjoyed on waterfront properties at seaside resorts.” A covenant gave the grantees and all other persons entitled to use the “park land, and beach front, as now laid out, existing and plotted or shown on said plans,” the right in common “of the reasonable use of said park land and beach front... for ingress, egress and regress to, from and over the sáme, for such pleasures as are usually indulged in by the public on park lands and waterfront beaches, including bathing, boating, fishing and outing.” It was further covenanted: “The beach before waterfront lots is available to all lot owners for reasonable use and enjoyment;” followed by the admonition “but users shall not leave garbage, trash or remains of camp fires.” It was expressly declared: “Lot owners do not have riparian rights.”

From the initial development of Manor in 1926 to about 1961 the beach and park areas, which included the amusement park buildings (concession buildings) of Crystal Beach Manor, Inc., were circumscribed by a series of small wooden posts with cable stringers between them so as to prohibit vehicular access to the park area containing the concession buildings other than by the roads. In 1961 the then owner of the park and beach property erected a chain link fence about six feet high around the beach and park areas. There were at least two openings in the fence on roads into the areas. These openings had no gates, leaving unrestricted access to the beach and park.

In 1975 all the interests in Manor which remained in Crystal Beach Manor, Inc. and its successors were obtained by T & C Development Corporation (T & C). T & C put gates at all the openings in the fence surrounding the beach and park areas. The gates were unlocked only at such times as the general public had access to the enclosed area in the commercial operation of the beach and park. Parker, et al., aggrieved by this restriction on their use of the beach and park areas, instituted an action in the Circuit Court for Cecil County seeking declaratory and injunctive relief with respect to their rights as lot owners in Manor’s roads and beach and *707 park areas. After hearing the matter, the court issued a decretal order:

“ORDERED AND DECREED that T & C Development Corporation, the Respondent, be and it is hereby enjoined from interfering with the free and uninhibited use and enjoyment of the streets in the development known as Crystal Beach Manor by the lot owners therein, and particularly the road across the ‘park area’____It is further ORDERED AND DECREED that subject to the limitations expressed in this opinion that the Respondent may impose on owners of lots in Crystal Beach Manor, and such other limitations as may be reasonable, T & C Development Corporation is hereby enjoined from denying said lot owners access to the said park and beach areas....”

Parker, et al. appealed to the Court of Special Appeals “from only that part of the Order and Decree relating to the right of lot owners in and to the park and beach areas____” We directed the issuance of a writ of certiorari before decision by the intermediate court.

The chancellor correctly determined that the grantor’s reservation of the fee in the park land, to be used for such purposes as the grantor may determine, including the erection of structures as are ordinarily found at seaside resorts, put each lot owner on notice that Manor would be a commercial enterprise in the nature of a seaside resort. He also found that the lot owners were not granted “unlimited and unrestricted use of the park land and beach front,” but only “the reasonable use” of those areas. He observed: “The question then is what is the reasonable use of the park, amusement area and public beach that the lot owners are entitled to.”

Parker, et al. contended in the trial court that they were “entitled to the unrestricted use of the park and amusement areas as well as the public beach at all times.” Their reason for purchasing the lots, they claimed, was to be near the water and enjoy the swimming and boating privileges that it *708 offered. It was with the thought in mind that they could enjoy these privileges without restrictions that they purchased their lots. T & C responded that “the reasonable use of the parks and beach by lot owners extends only to ‘daytime hours and during the milder outside seasons;’ that it does not contemplate free access to the amusement area when the buildings are closed for the season and the weather is unfit for bathing, boating, fishing and outing.”

The chancellor found:

“The park owner, [T & C], has a considerable capital investment in this enterprise. He has a right to protect his property, particularly against thieves and vandals. Enclosing his property by a chain link fence with gates that may be locked is certainly an acceptable means of affording such protection. It would be unreasonable for the lot owners to expect him to do otherwise. While [Parker, et al.] undeniably have the right to use the park and amusement areas and the beach, their insistence that their access to these areas be completely uninhibited and unrestricted at all times is unreasonable in light of the original scheme or plan for this development as a ‘seaside resort.’ Furthermore they were granted no such exclusive right by their deeds.”

He concluded:

“Use of the park land and beach front during hours when the amusement and public beach area is open to the public in the summer months is not an unreasonable restriction on the lot owners. However, restricting their use of these areas to the summer months would be unreasonable. Lot owners should be permitted to have access to these areas during daylight hours from early spring to fall.” 1

He thereupon issued the decretal order.

*709 Parker, et al.

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Bluebook (online)
381 A.2d 679, 281 Md. 704, 1978 Md. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-t-c-development-corp-md-1978.