PEOPLES FEDERAL SAVINGS v. Resources

596 S.E.2d 51, 358 S.C. 460
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 26, 2004
Docket25812
StatusPublished

This text of 596 S.E.2d 51 (PEOPLES FEDERAL SAVINGS v. Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PEOPLES FEDERAL SAVINGS v. Resources, 596 S.E.2d 51, 358 S.C. 460 (S.C. 2004).

Opinion

358 S.C. 460 (2004)
596 S.E.2d 51

PEOPLES FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Appellant/Respondent,
v.
RESOURCES PLANNING CORPORATION, Litchfield Plantation Company, Inc., Litchfield Plantation Association, Inc., and Louise P. Parsons a/k/a Louise Price Parsons, Respondents/Appellants, and
Lee R. Minton, Doris N. Beal, Joseph R. Bunn, II, Angela R. Bunn, Jeane M. Chapman, Jacqueline R. Coble, James Davies, Carol F. Davies, Cora N. Davis, Trustee, Thomas L. Davy, Jr., Jeanita S. Davy, Kevin W. Dickey, Christopher S. Dickey, William Talley Elliott, Jr., Emma T. Fairey, William F. Fairey, Hugh M. Farr, Ella Ray Farr, Anne C. Forrester, Donald *461 Gregg, Elizabeth L. Gregg, James H. Herbert, Elizabeth T. Herbert, Robert L. Jones, Trustee of Robert O. Jones, Retirement Trust, Robert D. Klemme, M. Virginia Klemme, Kathleen W. Lipscomb, Virginia W. Mackey, Winifred C. Moore, Ruby G. McManus, Adelaide S. Nichols, James E. Scott, II, Business Assets Trust, Jane Martin Smith, and James Harrison Whitner, IV, Trustee, Respondents.

No. 25812.

Supreme Court of South Carolina.

Heard October 22, 2003.
Decided April 26, 2004.
Rehearing Denied May 26, 2004.

*464 Michael W. Battle and Victoria T. Vaught, of Battle & Vaught, P.A., of Conway, and Douglas M. Muller of Moore & Van Allen, P.L.L.C., of Charleston, for appellant-respondent.

Howell V. Bellamy, Jr., and Douglas M. Zayicek, of Bellamy, Rutenberg, Copeland, Epps, Gravely & Bowers, P.A., of Myrtle Beach, for Respondents-Appellants Resources Planning *465 Corporation, Litchfield Plantation Company, Inc., and Louise P. Parsons a/k/a Louise Price Parsons.

Robert W. Dibble, Jr., and Robert L. Widener, of McNair Law Firm, P.A., of Columbia, for Respondent-Appellant, Litchfield Plantation Association, Inc., and for Respondents Lee R. Minton, Doris N. Beal, Joseph R. Bunn, II, Angela R. Bunn, Jeane M. Chapman, Jacqueline R. Coble, James Davies, Carol F. Davies, Cora N. Davis, Trustee, Thomas L. Davy, Jr., Jeanita S. Davy, Kevin W. Dickey, Christopher S. Dickey, William Talley Elliott, Jr., Emma T. Fairey, William F. Fairey, Hugh M. Farr, Ella Ray Farr, Anne C. Forrester, Donald Gregg, Elizabeth L. Gregg, James H. Herbert, Elizabeth T. Herbert, Robert L. Jones, Trustee of Robert O. Jones Retirement Trust, Robert D. Klemme, M. Virginia Klemme, Kathleen W. Lipscomb, Virginia W. Mackey, Winifred C. Moore, Ruby G. McManus, Adelaide S. Nichols, James E. Scott, II, Business Assets Trust, Jane Martin Smith, and James Harrison Whitner, IV, Trustee.

PER CURIAM:

Appellant/Respondent Peoples Federal Savings and Loan Association of South Carolina (Peoples) filed this action seeking a declaration of its rights and interests as the successful bidder at the foreclosure sale of 30 acres of undeveloped property located within Litchfield Plantation. In addition, it alleged the defendants, Respondents/Appellants Resources Planning Corporation (RPC), Litchfield Plantation Company, Inc. (LPC), and Litchfield Plantation Association (LPA), conspired to injure the marketability of the purchased property through improper assessments and initiation fees. Peoples sought actual and punitive damages. The defendants filed various counterclaims.

After a merits hearing, the Special Referee determined Peoples acquired the foreclosed property subject to the same rights and limitations (including the payment of assessment fees) as any other purchaser of undeveloped Plantation property, but that RPC, LPC, and LPA had conspired to injure Peoples by destroying the marketability of its property and depreciating the value of its property through improper means. The referee awarded Peoples actual and punitive *466 damages as a result of the conspiracy and awarded RPC, LPC, and LPA contract damages. The referee set off the monetary awards, leaving a net award to Peoples of $161,816 actual damages on its conspiracy claim against RPC, LPC, and LPA, and $441,050 in punitive damages against RPC and LPC. The parties have filed cross-appeals. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

BACKGROUND

LPC was formed in the 1960s for the purpose of developing 600-acre Litchfield Plantation as a private residential development in Pawley's Island. In 1971, LPC recorded a Declaration of Restrictive Covenants to facilitate the development of Phase I of the project. The Covenants reserved to LPC significant rights as the developer, including rights to approve certain uses in the Plantation and exclusion from payment of any assessments by a property owners' association. The Plantation and the property to which the Covenants were applicable were described on a recorded plat which was incorporated by reference into the Covenants.

The Covenants mandate the formation of LPA which serves as the property owners' association for the Plantation. Each purchaser of property within Phase I is an automatic member of LPA. The Covenants require LPA to operate and maintain the common elements and impose upon LPA the duty to levy and collect assessments against certain property owners within Phase I to defray the cost. The Covenants specify: "[e]ach purchaser of any lot ... within Phase I, shall, by acceptance of a deed or other conveyance, be deemed to agree to pay [LPA] an annual assessment or charge to be fixed, established and collected from time to time as hereinafter provided." The only property exempt from assessments are properties owned or leased by LPC, LPA, and all property owned by their affiliates, subsidiaries, and paid employees.

The Covenants contain a specific provision making the Covenants and LPA's by-laws binding upon all owners within Phase I. In addition, the Covenants contain a provision making duly adopted amendments to the Covenants binding upon future owners of property subject to the amendment.

*467 In June 1971, LPC recorded master deeds for two condominium regimes in the Plantation. The sale of residential lots followed. Each deed to a condominium and to a residential lot was made subject to the Covenants. The purchasers became members of the LPA and became obligated to pay assessments levied by the LPA.

In the mid-1970s, LPC suffered severe financial hardship and underwent statutory reorganization. RPC became the "financial advisor" to LPC; RPC entered into a management contract with LPA. Donald Parsons is CEO of RPC; his children own all the stock in RPC. LPC's stock is held almost entirely by Parsons' wife, Louise Parsons. Donald Parsons serves on the board of directors for RPC, LPC, and LPA. Allan Kidston is an employee of RPC, a board member of LPA, and president of RPC, LPC, and LPA.

Prior to 1985, RPC acquired property in Phase I of the Plantation. Thereafter, Peoples loaned RPC $1,000,000. The loan was secured by personal guaranties, a mortgage from RPC on real estate within Phase I, and an accommodation mortgage from LPC on real estate within Phase I. In 1986, RPC negotiated a $400,000 loan from Peoples. The loan was secured by personal guaranties and an accommodation mortgage from LPC on real estate within Phase I. In 1984, the independent homeowners (those not affiliated with RPC or LPC), filed suit against LPC and LPA. A 1988 Settlement Agreement provided for various changes in and additions to the Covenants, including a ten year limitation on RPC's and LPC's voting control over LPA.

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Bluebook (online)
596 S.E.2d 51, 358 S.C. 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-federal-savings-v-resources-sc-2004.