Pulte Home Corp. v. Countryside Cmty. Ass'n, Inc

2016 CO 64, 382 P.3d 821, 2016 Colo. LEXIS 978, 2016 WL 5375715
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 26, 2016
DocketSupreme Court Case 14SC77
StatusPublished
Cited by91 cases

This text of 2016 CO 64 (Pulte Home Corp. v. Countryside Cmty. Ass'n, Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pulte Home Corp. v. Countryside Cmty. Ass'n, Inc, 2016 CO 64, 382 P.3d 821, 2016 Colo. LEXIS 978, 2016 WL 5375715 (Colo. 2016).

Opinions

JUSTICE HOOD

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 In this case, we address when and how common interest communities are formed under the Colorado Common Interest Ownership Act (“CCIOA” or “the Act”), §§ 38-33.3-101 to -402, C.R.S. (2016). ' '

¶2 The Countryside Townhome Subdivision is a residential common interest community located in Fountain, Colorado. In 2011, the homeowners association for the Countryside Subdivision filed a complaint against the Countryside Subdivision’s developer seeking over $400,000 in past-due assessments for maintenance of the developer’s unsold properties and related common elements. The developer’s liability turns on when its proper[824]*824ties became a part of the Countryside Subdivision under the community’s governing instruments and CCIOA.

¶3 In a split decision, the court of appeals determined that the community was formed when the document containing the community’s covenants and the plat for the community were recorded, and that the developer’s properties were brought into the community at that time. As a result, the court concluded that the developer was liable for the assessments under both the community’s covenants and CCIOA.

¶4 We disagree. On the facts of this case, we conclude that recordation of the covenants and plat did not create a common interest community. Rather, the community was created when the developer first subjected property to the covenants, and the remaining property could not become part of the community until the developer added it in accordance with certain prescribed steps. Because the developer’s property could not become part of the community until it was added, and the developer was not otherwise liable for the assessments, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment deeming the developer contractually and statutorily liable to the homeowners association.

¶5 The court of appeals also held that, because the covenants fully allocate responsibility for assessment costs, the association has no remedy for unjust enrichment. We agree and therefore affirm that aspect of the court’s decision,

I. Facts and Procedural History

¶6 Pulte Home Corporation, Inc. (“Pulte”) began creating the Countryside Subdivision as a statutory common interest community in March 2004, when it recorded the Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions of Countryside Community Association (“CCR”). Pulte is the “Declarant” of the CCR. At that time, Pulte did not own any of the land that would eventually constitute the community, but it did haye an option to purchase that land.

¶7 The CCR defines the “Community” as “real property described on Exhibit A or which becomes subject to this [CCR],” and encumbers “the real property described on ... Exhibit A” with various “covenants, conditions, restrictions, [and] obligations,” including a duty to pay assessments levied by the homeowners association, Countryside Community Association, Inc. (“the Association”). Exhibit A, however, lists no real property.

¶8 Exhibit D, on the other hand, contains a metes and bounds description of “Annexable Property,” and article XII, section 5 of the CCR—entitled “Annexation”—outlines procedures by which the property described in Exhibit D could be subjected to the OCR’s terms and incorporated into the community. Exhibit D further provides that, upon recording of a plat, the annexable property “shall be known as ... Lots 1 through 186 inclusive, Tracts B and C, Countryside Townhome Subdivision, Filing No. 1, County of El Paso, State of Colorado.”

¶9 Tracts B and C are identified in Exhibit B as common elements. The CCR defines common elements as “any real property ... owned or leased by the Association, other than a Lot ..., for the benefit, use or'enjoyment of the Owners.” Common elements generally include roads, paths, and common spaces, such as a clubhouse. The 186 lots represent the maximum number of lots that may be included in the community, but the CCR makes clear that the actual number of lots included might be less.

¶10 In addition, the CCR states that Pulte, as the declarant, would pay all “Common Expenses” until the Association began annual assessments. The CCR defines common expenses as “expenditures made or liabilities incurred by or on behalf of the Association, together with any allocations to reserves.” Once the Association made its first annual assessment, the Association would assume the responsibility to pay for common expenses and maintenance costs, but it could bill lot owners for their respective shares of those expenditures.

¶11 When Pulte created the Association, it appointed its own employees to serve as the Association’s board of directors. Pulte’s employees filled the board until June 2008, when homeowners replaced them.

[825]*825¶12 In April 2004, one month after recording the CCR, the plat for the Countryside Subdivision, titled “Countryside Townhome Subdivision, Filing No. 1” (“the Plat”), was recorded. The Plat designated and numbered 186 lots, and identified Tracts B and C as common areas. Together, the 186 lots and common areas comprise the same property as the annexable property described in Exhibit D.

¶13 In four separate transactions spanning from June 2004 to March 2006, Pulte exercised its option to purchase the land described in Exhibit D. In August 2004, Pulte conveyed Tracts B and C—the common elements—to the Association but retained easements over this land to maintain a sales office and access to other properties. Shortly thereafter, the Association began paying for services related to the common elements, such as irrigation, grounds maintenance, and snow removal. From 2006 to 2011, Pulte gradually constructed homes on the 186 lots and deeded the lots to various buyers. During this six-year period, the Association paid for maintenance of the structures built on the lots.

¶14 As of December 2010, Pulte still owned two of the 186 lots. The Association invoiced Pulte for its share of maintenance costs for these two properties, which amounted to $200. Pulte refused to pay.

¶15 In June 2011, the Association filed a complaint against Pulte seeking payment for this invoice and for Pulte’s past-due share of assessments covering maintenance costs that the Association paid while Pulte still owned and was developing the lots described in Exhibit D. The Association alleged that Pulte owed over $4(30,000. The Association pleaded three claims: (1) breach of contract, arguing that the CCR required Pulte to pay assessments; (2) unjust enrichment, on the ground that Pulte would be unjustly enriched if allowed to retain the benefit of the Association’s expenditures without cost; and (3) breach of fiduciary duty, alleging that Pulte’s employees had misappropriated funds while serving as the Association’s board of directors.

¶16 After discovery, Pulte moved for summary judgment on all claims. Pulte argued that its properties were not annexed into the Countryside Subdivision until Pulte deeded them to third-party homebuyers and that, accordingly, the properties were not subject to assessments under the CCR while Pulte owned them. In opposition, the Association maintained that Pulte’s properties were a part of the community and that the CCR required Pulte to pay assessments. The Association further asserted that, even if the CCR did not impose this payment obligation, CCIOA did.

¶17 After hearing arguments, the trial court granted Pulte’s motion in full.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 CO 64, 382 P.3d 821, 2016 Colo. LEXIS 978, 2016 WL 5375715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pulte-home-corp-v-countryside-cmty-assn-inc-colo-2016.