NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-3502-18T3
RIALTO-CAPITOL CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION October 2, 2020 Plaintiff-Appellant, APPELLATE DIVISION
v.
BALDWIN ASSETS ASSOCIATES URBAN RENEWAL COMPANY, LLC; THE RIALTO-CAPITOL URBAN RENEWAL COMPANY, LLC; METRO ASSETT II, LLC; METROVEST EQUITIES, INC.; GEORGE FILOPOULOS, PATRICIA FILOPOULOS, PHILIP FIERRO, ISMAEL LEYVA ARCHITECTS, PC, GOLDSTEIN ASSOCIATES, PLLC a/k/a GACE CONSULTING ENGINEERS, PC, TURNER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, COMMODORE CONSTRUCTION CORP., WATERPROOFING SYSTEMS NORTHEAST, LLC, SPERANZA BRICKWORK, INC., BEDROC CONTRACTING, ERC CLASSIC RESTORATION, LLC, JOVIN DEMO, AGD CONSTRUCTION, and CCC RESTORATION, INC., THOMAS McGINTY, AIA d/b/a MADONNA DESIGNS, DAVIDSON & HOWARD, INC., SCHNELLBACHER- SENDON GROUP, LLC, ZAKALAK ASSOCIATES, COMPONENT ASSEMBLY SYSTEMS, INC., B.J. McGLONE & COMPANY, and SKYLINE WINDOWS, LLC, LPL CONTRACTING CORP., METROVEST CONSTRUCTION CORP., MIDWEST MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS OF NEW JERSEY, INC., JERSEY STATE ENERGY CONTROLS, INC., NATIONAL AIR BALANCE COMPANY, INC., J&J LIMITED, INDEPENDENT SHEET METAL CO., LKU GROUP, INC., VECTOR STRUCTURAL PRESERVATION CORP., ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH INVESTIGATIONS, INC., GUZMAN GENERAL CONSTRUCTION, GTC RESTORATION, INC., and IGH RESTORATION,
Defendants,
and
ISRAEL BERGER & ASSOCIATES, INC., WINDSTRUCT, INC., CHAMPION ALUMINUM CORP., d/b/a CHAMPION WINDOW AND DOOR and NGU, INC. d/b/a CHAMPION ARCHITECTURAL WINDOW AND DOOR,
Defendants-Respondents, ___________________________________
TURNER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
A-3502-18T3 2 Third-Party Plaintiff,
MIDWEST MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS OF NEW JERSEY, INC., SKYLINE WINDOWS, LLC, DAVISON & HOWARD, DEL TURCO BROTHERS, INC., S.A. COMUNALE, STAR-LO ELECTRIC, INC., and V.A.L. FLOOR, INC.,
Third-Party Defendants. ___________________________________
SKYLINE WINDOWS, LLC,
Fourth-Party Plaintiff,
WINDSTRUCT, INC., and CHAMPION WINDOW AND DOOR,
Fourth-Party Defendants, ___________________________________
MIDWEST MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS OF NEW JERSEY, INC.
STATE CONTROLS COMPANY, NATIONAL AIR BALANCE COMPANY, INC., J&J LIMITED, and INDEPENDENT
A-3502-18T3 3 SHEET METAL CO.,
Fourth-Party Defendants. ___________________________________
Argued telephonically September 15, 2020 – Decided October 2, 2020
Before Judges Fisher, Moynihan and Gummer.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Hudson County, Docket No. L-4994-13.
John Randy Sawyer argued the cause for appellant (Stark & Stark, attorneys; John Randy Sawyer, of counsel and on the briefs).
Petar Kuridza argued the cause for respondent Israel Berger and Associates (Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, LLP, attorneys; Meredith Kaplan Stoma and Petar Kuridza, of counsel and on the brief; Elise Dinolfo Shamosh, on the brief).
Brian M. Murphy argued the cause for respondent Windstruct, Inc. (Norton, Murphy, Sheehy & Corrubia, P.C., attorneys; Brian M. Murphy, of counsel and on the brief; Kelly P. Corrubia, on the brief).
Russell S. Massey argued the cause for respondents Champion Aluminum Corporation and NGU, Inc. (Wright & O'Donnell, attorneys; Russell S. Massey, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
FISHER, P.J.A.D.
A-3502-18T3 4 In this appeal, we consider a condominium association's standing to sue
defendants alleged to have been involved in the design, manufacture, and
installation of the condominium's windows. The motion judge found the
association lacked standing because the master deed declares without ambiguity
that the windows are part of the units. We agree with that understanding of the
master deed and the limits it places on the association's window claims, but we
also recognize that any claim against these defendants based on allegations that
their actions altered the buildings' exterior appearance in a way that violated a
historic preservation easement could be asserted. The association is bound by
the easement and would have a sufficient stake in that claim's outcome .
Additionally, we reject the motion judge's finding that the association was
limited to suing only the unit owners for damages caused to the common
elements; that determination is inconsistent with the nature of the association's
relationship to the common elements and to the unit owners.
From 1928 until 2003, Jersey City Medical Center conducted business in
eleven registered historic landmark buildings spread across thirteen acres in
downtown Jersey City. In 2005, defendant Baldwin Assets Associates Urban
Renewal Company, LLC, purchased the property to develop a large residential
and commercial project known as The Beacon Community. The first phase was
A-3502-18T3 5 the Rialto-Capitol Condominium, which consisted of two adjacent, connected
buildings: the Rialto Building, a twenty-two story structure, designed to house
164 residential condominium units, and the Capitol Building, a twenty -one story
structure designed to contain 151 residential condominium units.
Baldwin formed Rialto-Capitol Condominium Association, Inc. (the
association) to administer, manage and operate the common elements of the
Rialto-Capitol Condominium. When seventy-five percent of the units were sold,
Baldwin turned over control of the association to a unit-owner controlled board
of trustees.
Sometime after the unit-owner board assumed control, the association
retained Berman & Wright Architecture, Engineering & Planning, LLC, to
investigate the condition of the common elements. That investigation led to
Berman & Wright's determination that water was seeping into the building and
that the windows were a cause of this infiltration; Berman & Wright opined the
windows were improperly installed or were themselves defectively designed and
manufactured.
The association filed this suit in October 2013 for relief based on the
alleged negligence in the design, repair and construction of the buildings. In
March 2016, defendant Skyline Windows, Inc., which was alleged to have
A-3502-18T3 6 contracted with Baldwin to install the windows, moved for summary judgment,
asserting that the association did not have standing to pursue its window claims
because the master deed declares that windows are the property of the unit
owners. Other defendants, including Israel Berger and Associates, Windstruct,
Inc., Champion Aluminum Corporation, and NGU, Incorporated (all, including
Skyline, referred to collectively as the window defendants) joined in the motion.
In opposition, the association argued it had standing because a historic easement
applicable to the two buildings imposed responsibility for the maintenance of
the windows on the association, and – even if it lacked standing to pursue claims
for the windows themselves or damage to the units – the association had standing
to assert claims for damage caused to the common elements by the window
defendants' acts or omissions.
In May 2016, the judge first determined that the association lacked
standing because the windows belonged to the unit owners. The judge then held
that the association could not assert a claim for damages to the common elements
against these defendants and that the association's only recourse was to sue the
unit owners for damages to the common elements.
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NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-3502-18T3
RIALTO-CAPITOL CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION October 2, 2020 Plaintiff-Appellant, APPELLATE DIVISION
v.
BALDWIN ASSETS ASSOCIATES URBAN RENEWAL COMPANY, LLC; THE RIALTO-CAPITOL URBAN RENEWAL COMPANY, LLC; METRO ASSETT II, LLC; METROVEST EQUITIES, INC.; GEORGE FILOPOULOS, PATRICIA FILOPOULOS, PHILIP FIERRO, ISMAEL LEYVA ARCHITECTS, PC, GOLDSTEIN ASSOCIATES, PLLC a/k/a GACE CONSULTING ENGINEERS, PC, TURNER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, COMMODORE CONSTRUCTION CORP., WATERPROOFING SYSTEMS NORTHEAST, LLC, SPERANZA BRICKWORK, INC., BEDROC CONTRACTING, ERC CLASSIC RESTORATION, LLC, JOVIN DEMO, AGD CONSTRUCTION, and CCC RESTORATION, INC., THOMAS McGINTY, AIA d/b/a MADONNA DESIGNS, DAVIDSON & HOWARD, INC., SCHNELLBACHER- SENDON GROUP, LLC, ZAKALAK ASSOCIATES, COMPONENT ASSEMBLY SYSTEMS, INC., B.J. McGLONE & COMPANY, and SKYLINE WINDOWS, LLC, LPL CONTRACTING CORP., METROVEST CONSTRUCTION CORP., MIDWEST MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS OF NEW JERSEY, INC., JERSEY STATE ENERGY CONTROLS, INC., NATIONAL AIR BALANCE COMPANY, INC., J&J LIMITED, INDEPENDENT SHEET METAL CO., LKU GROUP, INC., VECTOR STRUCTURAL PRESERVATION CORP., ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH INVESTIGATIONS, INC., GUZMAN GENERAL CONSTRUCTION, GTC RESTORATION, INC., and IGH RESTORATION,
Defendants,
and
ISRAEL BERGER & ASSOCIATES, INC., WINDSTRUCT, INC., CHAMPION ALUMINUM CORP., d/b/a CHAMPION WINDOW AND DOOR and NGU, INC. d/b/a CHAMPION ARCHITECTURAL WINDOW AND DOOR,
Defendants-Respondents, ___________________________________
TURNER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
A-3502-18T3 2 Third-Party Plaintiff,
MIDWEST MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS OF NEW JERSEY, INC., SKYLINE WINDOWS, LLC, DAVISON & HOWARD, DEL TURCO BROTHERS, INC., S.A. COMUNALE, STAR-LO ELECTRIC, INC., and V.A.L. FLOOR, INC.,
Third-Party Defendants. ___________________________________
SKYLINE WINDOWS, LLC,
Fourth-Party Plaintiff,
WINDSTRUCT, INC., and CHAMPION WINDOW AND DOOR,
Fourth-Party Defendants, ___________________________________
MIDWEST MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS OF NEW JERSEY, INC.
STATE CONTROLS COMPANY, NATIONAL AIR BALANCE COMPANY, INC., J&J LIMITED, and INDEPENDENT
A-3502-18T3 3 SHEET METAL CO.,
Fourth-Party Defendants. ___________________________________
Argued telephonically September 15, 2020 – Decided October 2, 2020
Before Judges Fisher, Moynihan and Gummer.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Hudson County, Docket No. L-4994-13.
John Randy Sawyer argued the cause for appellant (Stark & Stark, attorneys; John Randy Sawyer, of counsel and on the briefs).
Petar Kuridza argued the cause for respondent Israel Berger and Associates (Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, LLP, attorneys; Meredith Kaplan Stoma and Petar Kuridza, of counsel and on the brief; Elise Dinolfo Shamosh, on the brief).
Brian M. Murphy argued the cause for respondent Windstruct, Inc. (Norton, Murphy, Sheehy & Corrubia, P.C., attorneys; Brian M. Murphy, of counsel and on the brief; Kelly P. Corrubia, on the brief).
Russell S. Massey argued the cause for respondents Champion Aluminum Corporation and NGU, Inc. (Wright & O'Donnell, attorneys; Russell S. Massey, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
FISHER, P.J.A.D.
A-3502-18T3 4 In this appeal, we consider a condominium association's standing to sue
defendants alleged to have been involved in the design, manufacture, and
installation of the condominium's windows. The motion judge found the
association lacked standing because the master deed declares without ambiguity
that the windows are part of the units. We agree with that understanding of the
master deed and the limits it places on the association's window claims, but we
also recognize that any claim against these defendants based on allegations that
their actions altered the buildings' exterior appearance in a way that violated a
historic preservation easement could be asserted. The association is bound by
the easement and would have a sufficient stake in that claim's outcome .
Additionally, we reject the motion judge's finding that the association was
limited to suing only the unit owners for damages caused to the common
elements; that determination is inconsistent with the nature of the association's
relationship to the common elements and to the unit owners.
From 1928 until 2003, Jersey City Medical Center conducted business in
eleven registered historic landmark buildings spread across thirteen acres in
downtown Jersey City. In 2005, defendant Baldwin Assets Associates Urban
Renewal Company, LLC, purchased the property to develop a large residential
and commercial project known as The Beacon Community. The first phase was
A-3502-18T3 5 the Rialto-Capitol Condominium, which consisted of two adjacent, connected
buildings: the Rialto Building, a twenty-two story structure, designed to house
164 residential condominium units, and the Capitol Building, a twenty -one story
structure designed to contain 151 residential condominium units.
Baldwin formed Rialto-Capitol Condominium Association, Inc. (the
association) to administer, manage and operate the common elements of the
Rialto-Capitol Condominium. When seventy-five percent of the units were sold,
Baldwin turned over control of the association to a unit-owner controlled board
of trustees.
Sometime after the unit-owner board assumed control, the association
retained Berman & Wright Architecture, Engineering & Planning, LLC, to
investigate the condition of the common elements. That investigation led to
Berman & Wright's determination that water was seeping into the building and
that the windows were a cause of this infiltration; Berman & Wright opined the
windows were improperly installed or were themselves defectively designed and
manufactured.
The association filed this suit in October 2013 for relief based on the
alleged negligence in the design, repair and construction of the buildings. In
March 2016, defendant Skyline Windows, Inc., which was alleged to have
A-3502-18T3 6 contracted with Baldwin to install the windows, moved for summary judgment,
asserting that the association did not have standing to pursue its window claims
because the master deed declares that windows are the property of the unit
owners. Other defendants, including Israel Berger and Associates, Windstruct,
Inc., Champion Aluminum Corporation, and NGU, Incorporated (all, including
Skyline, referred to collectively as the window defendants) joined in the motion.
In opposition, the association argued it had standing because a historic easement
applicable to the two buildings imposed responsibility for the maintenance of
the windows on the association, and – even if it lacked standing to pursue claims
for the windows themselves or damage to the units – the association had standing
to assert claims for damage caused to the common elements by the window
defendants' acts or omissions.
In May 2016, the judge first determined that the association lacked
standing because the windows belonged to the unit owners. The judge then held
that the association could not assert a claim for damages to the common elements
against these defendants and that the association's only recourse was to sue the
unit owners for damages to the common elements. The association's
reconsideration motion was denied.
A-3502-18T3 7 After the disposition of these motions and the disposition of the remaining
claims – the last of which was resolved in September 2018 – the association
filed this appeal, reprising for our consideration its arguments about standing.
The association argues in its first point that its claims against the window
defendants should not have been dismissed for lack of standing "because the
condominium's master deed and the requirements of a historic preservation
easement . . . impose[] responsibility to maintain the windows on the
association." In its second and last point, the association argues that the judge
erroneously dismissed the association's claims for damage "caused by the
windows to the common elements." We agree with the motion judge that the
association lacked standing to assert its claims to the extent the association
sought replacement of windows due to damages to the units themselves, but we
do not foreclose the assertion of a claim against these defendants that their
alleged acts or omissions caused a violation of the historic preservation
easement. We also reverse that part of the order under review that encompassed
the judge's ruling that the association lacked standing to sue the window
defendants for damages caused to the common elements.
The law is well settled that unit owners have standing to bring claims for
damages to their units, including the units' contents or those fixed items that
A-3502-18T3 8 form part of the units, while the association has standing to pursue a claim for
damages caused to the common elements. See Siller v. Hartz Mountain Assocs.,
93 N.J. 370, 378 (1983); Belmont Condo. Ass'n, Inc. v. Geibel, 432 N.J. Super.
52, 85 (App. Div. 2013). Difficulties in applying this distinction usually arise
from uncertainty about what is part of the unit and what is part of the common
elements. There is no such problem here.
The master deed defines what constitutes a "unit" through a listing of
items that includes, among other things, "interior and exterior windows." As a
result, we agree with the motion judge that there is no doubt about who has
standing to sue for unit damages arising from the design or defect of the
windows or their installation. That claim belongs to the unit owners of the
particular windows in question. 1
The debate about standing here presents only one hiccup: the impact of
the historic preservation easement. The master deed declares in part that the
buildings "have been included on the National Register of Historic Pla ces and
1 We agree with the association that standing to sue is not bound solely to the question of ownership; it may also arise from an association's obligation to maintain, repair or replace the allegedly defective or nonconforming item. Siller, 93 N.J. at 380. But, as for the windows, we find no such duty imposed on the association by the governing documents, other than that which may arise from the historic preservation easement, which we discuss separately. A-3502-18T3 9 on the New Jersey Register of Historic Places"; the New Jersey Historic
Preservation Office agreed to the development subject to a historic preservation
easement that "cover[s] certain protected features" like "the exteriors of the
[b]uildings." The section of the master deed that supports the motion judge's
determination that the windows are part of the units also provides an exception
to what the unit contains and binds the association to the historic preservation
easement, which protects "all surfaces that are of historic significance." The
association argues that the exterior windows are part of the "surface" of the
buildings and that the obligation imposed by the easement gave the association
a "sufficient stake" to allow it standing to sue to protect and vindicate its promise
to maintain the outward appearance of the buildings. See In re Adoption of Baby
T., 160 N.J. 332, 340 (1999); Crescent Park Tenants Ass'n v. Realty Eq. Corp.,
58 N.J. 98, 107 (1971). So, while the windows are undeniably part of the unit,
one aspect of the windows – their exterior appearance – was subject to an
easement to which the association was bound, and, in being so bound, would
have standing to sue a wrongdoer in order to stay in compliance.
Having said that, it is not entirely clear from a review of the record on
appeal that the association asserted a claim against defendants for having
provided or installed windows that caused a violation of the historic preservation
A-3502-18T3 10 easement. That the windows may have leaked due to a design or manufacturing
defect, or because of negligent or improper installation, does not necessarily
mean that the exterior appearance of the windows somehow violates the
easement. Because of this lack of clarity as to what the association has pleaded,
we remand in part to allow the association, if it chooses, to file an amended
complaint containing any such claim if, in good faith, it may be asserted against
these defendants.
We add one additional comment about this particular standing issue. The
record on appeal reveals that not long after the motion judge granted dismissal
on the standing issue, the association sought and obtained assignments from unit
owners and commenced a new suit in 2016 in its own name as assignee of unit
owners. We are also told that this action was placed in abeyance pending a final
disposition of the issues now before us. It would thus appear that our decision
of this part of the appeal may have been mooted by the existence of the
companion action. Nevertheless, we have decided, for expedience's sake, not to
inquire further or to question whether this part of the appeal has been rendered
moot by the existence and, now, likely reanimation of the companion action.
In lastly turning to the question of whether the association had standing to
sue for damages caused to common elements by any of the acts or omissions of
A-3502-18T3 11 the window defendants, we agree with the association that it was not limited to
sue only the unit owners for those alleged damages. Indeed, of those defendants
who have argued to us that this claim was correctly dismissed, the only authority
offered in support is Ellenheath Condo. Ass'n, Inc. v. Pearlman, 294 N.J. Super.
381 (App. Div. 1996), which we find entirely inapposite. In that case, a
condominium association sued the owners of a unit for the costs expended by
the association in remediating a spill from a leaky underground storage tank that
was located in front of the defendants' unit and which serviced that unit's heating
needs. Id. at 382-84. The trial court ordered the unit owners to reimburse the
association, id. at 384, and we affirmed, agreeing that the factual record
demonstrated the tank was not a common element but part of the defendants'
unit, id. at 385-86. We did not then hold either expressly or by implication that
when common elements are damaged by the manufacture, design or installation
of a component of the unit, the association may sue only the unit owner for the
damage to the common areas.
We find nothing in the applicable statutes, the documents that govern this
condominium, or our case law, to suggest the existence of a rule that would
deliberately pit the association against unit owners when damage to the common
elements was caused by an act or omission of some third party. Moreover, such
A-3502-18T3 12 a holding offers no practicable benefit for any of the interested parties or the
efficient administration of justice. If, for some reason, we were ensorcelled by
defendants' argument and concluded that an association could sue only the unit
owners whose windows caused damage to the common elements, it is rather
obvious that those unit owners would then commence third-party actions against
the allegedly responsible third parties and utilize whatever evidence their
association had marshaled. We decline to adopt a rule that would, with no clear
salutary benefit, unduly complicate the condominium jurisprudence in this State
and create an unnecessary adversarial relationship between unit owner and
association, particularly when the association's board owes its unit owners a
fiduciary duty in this regard. See Siller, 93 N.J. at 382; Kim v. Flagship Condo.
Owners Ass'n, 327 N.J. Super. 544, 550 (App. Div. 2000). If, as our Supreme
Court has held, an association "may sue to protect the rights and interests of the
unit owners in the common elements," Siller, 93 N.J. at 380 (emphasis added),
why would the interests of justice, see Crescent Park, 58 N.J. at 109 (recognizing
that determinations about the pursuit of litigation through an association of
similarly situated dwellers are guided by "policy consideration[s]" and a
"consideration of justice"), require a holding that the association may sue only
the same unit owners whose "interests . . . in the common elements" it seeks to
A-3502-18T3 13 protect or vindicate? We reject the argument that the association's claim for
damages to the common elements could be pursued only against the unit owners.
The association's fiduciary obligation to the unit owners required their pursuit
of relief for the unit owners not from them.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings
in conformity with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
A-3502-18T3 14