Scott v. Ranch Roy-L, Inc.

242 S.W.3d 401, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 1413, 2007 WL 2990617
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 16, 2007
DocketED 88991
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 242 S.W.3d 401 (Scott v. Ranch Roy-L, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Ranch Roy-L, Inc., 242 S.W.3d 401, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 1413, 2007 WL 2990617 (Mo. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

SHERRI B. SULLIVAN, J.

Introduction

James Scott and John Kuhlmann 1 (Appellants) appeal from the trial court’s judgment in favor of Ranch Roy-L, Inc. (Ranch Roy-L), Gary Schaeffer and Jill M. Schaeffer (the Schaeffers) (Ranch Roy-L and the Schaeffers collectively referred to as Respondents) on Appellants’ First Amended Complaint and on Respondents’ Counterclaim, both of which sought declaratory and injunctive relief on the issues in question, to-wit, whether Ranch Roy-L is the successor Developer to one Roy Longstreet and whether as such Ranch Roy-L had the right to add and subdivide certain property to a subdivision created by Roy Longstreet and transferred to Ranch Roy-L. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

In 1966, Roy Longstreet and his sons William and James created a planned residential community, or subdivision, called “Golden Eagle Reserve” (sometimes referred to as the Subdivision), out of 300 acres of land in Montgomery County by recording with the Montgomery County Recorder of Deeds a plat of the subdivision and a document entitled Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions of Golden Eagle Reserve (the Declaration). The Declaration grants certain powers to the “Developer,” which it defines as Roy Longstreet.

In that same year, Roy and his sons, James and William, also incorporated the “Golden Eagle Reserve Association” (the Association). Every lot owner in the Subdivision is a member of the Association. At the first meeting of the Board of Directors of the Association in 1966, ByLaws were adopted. The By-Laws define “Developer” as “Roy W. Longstreet and his heirs, representative or assigns, including any corporation to which he may sell or assign the land which is being developed as Golden Eagle Reserve.” Article II, section 2 of the Declaration states as follows:

The Developer, its heir and assigns, shall in the future have the right to bring within the scheme of this declaration additional property, or properties, provided that such additions are in accord with a general plan of development prepared prior to the sale of any lot in any such new development and made known to every purchaser prior to the sale.

Article VIII, Section 1 is a restriction on all lots on the property described in Article II, which states, among other things, that *404 “[n]o lot may be subdivided, but more than one lot may be purchased and combined to make one lot.”

Article VII addresses out-lots. Section 3 of Article VII states that, notwithstanding any other restrictions in the Declaration, “Developer, for. himself and his heirs and assigns, reserves the right to resubdi-vide out-lots G and H[J” No mention is made about subdividing Out-Lot F, which is at issue in this case.

In 1972, Roy, James and William, all of whom had been among the incorporators of the Association, incorporated “Ranch Roy-L.” On November 16, 1972, Roy and his wife conveyed real property, by warranty deed, to Ranch Roy-L, which included all property in the Subdivision with the noted exceptions of a number of individual lots, and some adjacent property that was not originally a part of the Subdivision. This warranty deed included a clause stating that Roy and his wife were conveying the real property to Ranch Roy-L to have and to hold “with all and singular the rights, privileges appurtenances and immunities thereto or in anywise appertaining unto the said party of the second part [Ranch Roy-L], and unto its heirs and assigns forever[.]” James and William also deeded real property to Ranch Roy-L, totaling 200 and 517 acres respectively that adjoined the real property that was originally part of the Subdivision.

In 1987 and 1988, Ranch Roy-L conveyed real property by quit-claim deeds to the Association, which the latter accepted.

On May 3, 1988, Ranch Roy-L subdivided Out-Lot F, which was not common property of the Subdivision, into ten lots, numbered 113 through 122, by recording a plat of this re-subdivided property with the Recorder of Deeds. On December 31, 2001, Ranch Roy-L purported to add a section of real property to the Subdivision, which it designated as “Golden Eagle Reserve, Section Three,” recording a plat thereof with the Recorder of Deeds. That same day, Ranch Roy-L conveyed this real property to the Schaeffers, and attempted to convey additional property and an easement within the original boundaries of Golden Eagle Reserve, Section One. These areas had been designated as common ground of Section One in the original plat.

In the fall of 2002, Appellants, who are Subdivision lot owners, filed a petition 2 against Ranch Roy-L and the Schaeffers, seeking a declaratory judgment that Ranch Roy-L’s 1988 subdivision of Out-Lot F into lots 113 through 122 and Ranch Roy-L’s 2001 addition of Golden Eagle Reserve, Section Three to the Subdivision were unlawful. Appellants maintained that subdivision of Out-Lot F was prohibited by the Declaration, and that Roy Longstreet, the Developer, never conveyed or assigned to Ranch Roy-L the right to add real property to the Subdivision.

Respondents filed answers raising a variety of affirmative defenses. Ranch Roy-L also filed a four-count counterclaim seeking declaratory relief. Relevant to our discussion is Count I of the counterclaim, which sought a declaration that Ranch Roy-L is the successor Developer to Roy Longstreet with all rights thereto, and that Ranch Roy-L is not prohibited from dividing property that it owns within the Subdivision, and that its subdivision of Out-Lot F is lawful.

Appellants filed a motion for summary judgment on the counts in their amended petition and on Count I of Respondents’ counterclaim. Respondents filed amended responses to this motion. Ranch Roy-L filed a separate motion for summary judgment on Count I of its counterclaim.

*405 The trial court granted summary judgment to Ranch Roy-L on Count I of its counterclaim, finding that the undisputed facts showed “that Ranch Roy-L is the successor Developer of Golden Eagle Reserve Association as defined in the ByLaws of Golden Eagle Reserve Association” and that Ranch Roy-L lawfully subdivided Out-Lot F “in accordance with the authority vested in Ranch Roy-L, Inc. by the Declarations and according to the specifications within the Declarations.” Appellants appealed, and this Court found that summary judgment was not proper because “the undisputed facts did not establish that Ranch Roy-L is the successor developer to Roy Longstreet with those developer’s rights that Roy Longstreet possessed.” Scott v. Ranch Roy-L, Inc., 182 S.W.3d 627, 686 (Mo.App. E.D.2005) (emphasis added). We remanded the case without reaching the issue of whether the Declaration permitted the subdivision of Out-Lot F, or whether Appellants’ suit was barred by certain affirmative defenses raised by Respondents.

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242 S.W.3d 401, 2007 Mo. App. LEXIS 1413, 2007 WL 2990617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-ranch-roy-l-inc-moctapp-2007.