Seagull Condo Ass'n v. First Coast Realty & Dev.

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 19, 2011
DocketYORre-09-93
StatusUnpublished

This text of Seagull Condo Ass'n v. First Coast Realty & Dev. (Seagull Condo Ass'n v. First Coast Realty & Dev.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seagull Condo Ass'n v. First Coast Realty & Dev., (Me. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL ACTION YORK, ss. DOCKET NO. RE-09-93 I I

(7f)S - jof?- 7;/;q; {~6/J SEAGULL CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION,

Plaintiff

V.

FIRST COAST REALTY & ORDER DEVELOPMENT, LLC

Defendant

and

MBM INVESTMENT PARTNERS, et al.,

Parties-in-Interest

The court has before it Defendant First Coast Realty & Development, LLC's

("First Coast") motion for summary judgment on Counts I-III, V, and VII of Plaintiff

Seagull Condominium Association's ("SCA") second amended complaint, on portions

of Counts I-II of First Coast's counterclaim and in full on Counts III-IV of First Coast's

counterclaim.

BACKGROUND First Coast is a Maine limited liability company created in March 2008. M. Harry

Zea is currently First Coast's sole owner and member. Seagull Condominium is a

condominium complex located in Wells, Maine.· Seagull Condominium was created by

the recording of the Seagull Condominium Declaration of Condominium (the

"Declaration") in the York County Registry of Deeds on August 19, 2003 by the original

Declarant of Seagull Condominium, Broderick Associates, Inc. Broderick Associates, Inc. conveyed its interest in Seagull Condominium, including the declarant's rights and

any interest in the real property to the Wells Group, LLC ("Wells Group") (Def.'s S.M.F.

err 6, as qualified by Pl.'s Opp. S.M.F. err 6.) First Coast acquired Wells Group's property

interests and Declarant rights in Seagull Condominium by virtue of a deed and an

Assignment and Assumption of Special Declarant Rights.

Under the terms of the Declaration, First Coast has the right to add

condominium units in phases. As of the original Declaration, eleven units were created

and declared as part of the Seagull Condominium. The Declaration references a

recorded plan, recorded as Condominium Plan 551, Sheet 2. Subsequent to the

recording of the Declaration, there have been eleven amendments to the Declaration, all

filed in the York County Registry of Deeds. (See Ex. H.) In the Declaration and in each

amendment to the Declaration that declared and added units, there was a chart labeled

Exhibit B to Declaration- Percentage Interest in Common Elements and Voting Rights."

(Ex. D; Ex. H.) The Declaration describes the chart as "contain[ing] a list of all Units by

their identifying Number and Percentage Interest" as well as describing "[t]he liability

of each Unit for Common Expenses of the Condominium" and the SCA votes allocated

to each Unit. (Ex. D.§§ 5.1-5.3.)

As SCA recorded amendments adding units to the condominium, SCA recorded

new plans replacing the Phase I Plan along with the original Declaration on a number of

occasions. The most recent plan recorded in connection with the Seagull Condominium

was the Phase IV Plan, recorded on July 21, 2005, the same date as the Fifth Amendment

to the Declaration, at Condominium File 551, Page 7. The Phase IV Plan depicts certain

units in addition to those added on the Exhibit B as part of the Fifth Amendment. The

Phase IV Plan depicts 67 units, which is more than the number of units declared or

added pursuant to any Amendment to the Declaration. (Def.'s S.M.F. err 42, ns qualified

2 by Pl.'s Opp. S.M.F. <[ 42.) At the same time and subsequent to the recording of the

Phase IV Plan, the Fifth, Sixth, Ninth, Tenth, and Eleventh Amendments all explicitly

state that they were adding units to the Seagull Condominium. (Def.'s S.M.F. <[ 43, as

qualified by Pl.'s Opp. S.M.F. <[ 43.)

First Coast currently owns Unit 1, the Barn Unit, Units 60-61, and Units 64-66,

which were part of the Phase IV Plan. Unit 60 shares a duplex with 59 and Unit 61

shares a duplex with 62. 1 First Coast leases Unit 64 to the public without paying dues to

SCA. Units 65 and 66 are empty. First Coast does not share in the common expenses for

Units 60-61 and 64-66 because it claims that the units were never declared and added to

SCA.

Seagull Condominium filed a second amended complaint with causes of action

against First Coast for: count I - declaratory judgment that Units 60, 61, and 64-66 were

declared and added to the condominium by virtue of the recording of the Phase IV Plan

and are subject to unpaid condominium fees; count II - declaratory judgment that the

Declaration, Plats and Plans of SCA establish an easement to use the White House as an

office; count III - foreclosure of the condominium lien for unpaid assessments in count

I; count IV- foreclosure of a condominium lien against Two Lights; count V- breach of

contract for unpaid assessments and rental fees on the purportedly declared units;

count VI - unjust enrichment in connection with the unpaid assessments and rental

fees; and count VII- breach of the condominium act, 22 M.R.S. § 1603-107 against First

Coast.

Wells Group conveyed Units 59 and 62 prior to the conveyance to First Coast. Wells Group paid dues on Units 60 and 61, despite First Coast's clainl. that those units have never been declared and added to SCA in an amendment to the Declaration. (Pl.'s S. Add'l M.F. 9I 126, as qualified by Def.'s Rep. S.M.F. 9I 126.)

3 First Coast filed a counterclaim against Seagull Condominium alleging: count I-

declaratory judgment that Units 60-66 have never been declared; count II- declaratory

judgment that the rental program cannot be enforced against Units 60-61 and 64-66;

count III - declaratory judgment that SCA has no easement to the Bam Unit or White

House; count IV - declaratory judgment that SCA is estopped from asserting that First

Coast is liable for unpaid assessments due by virtue of SCA's failure to issue resale

certificates on Units 60-61 and 64-66; count V- tortious interference; count VI- slander

of title; and count VII - defamation. First Coast now brings the instant motion for

summary judgment on counts I-III, V, and VII of Seagull Condominium's second

amended complaint and on portions of counts I and II and all of counts III and IV of its

DISCUSSION

I. Standard of Review

Summary judgment should be granted if there is no genuine dispute as to any

material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. M.R. Civ. P.

56(c). In considering a motion for summary judgment, the court should consider the

facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, and the court is required to

consider only the portions of the record referred to and the material facts set forth in the

parties' Rule 56(h) statements. See e.g., Johnson v. McNeil, 2002 ME 99, 9[ 8, 800 A.2d 702,

704. "The declaration of rights in the condominium development is a contract."

Farrington's Owners' Ass'n v. Conway Lake Resorts, Inc., 2005 ME 93, 9[ 10, 878 A.2d 504,

507 (citing Alexander v. Fairway Villas, Inc., 1998 ME 226, 9[ 11, 719 A.2d 103, 106). "As a

contract, the Declaration must be interpreted to effect the parties' intentions as reflected

in the instrument, construed with regard for the subject matter, motive, and purpose of

4 the agreement, as well as the object to be accomplished." Fairway Villas, Inc., 1998 ME

226, 'IT 11, 719 A.2d at 106.c

II. Units 60-61 and 64-66

The first issue in this case is whether Units 60-61 and 64-66 were ever declared

and added to SCA.

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