Sewall-Marshal Condominium Assoc. v. 131 Sewall Ave. Condominium Assoc.

46 N.E.3d 96, 89 Mass. App. Ct. 130
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMarch 1, 2016
DocketAC 15-P-149
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 46 N.E.3d 96 (Sewall-Marshal Condominium Assoc. v. 131 Sewall Ave. Condominium Assoc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sewall-Marshal Condominium Assoc. v. 131 Sewall Ave. Condominium Assoc., 46 N.E.3d 96, 89 Mass. App. Ct. 130 (Mass. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Wolohoiian, J.

The parties are neighboring condominium associations in the Coolidge Corner area of Brookline, where parking is at a premium. In 1978, when both condominiums were controlled by the same developers, they entered into a written agreement concerning the shared use and allocation of parking spots on their respective properties. Summarized in broad strokes, they agreed that twenty percent of the spots would be reserved for residents of the plaintiff, the smaller of the two condominium associations (Sewall-Marshal), and eighty percent would be reserved for residents of the defendant, the larger one (131 Sewall), *131 at no cost to either side. This arrangement continued for some twenty-eight years until 131 Sewall notified Sewall-Marshal that it would no longer abide by the agreement. This suit followed, seeking a declaration concerning the rights of the parties under the agreement. In essence, 131 Sewall contends that the agreement is unenforceable because it fails to comply with various provisions of G. L. c. 183A, the statute that enables the creation of condominiums, and because it is otherwise an unconscionable contract. After a bench trial, a judge of the Land Court sitting by designation in the Superior Court disagreed and entered a declaratory judgment in favor of Sewall-Marshal. We affirm.

Background. The judge’s findings have not been shown to be clearly erroneous, and we summarize them here. The parties are condominium associations situated on abutting parcels of registered land in Brookline, near Coolidge Corner. Both associations were created in 1978, pursuant to the provisions of G. L. c. 183A, and their master deeds and by-laws were registered with the Norfolk registry district of the Land Court (registry district). With certain exceptions, the organizing documents of both entities mirror each other, which is not surprising given that both properties were developed by the same owners, Roger and Matthew Stern.

Roger and Matthew, along with Jeffrey Stern, constituted the original boards of both condominiums and, pursuant to various enabling provisions in the by-laws, 1 they entered into the parking agreement in December, 1978, which they executed under seal. That agreement provides in relevant part:

“So long as the 131 Sewall Avenue Condominium and the Sewall-Marshal Condominium shall be condominiums subject to Chapter 183A ... Sewall-Marshal Condominium shall have the right, without cost, to the use of 20% of the total number of parking spaces located in both Condominiums, and 131 Sewall Avenue Condominium shall have the right, without cost, to the use of 80% of the total number of parking spaces located in both C[o]ndominiums.
“The Boards of Managers, or their designees, of the two Condominiums shall meet during the month of December as *132 necessary to agree upon the particular spaces which the Condominiums shall have the right to use ... for the next year.”

The agreement was never submitted to registration or otherwise placed in the record at the registry district. Some original unit owners were provided a copy of the agreement with the condominium documents. Although shortly after the agreement was entered into, the by-laws of Sewall-Marshal were amended to reflect that each unit owner would be allocated the use of a parking spot pursuant to the parking agreement, the by-laws of 131 Sewall were not.

There were sixty-two parking spaces between the two condominiums in 1978, and there are now sixty-eight. The majority of these spaces (approximately sixty) are part of 131 Sewall’s common area, which includes a parking garage. The remaining spaces are part of Sewall-Marshal’s common area, and are all outdoors. 131 Sewall has more units (fifty-one) than Sewall-Marshal (sixteen). At the time the condominiums were created, Brookline zoning ordinances required a minimum of one parking space per condominium unit.

It appears that the parties operated under the parking agreement without incident for close to thirty years. Then, on December 14, 2006, 131 Sewall announced to Sewall-Marshal that, as of February 14, 2007, it would ‘“designate spaces to our own unit owners,” and that “[a]s of February 15, 2007, any vehicle that is parked on [131 Sewall’s] property without a written agreement for the same . . . will be towed at the vehicle owner’s expense.”

Discussion. 131 Sewall argues that the parking agreement is unenforceable because of various provisions of the Massachusetts condominium statute, G. L. c. 183A (Act), which has been characterized as “essentially an enabling statute.” 2 Tosney v. Chelmsford Village Condominium Assn., 397 Mass. 683, 686 (1986). Specifically, 131 Sewall contends that the parking agreement was an unrecorded easement and, therefore, ineffective ab initio, and, further, pointing to § 5(b) of the Act, that the parking agreement altered the undivided interests of the unit owners without their consent. Section 5(b), as in effect when the condominiums were *133 formed, see St. 1963, c. 493, § 1, provides, in part, that ‘“[t]he percentage of the undivided interest of each unit owner in the common areas ... as expressed in the master deed shall not be altered without the consent of all unit owners, expressed in an amended master deed duly recorded.” Both arguments fail if for no other reason than that they rest on incorrect premises: namely, that the parking agreement created an easement and that it affected the interests of the unit owners in the common areas.

An easement is a property interest appurtenant to land which allows “one proprietor... some profit, benefit, or beneficial use, out of, in, or over the estate of another proprietor.” Commercial Wharf E. Condominium Assn. v. Waterfront Parking Corp., 407 Mass. 123, 133 (1990), quoting from Ritger v. Parker, 8 Cush. 145, 147 (1851). The parking agreement did not create an easement because it did not create a property interest appurtenant to land. Although the agreement sets the percentage of parking spaces each condominium has the right to use, it does not assign any particular space to one or the other condominium, or to any specific unit owner. There is no specific property benefited or burdened by the agreement; accordingly, the parking agreement did not create an easement. 3

Nor did the parking agreement alter 131 Sewall’s unit owners’ percentage interest in the condominium’s common areas such that unanimous consent was required under G. L. c. 183A, § 5(b). See Kaplan v. Boudreaux, 410 Mass. 435, 438 (1991). In Kaplan, a condominium’s governing body executed an amendment to the condominium’s by-laws that allowed one unit owner the exclusive use of an area that had previously been part of the condominium’s common area. Id. at 441. The court held that because “other unit owners . . . lost all right to use part of the common property, and one unit owner gained the right to use it exclusively"

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.E.3d 96, 89 Mass. App. Ct. 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sewall-marshal-condominium-assoc-v-131-sewall-ave-condominium-assoc-massappct-2016.