Skaneateles Country Club v. Olivia Cambs

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 24, 2023
Docket98
StatusPublished

This text of Skaneateles Country Club v. Olivia Cambs (Skaneateles Country Club v. Olivia Cambs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skaneateles Country Club v. Olivia Cambs, (N.Y. 2023).

Opinion

State of New York MEMORANDUM Court of Appeals This memorandum is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports.

No. 98 SSM 6 Skaneateles Country Club, Appellant, v. Olivia Cambs, Respondent.

Submitted by Brian J. Buttler, for appellant. Submitted by Peter J. Cambs, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM:

The order and judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs,

and the judgment of Supreme Court reinstated.

-1- -2- SSM No. 6

In 1999, plaintiff Skaneateles Country Club (SCC) undertook a project to construct

80 boat slips on Skaneateles Lake for the benefit of club members. Interested members,

including defendant Olivia Cambs, were required to contribute an initial capitalization

payment and enter into an Assignment Agreement. Through the Assignment Agreement,

SCC “assign[ed] and transfer[red]” to defendant the “use and occupancy right with respect

to one boat slip,” subject to certain express conditions. SCC reserved the right to determine

the specific boat slip defendant would occupy, and defendant agreed to comply with all of

SCC’s rules and policies, pay an annual maintenance fee, and adhere to any applicable

laws, ordinances or governmental regulations. The agreement also permitted defendant to

make a “Legacy Transfer” of the slip to her offspring if certain specified conditions were

met. Further, the agreement provided that, “[i]n the event [defendant] elect[ed] to

terminate this Assignment Agreement” or was no longer a club member, SCC would return

the initial capitalization payment.

Following an unrelated dispute with defendant, SCC commenced this declaratory

judgment action, seeking a declaration that the agreement was a license terminable at will

by SCC. Defendant answered and counterclaimed seeking a declaratory judgment “that

the Agreement is not terminable at will by SCC.” Supreme Court granted SCC’s motion

for summary judgment and declared in its favor.

The Appellate Division reversed and declared that “the agreement is a license not

terminable at [SCC’s] will” (211 AD3d 1459, 1462 [4th Dept 2022]). Two Justices

dissented, agreeing that the instrument was a license, but finding no basis for applying an

exception to the general rule that a license is terminable at will by the licensor.

-2- -3- SSM No. 6

Before this Court, the parties do not dispute that the subject agreement is a license—

only whether SCC had the ability to revoke it. “A license . . . is a revocable privilege given

‘to one, without interest in the lands of another, to do one or more acts of a temporary

nature upon such lands’” (Union Sq. Park Community Coalition, Inc. v New York City

Dept. of Parks & Recreation, 22 NY3d 648, 656 [2014], quoting Trustees of Town of

Southampton v Jessup, 162 NY 122, 126 [1900]). Contrary to defendant’s contention,

nothing in the parties’ agreement limits SCC’s right to terminate or otherwise evinces an

intent to alter the general rule that licenses are revocable at will by the licensor (see Willow

Tex v Dimacopoulos, 68 NY2d 963, 965 [1986]; see also Union Sq. Park Community

Coalition, Inc., 22 NY3d at 656-657). Although licenses may become irrevocable by the

licensor in certain circumstances (see e.g. Sarfaty v Evangelist, 142 AD2d 995, 996 [4th

Dept 1988]; Prosser v Gouveia, 98 AD2d 992, 993 [4th Dept 1983]), we are not satisfied

that any such circumstances are presented here.

-3- RIVERA, J. (dissenting):

The parties’ Assignment Agreement controls and, based on that Agreement,

plaintiff Skaneateles Country Club (“SCC”) did not issue defendant Olivia Cambs a license

revocable at will by SCC for a boat slip she has used for over twenty years. Instead, SCC

granted Cambs an exclusive right of use and occupancy for the duration of her membership,

and the right to transfer the boat slip at any time, in accordance with the Agreement’s terms.

The word license does not appear in the parties’ Agreement, and at-will revocability by

SCC is contrary to the purpose and structure of the Agreement. But putting that aside, even

if this were a license, SCC could not revoke at will. The majority concludes that SCC can

terminate Cambs’ right of use on the flawed premise that a license may never be rendered

irrevocable. The law recognizes that a license may be rendered irrevocable by the parties’

choice and conduct. The parties made that choice here and Cambs acted in reliance thereof.

Therefore, I would affirm the Appellate Division’s grant of summary judgment to Cambs,

but on slightly different reasoning.

I.

The Parties’ Boat Slip Assignment Agreement

SCC is a lakeside private golf, sailing and vacation club in New York’s Finger Lake

region, open seasonally to paying members and guests. To help fund its Breakwater and

Boat Slip Project and the construction of 80 boat slips on Skaneateles Lake, SCC entered

individual agreements with members interested in purchasing rights of use to one of the

new boat slips.

Cambs was one of the original eighty members to enter an “Assignment Agreement”

with SCC at a $5,000 purchase price consisting of her initial capitalization payment and

binder, and a promise to pay future annual maintenance fees.1 The parties’ Agreement

reads, in relevant part, as follows:

1. The Assignor [SCC], through its Board of Directors (or its authorized designee) (hereinafter, the “Board), reserves the right to determine the specific boat slip location to be occupied by Assignee [Cambs] within the Breakwater and Boat Slip Project. 2. The Assignee agrees to adhere to all the Rules and Policies of the Assignor at all times. 3. The Assignee agrees to pay an annual maintenance fee which is initially set at $100.00, and the Board reserves the right to increase maintenance fee as required, however, such increase not to exceed 10% per year.

1 Cambs is one of the 23 remaining original boat slip assignees. -2- -3- SSM No. 6

4. The Assignee agrees to abide by any law, ordinance, or governmental regulation including environmental regulations restricting or regulating the use or enjoyment of the Breakwater and Boat Slip Project. 5. The Assignee agrees to hold the Assignor harmless for any and all claims for property damage or bodily injury arising in whole or in part from the acts or omissions of the Assignor, its employees and agents, excepting only claims arising from the gross negligence of the Assignor or its employees or agents. The Assignee further waives the right of the subrogation of any third party. 6. In the event the Assignee elects to terminate this Assignment Agreement or is no longer a member of the Assignor, the Assignor agrees to return to Assignee the Initial Capitalization Payment (as described in the Boat Slip Payment Agreement dates of today’s date) less any monies owed Assignor by Assignee. This return of funds will occur only after the Assignor transfers the slip rights to another Assignee, which transfer shall not be unduly delayed. 7. The slip can be transferred by the Assignee to their offspring, provided such offspring is at the time of the transfer, a member in good standing of the Assignor. This is called a Legacy Transfer.

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