Stillwater Lakes Civic Assoc., Inc. & Stillwater Sewer Corp. v. G. Kuzni

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 5, 2020
Docket998 C.D. 2018
StatusUnpublished

This text of Stillwater Lakes Civic Assoc., Inc. & Stillwater Sewer Corp. v. G. Kuzni (Stillwater Lakes Civic Assoc., Inc. & Stillwater Sewer Corp. v. G. Kuzni) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stillwater Lakes Civic Assoc., Inc. & Stillwater Sewer Corp. v. G. Kuzni, (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Stillwater Lakes Civic Association, Inc. : and Stillwater Sewer Corporation : : v. : No. 998 C.D. 2018 : Argued: December 12, 2019 George Kuzni, : Appellant :

BEFORE: HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE BROBSON FILED: February 5, 2020

George Kuzni (Owner) seeks review of two orders of the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County (trial court). Both orders arise from an action by the Stillwater Lakes Civic Association, Inc. (Association) and the Stillwater Sewer Corporation (collectively, Appellees), seeking to collect unpaid dues, assessments, and sewer fees, as well as attorney’s fees, from Owner. The first order, dated March 13, 2017, granted summary judgment in favor of Appellees as to the issue of liability, and the second order, dated June 6, 2018, awarded damages to Appellees in the amount of $43,377.39. For the following reasons, we reverse and remand. I. BACKGROUND This matter concerns Owner’s properties at 2346 and 2347 Nadine Boulevard, Coolbaugh Township, Pennsylvania (the Properties), within the housing development known as Stillwater Lake Estates (the community). Sun Dance Stillwater Corporation (Developer) began development of the community in 1968 and sold the first residential lots in 1971. In 1981, Developer conveyed to the Association, a Pennsylvania nonprofit corporation, all roads and certain recreational facilities (including two lakes, a beach, a clubhouse, a pool, and other facilities) within the community. In 1986, Developer conveyed either title to or an easement in the sewer facilities in the community to Stillwater Lakes Sewer Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Association. Owner purchased the first of the Properties—lot 2346, on which he maintains a residence—in 2004, and the adjoining lot 2347 in 2006. Lot 2347 contains wetlands and remains vacant. The deeds by which Owner took title to the Properties provide that the conveyances are “subject to covenants, conditions, and restrictions which shall run with the land as appear in the chain of title.” (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 71a, 75a, 77a.) Prior deeds for both of the Properties impose identical sets of covenants and restrictions that will run with the land (collectively, the deed covenants), including the following: 2. The purchase and ownership of subject lot does not convey or confer upon the PURCHASER any right, title or interest in and to the lake or lakes, stream or streams, swimming pools, or pools, community facility buildings, club house, ski-runs and other types of community facilities and improvements, whether for recreational use or not or any right, title or interest for PURCHASER to use, occupy and enjoy said facilities, improvements, lake or lakes, stream or streams, swimming pool or pools, club house, ski-runs, etc., except that PURCHASER has the right to join SELLER’s club when same is formed and use aforesaid facilities, and until same is formed has the right to use the aforesaid facilities, provided that PURCHASER pays SELLER all recreation and road maintenance charges when due and complies

2 with all rules and regulations of club when formed [(covenant 2)]. 3. PURCHASER agrees to pay to SELLER each and every year a road maintenance and use charge for the maintenance and use of the roads traversing the development, and a recreation charge for maintenance and use of recreational facilities, in such amount as the SELLER in its sole and absolute discretion is to be paid. In any event, the minimum yearly road maintenance and use charge to be paid by PURCHASER shall be $20.00 [(covenant 3)]. .... 19. The portion of the lands of the SELLER laid down on the map as streets are [sic] not dedicated to public use and title thereto shall remain in the SELLER subject to the right to convey to another entity with reservations and subject to the right of the PURCHASER and those claiming under them to use the same for ingress and egress . . . [(covenant 19)]. 20. If the rear lot lines of lake and stream lots . . . do not abut upon the physical stream or lake, then in such case, an easement, for ingress and egress to the lake and stream as the case may be is hereby granted by SELLER to such lot owner commencing from the rear line of subject lot, for the length of such rear line, to the stream or lake [(covenant 20)].

(Id. at 103a, 118a.) A prior deed for Lot 2347 makes that lot subject to the Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions of Stillwater Lake Estates, recorded in Monroe County in deed book volume 1121, page 213 (the Declaration).1 The provisions of the Declaration are substantially similar to the deed covenants. (See Original Record (O.R.), Item No. 52, App. F.)

1 The Declaration does not independently apply to the Properties because they are not part of the property described in the Declaration. Accordingly, the Declaration applies to Lot 2347 but not to Lot 2346.

3 Shortly after purchasing the first of the Properties, Owner began receiving and paying invoices from the Association. For several years, Owner continued to pay in full all invoices from the Association with respect to both Properties. In 2009 or 2010, Owner wrote a letter to the managing director of NEPA Associates, which then managed the community on behalf of the Association, purporting to terminate any membership interest he had in the Association (the termination letter). Either upon or shortly after the termination letter, Owner ceased paying all invoices from the Association with respect to both Properties. In 2013, Owner’s attorney wrote a letter to the Association concerning several citations the Association had issued to Owner for maintaining an “unsightly lot.” (Supplemental Reproduced Record (S.R.R.) at 55b.) In the letter, Owner’s attorney reiterated that Owner is not a member of the Association. Counsel for the Association responded with a letter stating that “[the Properties are] certainly located within the boundaries of the [Association]” and that, accordingly, Owner is a member of the Association and responsible for assessments for maintenance. (Id. at 41b.) On December 2, 2015, Appellees filed an action in the trial court, seeking to collect “dues, assessments, sewer charges and various other charges,” plus late fees, interest, and attorney’s fees from Owner for the period during which Owner did not pay Association invoices (approximately 2011 to the present). (R.R. at 3a.) Appellees claimed that, by virtue of his ownership of lots within the community, Owner must be a member of the Association and is subject to the Association’s bylaws (Bylaws), which authorize the Association to impose assessments upon members for maintenance of common elements.

4 In anticipation of trial, Appellees secured Owner’s deposition. Owner admitted that, during the entire period of his ownership of the Properties, he has driven on roads owned and maintained by the Association in order to access the Properties. Owner also testified that he paid the Association’s invoices for assessments in full before 2011, without inquiring about the basis for the charges. He explained that, following the termination letter, he asked the Association to give him a separate accounting of road and sewer maintenance assessments, which he would pay, but excluding “membership dues,” which he refused to pay. (S.R.R. at 44b.) After the Association refused to make an itemized accounting and demanded payment in full (and following an alleged mismanagement of one of Owner’s previous payments), Owner made no further payments to the Association. Owner also stated that he has gone boating on the lake adjoining his Properties “more than 30 times” and allowed guests to fish in the lake, including instances of boating and fishing as recently as 2014. (Id.

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Stillwater Lakes Civic Assoc., Inc. & Stillwater Sewer Corp. v. G. Kuzni, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stillwater-lakes-civic-assoc-inc-stillwater-sewer-corp-v-g-kuzni-pacommwct-2020.