Stonebridge Townhomes Owners' Association v. Mark T. Ptomey

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 27, 2026
DocketC.A. No. 2020-0607-SEM
StatusPublished

This text of Stonebridge Townhomes Owners' Association v. Mark T. Ptomey (Stonebridge Townhomes Owners' Association v. Mark T. Ptomey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stonebridge Townhomes Owners' Association v. Mark T. Ptomey, (Del. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

STONEBRIDGE TOWNHOMES ) OWNERS’ ASSOCIATION, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2020-0607-SEM ) MARK T. PTOMEY and ) MARTHA PTOMEY, ) ) Defendants. )

Final Report: February 27, 2026 Date Submitted: November 13, 2025

FINAL POST-TRIAL REPORT

Chad J. Toms, Queen C. Nwangwu, WHITEFORD, TAYLOR & PRESTON, LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for Plaintiff Stonebridge Property Owners’ Association, Inc.

Mark T. Ptomey, Martha K. Ptomey, Wilmington Delaware; Self-Represented Defendants.

MOLINA, Senior Magistrate This homeowners’ association dispute began more than five years ago with

the association’s complaint alleging homeowners were trespassing on the

community’s common areas. The homeowners do not dispute that they are

exclusively using and enjoying the area at issue. But they argue that they have

acquired title to the area through adverse possession. That adverse possession

counterclaim was the focus of our trial last fall. Through this post-trial decision, I

conclude the homeowners failed to meet their burden of proof and judgment should

be entered for the association on its trespass claim. The contested area should be

cleared out, returned to the association, and remediated at the homeowners’ expense.

The association should recover costs as the prevailing party, but attorneys’ fees

should not be shifted.

This is my final report.

I. BACKGROUND 1

This action was initiated by Stonebridge Townhome Owners’ Association (the

“Plaintiff”) against homeowners Mark T. Ptomey and Martha K. Ptomey (the

“Defendants”). The Plaintiff is a non-profit Delaware corporation, which is

responsible for the maintenance of the private open space of the development known

1 The facts in this report reflect my findings based on the record developed at trial on October 15, 2025. See Docket Items (“D.I.”) 163. I grant the evidence the weight and credibility I find it deserves. Citations to the trial transcript are in the form “[Last Name] Tr.” referring to the testimony of the identified person; I use full names to differentiate the defendants. The plaintiff’s exhibits are cited as “PX__,” and the defendants’ as “DX__.” as Stonebridge, a community of townhomes in New Castle, Delaware.2 The

Defendants own a townhome in Stonebridge located on 457 Stonebridge Blvd. (the

“Unit”). The Unit is adjacent to land which is denoted as private open space owned

and controlled by Stonebridge (the “Common Area”). It is the Defendants’

(primarily Mr. Ptomey’s) use of that Common Area that is in dispute. I will begin

with a factual background, before turning to the dispute before me.

A. Stonebridge

The Stonebridge community dates back, at least, to 1989. The original plan

was for condominiums. 3 In November 1989, Mann-Talley Engineers & Surveyors

recorded a re-subdivision plan for Stonebridge, presumably to that effect. 4 That plan

was then superseded by a 1990 plan submitted by Stonebridge Townhomes, Inc. for

a community of townhomes.5 In that 1990 plan, the developer confirmed that the

subdivision would include “open space” which would be maintained privately and

available for public use.6 The Plaintiff was incorporated in 1990 to manage and

maintain that space.7

2 PX8(B). 3 See Weinsteiger Tr. 95:11-14. 4 See PX7. 5 Id. 6 Id. 7 PX8(C) at 43–44.

2 Properties within Stonebridge are governed by a set of documents, including

Stonebridge’s Declaration of Restrictions and supplements thereto (collectively

referred to as the “Declaration”),8 and the Stonebridge Townhomes Owner’s (sic)

Association Rules and Regulations (the “Regulations”). 9

The Declaration provides, in relevant part, that owners of units within

Stonebridge shall have “the free and uninterrupted use of all of the . . . private and/or

public open space, as shown on the Plans, in common with others entitled thereto

forever.”10 It further provides that each owner, “by acceptance of the deed, grants to

all other such owners, . . . the free and uninterrupted use of all the . . . private and/or

public opens spaces, and grants to the maintenance corporation the right to come

upon any owner’s property for purposes of maintaining the . . . private and/or public

open spaces.”11 There is no dispute that the Common Area is a covered “open

space.”12

The Regulations govern how homeowners within the community can seek

alterations to community property. Specifically, Section E provides that

8 PX8(A)–(D). 9 PX8(E). 10 PX8(C) at 45–46. 11 Id. 12 See PX7; D.I. 5 ¶ 10.

3 homeowners must seek “prior consent of the Board[.]”13 Owners are also prohibited

from installing fences or engaging in “noxious or offensive activity.”14

B. The Unit

Although, at first glance, the Defendants appear to be newcomers to the

community, the Unit is their family property. It was originally owned by Ms.

Ptomey’s sister and Mr. Ptomey’s aunt: Mary Elizabeth “Beth” Kuhn. Ms. Kuhn

purchased the Unit directly from the builders of the Stonebridge community on

September 30, 1992.15 Neighbors described Ms. Kuhn as a “nice” person and an

overall “great” neighbor.16

The Defendants’ disputed use of the Common Area stems from Ms. Kuhn’s

historical use. She first altered and maintained the area to address drainage issues

that she faced when she moved into her home in 1992.17 “[D]uring heavy rains, she

13 PX8(E) ¶ E(1). The board must then respond to written requests within 45 days. PX8(E) ¶ E(2). 14 PX8(E) ¶ E(8); PX8(E) ¶ F(9). 15 PX5. See also Mackes Tr. 32:3–6. 16 Weinsteiger Tr. 94:17–20; Mackes Tr. 74:12. Robert Mackes, owner of Unit 465 since 2008, and Ms. Kuhn’s neighbor for approximately seven years, described her as being “very personal” and keeping “her property meticulously maintained.” Mackes Tr. 15:19– 16:4, 74:12–14. Mr. Mackes’ property is located on the opposite corner of the same building as the Unit. Mackes Tr. 21:4–7. Ann Weinsteiger, also Ms. Kuhn’s neighbor for several years and owner of Unit 457, described Ms. Kuhn as being “very nice” and “down- to-earth.” Weinsteiger Tr. 94:17–223. From her property, she can view the Common Area. Weinsteiger Tr. 94:3–14. 17 See Mackes Tr. 22:10–24; see also Weinsteiger Tr. 98:5–21.

4 would get water in her house. And so[,] by agreement with the builder and then

subsequently the board of directors, she was given permission to maintain a swale[18]

that directed the water away from the common area.”19 Ms. Kuhn also had

permission to maintain a garden, shed, and fence within the Common Area. 20

Ms. Kuhn was granted this special permission to use and enjoy the Common

Area despite the restrictions in the Declaration.21 When Ann Weinsteiger first

became a board member in 2011, she asked about Ms. Kuhn’s shed and fencing in

the Common Area, and was told by prior board members that: “it had been

grandfathered because they had been building [Stonebridge] as condominiums. . .

[a]nd then when it became townhomes and they were not going to allow that type of

shed and fencing in common areas, they . . . allow[ed] [Ms. Kuhn’s fencing] there.”22

18 A “swale” is a “low-lying or depressed and often wet stretch of land.” MERRIAM- WEBSTER, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/swale (last updated Sep. 24, 2025). 19 See PX10(A); Mackes Tr. 22:16–21, 26:7–11; Weinsteiger Tr. 103:16–20.

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