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. The Defendants’ trial testimony disputing any such permission was not persuasive and was overborne by the evidence to the contrary including Ms. Ptomey’s own deposition testimony. See Martha Ptomey Tr. 313:16–316:8. 20 See PX20 (Martha Ptomey Dep.) 5:23–6:3 (stating that the shed went in shortly after Ms. Kuhn purchased the Unit). Mr. Mackes testified that Ms. Kuhn had a small garden, which contained “some tomato plants, vegetable plants, basil, herbs, things like that, [and] some flowers.” Mackes Tr. 23:16–18. Mr. Mackes also testified that community members had open access to Ms. Kuhn’s garden, something Mr. Ptomey disputes. Compare Mackes Tr. 23:21–24 with Mark Ptomey Tr. 260:23–261:4. 21 See Mackes Tr. 23:7–9. 22 Weinsteiger Tr. 95:3–12.
5 Mr. Ptomey was not privy to any permission granted but was a frequent visitor
to his aunt’s property. He helped Ms. Kuhn work on the property starting when he
was around eight or nine years old. 23 Ms. Ptomey was also privy to Ms. Kuhn’s
gardening activities.24 It appears they both enjoyed a close relationship with Ms.
Kuhn until her passing in February 2015.
C. The Ptomeys
Shortly after Ms. Kuhn’s passing, Mr. Ptomey moved into the Unit.25 He was,
initially, a tenant, until he and his mother, Ms. Ptomey, officially purchased the Unit
on March 31, 2017.26
This change of ownership triggered a few things. On the Plaintiff’s side, it
compelled Ms. Weinsteiger, acting on behalf of the Plaintiff, to direct the
community’s property manager that, with the transfer, “the shed should be removed,
unless [Stonebridge’s] architectural guidelines change before then.” 27 The Plaintiff,
thus, anticipated that the new owners would have reduced use and possession of the
Common Area.
23 Mark Ptomey Tr. 207:23–208:3; PX19 (“Mark Ptomey Dep.”) 29: 4–8. See also Mackes Tr. 56:13–21. 24 Martha Ptomey Tr. 292:14–20. 25 Mark Ptomey Tr. 241:14–19. 26 PX6. The parties dispute whether Mr. Ptomey had, and disclosed to the Plaintiff, a rental agreement for his initial residence; that factual issue is not material to the dispute presently before me. 27 PX10(A).
6 Mr. Ptomey had other plans. Shortly after the Defendants took title to the
property, Mr. Ptomey started to make modifications to the Common Area. The
Defendants first expanded the original fencing and then the patio. Mr. Ptomey
testified that he “replaced” the fencing because the original fencing was twenty years
old at the time and was “bent over with vegetation or with animals trying to go over
it [or] under it.” 28 But the Defendants also significantly expanded the size, material,
and perimeter of the fencing.29
The Defendants also removed the central garden and expanded the size of the
original patio underneath. Mr. Ptomey testified that he removed Ms. Kuhn’s central
garden because his large dogs destroyed it by constantly running through it.30 When
he took out the central garden, he found a “crumbling patio” beneath it.31 He, thus,
28 Mark Ptomey Tr. 247:8–12. 29 See, e.g., PX13 (showing an enclosed fence with a topper made of black tarp). This expansion was confirmed by the Defendants’ evidence, in particular the Google Earth images in DX1. The Plaintiff objected to DX1 for lack of authentication. Tr. 203:21– 204:10. That objection is overruled and DX1 is admitted into evidence. Under Delaware Rule of Evidence 901, authentication requires the proponent to produce evidence sufficient to support a finding that the item is what the proponent claims it is. One way to do that is through testimony of a witness with knowledge—i.e., testimony that an item is what it is claimed to be. D.R.E. 901(b)(1). At trial, Mr. Ptomey and Ms. Ptomey testified to their intimate familiarity with the Unit, the changes done over the years, and that those changes were accurately reflected through the pictures in DX1. See, e.g., Mark Ptomey Tr. 206:2– 215:23. That testimony is sufficient to show that the images are what Mr. Ptomey claims them to be—changes to the Unit and Common Area from 1992 to present. 30 Mark Ptomey Tr. 242:12–17. See also Mark Ptomey Dep. 13:16–18 (“[the garden] got removed when I got there because my dogs just were killing everything in it as soon as they ran out the door.”); DX1. 31 Mark Ptomey Tr. 243:6–7.
7 hired a contractor to bring the “crumbling” patio up to the level of the original
patio. 32 Mr. Ptomey testified that he was not “enlarging” the patio but “merely
repair[ing] the concrete that existed.”33 But, in his August 22, 2022 deposition he
admitted to extending the surface area.34 He explained that once the original center
garden was removed, the “crumbling patio” was “probably about ten inches below
the existing pad, so [he] had [concrete] poured on to top to make it so it was [an]
even transition from the other pad instead of having a step down.” 35
This work was not well taken. Acting on behalf of the Plaintiff, Ms.
Weinsteiger put a note on the Defendants’ front door informing them that they
needed to stop their work and reach out to the managing company. 36 She also sent
an email to the managing company on May 29, 2018, making them aware of the
32 Id. at 243:7–14. 33 Id. at 243:14–16. 34 Mark Ptomey Dep. 13:10–12. 35 Id. at 13:18–14:3. Mr. Ptomey was doing more than expanding the footprint for personal enjoyment; he began operating an animal rescue in the Unit and into the Common Area in or around 2023. See Mark Ptomey Tr. 245:13–14. Whether those commercial activities were a separate violation of the restrictions on the Unit was an issue in this action until the second pretrial conference as addressed below. The commercial activities will not be addressed in this report. I will also not attempt to summarize or opine on the criminal proceedings that appear to be ongoing regarding the animal rescue and removal of said animals from the Unit. See D.I. 147. Those matters are outside the scope of the issues ripe for my consideration. 36 Weinsteiger Tr. 113:13–19. This was after prior disputes about the Defendants having a commercial vehicle parked outside the Unit. See PX10(B)–(C); Weinsteiger Tr. 111:1– 112:17.
8 activity being done on the Common Area, noting it required the Plaintiff’s
approval. 37 The Plaintiff then sent a letter to the Defendants on May 31, 2018,
informing them that “[a]ll construction must cease until the proper approval has been
granted by the Association, or legal action would be taken.”38 That letter went
unclaimed and was returned to sender. 39 The Plaintiff sent a follow-up email to the
managing company on June 30, 2018, asking that they contact an attorney and
characterizing the situation as “urgent.”40
The Defendants engaged with the property manager and acted, to some extent,
upon these communications. 41 Through an application dated July 17, 2018, the
Defendants first sought approval for the work “presently done” to the property.42
The retroactive request was formally denied by letter dated October 19, 2018.43 The
Defendants then made another request on May 20, 2019, again for “work presently
37 PX10(D). 38 PX10(E). 39 Id.; see also Weinsteiger Tr. 114:12–115:14. 40 PX10(F). 41 See Mark Ptomey Tr. 246:8–21. 42 PX10(G). 43 PX10(H).
9 done.”44 The Plaintiff did not respond to the reiterated request in writing; 45 rather, it
hired legal counsel to take over the dispute. 46
Through counsel, the Plaintiff, on August 13, 2029, alerted the Defendants to
their trespass and requested to schedule a meeting. 47 The Plaintiff’s request was
repeated on August 27, 2019. 48 The Defendants never responded to these requests
and a third request was made by the Plaintiff on September 15, 2019, this time
warning that the Plaintiff would seek legal action if they received no response.49 The
Defendants continued to be unresponsive, and the Plaintiff sent a final cease and
desist letter dated September 28, 2019. 50
D. Procedural Posture
With the Defendants unresponsive and continuing to use the Common Area,
the Plaintiff ultimately initiated this action on July 22, 2020. 51 Seeing a largely
44 PX10(I). 45 See PX8(E) ¶ E(2). Ms. Weinsteiger testified that a rejection was orally communicated to the Defendants through the property manager. Weinsteiger Tr. 136:11–14. 46 Per Mr. Ptomey, the Defendants reached a potential easement agreement with the property manager, but it was overruled by Mr. Weinsteiger. Tr. 246:14–20. 47 PX10(J). 48 PX10(K). 49 PX10(L). 50 PX10(M). 51 D.I. 1. While this action was pending, the Defendants continued to alter and use the Common Area. See, e.g., PX1, PX13. This continued use was described by multiple witnesses, including Sharita Brooks, a code officer for New Castle County. Officer Brooks testified about her involvement with the Unit and the Defendants, in connection with
10 inactive docket, I wrote to the parties on August 17, 2021 asking about the status of
this action. In response, the Plaintiff’s counsel advised on August 23, 2021 “that the
parties [had] reached a framework for the resolution of this matter.” 52 They hoped
to file a stipulation within 30 days. By November, however, the parties reported “a
few points of contention[,]” which were holding up the stipulation. 53 But, in
February 2022, counsel reported that the parties were “unsuccessful in reaching an
amicable resolution of the matter.”54
With settlement off the table, litigation truly began in 2022. The parties
initially tried to resolve this action through motions for summary judgment. The
Plaintiff filed its first motion for summary judgment on March 18, 2022.55 I denied
that motion without prejudice on July 14, 2022 finding the evidentiary record
wanting, yet with material disputes of fact. 56 Thereafter, I entered a schedule for fact
complaints made to the county. Brooks Tr. 177:1–179:18. Those complaints led to several inspections of the property, a search warrant, and a determination that the Unit was not livable. See Brooks Tr. 178:2–15, 188:18, 190:7–11. New Castle County’s investigation and findings are outside the limited scope of these proceedings. 52 D.I. 9. 53 D.I. 10. 54 D.I. 13. 55 D.I. 17. 56 D.I. 28.
11 discovery to conclude by February 2023, with another opportunity for dispositive
motion practice thereafter.57
The Plaintiff filed their second motion for summary judgment on January 11,
2023, 58 and the Defendants cross-moved on March 16, 2023.59 Around this time, the
case was reassigned to newly appointed Magistrate Judge Mitchell. 60 Magistrate
Judge Mitchell heard the second motion for summary judgment and denied it
through an order dated November 6, 2023, explaining there were still genuine
disputes as to material facts, particularly regarding the Defendants’ adverse
possession counterclaim.61 Magistrate Judge Mitchell then set a new schedule,
expanding the fact discovery timeline and permitting another dispositive motion
opportunity in advance of a June 2024 trial date.62
Under this new schedule, the Defendants moved again for summary judgment
on March 21, 2024.63 The Plaintiff opposed the motion but, shortly thereafter,
changed counsel. 64 With that change of counsel, the Plaintiff requested a
57 D.I. 30. 58 D.I. 33. 59 D.I. 37. 60 D.I. 32. 61 D.I. 55. 62 D.I. 57. 63 D.I. 58. 64 D.I. 65, 68.
12 continuance of the June 2024 trial date, with an opportunity for more discovery and
another dispositive motion opportunity. 65 At a June 4, 2024 teleconference,
Magistrate Judge Mitchell denied the latest motion for summary judgment, and
granted the continuance in part, directing the parties to secure a new trial date in Fall
2024, and denying the Plaintiff’s request to reopen discovery or file another motion
for summary judgment.66 The parties ultimately landed on October 2, 2024 for their
new trial date.67
Shortly thereafter, I was reassigned to this matter. 68 Thereafter, the
Defendants tried again to secure summary judgment; I denied their motion on
September 24, 2024.69 Mr. Ptomey then requested a continuance of the October 2,
2024 trial for health reasons, which I granted by minute order.70
In connection with that continuance, the Plaintiff sought a status quo order.71
I heard that request during a teleconference on October 2, 2024, and granted it, in
part, barring the Defendants, “and anyone acting on their behalf, [from making] any
65 D.I. 67. 66 See D.I. 73–75. 67 See D.I. 78. 68 D.I. 79. 69 D.I. 87–88. 70 D.I. 91. 71 See D.I. 90–92.
13 modifications, improvements, alterations, or changes to the” Common Area (the
“Status Quo Order”).72
By April 2025, the Plaintiff contends the Defendants were violating the Status
Quo Order. 73 The Plaintiff moved for contempt and sanctions (the “Contempt
Motion”). 74 The Defendants denied any contemptuous behavior, cross-moved
arguing the Plaintiff was the bad actor, and requested more time to prepare for trial,
advocating for a further 6-month continuance. 75 I heard and denied those requests at
a June 16, 2025 telephonic hearing; the Contempt Motion, I ruled, would be
72 D.I. 93. Before the Status Quo Order, the Defendants had continued to modify, alter, and expand their contested use. The most current showing of their use was demonstrated during trial by drone footage obtained by the Plaintiff. PX2. During trial, the Defendants objected to the admissibility of the drone footage. See Defendants Tr. 59:24–60:7. I directed the Plaintiff to submit the flight approval plan and held in abeyance my ruling on admissibility until I could review the plan and applicable Delaware law. Tr. 63:16–21. On November 5, 2025, the Plaintiff submitted: (1) a scope of work that depicts the agreement between the Plaintiff and its vendor; (2) a copy of the drone pilot’s license by the Federal Aviation Administration (the “FAA”); and (3) a copy of the FAA’s approval, obtained by an online application. D.I. 161. This submission resolves any concerns and PX2 is admitted. Cf. 11 Del. C. § 1334 (criminalizing, at the state level, certain drone operation, but exempting any use for “a commercial or other purpose if the operator is authorized by the Federal Aviation Administration”); BETHANY BEACH, DE., CODE pt. III, ch. 212, art. III, § 212-6(b) (2016) (prohibiting drone operators in the Town of Bethany Beath from flying their drone: “[d]irectly over any person who is not involved in the operation of the [drone], without such person’s consent; [and] “[o]ver property that the operator does not own, without the property owner’s consent, and subject to any restrictions that the property owner may place on such operation”). The operator was authorized, the flight was over the Common Area at the behest of the Plaintiff, and the Defendants have failed to articulate any wrongful conduct in connection therewith. 73 See D.I. 95. 74 Id. 75 D.I. 97–102.
14 addressed post-trial and the parties were to secure a trial date in or around September
2025. 76
Ultimately, I scheduled a pretrial conference for September 10, 2025, before
an October 15, 2025 trial date. 77 The Defendants failed to appear at the initial pretrial
conference despite notice and opportunity to do so. 78 In their absence, I granted the
Plaintiff’s two evidentiary requests and confirmed those rulings by letter issued the
same day as the conference. 79
I scheduled another pretrial conference for September 29, 2025, which went
forward with all parties present. 80 At the second pretrial conference, Mr. Ptomey
stipulated that his “business will not operate on [the contested] property.”81 I
instructed the parties to work together to memorialize that limiting stipulation in
writing, but they were unable to do so and Mr. Ptomey later attempted to qualify or
limit his representation. I held Mr. Ptomey to it, nonetheless, as explained in my
October 7, 2025 ruling denying Mr. Ptomey’s emergency motion for a temporary
restraining order and preliminary injunction.82 At the second pretrial conference I
76 See D.I. 113–116. 77 D.I. 118. 78 D.I. 121–122. 79 D.I. 122. 80 D.I. 131. 81 D.I. 154 (Pretrial Tr.) at 30:13–14. 82 D.I. 147.
15 also limited the Defendants’ trial presentations to account for their failure to timely
disclose exhibits and witness lists. 83
The rescheduled trial went forward as planned on October 15, 2025. 84 The
parties completed their evidence but needed additional time for closing remarks; I
directed them to submit written closing statements on October 22, 2025, which they
did timely.85 The final outstanding matter related to drone footage played at trial, but
for which the Defendants preserved an objection; the Plaintiff produced the
documentation I ordered on November 5, 2025.86 With the Defendants’ letter
response thereto, filed on November 10, 2025, I took this matter under advisement.87
II. ANALYSIS
Although initiated as a trespass action, the primary question before me is
whether the Defendants have adversely possessed the Common Area. If the answer
is “yes,” they are the rightful owners and cannot be held liable for the alleged
trespass. If “no,” they have trespassed, and the Plaintiff is entitled to judgment in its
favor and appropriate relief. For the reasons explained herein, I conclude the
83 D.I. 131. 84 D.I. 155. Before trial, Mr. Ptomey filed two purportedly emergency motions related to animals at the Unit, which I denied on October 7, 2025. D.I. 141–48. 85 D.I. 156; D.I. 158. 86 D.I. 161. 87 D.I. 162.
16 Defendants have failed to meet their burden to prove adverse possession and I award
injunctive and monetary relief for their trespass.
The Plaintiff’s remaining requests for relief are largely denied. The Plaintiff
failed to prove violations of the Status Quo Order sufficient to find contempt; the
Contempt Motion, as preserved, is therefore denied. And the Plaintiff has failed to
convince me that I should shift its attorneys’ fees to the Defendants. I do, however,
recommend that costs be shifted in the Plaintiff’s favor as the prevailing party.
I address these matters in turn.
A. The Defendants did not prove adverse possession.
The Defendants’ trespass onto the Common Area in this matter is uncontested;
the Defendants have admitted on numerous occasions that they are using the
Common Area as their own. 88 But the Defendants contend that they own the property
through adverse possession.89 To prevail on their counterclaim of adverse
88 See, e.g., D.I. 5 ¶ 12. 89 The Defendants also appear to argue that the Plaintiff consented to their actions by failing to respond to their May 20, 2019 request. See Weinsteiger Tr. 136:7–14; D.I. 156 at V.2 (“silence in the face of obvious possession is consent by acquiescence”). The Defendants rely on paragraph E(2) of the Regulations, which states ‘[t]he Board shall have the obligation to answer any written request received by it from a Unit Owner for approval of a proposed structural addition, alteration or improvement to his or her Unit within forty- five (45) days after receipt of such request, and failure to do so within the stipulated time shall constitute a consent to the proposal.” PX8(E) ¶ E(2). In doing so, however, the Defendants ignore the preceding language, which states “[n]o Unit Owner (or tenant) may make any structural additions, alterations or improvements in his or her unit or in or to the association areas, without the prior consent of the Board[.]” PX8(E) ¶ E(1) (emphasis
17 possession, the Defendants needed to “show by a preponderance of the evidence that
[they] used and possessed the [Common Area], in a manner open and notorious,
exclusive, and hostile and adverse, for a continuous statutorily-prescribed period of
years. The prescriptive period in Delaware is twenty years.”90
“Proof by a preponderance of the evidence means proof that something is
more likely than not. It means that certain evidence, when compared to the evidence
opposed to it, has the more convincing force and makes you believe that something
is more likely true than not.” 91 If this burden is met, the record holder may overcome
it with sufficient proof that the use or possession was permissive. 92
The Defendants’ evidence falls short. The Defendants have demonstrated that
they possessed the Common Area openly and notoriously. But the record shows that
the initial possession was permissive and the expanded possession, although adverse
and hostile, was not for the statutorily required period (20 years).
added). Reading these provisions together, it would not be appropriate to treat the lack of written response as consent. The Defendants’ argument fails. 90 Swann Keys Civic Ass’n v. Dippolito, 2022 WL 17999590, at *6 (Del. Ch. Dec. 30, 2022), aff’d, 340 A.3d 1133 (Del. 2025) (citations omitted). 91 St. of R.I. Off. of Gen. Treasurer on Behalf of Empls.’Ret. Sys. Of R.I. v. Paramount Glob., 331 A.3d 179, 190 (Del. Ch. 2025) (citing Agilent Techs., Inc. v. Kirkland, 2010 WL 610725, at *13 (Del. Ch. Feb. 18, 2010)) (internal quotation marks omitted). Est. of Waples v. Burton, 2020 WL 3286535, at *2 (Del. Ch. June 18, 2018) (citing In re 92
Campher, 1985 WL 21134, at *2 (Del. Ch. Mar. 20, 1985)).
18 To reach the 20-year period, the Defendants point back to Ms. Kuhn, who
used parts of the Common Area for her flower beds, shed, and fencing. Only with
her use included can they reach the 20-year mark. But the evidence at trial
demonstrated that Ms. Kuhn’s use was permissive, not adverse or hostile. And, even
if her use could be seen as adverse or hostile, the Defendants greatly expanded the
footprint thereof, cutting off the tracking period and defeating their claim now.
“A use is adverse or hostile if it is inconsistent with the rights of the owner.”93
Stated otherwise, “[h]ostile means against the claim of ownership of all others,
including the record owner.”94 “It is not necessary that one entering a property must
expressly declare his intention to take and hold the property as his own. The actual
entry upon and the use of the premises as if it were his own, to the exclusion of all
others, is sufficient.”95 The adverse possessor must prove that the use was adverse
to the rights of the record holder.96
The trial record confirmed that Ms. Kuhn had permission for her use of the
Common Area. The only evidence to the contrary was the testimony of the
Defendants. Mr. Ptomey’s testimony was unpersuasive as largely self-serving and
93 Berger v. Colonial Parking, Inc., 1993 WL 208761, at *4 (Del. Ch. June 9, 1993). 94 Bogia v. Kleiner, 2019 WL 3761647, at *10 (Del. Ch. Aug. 8, 2019). 95 Tumulty v. Schreppler, 132 A.3d 4, 27 (Del. Ch. 2015). 96 David v. Steller, 269 A.2d 203, 204 (Del. 1970).
19 admittedly lacking foundation. 97 Ms. Ptomey’s testimony was even less persuasive
because it was undermined by her deposition testimony.98 The Defendants’ evidence
failed to prove that, more likely than not, Ms. Kuhn’s use was adverse and hostile,
rather than permissive. 99 Because Ms. Kuhn’s possession of the Common Area was
permissive, the Defendants cannot tack the 22 years Ms. Kuhn was in possession of
the Common Area to the three years they were in possession when this case was
initiated; therefore, they fail to meet the 20-year requirement.
B. The Common Area should be cleared out and returned to the Plaintiff and remediated at the Defendants’ expense.
Absent adverse possession, there is no dispute that the Defendants are
trespassing.100 The only question that remains is the relief warranted to address their
trespass. The Plaintiff seeks mandatory injunctive relief and damages. For the
97 Mark Ptomey Tr. 255:16–256:24 (admitting that he never had a discussion with Ms. Kuhn about whether she had or did not have permission to utilize the Common Area). 98 See Martha Ptomey Dep. 5:23–6:3 (“Berman who owned the property let her, you know, put grass and stuff down, you know, when they were done and I don’t know who have her permission for the shed, but the shed went right in in October.”); Id. at 4:12–14 (“Nobody ever knocked on [Ms. Kuhn’s] door. Matter of fact neighbors came over to borrow—I mean to cut her herbs and go through her garden[.]”). 99 Cf. Weinsteiger Tr. 121:1–5 (stating that it was her “understanding that Ms. Kuhn had permission to maintain the garden and her shed on [the] property.”); Mackes Tr. 23:21–24 (explaining that members of the community had “open access” to help themselves to herbs and plants in the garden.). 100 The Defendants asserted the affirmative defenses of laches and equitable estoppel in their answer and briefly mentioned them in their closing statement. See D.I. 5; D.I. 156. But the Defendants failed to meet their burden of proof by failing to produce any evidence during trial supporting either of their defenses.
20 former, it seeks an injunction requiring the Defendants to remove any property on,
or improvements to, the Common Area and a prohibition against their use or
possession thereof going forward. 101 For the latter, it seeks damages for any costs it
incurs remediating the Common Area to remove the unauthorized alterations thereto.
I grant both forms of relief.
For its request for injunctive relief, the Plaintiff needed to prove “(1) actual
success on the merits; (2) irreparable harm; and (3) the harm resulting from failure
to issue an injunction outweighs the harm befalling the opposing party if the
injunction is issued.”102 On the damages side, this Court has looked to and adopted
the Restatement (Second) of Torts under which “the reasonable cost of replacing the
land in its original position is ordinarily allowable as the measure of recovery.” 103
101 The Plaintiff initially sought further injunctive relief barring the Defendants from operating a business at the Unit. D.I. 126. This request was reiterated in the Plaintiff’s closing statement. D.I. 158. As noted, however, this issue was mooted by Mr. Ptomey’s binding representation at the second pretrial conference. D.I. 131. I confirm herein Mr. Ptomey’s binding representation that his rescue business will no longer operate at the Unit, subject to the limited exceptions agreed to by the parties at the pretrial conference. See D.I. 147. 102 ID Biomed. Corp. v. TM Techs., Inc., 1995 WL 130743, at *15 (Del. Ch. Mar. 16, 1995) (citing Draper Commc’ns, Inc. v. Del. Valley Broads., L.P., 505 A.2d 1285, 1288 (Del. Ch. 1985)). 103 Gordon v. Nat’l R.R. Passenger Corp., 1997 WL 298320, at *9 (Del. Ch. Mar. 19, 1997) (quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 929 cmt. b (1979)).
21 Here, the Plaintiff met its burden of proof on both injunctive relief and
damages. The Defendants’ continuing trespass onto the Common Area amounts to
irreparable harm. The Defendants are exclusively possessing the Plaintiff’s private
land without their permission and excluding other members of the community from
free and uninterrupted use of the Common Area; injunctive relief to have the
Defendants’ items removed and the Common Area returned to the Plaintiff is
warranted.
The Plaintiff also suffered damages directly caused by the Defendants’
trespass. Here, the Plaintiff is seeking damages sufficient to compensate it for
restoring the land to its natural condition. The amount is presently unknown, because
of the Plaintiff’s exclusive and hostile possession. The Common Area should be
returned to the Plaintiff, which can remediate the unauthorized modifications thereto
and assess the reasonable cost thereof to the Defendants.
C. The Plaintiff has not demonstrated that the Defendants should be sanctioned for violating the Status Quo Order.
Through the Contempt Motion, which was held for post-trial consideration,
the Plaintiff further argues that the Defendants violated the Status Quo Order and
should be sanctioned accordingly.
22 To prove contempt, the Plaintiff needed to demonstrate that the Defendants
were “bound by an order, ha[d] notice of it, and nevertheless violate[d] it.”104 The
violation “must not be a mere technical one, but must constitute a failure to obey the
Court in a meaningful way.”105 The Plaintiff, as “party petitioning for a finding of
contempt[, bore] the burden to show contempt by clear and convincing evidence.”106
The Plaintiff failed to meet this burden. The Plaintiff contends that the
Defendants continued to alter the Common Area despite my prohibition in the Status
Quo Order. But the Plaintiff failed to present convincing evidence that material
alterations were made after I issued the Status Quo Order; the changes and timeline
are not sufficiently definite for me to conclude a knowing, intentional violation by
the required clear and convincing evidence.
D. Prevailing party costs should be shifted; attorneys’ fees should be borne by each side.
Finally, the Plaintiff asks that its attorneys’ fees and costs incurred in this
action be shifted to the Defendants under 10 Del. C. § 348(e). Section 348 sets up
104 Aveta Inc. v. Bengoa, 986 A.2d 1166, 1181 (Del. Ch. 2009). 105 Dickerson v. Castle, 1991 WL 208467, at *3 (Del. Ch. Oct. 15, 1991). 106 Trascent Mgmt. Consulting, LLC v. Bouri, 2018 WL 6338996, at *1 (Del. Ch. Dec. 4, 2018). Clear and convincing evidence “is a higher evidentiary standard than a preponderance of the evidence, but is a lesser standard of proof beyond a reasonable doubt.” Amstel Assocs., L.L.C. v. Brinsfield-Cavall Assocs., 2002 WL 1009457, at *5 n.12 (May 9, 2002). That standard requires evidence that would lead a trier of fact to “an abiding conviction that the truth of the [factual] contention is ‘highly probable.’” In re Martin, 105 A.3d 967, 975 (Del. 2014).
23 an expedited process for certain homeowners’ association disputes. If that process is
followed, under Section 348(e), “[t]he nonprevailing party at trial held pursuant to
the provisions of this section must pay the prevailing party’s attorney fees and court
costs, unless the court finds that enforcing this subsection would result in an unfair,
unreasonable, or harsh outcome.”107 Section 348(e) gives this Court “the discretion
to deny fee shifting in whole, a discretion that includes the lesser power to conclude
that whole hog fee shifting would be unfair, unreasonable, or harsh in the
circumstances.”108
For an action to be treated as expedited under Section 348, the Plaintiff needed
to “attach to the complaint, a certification that the case is eligible to proceed under
10 Del. C. § 348[,]” as required in Court of Chancery Rule 174(c)(2). The Plaintiff
failed to do so. And, as the procedural posture of this case reflects, this case
proceeded in anything but expedited fashion. Section 348 fee shifting is unavailable,
and the Plaintiff has failed to articulate any other exception to the American Rule.109
107 10 Del. C. § 348(e). 108 Swann Keys Ass’n v. Shamp, 2008 WL 4698478, at *1 (Del. Ch. Oct. 10, 2008). 109 See Johnston v. Arbitrium (Cayman Islands) Handels AG, 720 A.2d 542, 545 (Del. 1998) (“Under the American Rule, absent express statutory language to the contrary, each party is normally obliged to pay only his or her own attorneys’ fees, whatever the outcome of the litigation.”). To the extent the Plaintiff is seeking bad faith fee shifting, it has failed to meet the heavy burden required. See Donnelly v. Keryx Biopharmaceuticals, Inc., 2019 WL 5446015, at *6 (Del. Ch. Oct. 24, 2019) (“The Court typically will not find a litigant acted in bad faith for purposes of shifting attorneys’ fees unless the litigant’s conduct rose to the level of ‘glaring egregiousness.’”).
24 The Plaintiff is, however, entitled to costs under Court of Chancery Rule
54(d), where “costs shall be allowed as of course to the prevailing party unless the
Court otherwise directs.”110 This Court has defined a prevailing party as “the party
who successfully prevails on the merits of the main issue or on most of her
claims.”111 Here, the Plaintiff is the prevailing party, and costs should be shifted in
its favor.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated herein, I find that the Defendants did not acquire title
to the Common Area through adverse possession. I therefore find in favor of the
Plaintiff on its trespass claim. An injunction should be issued requiring the
Defendants to remove any property from the Common Area and barring them from
continued trespass. Once possession is returned, the Plaintiff’s remediation costs and
expenses, if any, should be assessed against the Defendants as appropriate remedies
for their unauthorized alterations. Each party should bear their own legal fees and
110 At trial, Mr. Ptomey introduced and highlighted documentation showing attorneys’ fees and expenses purportedly charged to the Unit by Stonebridge. See DX05. With this ruling, I expect the parties to meet and confer to address what charges are appropriately included within the limited cost shifting granted herein; if they cannot, they may seek relief through motion practice. To avoid any unnecessary delay, any request for relief must be filed within 30 days of this post-trial ruling becoming an order of the Court. 111 Adams v. Calvarese Farms Maint. Corp., 2011 WL 383862, at *3 (Del. Ch. Jan. 13, 2011) (emphasis in original).
25 expenses incurred in this action, but costs should be shifted to the Plaintiff as the
prevailing party.
This is my final report, and exceptions may be filed under Court of Chancery
Rule 144.
Respectfully submitted,
/s/ Selena E. Molina
Senior Magistrate in Chancery