Terence Cooper & Vanessa Cooper v. English Turn Property Owners Association, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 25, 2023
Docket2022-CA-0748
StatusPublished

This text of Terence Cooper & Vanessa Cooper v. English Turn Property Owners Association, Inc. (Terence Cooper & Vanessa Cooper v. English Turn Property Owners Association, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terence Cooper & Vanessa Cooper v. English Turn Property Owners Association, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

TERENCE COOPER & * NO. 2022-CA-0748 VANESSA COOPER * VERSUS COURT OF APPEAL * ENGLISH TURN PROPERTY FOURTH CIRCUIT OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC. * STATE OF LOUISIANA *******

APPEAL FROM CIVIL DISTRICT COURT, ORLEANS PARISH NO. 2021-09712, DIVISION “N-8” Honorable Ethel Simms Julien, Judge ****** Chief Judge Terri F. Love ****** (Court composed of Chief Judge Terri F. Love, Judge Paula A. Brown, Judge Dale N. Atkins)

Kyle Salvador Sclafani Ryan Michael Scafidel THE LAW OFFICE OF KYLE S. SCLAFANI 4130 Canal Street, Suite A New Orleans, LA 70119

Jack Edward Morris JACK E. MORRIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, LLC 4051 Veterans Memorial Boulevard Suite 208 Metairie, LA 70002

COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFFS/APPELLANTS

Kim M. Boyle Allen C. Miller, Sr. James H. Gilbert PHELPS DUNBAR LLP 365 Canal Street Suite 2000 New Orleans, LA 70130-6534

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE

AFFIRMED April 25, 2023 TFL This matter involves a dispute between Terrence and Vanessa Cooper (“the PAB Coopers”), purchasers of property (“Lot 86”) within the English Turn Subdivision DNA (“the Subdivision”), and the English Turn Property Owners Association

(“ETPOA”). The dispute centers on whether the Coopers have a right of passage

to access their property without being subject to the fees assessed on the

Subdivision’s property owners under the terms of the Subdivision’s Declarations

of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (“DCCR”).

The Coopers retained contractors to begin construction work on a house for

Lot 86. The ETPOA, which privately maintains and owns the Subdivision’s

Common Areas, denied the contractors’ entry to the Subdivision and issued a stop

work order pending the Coopers’ ratification of the DCCR. The Coopers refused to

sign the DCCR. Both parties filed summary judgment motions regarding the

Coopers’ right of passage.

On appeal, the Coopers maintain that the trial court erred in denying their

motion for partial summary judgment seeking declaratory judgment and mandatory

1 injunction demanding access to Lot 86 without subjecting their property to the

DCCR payments terms. Conversely, they contend that the trial court also erred in

granting the ETPOA’s motion for summary judgment which denied the Coopers’

request for unrestricted access to the Subdivision without paying the DCCR

assessments and dismissed the Coopers’ claims with prejudice.1

We find no material issues of fact or law exist that entitle the Coopers to an

unrestricted right of passage to their property without submitting to the DCCR

assessment fees. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment granting the

ETPOA’s motion for summary judgment and denying the Coopers’ motion for

partial summary judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The English Turn Joint Venture LLC, which later changed its name to

English Turn Limited Partnership (“the Partnership”), created the Subdivision

through the filing of the DCCR on May 6, 1988. At the time the DCCR was

recorded, the Partnership had retained the right to subject additional properties to

the terms of the DCCR at its discretion. The Partnership also held certain

easements to access the properties across the Subdivision’s Common Areas.

The Partnership sold some of the remaining lots within the Subdivision to

English Turn Lots, L.L.C. (“English Turn Lots”) in 2013. Some of the lots

obtained by English Turn Lots were not subject to the DCCR and its amendments.

As part of the sale, English Turn Lots acquired from the Partnership “[a]ll rights

1 The ETPOA had permitted the Coopers to access Lot 86; however, denied access to the

Coopers’ guests and invitees.

2 and obligations of the Sellers as the ‘Declarant’ and as an ‘Owner’ under that

certain Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions for English Turn

Subdivision dated May 6, 1988 . . . as amended.” These rights included the

acquisition of certain easements afforded by the DCCR in Section 3.11, which

provided, in part, the following:

There is hereby reserved in Declarant, and its successors, assigns, and successors-in-title to the Additional Property (if said rights are granted by Declarant to such successors, assigns, and successors-in-title), for the benefit of and as an appurtenance to the Additional Property and as a burden upon the Property, perpetual, non-exclusive rights and easements for (i) pedestrian and vehicular ingress, egress, and parking, across, within, and on all roads, sidewalks, trails and parking facilities, from time to time located within the Common Areas . . . .

The Subdivision’s Common Areas, as defined in the DCCR, include

privately maintained community parks, recreational facilities, and streets. Access

to all lots within the Subdivision—through manned security guard gates— requires

traversal of the Common Areas. The ETPOA funds the amenities for the Common

Areas through fees assessed by the DCCR on the Subdivision’s property owners.

The Coopers purchased Lot 86 from English Turn Lots via Act of Cash sale

on March 8, 2021. The transaction did not grant the Coopers English Turn Lot’s

easement rights, such as the right to traverse the Common Areas, as outlined in

Section 3.11 of the DCCR. At the time of the sale, Lot 86 was one of the

properties not subject to the terms of the DCCR.

In October 2021, the Coopers retained contractors to begin improvements on

Lot 86 to build a house. After the ETPOA learned of these improvements, the

3 ETPOA prevented the Coopers’ contractors from entering the Subdivision. The

ETPOA issued a “Stop Work Order” which stated, in pertinent part, that “Property

is not annexed into the community. Owner must sign annexation paperwork and

return to the POA office.” The “annexation paperwork” included the Coopers’

ratification of the DCCR. The Coopers declined to ratify the DCCR.

The Coopers filed a Petition for Declaratory Judgment, Mandatory

Injunction and Damages (“the Petition”) against the ETPOA. The Petition sought

a declaratory judgment finding that Lot 86 was not subject to the DCCR and a

mandatory injunction for the ETPOA to cease and desist from interfering with the

Coopers’ access to their property and disturbing the Coopers’ peaceful possession.

The Petition also sought damages caused by the ETPOA’s alleged bad faith

disturbance of the Coopers’ peaceful possession and their right to access Lot 86.

The ETPOA’s answer and affirmative defenses to the Coopers’ Petition

argued, in part, that the Coopers had no right to traverse the Common Areas and

claim the benefits of the Subdivision without paying the dues and assessments

provided for in the DCCR.

Thereafter, the Coopers filed a motion for partial summary judgment

reiterating its request for a declaratory judgment that Lot 86 was not subject to the

DCCR and a mandatory injunction ordering the ETPOA to cease and desist from

interfering with the peaceful possession of their property. In response, the ETPOA

filed its counter motion for summary judgment. The ETPOA asserted that no

provision of the DCCR or the Coopers’ Act of Sale granted the Coopers an

4 unconditional right to traverse the Subdivision and that the Coopers had no claim

for damages because their property rights had not been disturbed. The ETPOA

also acknowledged that Lot 86 had not been annexed to the Subdivision pursuant

to the terms of the DCCR at the time of the Coopers’ purchase. Consequently, the

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Bluebook (online)
Terence Cooper & Vanessa Cooper v. English Turn Property Owners Association, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terence-cooper-vanessa-cooper-v-english-turn-property-owners-lactapp-2023.