Tuneen Chisolm v. Danforth, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 6, 2019
DocketA19A1438
StatusPublished

This text of Tuneen Chisolm v. Danforth, LLC (Tuneen Chisolm v. Danforth, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tuneen Chisolm v. Danforth, LLC, (Ga. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION MILLER, P. J., RICKMAN and REESE, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules

October 29, 2019

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A19A1438. CHISOLM v. DANFORTH, LLC.

REESE, Judge.

Tuneen Chisolm (the “Appellant”) and two other property owners (collectively,

the “Owners”) filed suit against Danforth, LLC (the “Appellee”) and the Owners’

homeowners’ associations, challenging, inter alia, the validity of assessments levied

against them. In this appeal, the Appellant seeks review of an order of the Superior

Court of Fulton County, reallocating and directing reimbursement of mediation fees.

The Appellant also seeks review of a “final” order entered the same day, which

granted the Appellee’s motion for summary judgment and declaratory judgment and

denied the Owners’ motion for partial summary judgment. For the reasons set forth

infra, we reverse the “final” order, vacate the mediation costs order, and remand the

case for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. Viewed in the light most favorable to the non-movants in the parties’ respective

motions for summary judgment,1 the record shows the following facts.2 The Owners

in this case own lots within the Tapestry subdivision, situated within the master

planned community of Le Jardin. In their original complaint, the Owners named as

defendants the following three entities: (i) Tapestry at Le Jardin Owners Association,

1 See Crabapple Lake Parc Community Assn. v. Circeo, 325 Ga. App. 101 (751 SE2d 866) (2013). 2 As an initial matter, we note that, other than a one-paragraph “Second Amendment to Answer and Affirmative Defenses[,]” filed in January 2017, the Appellee’s answer is not part of the record on appeal. And, although there had been a prior appeal to this court involving the same cause of action, the Appellee failed either to properly request that this Court retain the record in that appeal or to properly object to the record and obtain a ruling from the trial court before transmittal of the record in this appeal. See Case No. A16A0309. In an unreported decision issued in that case on July 12, 2016, we vacated the trial court’s dismissal of the Owner’s complaint and remanded the case for further proceedings. Under Court of Appeals Rule 42 (a), “[this] Court will maintain the record of an appeal for one year after the remittitur date unless a party asks the Court in writing to maintain the record for an additional six months, and explain why. The requesting party must send an additional request fourteen days before the expiration of each six-month period to avoid the record being destroyed. The Court will not provide any notice that the record is being destroyed other than that contained in the notice of remittitur.” Further “[i]f the parties anticipate that the case will return to the Court . . . , the parties must notify the Clerk, in writing, to hold the record in accordance with the requirements in Rule 42 (a).” Court of Appeals Rule 42 (b). See also Court of Appeals Rules 20 (waiver by appellee); 41 (c) (motions to supplement the record).

2 Inc.,3 as the homeowners’ association pursuant to a declaration of covenants that

burdened the individual lots (including the Owners’) and common property located

within Tapestry; (ii) Le Jardin Community Association, Inc. (“Le Jardin CAI”), as the

homeowners’ association pursuant to a declaration of covenants that burdened the

individual lots (including the Owners’) and common property located within the

master planned community of Le Jardin; and (iii) the Appellee, as the purported

declarant as defined within both declarations of covenants.

The Owners alleged that the Appellee had not validly obtained declarant rights,

yet had claimed the unilateral right to appoint the directors of the homeowners’

associations; and that, under the Appellee’s direction and control, the homeowners’

associations had levied assessments and recorded the liens. The Owners claimed,

however, that they did not owe the assessments because: the right to levy assessments

was vested in the associations’ boards of directors; the boards were never duly elected

or were otherwise illegally constituted; and in the absence of properly constituted

boards, the associations lacked authority to impose the assessments and record the

liens at issue.

3 The trial court dismissed Tapestry at Le Jardin Owners Association, Inc., in December 2016, upon consideration of a consent motion to dismiss.

3 The Appellee acquired the property that is the subject of this lawsuit in the

early 2000s. Said property is designated as Land Lots 10, 11, 15, 16, 30, and 31 of the

Ninth District C, Fulton County, Georgia (hereinafter, the “Property”). The Property

is in the “Le Jardin” subdivision and is subject to the Le Jardin subdivision

homeowners’ association’s Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions

(“Le Jardin Declarations”), which burden the entire Property. Additional

neighborhood Declarations, such as that of the Tapestry at Le Jardin (“Tapestry

Declarations”), also burden the Owners’ lots. These Declarations were recorded on

April 13, 2006, and named Le Jardin, LLC, as the “Declarant” under both

Declarations.

Section 1.16 of the Declarations define “Declarant” as:

Le Jardin, LLC, a Georgia limited liability company, or any successor, successor-in-title, or assign who holds or takes title to any portion of the [Property] for the purpose of development and/or sale and who is designated as the Declarant in a recorded instrument executed by the immediately preceding Declarant; provided, however, there shall be only one (1) Person entitled to exercise the rights and powers of the “Declarant” hereunder at any time.

4 Le Jardin, LLC, was the owner and developer of the subdivision and, under

Section 3.2 of the Declarations, was the sole Class B Member. Under that provision,

the Declarant could:

appoint the members of the Board of Directors until the first to occur of the following: (i) when 100% of the total number of Lots permitted by the Master Plan for the [Property] have certificates of occupancy issued thereon and have been conveyed to Persons other than Declarant or Builders; (ii) December 31, 2020; or (iii) when, in its discretion, the Class “B” Member so determines and voluntarily relinquishes such right. At such time, the Class “B” Membership shall terminate, and the Declarant shall be a Class “A” Member[.4]

Between 2005 and 2007, Le Jardin, LLC, took out a number of loans with

Fairfield Financial Services (“Fairfield”). The loans were secured by the Property, as

described in four recorded Deeds to Secure Debt (“security deeds”).

In August 2008, before the development was completed, Le Jardin, LLC, filed

a voluntary Chapter 11 petition for bankruptcy relief. With permission of the

4 According to Section 3.2 (b), “[t]he sole Class ‘B’ Members shall be the Declarant. . . . The Class ‘B’ Member may appoint the members of the Board of Directors until [the first of three designated events occurs]. At such time, the Class ‘B’ membership shall terminate, and the Declarant shall be a Class ‘A’ Member[.]” Section 3.2 (a) provides in part that “Class ‘A’ Member[s] shall have one (1) equal vote for each Lot in which he or she holds the interest required for membership under Section 3.1[.]”

5 bankruptcy court, Fairfield foreclosed on the Property in May 2009. Three separate

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