Unit Owners Ass'n of 2337 Champlain St. Condo. v. 2337 Champlain St., LLC

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 9, 2024
Docket21-CV-0798
StatusPublished

This text of Unit Owners Ass'n of 2337 Champlain St. Condo. v. 2337 Champlain St., LLC (Unit Owners Ass'n of 2337 Champlain St. Condo. v. 2337 Champlain St., LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Unit Owners Ass'n of 2337 Champlain St. Condo. v. 2337 Champlain St., LLC, (D.C. 2024).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound volumes go to press.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 21-CV-0798

UNIT OWNERS ASSOCIATION OF 2337 CHAMPLAIN STREET CONDOMINIUM, DONALD P. MULLIKIN, PEDRO COLI, SHARON CAO, LUIS E. LUY, and VIANKA LUY, APPELLANTS,

V.

2337 CHAMPLAIN STREET, LLC, CAPITAL CITY REAL ESTATE, LLC, and UNIT OWNERS ASSOCIATION OF THE ERIE CONDOMINIUM, APPELLEES.

Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (2018-CA-006063-B)

(Hon. Fern Flanagan Saddler, Trial Judge)

(Argued December 14, 2022 Decided May 9, 2024)

Louise T. Gitcheva, with whom Mariam W. Tadros was on the brief, for appellants.

Russell S. Drazin, with whom Jason A. Pardo was on the brief, for appellees 2337 Champlain Street, LLC, and Capital City Real Estate, LLC.

Thomas C. Mugavero, with whom Rafiq R. Gharbi was on the brief, for appellee Unit Owners Association of the Erie Condominium.

Before BECKWITH and EASTERLY, Associate Judges, and GLICKMAN, * Senior Judge.

* Judge Glickman was an Associate Judge of the court at the time of argument. He began his service as a Senior Judge on December 21, 2022. 2

GLICKMAN, Senior Judge: This appeal is from the Superior Court’s grant of

summary judgment in a lawsuit brought by a condominium unit owners association

and certain of its members against the developers of the condominium and the unit

owners association of a neighboring condominium building. The plaintiffs charged

that the developers violated statutory disclosure requirements and committed fraud

by failing to inform them, when they purchased their units, of amendments to the

condominium bylaws that imposed restrictions on them for the benefit of the

neighbors; and they sought a declaratory judgment that the bylaw amendments were

void as a matter of law. The Superior Court awarded summary judgment to the

defendants. We affirm.

I.

A. Factual Background

In 2011, an entity named FCP Champlain, LLC (“FCP”) purchased land in

Northwest Washington, D.C., to develop the condominium building that is now

known by its street address as the 2337 Champlain Street Condominium (hereinafter

referred to as the Champlain Condominium or “the Champlain”).1 FCP applied to

the District of Columbia Board of Zoning Adjustment (“BZA”) for a special

1 The building was previously called the “Morgan Condominium.” 3

exception allowing the future building to exceed as-of-right height limitations and a

variance to increase its permitted floor area ratio. The BZA granted the application

on July 26, 2012, but the unit owners association of the building adjacent to the

property, known as the Erie Condominium, appealed the BZA’s order. This appeal

was settled by agreement of the parties on January 22, 2013. As part of the

settlement, FCP agreed to protect the view from the Erie Condominium by requiring

future residents of the Champlain to maintain a green screen of plants on its roof and

precluding them from placing certain items on the rooftop terraces and from adding

structures on the roof above a certain height. Thereafter, in November 2013, FCP

sold the Champlain to appellee 2337 Champlain Street, LLC (“2337 LLC”). The

managing member of 2337 LLC is appellee Capital City Real Estate, LLC

(“CCRE”). 2337 LLC and CCRE undertook to develop the Champlain

Condominium, and we refer to them collectively in this opinion as the “Developers.”

The rooftop restrictions to which the parties agreed in the 2013 settlement

agreement were incorporated in the bylaws for the Champlain Condominium that

the Developers adopted on January 31, 2015, and recorded on May 26, 2016, prior

to the sale of any condominium units. The relevant provisions of those bylaws stated

the following:

7.7.1 . . . (4) The [Champlain Unit Owners’] Association shall maintain the green screen of planted material on the 4

north façade of the mechanical penthouse as part of its duties to maintain common areas. This provision is for the benefit of Erie Condominium Association located at 2351 Champlain Street. N.W., Washington, D.C. [sic2] without its express written consent. . . .

9.18 Provisions to Benefit Erie Condominium Association located at 2351 Champlain Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. (“Erie Association”). The following restrictions on the use of the Condominium property are for the benefit of the Erie Association and may not be modified in any manner without the express written consent of the Erie Association:

(a) Neither the Association nor any Unit Owner shall place a partition, screen or other improvements within the roof terrace area used exclusively by the four Unit Owners with appurtenant roof terraces fronting on Champlain Street designated at RC3, RC4, RC5, and RC6;

(b) Neither the Association nor any Unit Owner shall undertake any alteration or addition to the mechanical penthouses, rooftop structures, railing and equipment on top of the Condominium that would be situated closer than twenty (20) feet from the northern lot line of the property; and

(c) Neither the Association nor any Unit Owner shall construct or install railings surrounding the roof terrace areas that exceed three (3) feet in height, or the minimum height required by any governing building code, whichever is greater.

2 It appears that words such as “and may not be modified in any manner” were omitted inadvertently before the word “without” in § 7.7.1(4), as shown by the inclusion of those words in § 9.18. 5

Thus, the bylaws clearly provided that the future Champlain Unit Owners and their

Association would be prohibited from altering these provisions without the consent

of the Unit Owners Association of the Erie Condominium (hereinafter the “Erie

Condominium Association” or “Erie”).

CCRE proceeded to develop the Champlain into a forty-unit residential

condominium building with six rooftop cabanas. Disputes then arose between the

Developers and Erie as to whether the development was complying with the

restrictions of the settlement agreement, and in particular whether the Developers

improperly increased the height of the penthouse structures and rooftop cabanas

beyond what the BZA had approved. In October and November 2015, Erie filed an

appeal with the BZA challenging the issuance of building permits to the Developers,

and a lawsuit in Superior Court alleging that the Developers were breaching the

settlement agreement.

The BZA dismissed Erie’s appeal as untimely, but a second settlement

agreement was reached to resolve the claims brought in Superior Court. This second

settlement agreement was entered into by 2337 LLC, CCRE, the Erie Condominium

Association, and several Erie unit owners on June 17, 2016, and it superseded the

earlier settlement agreement. In exchange for the dismissal of the Erie lawsuit with

prejudice and Erie’s agreement to allow the Developers to repaint the exterior south 6

wall of the Erie Condominium building (to make it more attractive to future residents

of the Champlain), the Developers agreed not to increase the height of the Champlain

and to additional restrictions on the rooftop’s structures, improvements, and use so

as not to “further obstruct views from Erie Condominium.” These restrictions

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