Vista Grande Homeowners Association, Inc. v. Dennis Brand and Kimberly Harper

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 2023
Docket03-22-00321-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Vista Grande Homeowners Association, Inc. v. Dennis Brand and Kimberly Harper (Vista Grande Homeowners Association, Inc. v. Dennis Brand and Kimberly Harper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vista Grande Homeowners Association, Inc. v. Dennis Brand and Kimberly Harper, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-22-00321-CV

Vista Grande Homeowners Association, Inc., Appellant

v.

Dennis Brand and Kimberly Harper, Appellees

FROM THE 201ST DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-GN-20-003601, THE HONORABLE MADELEINE CONNOR, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Vista Grande Homeowners Association, Inc. (the Association) appeals from the

district court’s order dismissing its breach of contract claim against Dennis Brand and Kimberly

Harper (collectively, the Owners) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We will affirm.

BACKGROUND

This dispute involves the construction of a home on Lot 63 in Vista Grande

Section Two (Section Two), a subdivision in the Hudson Bend community in Travis County.

Section Two is composed of four lots—Lot 43, Lot 44, Lot 62, and Lot 63. Section Two is in the

center of and surrounded by another subdivision, Vista Grande Section One (Section One). The

plat for Section One was filed August 2, 1973, and recorded at Plat Book 64, Page 26 of the

Travis County Plat Records. The plat for Section Two was filed October 8, 1973, and recorded

at Plat Book 66, Page 87 of the Travis County Plat Records. Section One and Section Two each have separate declarations imposing restrictive covenants on the lots within each section.

The original Section One declaration authorized the creation of a homeowners’ association

(the Association) and provided for Section One lot owners’ mandatory membership in the

Association. The original declaration for Section One was signed August 30, 1973, but not

recorded until March 2000. Thereafter, the Section One declaration was amended by a majority

of the Section One lot owners in January 2003, but the amended declaration that was recorded

was signed by only the officers of the homeowners’ association rather than by a majority of

the then owners of the lots in Section One as required to comply with the provisions of the

original declaration. In February 2012, corrective action was taken, and the majority of the

Section One lot owners filed a “First Amended and Restated Restrictive Covenants of Vista

Grande Subdivision” for Section One (the Section One Amended Declaration).

The original declaration for Section Two (the Section Two Declaration) was

signed and recorded on May 10, 1977, and was not subsequently amended. The Section Two

Declaration does not provide for any homeowners’ association, nor does it impose on Section

Two lot owners mandatory membership in any homeowners’ association.

The Owners purchased Lot 63 in Section Two (the Property) in November 2019.

Desiring to build a home on the Property, the Owners submitted a project approval plan to

the Association seeking architectural approval from the Association’s Architectural Control

Committee (ACC). The ACC denied the application citing concerns that the proposed residence

could obstruct an adjoining lot owner’s view of the lake. After a failed attempt to secure the

ACC’s approval by citing certain provisions of the Section One Amended Declaration, the

Owners’ legal counsel sent the Association a letter stating:

2 After further review of the applicable plats and restrictive covenants for the Property, we have discovered that neither you, the Architectural Control Committee (the “ACC”), nor the Vista Grande Homeowners Association, Inc. (the “HOA”) have any authority over the Property or over our clients. Specifically, the First Amended and Restated Restrictive Covenants of Vista Grande Subdivision, filed as Instrument#2012044311 in the Travis County Clerk’s Real Property Records (the “Declaration”) encumbers only the original Vista Grande subdivision located at Plat Book 64, Page 26 of the Plat Records of Travis County, Texas. Our clients’ Property is located solely within Vista Grande Section Two, located at Plat Book 66, Page 87 of the Plat Records of Travis County, Texas. Nowhere in the Declaration is Plat Book 66, Page 87 referenced, incorporated or otherwise dedicated.

Having expressed their view that the Property was not subject to the Section One building

restrictions and that they did not need approval from the Section One ACC, the Owners

proceeded to begin construction of a house on the Property in the spring of 2020. On July 9,

2020, the Association sent the Owners copies of recorded instruments executed by the owners of

Lot 43, Lot 44, and land constituting .0462 acres out of Lot 62.1 These documents, which were

each titled “Acknowledgement,” were executed and recorded in early July 2020. Each of the

Acknowledgments recites:

I understand [my lot] to be included in the real property that is described in and subject to the Amended and Restated Covenants of Vista Grande Homeowners Association, filed as Document 200411662 and 2012044311 in the real property records of Travis County, Texas (the “Amended and Restated Covenants”) and part of the “Association” because:

(a) [my lot] has always been subject to assessment by the Association;

(b) architectural review is conducted by the Association;

(c) [my lot] is afforded notice and voting rights with regard to Association matters; and

1 This portion of Lot 62, which constitutes approximately 7% of the total square footage of Lot 62, is adjacent to Lot 44 and was conveyed to the owner of Lot 44 by the then-owner of Lot 62.

3 (d) the “Section Two” property was included in the vote on the Amended Declaration (as evidenced by the Lot 44 acknowledgement document included in Doc. No. 2012044311).

[My lot] is also subject to the Section Two covenants found at Volume 5774, Pages 2216-2219 in the real property records of Travis County, Texas (the “Section Two Covenants”). The Section Two Covenants state that “at any time the then record owners of a majority of the lots shall have the power through a duly recorded written instrument to change the membership of the [ACC]” and further provides the covenant can be changed by “an instrument signed by the majority of the then owners of the lots has been recorded, agreeing to change the covenants in whole or in part.” Whether or not the Section Two Covenants were supplemented/amended by the Amended and Restated Covenants, I hereby consent to, ratify, and approve, the adoption of the Amended and Restated Covenants as a supplement to the Section Two Covenants, to include any change to the ACC to have the ACC for the Vista Grande Homeowners Association serve as the ACC under the Section Two Covenants. The covenants of Section Two that contain limitations and restrictions on development and construction that are more stringent than those in the Amended and Restated Covenants shall continue to apply to all Section Two property and property subject to the Section Two Covenants, including the garage restriction in Section B-1.

The Association asserted that these Acknowledgements demonstrated that the Property, even

though located in Section Two, was subject to the Section One Amended Declaration because

lots in Section Two had paid assessments levied by the Association and had participated in

votes regarding Association matters. The Association also claimed that the Acknowledgements

constituted an agreement by the majority of the Section Two lot owners to (1) amend the

Section Two Declaration by supplementing it with the Section One Amended Declaration and

(2) provide that the Section One ACC would serve as the architectural control committee for

Section Two.

On July 14, 2020, the Association filed suit against the Owners asserting a cause

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