Von Seggern v. 310 West 49th Street, Inc.

631 S.W.2d 877, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 2849
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 23, 1982
DocketWD 32379
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 631 S.W.2d 877 (Von Seggern v. 310 West 49th Street, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Von Seggern v. 310 West 49th Street, Inc., 631 S.W.2d 877, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 2849 (Mo. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

CLARK, Presiding Judge.

By petition for declaratory judgment, plaintiffs sought determination of their obligation to pay the cost of interior improvements to a cooperative apartment building which plaintiffs occupy under perpetual use and equity ownership contracts. Defendant, the corporate owner of the structure, counterclaimed to enforce payment of the disputed charges and penalties. The trial court held plaintiffs not liable for payment of the charges as assessed, enjoined defendant from pursuing collection and awarded plaintiffs their attorney fees and costs. Defendant appeals.

Plaintiffs are first floor residents in a sixteen-story apartment building known as the Wornall Plaza. In all, the building contains eighty-nine apartments, a garage, elevators, laundry facilities, an apartment for a maintenance employee, a lobby, hallways and other facilities for the use of the occupants. Ownership of the real estate is in defendant, a non-stock, not-for-profit Delaware corporation. Each apartment occupant has acquired a “Use and Equity Contract” which entitles the owner to the exclusive use of the apartment identified in the contract, the non-exclusive use of the common areas and facilities and a corresponding obligation to contribute to the ongoing expense of operating and maintaining the building. The defendant corporation acts through a board of directors elected by the use contract owners.

The dispute which culminated in this suit commenced when the board of directors decided the lobby and first floor corridors in the building should be redecorated. None of the area in question is reserved for exclusive use by plaintiffs, but certain portions of the corridors are of practical use only to plaintiffs and their guests because those corridors lead only to plaintiffs’ apartments. While the same situation prevails on other floors where corridors serve as a means of ingress to and egress from the apartments on the floor, the first floor is unique because some corridor areas there serve the *880 entrance to the building and provide access to other facilities such as the laundry room and the mail room.

In view of the particular circumstances on the first floor, defendant’s directors concluded that redecorating costs should be apportioned between the corridor areas serving plaintiffs’ apartments and the remaining space used by all building residents. As to the former, the full cost was charged against plaintiffs and constitutes the crux of the dispute here. The remaining cost was divided among all the apartments in the building, including those of plaintiffs, and was billed as part of the overall building operation and maintenance expense.

The sole contractual obligation upon apartment residents for contribution to building expenses is contained in paragraph 3 of the use and equity contract, identical in language as to all apartments in the building. Summarized, the agreement contemplates that the directors of defendant corporation shall determine from time to time the amounts required for the continued ownership, maintenance and operation of the project, apportion the costs among all of the contract owners based on a formula taking into account the size and location of the apartments in the building, and assess each owner a monthly payment to defray the expenses. Special assessments are also authorized but are to be levied and paid in the same manner as regular monthly assessments. The expenses to be defrayed by assessments against contract holders are described in the following language:

“ * * * capital items, betterments, alterations, replacements, principal and interest payments on any deed of trust and any outstanding debenture indebtedness, and for taxes, assessments, insurance, repairs, gas, water, electricity, legal and accounting fees, management fees, salaries, wages,- and other compensation, other operating items and operating expenses, interest other than on mortgage notes and debentures, corporate expenses, fees, and taxes and other expenditures.”

The use ownership contract makes no provision for assessment of expenses chargeable against any particular owners or apartments or any group of owners despite the limited benefit which some improvement may, as here, entail. The evidence disclosed no other instance in which the directors had attempted to impose an assessment upon less than the entire contingent of contract owners. In the case of redecorating other floor corridors, however, the custom and practice had been for the apartment occupants on the floor to agree among themselves as to the time for and selection of floor and wall covering replacements and to make their own arrangements for the work and payment of the cost without involvement of defendant corporation or its assessment procedures.

The decision by defendant’s board of directors to redecorate the first floor areas at a cost of $12,500.00 was implemented over protestations by plaintiffs that the selections by the directors were extravagant and not suited to the personal tastes of plaintiffs. The necessity for replacing the wall and floor coverings has been conceded by plaintiffs who also tacitly acknowledge that they would have borne the cost if left to their own devices in selecting the quality and extent of redecorating to be done. Plaintiffs’ objection lies in the imposition upon them of special charges for work and materials of which they did not approve and which they contend violates the pro-rata apportionment requirement of the use and equity contract in all cases where expenses are incurred by defendant for building maintenance. The contention by defendant below was that the use contract makes no express provision for corridor decoration and defendant is therefore entitled under its general corporate authority to arrange for the work and assess the cost in any fair and equitable manner.

By its judgment entry, including some thirty-seven separate findings of fact, the trial court held that the cost for redecorating the first floor corridor was an expense *881 payable from the building operating and maintenance fund and was includable in the general assessments for that fund levied against all use contract owners. The court further found that individual charges assessed against plaintiffs and not similarly imposed on use contract owners occupying other floors violated the terms of the use and equity contract. Concurrently, the court also found against defendant on the counterclaims for enforced payment from plaintiffs of the special assessments. The effect of the judgment was to direct a refund as to those plaintiffs who had paid the special charge under protest and to restrain collection of the charge from and imposition of sanctions against those plaintiffs who had refused payment. The court also awarded attorneys fees to plaintiffs in 'the amount of $3500.00.

On this appeal, defendant first contends that the decision by the trial court was in error in construing the use contract to preclude the special assessments against plaintiffs. Defendant contends here, as it did before the trial court, that the particular work of replacing hallway decor is outside the terminology used in paragraph 3 of the contract but is within the general authority of the corporation to conduct the affairs of the cooperative apartment project. In furtherance of this argument, defendant points to the long standing custom of residents on other floors to defray the cost for decorating corridors.

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Bluebook (online)
631 S.W.2d 877, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 2849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/von-seggern-v-310-west-49th-street-inc-moctapp-1982.