Watch Hill Condominium, Inc. v. Van Eck, No. Cv 930344796 (Jun. 14, 1996)

1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4849, 17 Conn. L. Rptr. 198
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJune 14, 1996
DocketNo. CV 930344796
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4849 (Watch Hill Condominium, Inc. v. Van Eck, No. Cv 930344796 (Jun. 14, 1996)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watch Hill Condominium, Inc. v. Van Eck, No. Cv 930344796 (Jun. 14, 1996), 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4849, 17 Conn. L. Rptr. 198 (Colo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM FILED JUNE 14, 1996 The instant case is an action by the plaintiff condominium to foreclose a lien against the defendants who are the owners of one of the units. The claim is that the defendants have failed to pay common charges, special assessments, late charges, interest charges and fines. The relief sought includes a judgment of strict foreclosure, an ascertainment of the debt owed including interest, costs and attorneys fees and, if appropriate, a deficiency judgment.

On the defendants' part, ownership of the unit and governance by the declaration of condominium status and the original bylaws have been admitted. Otherwise, the material allegations of the CT Page 4850 complaint are denied. In addition, the defendants have asserted three special defenses and three counterclaims.

In the first and second special defenses, the defendants allege a failure of consideration or a waiver of the right to collect condominium fees because the plaintiff has acted inequitably in appropriating such fees to uses not authorized by the by-laws or pertinent statutes. The allegations of the third special defense are that the plaintiff lacks the corporate capacity to collect fees because of a failure to comply with the by-laws and/or statutes governing the following: election of the board of directors, annual meetings of unit owners, application of annual fees to common elements or limited common elements, providing budget summaries to unit owners, ratification of budgets and repayment or crediting of surplus association funds to unit owners.

On their counterclaims, the defendants seek monetary and equitable, including injunctive relief. In the first counterclaim, the defendants claim that payment of the common charges and special assessments will unjustly enrich the plaintiff or persons posing as the plaintiff's directors in that such charges and assessments have been collected and inequitably distributed. In the second counterclaim the allegations are that special assessments have been illegally placed in a reserve fund instead of being credited or refunded to unit owners. The third counterclaim recites that the plaintiff or individuals posing as its directors refused to repair the defendants' roof, a common element of the condominium, and attempted to prevent workers hired by the defendants to repair the roof from completing their work.

Approximately ten months before trial, the plaintiff moved to strike the defendants' special defenses and counterclaims on the ground that, as a matter of law, they were insufficient to serve as defenses in this foreclosure action. The motion to strike was denied without opinion by Judge Celotto. When, at the time of trial, the motion to strike was renewed, the court decided to admit evidence relevant to the special defenses and counterclaims and determine the question of legal sufficiency later. At the same time, the court denied a motion by the defendants to join the foreclosure action with another case brought by them against the plaintiff and others wherein claims similar to the special defenses and counterclaims have been made. CT Page 4851

At the trial, the parties called witnesses and placed exhibits in evidence. From the testimonial and documentary evidence, the court finds that the facts set forth below were established.

I.
The plaintiff condominium was established on August 13, 1981, in the Town of Branford by Anderson Wilcox Contractors, Inc. as an expandable condominium. According to General Statutes §47-68a(y) an "expandable condominium" is one to which additional land and units may be added. The declaration for Watch Hill specified a period of seven years in which expansion could be accomplished. The complex now consists of sixty units situated primarily on Jerimoth Drive and operates as a Connecticut corporation in good standing.

Linda Levin, the plaintiff's principal witness, resides at 54 Jerimoth Drive and is the state registered manager of the condominium. Article II § 3 of the plaintiffs by-laws provides for the employment of a manager and specifies the duties incidental to the position. As manager. Linda Levin maintains books and records, is in charge of common and to a certain extent limited common elements, collects common charges and special assessments, assists in the preparation of budgets and with the meetings of the plaintiff's board of directors and the owners of its units. Linda Levin also manages two other condominium complexes as an employee of Condominium Concerns, Inc., a corporation of which her husband is a director. She utilizes one room in their unit for condominium business purposes.

The defendants reside in unit No. 7 also known as 7 Jerimoth Drive. Linda Van Eck, known before her marriage as Linda Lounsbury, and her sister. Kathryn Phenix, were among the original unit owners having purchased unit No. 7 in 1981. On April 24, 1989, however, Linda Lounsbury quitclaimed her interest in unit No. 7 to Kathryn Phenix. On November 23, 1992, Kathryn Phenix and her husband. Paul, conveyed the unit to the defendants, Jan and Linda Van Eck, husband and wife. On dates prior to executing the deed with her husband, Kathryn Phenix had sent two other deeds to the defendants that for one reason or another were defective. During the period when Kathryn Phenix was the record owner of unit No. 7 common charges amounting to $575.00 had accumulated. The arrearage was discussed at a meeting of the plaintiff's board of directors held on October 31, 1991. CT Page 4852

Much of the difficulty between the plaintiff and the defendants is traceable to occurrences at the unit owners' meeting that started in January and finished in March of 1992. Article III § 3 of the by-laws requires the plaintiffs secretary to send notice to each unit owner of a meeting not less than 30 nor more than 40 days before the schedule meeting. A notice dated December 1, 1991 announced that the annual unit owner's meeting was scheduled for January 21, 1992. The notice was too early for compliance with Article III § 3. Among other things, the notice solicited nominees for the board of directors. Interested persons were requested to complete an enclosed candidate's information sheet and return it to Bill Casey, the plaintiff's then president, at unit #27 before the meeting. The notice further stated that "[c]andidates will not be taken from the floor at the meeting."

According to the notice, five directorships existed of which three were to be filled at the January 21, 1992, meeting. The number of directorships conflicts with Article II § 1(a) of the by-laws which states that "the affairs of the Condominium shall be governed by a Board of Directors consisting of three (3) persons."

The unit owners' meeting did not conclude on January 21, 1992 and divergent accounts were given as to what occurred at it. The plaintiffs version was that Jan Van Eck was nominated to be a director but that the elections were not held because the guest speaker talked too long and that the meeting was aborted when during Van Eck's presentation of his alternative budget the custodian at the Branford Community House turned off the lights. The defendants' claim was that Jan Van Eck had been both nominated and elected as a director and that he had never been removed by a majority vote of the unit owners as Article II § 4 of the by-laws requires. The defendants further claim that the election preceded the discussion where Jan Van Eck presented his alternative budget. The court finds that Jan Van Eck was nominated on January 21, 1992 but was not elected to a directorship as elections were not held on that date.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 4849, 17 Conn. L. Rptr. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watch-hill-condominium-inc-v-van-eck-no-cv-930344796-jun-14-1996-connsuperct-1996.