White Cypress Lakes Dev. Corp. v. Hertz
This text of 541 So. 2d 1031 (White Cypress Lakes Dev. Corp. v. Hertz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WHITE CYPRESS LAKES DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
v.
Carol and Gerald HERTZ; Irvin Massett; Trena Hoffmann; Cliff and Edson Osmer; Manuel and Eva Nicosia; Lauren Buck; Noel Genis; Hildrey and Lydia Wilson; Michael and Susanne Gorbach; George and Marie Rose; Curtis Griffin; Pascal Palmisano and Johnnie Palmisano; and Malcolm and Roseanne Patterson.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*1032 John L. Galloway, Galloway & Galloway, Gulfport, for appellant.
Peter C. Abide, Floyd G. Hewitt, Jr., Compton, Crowell & Hewitt, Biloxi, for appellees.
Before HAWKINS, P.J., and ROBERTSON and PITTMAN, JJ.
ROBERTSON, Justice, for the Court:
I.
This action arises from a complaint by homeowners in a "quality" residential subdivision in Hancock County seeking to enforce against the development company certain restrictive covenants in a planned-as-quality sister subdivision. The development company precipitated the dispute when it changed horses in midstream and began using unsold lots in the sister subdivision as a recreation vehicle (RV) campground. The Court below enjoined that use.
We hold that the homeowners have standing to sue, that the RV campground is not a use permitted under the covenants and that, by reason of its predecessor's marketing strategy, the development company is equitably estopped to vacate the plat and engage in the use. We affirm.
II.
A.
In the spring of 1977 L & A Contractors began work on a recently acquired 3,600 acre tract of land in Hancock County which surrounded White Cypress Creek. Various tributaries of the creek were dammed, creating a number of lakes and ponds. The largest of these man-made bodies of water is Lake Cypress, which covers 120 acres.
In 1980, after the first 280 acre subdivision (known as "Woodhaven") had been platted and sold, a group of investors led by Talmadge D. Bickham, Jr., organized as "Talmar, Inc," purchased the entire project. Talmar continued to develop the area, particularly the land around Lake Cypress. Bickham commissioned a "Master Plan" to be drawn up by a local civil engineer. This master plan called for the entire subdivision to be developed in phases, thirteen in all.
The area surrounding Lake Cypress, denominated "Mallard Point" Phases I through VI, was the first area subdivided and developed. Plats of Mallard Point Phases I through V, and restrictive covenants covering each specific plat, were recorded in the land records of Hancock County on August 14, 1980. The lots in Mallard Point varied in size, but all were a minimum of three acres.
The master plan also recognized the demand for smaller lots. The land immediately east of the Mallard Point area bordering the 64 acre, man-made "Quail Ridge Lake" was subdivided into lots averaging one acre in size. The plats and restrictive covenants for "Quail Ridge Estates," Phases I & II (and the rest of the White Cypress Lakes development) were completed by December, 1981. At this same time, the plat and covenants for Mallard Point, Phase VI, were finalized and recorded. The ownership of the platted land was transferred to Talmar, Inc., while title to the property kept for future subdivision was held by Bickham personally.
Sales of the lake-front lots at White Cypress Lakes commenced in 1982. Most of the homeowner plaintiffs in this action purchased *1033 their property in 1982 and 1983. Promotional literature for the development included the following representations:
The basic difference between White Cypress Lakes and other rural developments is that its land is measured in acres instead of feet. White Cypress is an acreage development ... no tract can be subdivided... . Talmar, Inc. has zoned each area of the huge development for its most suitable use. The zoning plans assure owners that quality will surround them. The types of structures and the uses of those structures are designated in each area.
After the first eleven phases of White Cypress Lakes had been substantially completed and most of the lots sold, Talmadge Bickham died. By deed dated January 31, 1985, Bickham's estate transferred all of the unsold lots in White Cypress Lakes as well as the surrounding undeveloped land to the newly-formed "White Cypress Lakes Development Corporation" (hereinafter "the development company"). The group of investors organizing this corporation included some of Bickham's business associates who had worked with him on the White Cypress Lakes project. This new development company thus assumed ownership of the entire portion of White Cypress Lakes designated as Mallard Point Phase V, comprised of thirty-two lots, averaging three and one-half acres each. Phase V also included over 2,000 feet of frontage on the western shore of Lake Cypress, including an area which was designated on the master plan as a ten acre recreation site.
The development company soon made known its plans for Mallard Point, Phases V and VI an RV campground affiliated with a nation-wide association of resort campgrounds, "Camp Coast-to-Coast".[1] The development company began the excavation and clearing of the RV campground in the summer of 1985.
B.
On November 21, 1985, Carol and Gerald Hertz and twenty-one other White Cypress Lakes homeowners commenced this civil action by filing their complaint in the Chancery Court of Hancock County. Plaintiffs sought to enjoin any further development of the campground, claiming it was in violation of the recorded protective covenants for Mallard Point, Phases V and VI.
Rather than await a judicial determination, the development company continued to build the campground facility pouring concrete parking "pads" (ten to the acre) and installing electrical hook-ups. The campground opened for business in early 1986.
On January 2, 1986, the development company responded to the homeowners suit by filing a separate action, a Petition to Vacate Plat. The petition similarly sought to vacate the protective covenants for Mallard Point, Phases V and VI. By order dated June 27, 1986, the two actions were consolidated for trial. See Rule 42(a), Miss. R.Civ.P.
On August 21, 1986, trial began. The testimony and argument were directed toward two essential issues. First, to what degree did the recorded covenants permit the developer to conduct commercial ventures upon the unsold lots? Second, did the plaintiff landowners have any right to enforce the covenants burdening phase V and VI of Mallard Point, as their property was technically not a part of either of those platted subdivisions?
Although the covenants for the various phases of Mallard Point are not worded identically, the language employed is distinctly similar. In relevant part the covenants of each subdivision read:
1. No lot shall be used for other than residential purposes (except as elsewhere herein provided), and no soil or trees shall be removed for any commercial use... .
2. No building shall be erected on any lots other than one single-family dwelling or cottage with garage... .
* * * * * *
*1034 4. No structure of a temporary character, trailer, mobile home, basement, camping vehicle, tent, shack, garage, or other outbuilding shall be used on any lot at any time as a residence, either temporarily or permanently... . Written approval may be obtained from TALMAR, INC. for the use of the property as a temporary weekend campsite subject to such vehicle being commercially manufactured and licensed.
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541 So. 2d 1031, 1989 WL 31955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-cypress-lakes-dev-corp-v-hertz-miss-1989.