White v. Pines Community Improvement Ass'n

917 A.2d 1129, 173 Md. App. 13, 2007 Md. App. LEXIS 23
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 6, 2007
Docket2652, Sept. Term, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 917 A.2d 1129 (White v. Pines Community Improvement Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Pines Community Improvement Ass'n, 917 A.2d 1129, 173 Md. App. 13, 2007 Md. App. LEXIS 23 (Md. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

DAVIS, J.

The Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, by memorandum and order, ruled on December 28, 2005 in favor of appellees, the Pines Community Improvement Association, Inc. 1 Trial commenced on April 13 and 15 of 2005 and the trial court determined there were necessary parties unnamed in the action. The trial court, sua sponte, issued a Show Cause Order to all lot owners of The Pines on the Severn (hereinafter “The Pines”) and a subsequent hearing was set to join all additional party defendants. Trial resumed December 21 and *27 22, 2005, at which time evidence and testimony were taken in regard to the action filed on December 8, 2003 2 and a cross-claim that was filed by appellees on July 8, 2005.

Following trial, the court adjudged that the Rices were not damaged by appellees nor did appellees trespass upon their land when the steps to pier one, discussed infra, were removed. Appellees’ response to the motion of appellants to alter or amend judgment, filed January 19, 2006, concedes in a footnote that the trial court’s Memorandum and Order did not expressly mention the Rice Triangle and offered the trial court its acquiescence for the trial court to amend its order “to reflect the Rices’ adverse possession of the area covered by the studio.’ ” The trial court denied the motion on January 26, 2006.

The trial court found that the Pines Community Improvement Association owned, in fee simple, title to the contested property and all of the existing improvements thereon and appellants’ claims of adverse possession and prescriptive easement were denied. Denied also were appellants’ claims that a mortgage and subsequent deed granted them an interest in community land, piers and boathouses that differed from interests enjoyed by all residents. PCIA was granted the right, power and authority to use, control and regulate the community land and any improvement thereon including assignation of boat slips at piers and boathouses. PCIA was also granted rights power and authority to charge fees for costs associated with such regulation, including storage fees for noncompliance with assignment regulations.

Monetary judgments were recorded against the following appellants: Gill & Assocs., the Donnellys, the Garmans, the *28 Whites, Clow, the Lyons, Johnston, and the Donahues. 3

All appellants noted timely appeals to this Court, filed five separate briefs 4 and have presented several questions for our review, which we restate as follows:

I. Are appellants entitled to ownership of Community Land and/or piers through adverse possession, an exclusive prescriptive easement, estoppel or alternatively by their predecessors extinguishing rights of common use?
II. Does the trial court’s lack of factual and legal findings concerning the “Rice Triangle” require remand for further proceedings?
III. Did the trial court err in creating a new covenant eighty years after the original plats of the Pines were recorded and by awarding damages against appellants arising out of use of the piers?
IV. Is an association community landowner, which calls itself a Community Improvement Association, but does not qualify as a homeowners’ association under Maryland Code Ann., Real Prop., § 11B-101, et seq., 5 entitled to ignore or overrule covenants and a common development scheme expressly providing that the land it now holds is subject to a right of use by lot owners?
V. When a “community lot” is burdened by a covenant and common development scheme providing for the use of the property by all adjacent property owners in a designated plat area, may a volunteer organization which acquires title to the “community lot” control use of the lot to the extent of charging fees to the adjacent property owners for the use of *29 the burdened property, making discretionary assignments of pre-existing piers and boathouses which were built by the adjacent property owners and by requiring that all adjacent lot owners who wish to exercise the right to use such piers and boathouses become members of the voluntary organization?
VI. Did the trial court abuse its discretion by failing to consider Simmons’ testimony and documentary evidence and as to its manner and timing in which it concluded trial and entered its order?

FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

“The Pines on the Severn” (hereinafter “The Pines”) is a residential community of approximately 250 single family lots located in Arnold, Maryland that binds on two branches of Chase Creek, a tributary of the Severn River. The Pines was created by Leonidas G. Turner, principal of The Severn River Company and his wife, Amelia A. Turner, by recordation of two plats in 1922 and 1924, respectively, in the Land Records of Anne Arundel County. The plats depict a ring of Community Land 6 in the proposed development such that no single lot is binding on Chase Creek.

After January 27, 1926, The Pines Company, Inc. owned all of the unsold lots in The Pines. The deed recorded in February 1926 contained the following language in regard to the land conveyed:

and all parts thereof marked Community Land or Community Lot, and all the roads, ways, streets, lanes, alleys, and paths, piers, riparian and water rights appurtenant to said Community lands, streets, roads, lanes, ways, alleys, and paths, being subject to such rights therein as granted to the owners of such lots or parts of said tract in the deeds from *30 the said The Severn River Company heretofore executed and recorded.
Together with the rights, roads, ways, waters, water and riparian rights, streets, lanes, alleys, and paths, piers and appurtenances and advantages to the same belonging or in anywise appertaining and particularly the roads and ways leading from said property to the Baltimore and Annapolis Boulevard.

Early deeds from The Severn River Company conveyed to individual lot holders

also the use in common with others of the road extending from Chase Creek to the Baltimore and Annapolis Boulevard and also the use in common with others entitled thereto of the lots of ground designated as Community Lot on said Plat and all water and riparian rights incident thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
917 A.2d 1129, 173 Md. App. 13, 2007 Md. App. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-pines-community-improvement-assn-mdctspecapp-2007.