Wild Meadows MHC, LLC v. Weidman

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 10, 2020
DocketK19M-07-003 NEP
StatusPublished

This text of Wild Meadows MHC, LLC v. Weidman (Wild Meadows MHC, LLC v. Weidman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wild Meadows MHC, LLC v. Weidman, (Del. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

WILD MEADOWS MHC, LLC, C.A. No. K19M-07-003 NEP Petitioner, In and for Kent County V.

DAVID J. WEIDMAN, ESQUIRE, ARBITRATOR,

Respondent, and

WILD MEADOWS HOMEOWNERS’ ASSOCIATION,

Intervenor-Respondent.

Submitted: June 18, 2020 Decided: July 10, 2020 MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Upon Respondent’s Motion to Dismiss GRANTED

Upon Intervenor-Respondent’s Motion to Dismiss GRANTED

Upon Petitioner’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings DENIED

Michael P. Morton, Esquire (argued), Robert J. Valihura, Jr., Esquire, and David C. Zerbato, Esquire, Morton, Valihura & Zerbato, LLC, Attorneys for Petitioner Wild Meadows MHC, LLC.

James P. Sharp, Esquire, Moore & Rutt, P.A., Attorney for Respondent David J. Weidman, Esquire, Arbitrator.

Olga K. Beskrone, Esquire, Community Legal Aid Society, Inc., Attorney for Intervenor-Respondent Wild Meadows Homeowners’ Association.

Primos, J. Wild Meadows MHC, LLC v., David J. Weidman, Esquire, Arbitrator, et al. C.A. No. K19M-07-003 NEP July 10, 2020

Wild Meadows MHC, LLC (hereinafter “Wild Meadows”), has filed a Petition for a Writ of Prohibition (hereinafter the “Petition”) against Respondent David J. Weidman, Esquire (hereinafter “Weidman”). In response, both Weidman and Intervenor-Respondent the Wild Meadows Homeowners’ Association (hereinafter the “HOA”)' have filed Motions to Dismiss. Wild Meadows itself has filed a Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings. Upon review of the written submissions and following oral argument, the Motions to Dismiss of Weidman and the HOA are GRANTED, and Wild Meadows’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings is DENIED.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Wild Meadows manufactured home community (hereinafter the “Community”) is located in Dover, Delaware. Each resident in the Community owns his or her home and rents the lot upon which the home is located from Wild Meadows, the community owner.

On October 31, 2018, Wild Meadows sent a letter to certain homeowners in the Community whose year-long leases were set to expire, notifying them that it would be raising their lot rent above the average annual increase of the Consumer Price Index, or “CPI-U,”* pursuant to the Rent Justification Act (hereinafter the

“Act”).? Wild Meadows subsequently held a meeting with the affected homeowners

' The Court granted the HOA’s Motion to Intervene on November 22, 2019.

* The CPI-U is “the average annual increase of the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers in the Philadelphia-Wilmington-Atlantic City area.” Former 25 Del. C. § 7042(a). Pursuant to the requirements of the Rent Justification Act, the CPI-U “for the most recently available preceding 36-month period” is used. Jd.

3 Former 25 Del. C. § 7040 to 7046. Effective December 10, 2019, the Act was redesignated (i.e., renumbered) and amended. This Opinion will cite the former statutes as they existed prior to the amendments, because the issues in question arose prior to the Act’s redesignation. See Wild Meadows Homeowners Association v. Wild Meadows MHC, LLC, 2020 WL 2070339, at *1 n. 3 (Del. Super. Apr. 28, 2020) (citing former version of the Act because events in question occurred prior to the Act’s redesignation). Notably, these changes to the Act did not make any substantive

2 Wild Meadows MHC, LLC v. David J. Weidman, Esquire, Arbitrator, et al. C.A. No. K19M-07-003 NEP July 10, 2020

of the Community to discuss the rent increase.* However, certain of the homeowners chose not to accept the rent increase and filed a petition through the HOA with the Delaware Manufactured Home Relocation Authority (hereinafter the “Authority”) seeking the appointment of an arbitrator to determine whether the rent increase was justified under the Act.°

The Authority chose Weidman to be the arbitrator in this case. Prior to the scheduled arbitration, the HOA filed a motion for summary judgment and a motion to compel the production of certain documents, including financial documents relating to Wild Meadows’s operations. On January 18, 2019, Weidman issued a decision (hereinafter the “First Decision”) denying the HOA’s motion for summary judgment but granting the motion to compel in part, ordering Wild Meadows to produce those financial documents that it planned to introduce or rely upon at the arbitration in addition to certain other non-financial documents related to the proposed rent increase.

After Weidman issued the First Decision, the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Sandhill Acres MHC, LC v. Sandhill Acres Homeowners Association, 210 A.3d 725 (Del. 2019). Prior to the issuance of this decision, the HOA had filed a Motion for Reconsideration, arguing that the financial documents to which it had been denied access in the First Decision were indeed discoverable. In a June 7, 2019,

decision on the Motion for Reconsideration (hereinafter the “Second Decision’),

changes with regard to the issues in this case. Therefore, the parties are not now subject to a different set of rules under the Act than they were prior to these changes.

* This meeting is required under the Act. See former 25 Del. C. § 7043(b) (“If the proposed rent increase exceeds the CPI-U, the Authority shall schedule a final meeting between the parties at a mutually-convenient time and place to be held within 30 days from the mailing of the notice of the rent increase, to discuss the reasons for the increase.”).

> See former 25 Del. C. § 7043(c) (“[A]ny affected home owner who has not already accepted the proposed increase, or the home owners’ association on the behalf of 1 or more affected home owners who have not already accepted the proposed increase may . . . petition the Authority to

appoint a qualified arbitrator to conduct nonbinding arbitration proceedings.”). 3 Wild Meadows MHC, LLC y. David J. Weidman, Esquire, Arbitrator, et al. C.A. No. K19M-07-003 NEP July 10, 2020

Weidman looked to Sandhill Acres and agreed with the HOA that the requested documents were discoverable, thereby amending the First Decision and expanding the scope of discoverable information.

In the Second Decision, Weidman ordered Wild Meadows to submit a proposed Confidentiality Agreement and ordered the HOA, in response, to submit any comments regarding the proposal. Weidman further provided that, if the parties could not agree on the proposal, he would issue a final Confidentiality Agreement.

On June 26, 2019, following the parties’ inability to reach consensus, Weidman issued a final draft Confidentiality Agreement. While he did not agree with the majority of the HOA’s requested edits to Wild Meadows’s original proposal, he rejected Wild Meadows’s request for an “attorneys’ eyes only” limitation and instead expanded the class of persons who could review the documents to include those directors, officers, or Board members of the HOA who would be attending the arbitration, requiring those individuals to agree to be bound by the Confidentiality Agreement in order to view the confidential documents. Weidman ordered the parties to sign and return the Confidentiality Agreement by July 3, 2019.

Wild Meadows refused to execute the Confidentiality Agreement and on July 3, 2019, filed the Petition, requesting that this Court, inter alia, prohibit Weidman from “ordering [Wild Meadows] to produce documents or engage in discovery of matters not to be used or relied upon by Wild Meadows in the arbitration” and from “ordering [Wild Meadows] to agree to a Confidentiality [Agreement] which [Wild Meadows] will not accept...

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