William Deghetto v. Beaumont's 7 Harbors White & Duck Lake Assoc

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 22, 2017
Docket330972
StatusUnpublished

This text of William Deghetto v. Beaumont's 7 Harbors White & Duck Lake Assoc (William Deghetto v. Beaumont's 7 Harbors White & Duck Lake Assoc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Deghetto v. Beaumont's 7 Harbors White & Duck Lake Assoc, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

WILLIAM DEGHETTO, DEBRA DEGHETTO, UNPUBLISHED LORI WOODS, RICHARD NELSON, CONNIE June 22, 2017 HILL, JOHN HILL, JANICE SMITH, LLOYD SMITH, PATTE DAY, DONALD DAY, MARGARET RIEPEN, KENNETH RIEPEN, RICK WOODWORTH, SHIRLEY MATUSZEWSKI, JEANNE KOZIOL, WALTER KOZIOL, JUNE MULLINIX, GREGORY MULLINIX, KENDRA PAPPAS, VERN PAPPAS, EDWARD MICHALSKI, EDWARD BALDWIN, SUSAN C. VERNIER, LON M. VERNIER, JUDITH JOHNS, JOHN JOHNS, CELESTINE KESSLER, NEIL KESSLER, KATHRYN WOLFF, PAUL WOLFF, CHERYL JONES, ROBERT JONES, MARCIA CARLINE, THOMAS CARLINE, and PRICE SPOOR,

Plaintiffs-Appellees,

v No. 330972 Oakland Circuit Court BEAUMONT’S SEVEN HARBORS WHITE LC No. 2014-141355-CH AND DUCK LAKE ASSOCIATION,

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: JANSEN, P.J., and MURPHY and BORRELLO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this case regarding the ongoing viability of restrictive covenants on plaintiffs’ lots, defendant homeowners’ association appeals a November 23, 2015, trial court order denying its motion for summary disposition and granting summary disposition in favor of plaintiffs pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10). For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm.

I. FACTS

The facts in this case are at times somewhat muddled, though they are not disputed. Plaintiffs own (or owned) lots in six separate subdivisions in Highland Township, Michigan,

-1- which are collectively known as Seven Harbors Subdivisions. Defendant is the homeowners’ association for the entire development, which contains over 650 lots. Defendant wishes to enforce certain covenants, which plaintiffs assert have expired.

The land now known as Seven Harbors belonged to various members of the Beaumont family until Harry S. and Florence M. Beaumont (the “Beaumonts”) began subdividing the land in the 1930s. The first two subdivisions created from the land are known as Supervisor’s Plat No. 1 (“SP1”) and Supervisor’s Plat of Seven Harbors (“SPOSH”). When defendant was incorporated in November 1947, it included only these two subdivisions. The Articles of Incorporation were amended in 1959 to add three additional subdivisions, Supervisor’s Plat No. 5 (“SP5”), Supervisor’s Plat No. 6 (“SP6”), and Proprietor’s Plat of Seven Harbors Reserve (“PPOSHR”). The sixth and final subdivision is Supervisor’s Plat 7 (hereafter “SP7”). It is not clear from the record when SP7 was created, but it appears to have been replatted from land that had been a private park sometime before 1962.

The lots of the two original subdivisions, SP1 and SPOSH, were originally transferred from the Beaumonts to various purchasers by a form deed. Plaintiffs provided an example of one such deed by which, in 1935, the Beaumonts sold a lot to George and Sarah Miles (the “1935 Miles Deed”). In this form deed, the Beaumonts agreed to convey certain land, along with a maintenance fund, to a homeowners’ association that was to be created. The association was to own and maintain that land, which would be used to provide purchasers with access to the lake for boating and swimming. The form deed also provided that each purchaser would automatically become a member of the association, and the purchasers agreed for themselves, their “heirs, executors and assigns” to pay an annual maintenance fee, not to exceed $5 per year. There was a provision authorizing the association to place a lien on the property if the dues were not paid. This original form deed also included extensive restrictions regarding building lines, the character and value of the buildings, docks and buoys, fences, front yards, garbage and refuse, and swimming. It stated explicitly that the restrictions would run with the land and that they would expire on January 1, 1960.

That document was allowed to expire. Effective on the expiration date, however, the homeowners of SP1 and SPOSH adopted deed restrictions, which the parties refer to as the “1959 Deed Restrictions.” These restrictions were recorded. The 1959 Deed Restrictions contained the substance of the original building restrictions found in the 1935 Miles Deed, and included a provision that each purchaser would automatically become a member in the association. There was no language in the 1959 Deed Restrictions stating that any covenants ran with the land, nor any specific mention of maintenance fees. The 1959 Deed Restrictions provided that they would expire on January 1, 1986, unless properly extended.

The Beaumonts apparently sold the lots in the next three subdivisions, SP5, SP6, and PPOSHR, in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and used an entirely different form of conveyance document. Plaintiffs provided examples of six such documents. The grantors in all of these documents were the Beaumonts, but in other respects these documents differed substantially from the 1935 Miles Deed. For example, none of these documents contains a recitation of the restrictions that appear in the 1935 Miles Deed. Each of the six documents does, however, contain language by which the original purchasers of these lots agreed that they were members of the association and agreed to pay to the association a yearly fee to be capped at $15 per year.

-2- The conveyance documents do not, however, expressly state that the grantees made this agreement for their heirs, successors or assigns or that the covenants would run with the land. That provision, in three of these deeds, is as follows:1

The Grantees hereby agree that they, as property owners in Seven Harbors, are now and so long as they remain as such, members of the ‘BEAUMONT’S SEVEN HARBORS WHITE AND DUCK LAKE ASSOCIATION’ and are subject herewith to it’s [sic] restrictions and by-laws. They hereby agree to pay, yearly, to this Association, a maintenance fee of 1% of the assessed valuation for tax purposes, of his conveyed property, not to exceed $15.00 per year per unit, so long as said rate of 1% per annum shall remain in effect, which shall be used, together with money collected from other owners for the upkeep of Seven Harbors. It is further agreed that the Grantees will not sell or otherwise dispose of this conveyed property to any person or persons not accepted by this Association.

Presumably because these later owners were not bound by the restrictions found in the 1935 Miles Deed concerning building lines, the character and value of the buildings, docks and buoys, fences, front yards, garbage and refuse, and bathing, the association adopted substantially similar deed restrictions for these three subdivisions in 1956. This document, to which the parties refer as the “1956 Deed Restrictions,” is nearly identical with the 1959 Deed Restrictions discussed above, which were applied to the first two subdivisions three years later. Specifically, like the 1959 Deed Restrictions, the 1956 Deed Restrictions contained a clear statement that every purchaser would become a member of the association by virtue of the purchase and provided that they would expire on January 1, 1986, unless properly extended. Like the 1959 Deed Restrictions, the 1956 Deed Restrictions do not mention maintenance fees. No such document was ever adopted for SP7.

Both the 1956 Deed Restrictions and the 1959 Deed Restrictions provided that they could not be extended without the written consent of 75% of the membership:

The Association shall have the right to alter, amend and abolish any of the foregoing restriction, [sic] or to add to or extend the time of such restrictions at any time, provided that it shall first notify all members of such proposed action and obtain the written consent of at least 75% of the membership, to such action.

No subsequent document adopted by the Seven Harbors residents contained language purporting to extend the 1956 or 1959 Deed Restrictions.

1 The other deeds the others are substantially similar.

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William Deghetto v. Beaumont's 7 Harbors White & Duck Lake Assoc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-deghetto-v-beaumonts-7-harbors-white-duck-lake-assoc-michctapp-2017.