STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
JOEL DORFMAN and S. DENNIS ROGERS UNPUBLISHED
TRUST, September 26, 2017
Plaintiffs/Counter -Defendants,
and
180 PIERCE STREET CONDOMINIUM
ASSOCIATION,
Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant-
Appellant,
v No. 333428
Oakland Circuit Court
PIERCE MARTIN LLC and TOWNHOUSE LC No. 2011-118450-CH
KITCHEN AND BAR LLC,
Defendants/Counter-
Plaintiffs/Third-Party Plaintiffs-
Appellees.
and
MARC SCAGLIONE and S. DENNIS ROGERS,
Third-Party Defendants-Appellants,
and
LAITH HANNA, IVANNA HANNA, MELISSA
S. DORFMAN, SETH ROGERS, ANNA SACK,
SHAINA STARK and LESLIE ROGERS,
Third-Party Defendants.
Before: BECKERING, P.J., and MARKEY and RIORDAN, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
-1-
This appeal arises from a dispute between co-owners of a six-unit condominium project
located at 180 Pierce Street in downtown Birmingham, Michigan. Four of the units are
residential units and two are commercial units. The primary issue in this case is whether
defendant Pierce Martin, LLC (hereafter “Pierce Martin”), which owned both of the commercial
units, obtained the approval necessary to occupy and use part of the outdoor general common
element space adjacent to one of its units for a commercial project it was developing. Appellants
180 Pierce Street Condominium Association (hereafter, “the Association”), Marc Scaglione, and
Dennis Rogers appeal from the May 26, 2016 final order dismissing defendants’ counterclaims
and third-party claims. Appellants challenge two prior orders, one granting defendants’ joint
motion for a directed verdict, and the other granting defendants’ joint motion for summary
disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10)(no genuine issue of material fact, and moving party
entitled to judgment as a matter of law). We affirm.
I. PERTINENT FACTS
The condominium building consists of two street-level commercial units of
approximately 350 square feet each (Units 5 and 6), and four luxury residential units (Units 1
through 4), each occupying its own floor above the commercial units. Administration, operation,
and maintenance of the building falls to the Association, which is a non-profit corporation
comprised of all the condominium’s co-owners with a Board of Directors (“the Board”) that is
granted broad authority by the condominium documents1 to act on behalf of the Association. In
July 2010, when events underlying this dispute began, Kousay (Casey) Askar owned Unit 1, but
the unit was in foreclosure and an entity controlled by Enriko (Henry) Sasson had purchased the
sheriff’s deed. Dennis Rogers owned Unit 2, Laith Hanna owned Unit 3, and Marc Scaglione
owned Unit 4. Pierce Martin owned Units 5 and 6. At all times relevant to this appeal,
Scaglione was president of the Board, and Hanna was its vice-president.
According to evidence presented at trial, Jeremy Sasson, his brother, Jordan, and his
father, Henry (collectively “the Sassons”), met with Rogers in July 2010, and Scaglione and
Hanna in August 2010 to discuss their plans for the two commercial units. The Sassons
proposed exterior improvements to the units that included the expansion of Unit 5 to enclose a
portion of general common element2 space that was at the time being used as a flowerbed. The
1
Pursuant to Michigan’s Condominium Act, MCL 559.101 et seq., the administration of a
condominium project is governed by the condominium bylaws. MCL 559.153. “Bylaws are
attached to the master deed and, along with the other condominium documents, the bylaws
dictate the rights and obligations of a co-owner in the condominium. See MCL 559.103(9) and
(10); MCL 559.108.” Tuscany Grove Ass’n v Peraino, 311 Mich App 389, 393; 875 NW2d 234
(2015). In the instant case, “condominium documents” refers to the master deed, as amended,
and the bylaws.
2
In addition to the residential and commercial units, the condominium project also consists of
“common elements.” The master deed classifies common elements as limited (e.g., an owner’s
balcony, an owner’s designated parking spaces), or general (e.g., the perimeter land, the parking
structure, the utilities used in common areas of the building). Each co-owner has an undivided
-2-
Sassons showed Rogers, Scaglione, and Hanna the same two sets of two sketches. Each set was
comprised of a daytime and nighttime rendering; one set showed a red slanted awning covering
the proposed expansion, and the other showed the same expansion with a black box-style
awning. Rogers testified that the Sassons told him they were going to open a coffee shop, and he
understood them to want to put up an awning under which their customers and the buildings’
residents could sit.
On August 19, 2010, the Sassons met with Hanna and Scaglione and showed them the
renderings. Scaglione testified that he thought the Sassons were asking him whether he liked the
black awning or the red one, and that he did not believe the Sassons were asking him to consider
the expansion of Unit 5 onto a common element. Scaglione recalled there being no discussion of
the Sassons seeking formal or informal approval from the Association to exclusively use and
occupy the common element area, and that they did not offer to compensate him or any of the
Association co-owners for their ownership interest in the common elements. Scaglione
acknowledged on cross-examination that his memory of the meeting was “hazy” or “foggy”; in
fact, he said that he did not have an independent memory of the month in which the meeting took
place, and testified, “I’ve come to learn that it was August, memorized the date . . . .” He also
acknowledged that he had not retained in his files any of the early e-mails exchanged regarding
the Sassons’ proposal, stating that he had deleted them after receiving them and that it had not
seemed important to him at the time to keep them. Scaglione further acknowledged that the
meeting took place during “the depths of the great recession,” at a time when vacancies in the
neighborhood were up, real estate values were down by upwards of 50%, the two commercial
spaces were empty, and Unit 5 was papered over.
The day after meeting with Hanna and Scaglione, Jeremy Sasson sent Rogers, Scaglione,
and Hanna separate e-mails thanking them for the meeting and stating that he looked forward to
working together “to accomplish this beautiful and dramatic building enhancement.” Attached
to each e-mail were the four renderings. Later that same day, Hanna sent Scaglione and Rogers a
short e-mail message comprised in part of a list of nine items. Included on the list was the
observation that they would be losing approximately 300 square feet of landscaping “owned by
the association.” Other items on the list included the need to provide a separate water meter for
the retail spaces, what affect increasing the retail area would have on the common air
conditioning usage, the need for an additional garbage pickup, landscaping, maintenance, snow
removal, no service of alcohol unless approved by the Association, and the enterprises’ hours of
operation. Hanna testified that the items on the list were things that he and Scaglione had
discussed, and that Hanna thought he, Scaglione, and Rogers needed to discuss in a conference
call. Scaglione characterized the list as “how the association would interact with the restaurant if
this were to happen, the coffee shop, what’s become a restaurant now.” Rogers said he
“probably” received the e-mail and thought it represented conditions to defendants’ use of Unit
5. Rogers said that, to his knowledge, the Association never agreed to allow the sale and
consumption of alcohol on the common element, and there had been no resolution of the nine
items. Scaglione also testified that the Sassons did not “agree to give any of the items on the
share in the general common elements determined by the percentage of value assigned to that co-
owner’s unit, and owns the general common elements as tenants in common with the other co-
owners.
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[August 20] list to the [A]ssociation in exchange for their approval.” He conceded on cross-
examination that the Sassons fulfilled seven of the nine items on the list.
After receiving Hanna’s e-mail with the list, Rogers responded with his own email,
stating,” “LAITH [HANNA], I WILL GO ALONG WITH WHATEVER YOU AND MARC
AGREE ON.”3 Rogers acknowledged at trial that, based on this e-mail, if Hanna and Scaglione
had agreed to anything, he would be “stuck with it.” He admitted that he took this position
knowing that Hanna supported the project, and that it involved the loss of some landscaping and
the potential sale of alcohol. He insisted, however, that Hanna and Scaglione did not reach an
agreement with the Sassons on anything. Scaglione testified that he understood Rogers’ e-mail
to give him and Hanna the authority to negotiate a deal with the Sassons “regarding the awning
and the outdoor seating.” Hanna affirmed that when he received Rogers’ e-mail, he interpreted it
as indicating that Rogers “didn’t have any problems. Whatever we decided, I decided. He gave
me concession, go ahead.” Hanna further testified that, in addition to receiving Rogers’ e-mail,
he ran into Rogers and his wife in the condominium’s garage and Rogers confirmed his support
of the proposed improvements.
Hanna testified that subsequent to his August 20, 2010 e-mail to Rogers and Scaglione,
the three engaged in a 20- to 25-minute telephone conference call where they discussed the items
on the list as well as noise, garbage, and an increase in the association fees paid by the
commercial units. Neither Scaglione nor Rogers testified about this alleged conference call.
Hanna said he did not recall much discussion about the list during the call, that Scaglione and
Rogers were mainly concerned about lowering the Association’s expenses, and that they
discussed increasing the fee assessments for the commercial units. He said that alcohol was
mentioned, but no one pushed, focusing instead on increasing the commercial units’ association
fees. According to Hanna, neither Scaglione nor Rogers objected to expansion of Unit 5. Hanna
testified, “We verbally agreed about it right on the phone.”4
3
Shortly thereafter, Rogers replied to an earlier e-mail sent by Jordan Sasson asking if Rogers,
Hanna, and Scaglione had had their conference call and, if so, how it went. Rogers responded:
i just got a e-mail from laith [Hanna]. he wants to discuss. i told him I
dont need to talk. i will agree to their position. if they say ok we are done. If
they say no, my vote to approve is meaning.less [sic]. you need 48%. i have only
24%.
4
Hanna said that when Rogers later asserted that he had not approved the expansion, Hanna
“was upset with [Rogers] calling me, telling me that I never approved this when here I’m talking
to the man, conference with him, seeing him in the garage, approving it. And I was just thinking,
what are you talking about? After all these months you told me yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, and I
have no problem. So it just made me feel so bad. Why he’s saying totally something different of
which you agreed with me.”
-4-
On September 12, 2010, Hanna signed a document in his capacity as vice-president of the
Association’s Board that stated:
180 Pierce Street Condominium Association hereby approves the
improvements to Units 5 and 6 of the 180 Pierce Street Condominium Project to
be constructed by Pierce Martin LLC substantially in accordance with the sketch
and floor plan attached hereto as Exhibit A.
The Association has obtained all necessary approvals and consents of the
Owners of the Units (and mortgagees if applicable) in the Condominium Project
in accordance with the Master Deed dated July 15, 1999 and recorded on
November 4, 1999 in Liber 20759, Page 480, Oakland County Records, as
amended.
Attached as exhibit A were one of the renderings the Sassons had shown the co-owners and a
schematic of the first floor showing the proposed expansion onto the common elements; Hanna
initialed both attachments. Hanna said that Sasson provided him with color copies of all of the
pages—the letter, the rendering, and the schematic—and he put copies in each owner’s mailbox
both before and after he signed the letter and initialed the rendering and schematic. He said that
when he called Scaglione before he signed the letter, he didn’t have any problem with it and that
it was his understanding that Rogers didn’t have a problem either. Hanna said he read the letter
to Scaglione and “[h]e says okay with me.” Hanna explained that when he signed the letter, he
understood that defendants were going to improve Units 5 and 6 with a three-foot expansion and
some canopies, and that the expansion was the one depicted on the attached rendering. Hanna
testified that he signed the document because he understood that he had “a hundred percent
approval from everyone.” Although Scaglione testified that he did not “authorize” Hanna to sign
the September 12, 2010 letter and recommended that he have a lawyer look at it, he did not
testify that he told Hanna not to sign it because he did not approve its contents. He affirmed that
at his deposition he testified that he could not recall the conversation and would not refute
Hanna’s account of it. Rogers was out of the county when Hanna signed the document.
Soon after obtaining the September 12, 2010 document, Pierce Martin applied to the City
of Birmingham for a building permit. The City mailed notices of four public hearings held
between October 6, 2010 and February 14, 2011 to all of the property owners and occupants
located near the condominium address as well as to Rogers’ Florida address.5 The notice cards
announced the subjects of the hearings as proposed exterior changes to the condominium
building and review of the final site plan and special use permit “for 356 sq. ft. addition and
outdoor seating.”6 According to their own testimony, neither Rogers,7 nor Scaglione, nor Joel
Dorfman, who had purchased Unit 1 in November 2010, attended any of the meetings.
5
Apart from two weeks in October 2011, Rogers lived primarily in Florida and rented his unit to
a grandson. In 2012, Rogers began using the unit regularly as a summer home.
6
It is not clear whether the area actually measured 356 sq. ft., or whether the notice transposed
the last two numbers. With the exception of Hanna’s approximation of 300 sq. ft. in his August
-5-
In January 2011, Rogers learned from a newspaper article that Jeremy Sasson planned to
open and operate a restaurant and bar in the two commercial units. Subsequently, Rogers
asserted in a series of e-mail messages that he did not approve of and would not support Sasson’s
plan, and insinuated that Sasson had misled him regarding the nature of his project. On the day
after the City of Birmingham approved Pierce Martin’s site plan on February 14, 2011, Rogers
sent Hanna an e-mail stating that the City’s approval had “no bearing on our ownership”
expressing certainty that the City could not proceed without the co-owners’ approval and that the
co-owners had not given their approval. Seeking to clarify the situation, Hanna responded with
two e-mails indicating that all of the voting co-owners had consented to the outside expansion
and seating for the bistro, and that the City had approved use of the space. In one email he stated
specifically, “The expansion/addition was approved and signed by the Condominium
Association on September 2nd [sic] after receiving consent from voting co-owners of the
Association, which included you.”
In April 2011, Dorfman and Rogers, through their attorney, demanded that Pierce Martin
stop construction and restore the condominium to its former condition. When Pierce Martin did
not respond, Dorfman and Rogers8 filed the underlying complaint and an emergency motion
seeking a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction.9 They amended their
complaint in September 2011 to add Townhouse Kitchen and Bar, LLC, as a defendant. The
complaint alleged violations of Michigan’s Condominium Act, MCL 559.101 et seq. (Count I),
violations of the condominium’s master deed and bylaws (Count II), and nuisance (Count III),
and requested declaratory relief (Count IV). With respect to the latter, Dorfman and Rogers
sought a ruling affirming their rights under the Condominium Act and the condominium
documents, and stating that the co-owners had not approved defendants’ construction activity on
the common elements or their intent to open a restaurant and bar in the commercial units.
20, 2010 e-mail, the parties consistently refer to the common elements at issue as measuring 365
sq. ft.
7
Notwithstanding evidence presented at trial that Rogers’ Florida address was on the mailing list
to receive notification of the public hearings, Rogers said that he did not receive any such
notices. He also testified that he did not actively monitor developments while he was in Florida,
but people would send him articles when they knew he was involved in a situation.
8
Rogers later executed a warranty deed conveying his interest in Unit 2 to the Revocable Inter-
Vivos Trust of Stephen D. Rogers, and in the spring of 2012 he successfully moved to substitute
the trust as plaintiff in the action.
9
In their emergency motion, Dorfman and Rogers argued that defendants had misrepresented to
the city that they had all the necessary approvals when in fact they did not because the co-owners
had never formally discussed and voted on the project, as required by the condominium
documents. Dorfman and Rogers observed that not only had they not approved the project, they
had “repeatedly – and vehemently – opposed it.” Subsequent to a hearing on the matter, the trial
court denied the motion without prejudice.
-6-
Defendants’ occupation and use of the common elements at issue was a topic central to
the Association’s next two annual meetings. At the Association’s 2011 annual meeting, Rogers
proposed that the Association add a provision to the bylaws that would prohibit any owners,
occupants, or “users” of Units 5 and 6 from selling, serving, or consuming alcohol “anywhere on
the Condominium Premises.” Rogers and Dorfman voted in favor of the proposal, Scaglione and
Hanna voted against it, and Sasson abstained; consequently, the proposal failed. Not long after
the 2011 meeting, Rogers filed a complaint in a separate cause of action against the Association.
During the Association’s 2012 annual meeting, the Board unanimously approved and
adopted four consent resolutions proposed by the Board president, Scaglione. 10 Of particular
relevance is the second proposal, which purported to “immediately revoke[] any approval or
permission claimed to have been given by the Corporation for the use of the General Common
Elements South of the building (a formerly landscaped area) by the occupants of Units 5 & 6[.]”
The proposal also demanded an immediate halt to “any commercial use, including but not
limited to exclusive use and operation of a bar and restaurant[.]” In addition to this resolution, a
motion was proposed to amend Article VI of the bylaws to prohibit the owners, tenants,
occupants or other users of Unit 5 and 6 from selling, serving, or consuming alcohol “anywhere
on the Condominium Common Elements South of Unit 5 (the formerly landscaped area).” This
motion passed by a vote of four in favor and one (Sasson) opposed. The parties refer to this as
the “second amendment.”11 Shortly after this meeting, the Association and Rogers entered into a
consent judgment that resolved Rogers’ suit against the Association. The Association then
successfully moved to intervene in the instant case as a party plaintiff, adopting the allegations
and requests for equitable relief that Dorfman and Rogers set forth in their first amended
complaint, and adding a count for trespass and fraud/fraud in the inducement. Along with their
answer and affirmative defenses, defendants filed a joint 15-count counterclaim and third-party
complaint against Dorfman, Rogers, and several other individuals who were co-owners or related
to co-owners of the condominium.
Over the next several months, the parties continued to engage in discovery and a vigorous
motion practice. On April 4, 2013, plaintiffs moved to bifurcate the trial and for an immediate
trial on the following issue:
What approval, if any, were Defendants given to exclusively use and occupy 365
square feet of real property located south of Unit 5 and was that approval
consistent with the Master Deed and Bylaws, as recorded in the Oakland County
Records, as well as the Michigan Condominium Act.
10
The record shows that at the 2012 annual meeting, in addition to returning Scaglione and
Hanna to the Board as president and vice-president respectively, they elected Rogers as
secretary-treasurer.
11
The first amendment of the bylaws is irrelevant to the instant appeal.
-7-
The trial court granted the motion, and a six-day trial limited to the issue of “what approval, if
any, was given for defendants’ use of the three hundred and sixty-five square feet of common
area” began on June 17, 2013.
In addition to the foregoing testimony about certain key documents, Scaglione testified at
trial that he expected to receive compensation and protection from liability for the Association’s
approval of the awning and outdoor seating. He denied that he, Hanna, and the Sassons had
agreed on anything that would have elicited his approval of the project, and stressed that the
Sassons had not followed the procedures required to obtain the approval they sought. Scaglione
stressed that he had never attended a meeting where he had voted to approve defendants’
exclusive use and occupation of the common elements. He further stated that Henry Sasson has
not asked the Association for “an amendment to the master deed granting Pierce Martin the right
to use the common elements,” and that even if one had been proposed, Scaglione would not have
approved it because he “didn’t want to give [his] property away for free.” Rogers also denied
that the Board or the co-owners approved defendants’ exclusive use of the common elements.
He stressed that he never gave approval for the Sassons to operate a restaurant and bar on the
common elements, and repeatedly denied that the Board or the co-owners approved defendants’
use of the space to operate a bar and restaurant.12
After the close of plaintiffs’ case-in-chief, defendants moved for a directed verdict.
Relevant to the instant appeal, they argued that the bylaws permit structural changes to the
exterior of units with the Association’s consent, and authorize the Board to act on behalf of the
Association in this matter. They observed that, not only did the Board, i.e., Scaglione and
Hanna, approve of the expansion, but with Rogers agreeing to follow the lead of these two, all
the co-owners of the Association agreed to the expansion of Unit 5 onto the common elements.
Dorfman and Rogers opposed the motion with essentially the same legal arguments that
appellants advance on appeal. They contended that the Condominium Act prohibits the
expansion of Unit 5 onto the common elements, that only the Association’s co-owners could
approve such expansion, and then only after following procedures that no one disputes were not
followed in this case, and that defendants’ use of the common elements violated certain other
provisions of the condominium’s governing statutes and documents. Dorfman and Rogers
further contended that none of the co-owners approved defendants’ operation of a restaurant and
12
In addition to Scaglione, Rogers, and Hanna, the trial court also heard testimony from
Dorfman, who acknowledged that, because he was not a co-owner in September 2010, he had no
right to be consulted in connection with the September 12, 2010 document and was not involved
with it in any way. Dorfman testified that a discussion of the matter with his real estate attorney
convinced him that the condominium documents had to be amended if defendants were to
exclusively occupy the common element at issue. Consequently, he emailed Rogers and Hanna
in March 2011 suggesting that they obtain a legal opinion regarding whether the Association had
agreed to defendants’ use of the common element at issue. Rogers agreed with his suggestion,
but Hanna and Scaglione did not. Dorfman recalled that he spoke with Jeremy Sasson and asked
him not to proceed until he had the approval and support of all the residents, or he was setting
himself up for protracted litigation, but Sasson did not take his advice.
-8-
bar on the common elements. Ruling from the bench, the trial court identified the key factual
question as whether the Association consented to defendants’ expansion of Unit 5 and use of the
common element as a coffee shop or café. The trial court concluded that the evidence clearly
showed that defendants obtained the necessary approval to “modify or alter unit five and to
expand upon the common elements[,]” but left the legal effect of that approval to a later
determination. The trial court entered a corresponding order, which it later amended twice for
reasons without bearing on the instant appeal.
On January 10, 2014, defendants and the Association filed competing motions for
summary disposition of Dorfman and Rogers’ complaint and the Association’s intervening
complaint.13 The Association reiterated the legal arguments it had made against defendants’
motion for a directed verdict, and further asserted that it was unreasonable to rely on the
September 12, 2010 letter because it was unsupported by written authorization from the co-
owners and it violated the statute of frauds. Defendants asserted that in directing a verdict for
them, the trial court had rejected the premise underlying all of plaintiffs’ complaints, which was
that defendants had not received the necessary approval to occupy and use the common elements
at issue.
Subsequent to a hearing, the trial court issued a written opinion and order granting
defendants’ joint summary disposition motion pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10), and denying the
Association’s counter-motion for summary disposition; the trial court also denied without
prejudice the Association’s request to dismiss defendants’ counterclaims. The trial court
acknowledged that defendants did not obtain approval according to the procedures set forth in
the bylaws, but noted that evidence submitted at trial established that the Association did not
conduct formal business at the time. The trial court further observed that it was clear that “the
majority of the co-owners in the condominium unit gave their express permission, or, at a
minimum, acquiesced in the others’ decisions.” Moreover, the approval was in keeping with the
Association’s authority under the Condominium Act and the condominium documents to
approve additions, alterations, and modification of the common elements. Finally, the trial court
rejected the Association’s characterization of the approval as tantamount to an illegal
conveyance, ruling, “[t]he common area at issue is still common area, albeit modified for
Defendants’ use.”
13
The trial court’s order granting defendants’ a directed verdict also dismissed Dorfman from the
case. Not only did Dorfman not own a unit at the time defendants sought and obtained approval
to expand Unit 5, but the agreement under which he purchased the unit insulated him from
fluctuations in the market price of the unit by giving him the option to require Askar to purchase
the unit back at a fixed price. Therefore, Dorfman did not lose any rights in the common element
at issue because he came to the unit after approval of defendants’ expansion, and he would be
unaffected by any decrease in his unit’s value attributable to the operation of defendants’
restaurant and bar because of the buy-back price agreement. Rogers did not join in the
Association’s motion or file a separate motion.
-9-
Subsequent to this order, litigation of defendants’ counterclaims continued until, in a
settlement agreement dated May 26, 2016, the parties stipulated to dismissal of those
counterclaims and third-party complaints not previously dismissed, and the trial court entered a
corresponding, final order. Of note, plaintiffs Dorfman and Rogers’ trust are not the appellants
in this Court. Rather, the Association and third-party defendants Scaglione and Rogers in his
personal capacity filed the instant appeal.
II. ANALYSIS
A. JURISDICTIONAL CHALLENGE
Before turning to the merits of the appeal, we first address challenges to appellants’
standing to bring this appeal. Defendants contend that the Association lacks standing to appeal
because it did not follow its own bylaws and obtain an affirmative vote of a supermajority of its
co-owners before commencing litigation. Defendants further contend that Scaglione and Rogers
lack standing because they are not “aggrieved parties” for purposes of MCR 7.203(A). For the
reasons stated below, we conclude that the Association has standing to appeal, but Scaglione and
Rogers are not aggrieved parties.
As indicated elsewhere in this opinion, the administration of a condominium project is
governed by the condominium bylaws. MCL 559.153. The bylaws of the 180 Pierce Street
condominium require the Association’s board of directors to obtain an affirmative vote of 75%
of the co-owners in certain situations, including prior to hiring an attorney to evaluate a claim, to
incurring the expense of further investigations of the claim, and to incurring “any expense or
legal fees with respect to any litigation.” Bylaws, Art XIII, § 6; Bylaws, Art II, § 2(c).
Defendants argue that, because the Association did not obtain the prior approval of at least 75%
of the co-owners, it lacked authority to file this claim of appeal. Defendants base their argument
on their reasoning that an appeal is “new proceeding” because “[i]t requires new filings, new
appearances, and new filing fees in a new court,” and because the Association’s attorney was
under no obligation to file an appeal after dismissal in the trial court.
We are unpersuaded that a claim of appeal is a “new proceeding” of the type that required
the Board in the instant case to adhere to the pre-litigation procedures set forth in the bylaws.
This appeal is the continuation of a civil action begun by the filing of a complaint by Dorfman
and Rogers in the trial court. MCR 2.101. Inherent in a civil action is the right to timely appeal
the trial court’s final order in this Court. MCR 7.203(A)(1); MCR 7.202(6)(a); MCR 7.204(A).
The fact that an aggrieved party may decide not to appeal, and that an appeal in this Court
requires new filings, appearances, and fees, and may involve a new attorney, does not make it a
“new proceeding.” Nothing in the bylaws indicates that procedures put in place to limit the
board’s authority to commence litigation were intended to restrict the board’s ability to see the
litigation through where completion called for a timely appeal. 14
14
Defendants’ reliance on the holding in Tuscany Grove Ass’n v Peraino, 311 Mich App 389;
875 NW2d 234 (2015), is unavailing. The unauthorized lawsuit at issue in Tuscany was not an
-10-
We also reject defendants’ contention that a claim of appeal is a “[m]odified
undertaking[] involving material cost increases and ultimate commencement of formal
proceedings for assertion of claims.” Bylaws, Art XIII, § 6. Read in context, the phrase
“modified undertakings” arguably refers to additional or modified evaluative or investigatory
undertakings leading up to filing the initial claim. An appeal is not the “commencement of
formal proceedings,” but as already indicated, the continuation of proceedings initiated with the
filing of a complaint. Therefore, because a claim of appeal is not a “new proceeding” or a
“modification of the original matter” requiring adherence to the pre-litigation procedures set
forth in the bylaws, defendants’ argument that the Association lacks standing to bring this appeal
necessarily fails.
Defendants next contend that Scaglione and Rogers lack standing because they were not
individual plaintiffs below and are not “aggrieved parties” for purposes of MCR 7.203(A).15 We
agree.
This Court has jurisdiction of an appeal of right filed by an aggrieved party from a final
judgment. MCR 7.203(A). “An aggrieved party is not one who is merely disappointed over a
certain result. Rather, to have standing on appeal, a litigant must have suffered a concrete and
particularized injury, as would a party plaintiff initially invoking the court’s power.” Federated
Ins Co v Oakland Co Rd Comm, 475 Mich 286, 291-292; 715 NW2d 846 (2006). There is a
significant difference between a litigant with standing in the trial court and an aggrieved party
for purposes of an appeal. “[A] litigant on appeal must demonstrate an injury arising from either
the actions of the trial court or the appellate court judgment rather than an injury arising from
the underlying facts of the case.” Id., 475 Mich at 292 (Emphasis added). Thus, even a litigant
who was not a party in the trial court proceedings may be an “aggrieved party” if the trial court’s
judgment injures the litigant in a way other than by an adverse decision on the underlying facts
of the case.16
appeal from an already commenced lawsuit, and the defendant sought summary disposition of
the plaintiff condominium association’s complaint in the trial court, apparently before the parties
engaged in substantial litigation.
15
Appellants did not address this issue in their primary appellate brief, and they did not file a
reply brief. However, in a brief in opposition to defendants’ motion to dismiss filed with this
Court, appellants relied on Federated Ins Co v Oakland Co Rd Comm, 475 Mich 286; 715 NW2d
846 (2006), to argue that Scaglione and Rogers did not have to be plaintiffs in the underlying suit
to be aggrieved parties with the right to bring this appeal.
16
See, e.g., Martin v Secretary of State, 482 Mich 956; 755 NW2d 153 (Mem) (2008) (holding
that two non-party elected officials were aggrieved parties for the purposes of appellate standing
where the circuit court’s decision extending the filing deadline for the plaintiff in a suit against
the Secretary of State meant they had to compete against someone potentially improperly placed
on the ballot); Mathew R Abel, PC v Grossman Investments Co, 302 Mich App 232; 838 NW2d
204 (2013) (holding that an attorney who had an attorney-fee request partially denied was an
aggrieved party with appellate standing).
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Apart from Federated Ins Co, Scaglione and Rogers provide no argument or authority in
support of their implication that they have standing to bring this claim of appeal simply because
they were third-party defendants in Pierce Martin and Townhouse’s counterclaim. Scaglione and
Rogers were dismissed as third-party defendants, and thus, they cannot be aggrieved by the trial
court’s act of dismissing them from being sued. To the extent that they identify their
“particularized harm” as arising from their status as individuals with rights or interests that the
Association has the legal authority to pursue, they merely link their “aggrieved party” status to
the Association’s authority to pursue an appeal. Scaglione and Rogers rely on property rights
derived from the Master Deed, and assert that they “are pursing remedies on appeal that they had
when the litigation commenced and that they would have the right to recover, individually, if the
appeal is successful.” However, none of these assertions demonstrates an injury arising from the
actions of the trial court. What they demonstrate is disappointment with the trial court’s
resolution of the underlying issues raised by the parties. Also telling is the fact that neither
Scaglione nor Rogers raises any issues or arguments distinguishable from those of the
Association, which suggests that, like the Association, they are disappointed and aggrieved by
the trial court’s decision on the underlying facts. Because Scaglione and Rogers fail to show an
“injury arising from either the actions of the trial court or the appellate court judgment rather
than an injury arising from the underlying facts of the case,” id., they are not aggrieved parties
for purposes of MCR 7.203(A). But because the Association is an appellant with standing to
appeal, we will address the issues it has raised, which are the same as those raised by Scaglione
and Rogers.
B. DIRECTED VERDICT
The Association first contends that the trial court erred in directing a verdict for
defendants on the question of whether Pierce Martin received the requisite approval to occupy
and use the common elements at issue because the evidence showed that no such approval was
given. We disagree.
We review do novo a trial court’s decision on a motion for a directed verdict. Krohn v
Home Owners Ins Co, 490 Mich 145, 155; 802 NW2d 281 (2011). We review all of the
evidence presented up to the time of the motion to determine whether a question of fact existed.
Silberstein v Pro-Golf of America, Inc, 278 Mich App 446, 455; 750 NW2d 615 (2008), lv den
483 Mich 886 (2009). The Court reviews the evidence in the light most favorable to the
nonmoving party, granting the nonmoving party every reasonable inference and resolving any
conflicts in the evidence in the nonmoving party’s favor. Krohn, 490 Mich at 155. “If
reasonable jurors could honestly have reached different conclusions, this Court may not
substitute its judgment for that of the jury.” Silberstein, 278 Mich App at 455 (quotation marks
and citation omitted).
Viewed in the light most favorable to appellants, reasonable jurors could not disagree that
the Association, through both its Board and the voting condominium co-owners, approved
defendants’ proposal to build upon and use the common elements at issue. The September 12,
2010 letter states that the Association approves the proposed improvements and that it “obtained
all necessary approvals and consents of the Owners of the Units (and mortgagees if applicable)
in the Condominium Project in accordance with the Master Deed . . . .” The letter is signed by
Hanna in his capacity as vice-president of the Association, and is accompanied by a floor plan
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and sketch showing the expansion of Unit 5 onto the common elements. Hanna testified
unequivocally that he signed the letter with the firm understanding that Scaglione and Rogers
approved of the proposed improvements during a conference call held prior to September 12,
2010. He testified that he understood Rogers’ August 20, 2010 e-mail to leave the decision to
him and Scaglione, and that he confirmed Rogers’ support for the proposal in a chance
conversation with Rogers in the condominium’s garage.
Scaglione’s testimony does not directly refute Hanna’s account. Scaglione believed at
the time that the proposal would be an enhancement to the building. He acknowledged that the
August meeting with the Sassons took place during “the depths of the great recession,” at a time
when neighborhood vacancies were up, real estate values were down, the two commercial spaces
in the condominium had been foreclosed on, and Unit 5 was papered over. He affirmed that he
told Hanna that they needed “to do something with the old retail space,” and that it would be “the
kiss of death” if they did not.
Further, nothing in the record indicates that Scaglione had any concerns about approving
defendants’ proposal. Although he stated that he and Hanna engaged in negotiations with the
Sassons without reaching an agreement, he conceded that Pierce Martin accomplished seven of
the items on Hanna’s list from August 20, 2010. Scaglione’s assertion that no agreement was
reached seems more properly to characterize the period after late 2010 or early 2011, when the
Association attempted without success to extract concessions, including a license agreement,
from Pierce Martin. Plaintiffs present no evidence indicating that, prior to 2011, any of the co-
owners desired compensation for defendants’ use of 365 square feet of the common elements at
issue beyond the items on Hanna’s list and an increase in the Association fees paid by the
commercial units. Likewise, they present no evidence indicating that liability protection was a
concern of the co-owners prior to their discovery that Pierce Martin planned to open a restaurant
and bar in the units.
Although Scaglione testified that he did not “authorize” Hanna to sign the September 12,
2010 letter and recommended that he have a lawyer look at it, he did not testify that he told
Hanna not to sign it because he did not approve its contents. In fact, he affirmed that at his
deposition he testified that he could not recall the conversation and would not refute Hanna’s
account of it. Further, Scaglione did not contradict Hanna’s January 2011 emails informing
Rogers that the Association had given its approval for the expansion, and he opposed Dorfman’s
suggestion to seek a legal opinion as to whether the Association had given approval. These facts
could reasonably be inferred as indicating that he was aware that the September 12, 2010 letter
permitted defendants’ improvements and was supported by approval of the members of the
Association.
In addition, evidence indicates that in August and September 2010, Scaglione did not
view defendants’ proposed improvements, which he knew included occupation and use of 365
square feet of common element, as the threat to his property interests that he later came to view
them. Scaglione acknowledged on cross-examination that his memory of the meeting with the
Sassons and their proposal for the building was “hazy” or “foggy,” and that his attention was
elsewhere at the time, and implied that he did not have an independent memory of the event.
Asked if it were true that he was not paying close attention at the meeting, Scaglione responded,
“Why should I have.” He also acknowledged that he had not retained in his files any of the early
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e-mails regarding the proposal. Whatever his later position, the evidence from August and
September of 2010 suggests that Scaglione supported the Sassons’ proposal to modify and
occupy the condominium’s commercial units.
Similarly, Rogers’ testimony does not directly refute that of Hanna. He did not contest
Hanna’s testimony that Rogers agreed to defendants’ expansion of Unit 5 onto and use of the
common elements during a conference call with Hanna and Scaglione and during a chance
encounter with Hanna in the condominium’s garage. He admitted telling Scaglione and Hanna
that he would follow their lead, knowing that Hanna supported the project and that it involved
the loss of common elements space, and testified that he would be “stuck with” whatever they
decided. After his August 30, 2010 e-mail to Hanna asking about progress with the Sassons and
informing him that he was leaving the country for two weeks, nothing in the record indicates that
Rogers questioned the proposed expansion onto the common elements until early 2011, when he
learned that Jeremy Sasson was going to put in a restaurant and bar. However, the record shows
that Dorfman, Rogers, and the Association agreed on the first day of trial that whether they
required defendants to obtain separate approval to serve alcohol was not part of the issue
presented to the jury in the trial. Nevertheless, Rogers consistently confused these two issues
throughout the trial, stating that defendants never gave him any proposed plans for Townhouse
Kitchen and Bar. He further asserted that he could not have approved of defendants’ plan
because Hanna and Scaglione never reached an agreement with the Sassons, and that, to his
knowledge, the Sassons had fulfilled none of the items on Hanna’s list from August 20, 2010.
Based on our review of the evidence, we conclude that if Hanna and Scaglione agreed to
approve defendants’ project, whether Rogers was aware that the Sassons had accomplished the
items on Hanna’s list was irrelevant. Rogers’s testimony that he did not read the list carefully
and that some of the items were Hanna’s opinion suggests that he did not tie his proxy to
completion of the items on the list. Further, even when he learned that Jeremy Sasson was
planning a restaurant and bar for the space, Rogers appeared to object only to the particular
commercial use of the space, not to defendants’ expansion onto and use of the common
elements. The record indicates that it was not until Dorfman became involved and this lawsuit
was pending that Rogers informed Scaglione in an April 7, 2011 e-mail that neither he nor
Hanna had “the legal right to give exclusive use to anyone of my share of a common area of our
condo.” In the same e-mail, Rogers withdrew permission for Hanna and Scaglione, i.e., the
Board, to negotiate with the Sassons on his behalf, stating that he thought they had “failed in
[their] responsibility to the state of Michigan and to the condo owners.”
Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, the evidence does not reasonably support
the conclusion that the Association did not approve defendants’ proposed occupancy and use of
the common elements adjacent to Unit 5 in the fall of 2010. Hanna was unwavering in his
support of the project, and the evidence shows that, as much as Scaglione may have come to rue
his support of the project, and Rogers his acquiescence to Hanna and Scaglione, both supported
the structural improvements proposed by defendants in the summer of 2010. Events later
transpired that may have caused them to regret communicating their approval without asking
more questions or extracting more concessions, but this does not change the fact that the
evidence shows that the approval conveyed by the September 12, 2010 letter represented the
approval of the Board—Hanna and Scaglione—and the acquiescence of Rogers. Even if, for the
sake of argument, one were to factor in Rogers’ disapproval and Hanna’s inability to contact
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Askar, defendants’ proposed use of the common elements still had the approval of the Board and
four of six, or two-thirds, of the co-owners.17 For these reasons, we affirm the trial court’s grant
of defendants’ motion for a directed verdict on the question of whether Pierce Martin obtained
the requisite approval to occupy and use the common elements at issue.
C. SUMMARY DISPOSITION
The Association next argues that, even if Pierce Martin did obtain approval for its
proposed occupation and use of the common elements, the approval was invalid because it
violated various provisions of the Condominium Act, MCL 559.101 et seq., and the
condominium documents. Again, we disagree.
We review a trial court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition de novo. Auto
Club Group Ins Co v. Burchell, 249 Mich App 468, 479; 642 NW2d 406 (2002). Defendants
brought their motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10). A motion for summary
disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) tests the factual sufficiency of a claim. Smith v Globe Life
Ins Co, 460 Mich 446, 454; 597 NW2d 28 (1999). “In reviewing a motion for summary
disposition brought under MCR 2.116(C)(10), a trial court considers affidavits, pleadings,
depositions, admissions, and documentary evidence filed in the action or submitted by the
parties, MCR 2.116(G)(5), in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion.” Quinto
v Cross & Peters Co, 451 Mich 358, 362; 547 NW2d 314 (1996). If the documentary evidence
shows that there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment
as a matter of law, the trial court may grant the motion. Id. MCR 2.116(C)(10), (G)(4).
Characterization of the legal effect of the Association and co-owners’ approval is critical
to a determination of whether the approval violates Michigan’s Condominium Act and the
condominium documents. The Association contends that the approval constituted a conveyance
to defendants of 365 square feet of formerly common element space. However, the trial court’s
summary disposition ruling rejects the notion that a conveyance has occurred. Even at trial, the
trial court resisted characterizations of the approval as conveying the property or changing
ownership, at one point reminding the litigants, “We’re dealing with use, not conveyance, not
ownership. The question is use.” Accordingly, the trial court stated in its order granting
defendants summary disposition, “[t]he common area at issue is still common area, albeit
modified for Defendants’ use.” The trial court’s conclusion reflects the nature of defendants’
request and of the approval given in the September 12, 2010 letter. Defendants did not seek, the
co-owners and the Association did not agree to, and the trial court did not find evidence of a
change in the ownership of the common elements that would affect the material rights of the
other co-owners. It is with this characterization of the legal effects of the Association’s and co-
owners’ approval in mind that we turn to the merits of the Association’s argument.
The Association first contends that any approval was void because it violated MCL
559.136, which authorizes a condominium master deed to “provide that undivided interests in
17
Bylaws, Art X, § 1 provides that each co-owner gets one vote per unit owned, which means
that Pierce Martin had two votes, and Hanna and Scaglione had one vote each.
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land may be added to the condominium project as common elements” in which the co-owners
share tenancy, but prohibits situating a condominium unit on the lands. We find this assertion
unpersuasive.
The primary goal of judicial interpretation of statutes is to ascertain and give effect to the
intent of the Legislature. Mich Ed Ass’n v Secretary of State (On Rehearing), 489 Mich 194,
217; 801 NW2d 35 (2011). The first criterion in determining intent is the specific language of
the statute. United States Fidelity Ins & Guaranty Co v Mich Catastrophic Claims Ass’n (On
Rehearing), 484 Mich 1, 13; 795 NW2d 101 (2009). The plain language of MCL 559.136
suggests that it authorizes a provision in a master deed describing how one could add land to the
project, not necessarily restricting the use of land already a part of the condominium project. For
example, there is a provision reserving to the developer of the project the right to add amenities
as limited or general common elements, and to modify or delete units and common elements for
six years from the recordation date of the master deed. Master deed, Art VII, § 2. However,
there is no such analogous provision for the addition of land to the condominium in the master
deed for 180 Pierce Street Association. Therefore, because the common elements at issue were
part of the original condominium project rather than lands later added, MCL 559.136 does not
operate in the instant case to render void the approval given to defendants to occupy and use a
portion of the common elements adjacent to Unit 5.
The Association also contends that any approval given violates MCL 559.137(5), which
generally renders void any alteration of “the undivided interest in the common elements
allocated to any condominium unit” by “any purported transfer, encumbrance, or other
disposition of that interest without the condominium unit to which it appertains.” However, this
argument fails because, as the trial court indicated in its summary disposition opinion and order,
there was no alteration, transference, encumbrance, or other disposition of interests in the
common elements. The common elements remain common elements, and the co-owners remain
tenants in common, with defendants enjoying a right to occupy and use for their requested
purposes that portion of the common elements at issue.
The Association next contends that the approval was void because neither the Board nor
the Association’s co-owners can change the restrictions in the condominium documents relative
to use of the common elements. To the extent that the Association argues that constructing a
restaurant and bar in the space at issue violates those provisions in the condominium documents
prohibiting activities that are “immoral, improper, unlawful, or offensive” and that annoy or are a
nuisance to the co-owners, Bylaws, Art VI, § 4, its argument goes beyond the narrow question
presented in the bifurcated trial. The argument blends the question of whether defendants
obtained approval to occupy and use the common elements with whether they obtained approval
to use the expanded area in operation of a restaurant and bar. As indicated elsewhere in this
opinion, the plaintiffs in the trial court action agreed that the latter issue was not part of the
bifurcated trial.
Moreover, evidence at trial indicates that, at the time defendants’ sought and obtained
approval, they had not finalized their plans for the space. Although Rogers testified that the
Sassons told him they were opening a coffee shop, he also admitted that he saw “many different
versions” of defendants’ plans, and the testimony of Scaglione and Hanna indicated that no final
decisions had been reached. This is further support by Jeremy Sasson’s admission in a January
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2011 e-mail to Rogers that, “[w]hen we first met back in July [2010], I had no clue about what
would be the final result of this retail project.” Finally, in opposing defendants’ motion for a
directed verdict, counsel for Dorfman and Rogers argued that plaintiffs could not have approved
of defendants’ plan on September 12, 2010, because defendants’ use of the space to operate a
restaurant and bar was not clear until the City of Birmingham approved their plan on May 4,
2011. However, the question before the trial court was “what approval, if any, was given for
defendants’ use of the three hundred and sixty-five square feet of common area.” Therefore,
whether approval violated restrictions in the condominium documents that might be associated
with a bar exceeds the scope of the issue tried.
The Association also argues that Pierce Martin violated the condominium documents by
not obtaining the co-owners’ approval “to enter into a lease with Townhouse.” However,
although the Bylaws authorize the Association to review a lease for compliance with the
condominium documents, they do not authorize the Association to reject the lease. If the lease
violates the condominium documents, Bylaws, Art VI, § 2 authorizes the Association to notify
the leasing co-owner of the violations by certified mail and, if the leasing co-owner has not
corrected the violations within 15 days, to pursue eviction of the lessee and damages. Nothing in
the bylaws provides that, under such circumstances, the Association can simply declare the lease
void.
The Association further argues that use of the space at issue is void because it violates the
condominium documents’ prohibition against obstructing common elements, including
landscaped areas, and using them “for purposes other than that for which they are reasonably or
obviously intended.” However, Bylaws, Art VI, § 3 allows the Association to authorize exterior
attachments and modifications to units and common elements. “Bylaws are generally construed
in accordance with the rules used for statutory construction.” Slatterly v Madiol, 257 Mich App
242, 255; 668 NW2d 154 (2003). A cardinal principle of statutory construction is to save and
not to destroy. Gora v City of Ferndale, 456 Mich 704, 722; 576 NW2d 141 (1998). Thus, the
usual rule of statutory construction is that apparently conflicting statutes should be construed, if
possible, to be read harmoniously, Nowell v Titan Ins Co, 466 Mich 478, 482; 648 NW2d 157
(2002), and to give each full force and effect, Ziegler v Witherspoon, 331 Mich 337, 358; 49
NW2d 318 (1951). Applying this rule of statutory construction to interpretation of the bylaws at
issue suggests that, while a co-owner may not decide unilaterally to use common elements in
ways prohibited by the bylaws, the Association is empowered to allow modification and
alterations in the common elements. In the instant case, the September 12, 2010 letter provided
defendants with the “express written approval of the Association” to execute the modifications
that all of the co-owners approved.
The Association next contends that the approval is void because neither the Board nor the
co-owners strictly adhered to the procedures set forth in the condominium documents for making
material changes to the rights of the co-owners. The Association contends that construction of a
restaurant and bar on the common elements for defendants’ exclusive and economic benefit
constitutes a material change to the rights of the co-owners and mortgagees that requires
approval of at least two-thirds of the co-owners and affected mortgagees, and amendment of the
condominium documents. However, the trial court’s conclusion that defendants received
permission to use the common elements and that the area remains a common element, albeit
modified for defendants’ use, calls into question the Association’s assumption that defendants’
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use of the common elements constitutes a material change in its members’ rights in the common
elements. Further, although appellants allege that defendants assert exclusive use over the area,
they present no evidence that defendants have excluded them from or restricted their use of the
area. In other words, although appellants assert a diminishment of their rights, they have
presented no evidence in support of this conclusion. Therefore, appellants have not provided the
evidence necessary to create a genuine issue of material fact as to any alleged diminishment of
their rights in the common elements that would require amendment of the master deed.
Finally, the Association contends that any approval given was void because it did not
result from strict compliance with the procedural requirements set forth in the bylaws. There is
no dispute that defendants’ proposal was not noticed for discussion at an annual or special
meeting and a vote taken on the proposal in accordance with the procedures set forth in the
bylaws. However, the evidence shows that, to accommodate their particular schedules, the co-
owners had previously adopted discussion through telephone conversations and e-mail as an
alternate procedure for conducting the Association’s business, and approved or acquiesced in the
approval of defendants’ use of the space in accordance with the alternate procedure they had
adopted. The co-owners’ approval was memorialized in the September 12, 2010 document, upon
which defendants relied to obtain a building permit and begin construction on their project.
Given these particular circumstances, to declare the approval void because it did not result from
strict compliance with the bylaws would be to elevate formalities over substance.
The Association next contends that any approval purportedly given by the September 12,
2010 letter signed by Hanna was void because the letter did not satisfy Michigan’s statute of
frauds. Michigan’s general real-estate statute of frauds provides:
No estate or interest in lands, other than leases for a term not exceeding 1
year, nor any trust or power over or concerning lands, or in any manner relating
thereto, shall hereafter be created, granted, assigned, surrendered or declared,
unless by act or operation of law, or by a deed or conveyance in writing,
subscribed by the party creating, granting, assigning, surrendering or declaring the
same, or by some person thereunto by him lawfully authorized by writing.
The Association bases it argument on the premise that the September 12, 2010 letter
brought about the transfer of a property interest (Plaintiffs’ brief on appeal, p 30-31). The trial
court did not find this to be so, stating in its summary disposition opinion and order, “The
Association’s argument that an illegal conveyance of the common area occurred is a
mischaracterization and conclusory. The common area at issue is still common area, albeit
modified for Defendants’ use.” As indicated above, that there is no evidence that the Sassons
asked for, or the Association or co-owners agreed to, a transfer of interests in the common
-18-
element supports the trial court’s ruling. Therefore, if no estate or interest in land has been
“created, granted, assigned, surrendered or declared,” the statute of frauds is inapplicable.18
Finally, the Association attempts to capitalize on the trial court’s statement in its
summary disposition opinion that “the majority of the co-owners in the condominium unit gave
their express permission, or, at a minimum, acquiesced in the others’ decisions[,]” by arguing
that the trial court erred in its application of the doctrine of acquiescence. The Association
erroneously infers a legal meaning for “acquiescence” where, when read in the context of the
trial court’s opinion, it is clear that the court intended its more general meaning of “to accept,
comply, or submit tacitly or passively.” See Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (2003), p
11. The doctrine of acquiescence is inapplicable in this case, and appellants’ attempts to
challenge a finding of acquiescence are unnecessary.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons explained above, we affirm the trial court’s grant of a directed verdict to
defendants on the question of whether defendants obtained the required approval or consent to
modify Unit 5 of the 180 Pierce Street condominium building to occupy and use a portion of the
common elements adjacent to the unit. We also affirm the trial court’s grant of summary
disposition to defendants. Given our disposition of this matter, we need not address the
Association’s claims of relief, nor defendants’ alternative reasons for affirming the trial court’s
orders.
Affirmed.
/s/ Jane M. Beckering
/s/ Jane E. Markey
/s/ Michael J. Riordan
18
Defendants’ statement in their brief to this Court that the trial court “rejected the Association’s
statute of frauds argument,” while plausible, gives the impression that the trial court considered it
and then rejected it. In fact, the trial court’s ruling made it irrelevant.
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