IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA
January 2018 Term
FILED
_______________ April 11, 2018
released at 3:00 p.m.
EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
No. 17-0141 SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
OF WEST VIRGINIA
_______________
ARTHUR L. CONKEY, Jr., and JO CAROL CONKEY,
Defendants Below, Petitioners
v.
SLEEPY CREEK FOREST OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC.,
Plaintiff Below, Respondent
_______________
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Morgan County
The Honorable Christopher C. Wilkes, Judge
Civil Action No. 16-C-29
_______________
AFFIRMED
_______________
Submitted: April 3, 2018
Filed: April 11, 2018
Michael L. Scales, Esq. Charles S. Trump IV, Esq.
Michael L. Scales, P.L.L.C. Trump & Trump, L.C.
Martinsburg, West Virginia Berkeley Springs, West Virginia
Counsel for the Petitioners Counsel for the Respondent
JUSTICE KETCHUM delivered the Opinion of the Court.
JUSTICE WALKER concurs and reserves the right to file a Concurring Opinion.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
1. “Where the terms of a contract are clear and unambiguous, they must be applied
and not construed.” Syl. pt. 2, Bethlehem Mines Corp. v. Haden, 153 W.Va. 721, 172 S.E.2d
126 (1969).
2. “The plain language of W.Va. Code § 36B-3-116(f) (1986) (Repl. Vol. 2005)
requires a judgment or decree in any action brought under W.Va. Code § 36B-3-116 to
include an award of costs and reasonable attorney’s fees for the prevailing party.” Syl. pt.
5, United Bank, Inc., v. Stone Gate Homeowners Ass’n, Inc., 220 W.Va. 375, 647 S.E.2d 811
(2007).
Justice Ketchum:
This action concerns the Sleepy Creek Forest Subdivision, a residential community
located in Morgan County. Arthur L. Conkey, Jr., and Jo Carol Conkey, lot owners in the
Subdivision, appeal from the December 22, 2016, order of the Circuit Court of Morgan
County. Pursuant to the order, summary judgment was granted for the Subdivision’s
Association and against the Conkeys for $1,215.00 in delinquent residential assessments and
related charges. The Conkeys also appeal from the circuit court’s order entered on February
13, 2017, awarding the Association $10,061.25 in attorney’s fees.
The Conkeys contend that the delinquent assessments represent certain increases in
annual assessments which were never properly voted on by the Association. According to
the Conkeys, the increases were, therefore, ultra vires with respect to the Subdivision’s
covenants and restrictions. In addition, the Conkeys contend that the Association’s efforts
to collect the delinquent assessments violated the West Virginia Consumer Credit and
Protection Act and that the Association’s imposition of 10% interest on the delinquent
assessments was usurious. The Conkeys ask this Court to reverse the summary judgment,
grant them partial summary judgment on the Association’s liability under the Consumer
Credit and Protection Act, and remand this action for a determination of the Conkeys’
damages and attorney’s fees.
1
The Association contends that the assessments were expressly authorized and properly
imposed by the required vote pursuant to the Subdivision’s covenants and restrictions. The
Association further contends that the imposition of the assessments and other charges were
consistent with the law and that attorney fees were warranted.
Upon review, we find that the circuit court reached the correct result. Consequently,
we affirm the December 22, 2016, order granting summary judgment in favor of the
Association and the February 13, 2017, order awarding the Association attorney’s fees.
I. Factual Background
The Sleepy Creek Forest Subdivision, located in Morgan County, consists of
residential lots managed by an Association of lot owners and governed by a Board of
Directors. From 1969 forward, each lot in the Subdivision was subject to the restrictions and
covenants set forth in the Subdivision’s Declaration of Restrictions. The Declaration
included a provision that certain maintenance and improvement costs would be paid by the
lot owners.
On September 21, 1982, an amended Declaration of Restrictions was recorded in
Morgan County. The amended Declaration provided in relevant part:
2
The Declarant hereby declares that all of the property comprising all
of the Sections of The Sleepy Creek Forest Subdivision shall be held, sold
and conveyed subject to the following easements, restrictions, covenants,
reservations and conditions, all of which are for the purpose of enhancing
and protecting the value and desirability of real property, and which shall
run with the real property, and be binding on all parties having any right,
title or interest in the above described property or any part thereof, their
heirs, successors and assigns, and shall inure to the benefit of each and
every owner thereof.
The amended Declaration of Restrictions designated every owner of a lot within the
Subdivision a member of the Association and noted that the initial assessment for each lot
would be up to $50.00 per year for the maintenance of roads, rights-of-way and common
areas. The amended Declaration provided further:
Any assessment made pursuant to this paragraph, including late fee
of Five ($5.00) Dollars, interest at the rate of ten (10%) percent per annum
from the date of delinquency, and reasonable attorney’s fees incurred in the
collection thereof, shall constitute a lien on thie [sic] property until paid and
all grantees do bind themselves, their heirs and successors in title to this lien
and to the covenants herein written. * * * This assessment may not be
raised by more than ten (10%) percent per year without the written
affirmative vote of two-thirds (2/3) of the members of the Association
entitled to vote.
(emphasis added)
The Conkeys became lot owners in the Subdivision after the September 21, 1982,
amended Declaration of Restrictions was recorded. The Conkeys purchased four lots
between 1988 and 2002 which made up their personal residence. Each conveyance to the
Conkeys was subject to the Subdivision’s covenants and restrictions.
3
The Association operated on a fiscal year basis, beginning on November 1 and ending
on October 31. Bills for assessments for the coming year were ordinarily sent to lot owners
in August and were due by November 1. The controversy between the Association and the
Conkeys in this action concerns fiscal years 2002-03, 2005-06 and 2015-16. In each of those
fiscal years, the Association voted to raise the assessment by more than 10%.
For 2002-03, the minutes of the Association show that the assessment was raised
from $75.00 per lot to $100.00 per lot for road maintenance. The result was a 33 1/3%
increase by a vote of 30 to 12 (71%). For 2005-06, the minutes show that the assessment was
raised from $100.00 per lot to $115.00 per lot to cover the cost of a liability insurance bill
in the amount of $889.81. The result was a 15% increase by a vote of 31 to 2 (94%).
Finally, for 2015-16, the assessment was raised from $125.00 per lot to $165.00 per
lot, a 32% increase. That increase occurred in two steps. First, the assessment was raised
by the Association from $125.00 per lot to $150.00 per lot (a 20% increase) by a vote of 31
to 2 (94%). Second, the Subdivision’s Board of Directors raised the assessment by an
additional 10% per lot to obtain “needed funds for road repairs / maintenance and delinquent
assessments.” The result was a $165.00 assessment per lot beginning with the 2015-16 year.
4
II. Procedural Background
In April 2016, the Association filed an action in the Morgan County magistrate court
against the Conkeys to recover unpaid Subdivision assessments, late fees, interest and costs.
The Conkeys removed the action to the Circuit Court of Morgan County and filed an answer
and counterclaim.1 According to the Conkeys, none of the increases in assessments of more
than 10% per year had been obtained by the required “written affirmative vote” of two-thirds
of the Association’s members. The Conkeys asserted that, as a result, they did not owe the
Association any assessment in excess of the original $50.00 per year. The Conkeys further
asserted that the Association’s debt collection efforts violated the West Virginia Consumer
Credit and Protection Act, W.Va. Code, 46A-1-101 [1974], et seq., and that the Association’s
imposition of 10% interest on their alleged delinquent assessments was usurious.
The Association filed a motion for summary judgment in July 2016 alleging, inter
alia, that the assessments and other charges were expressly authorized and correctly imposed
pursuant to the Subdivision’s 1982 amended Declaration of Restrictions. The Conkeys also
filed a motion for summary judgment. In that motion, the Conkeys sought recovery from the
Association under the Consumer Credit and Protection Act for improper debt collection
practices.
1
See, W.Va. Code, 50-4-8 [2008] (authorizing removal of a civil action from
magistrate court to circuit court prior to trial).
5
On December 22, 2016, the circuit court granted summary judgment in favor of the
Association. The Association was awarded $1,215.00, consisting of the delinquent
assessments, a late fee, and interest. Summary judgment was also granted in favor of the
Association on the Conkeys’s counterclaim.2 In addition, the Association was awarded
reasonable attorney’s fees to be determined at a later date.
The circuit court’s rulings were primarily based on the Subdivision’s amended
Declaration of Restrictions. The circuit court rejected the Conkeys’ assertion that the
increased assessments were never properly voted on by the Association. The circuit court
concluded: “The records show that any increases in any single year which exceeded 10%
over the assessments for the previous year were approved by the affirmative vote of more
than two-thirds of the members voting.” The circuit court thus found the increases consistent
with the requirements of the amended Declaration of Restrictions.
The circuit court further concluded that, although the Consumer Credit and Protection
Act applied to the Association’s debt collection efforts,3 no violations occurred because the
2
The Association was awarded $1,160.00 in delinquent assessments, a $5.00 late
fee, and $50.00 in interest, totaling $1,215.00. Having denied the counterclaim, the
circuit court determined that the Conkeys’s motion for summary judgment was moot.
3
Syl. pt. 2 of Fleet v. Webber Springs Owners Ass’n, Inc., 235 W.Va. 184, 772
S.E.2d 369 (2015), holds:
Homeowners association assessments that are to be used for
6
late charges on the delinquent assessments were authorized by agreement and by statute. The
agreement was the Subdivision’s 1982 amended Declaration of Restrictions, and the statute
cited by the circuit court was W.Va. Code, 36B-3-116 [1986], of the West Virginia Uniform
Common Interest Ownership Act.4 Subsection (a) of W.Va. Code, 36B-3-116 [1986],
improving and/or maintaining common areas of a planned community,
including, but not limited to, maintaining common roads and common
recreational areas within the community, are an obligation primarily for
personal, family, or household purposes, and, therefore, such assessments
are “claims” pursuant to W.Va. Code § 46A-2-122(b) (1996) (Repl. Vol.
2006) [of the Consumer Credit and Protection Act].
In 2016, the Legislature added an exclusion from the provisions of the Consumer
Credit and Protection Act. That exclusion, effective on June 8, 2016, and found in W.Va.
Code, 46A-1-105(a)(3) [2016], states:
(a) This chapter does not apply to: * * *
(3) The obligation of a property owner, lot owner or homeowner in a
planned community containing no more than twelve units which is not
subject to any development rights or a planned community that provides in
its declaration that the annual average common expense liability of all units
restricted to residential purposes, exclusive of optional user fees and any
insurance premiums paid by the association, may not exceed $300 . . . ,
or the efforts of property owners’ associations or homeowners’ associations
to collect the same to pay dues, assessments, costs or fees of any kind to a
property owners’ association or homeowners’ association.
The new exclusion, however, does not apply to the Subdivision herein. The circuit
court noted that the Subdivision had no $300.00 cap on assessments as specified in the
exclusion. Moreover, the events surrounding the increases in the assessments challenged
by the Conkeys occurred prior to the exclusion’s June 8, 2016, effective date.
4
The Subdivision was created prior to the enactment of the Uniform Common
Interest Ownership Act, W.Va. Code, 36B-1-101, et seq. However, pursuant to W.Va.
Code, 36B-1-204(a) [1986], a number of the Act’s provisions, including W.Va. Code,
36B-3-116, are made applicable to common interest communities created before the Act’s
effective date.
7
provides an association with a lien for any assessment (including late charges and interest)
from the time the assessment becomes due. In addition, subsection (f) states: “A judgment
or decree in any action brought under this section must include costs and reasonable
attorney’s fees for the prevailing party.”
On February 13, 2017, the circuit court entered an order awarding the Association
$10,061.25 in attorney’s fees.5 The court noted that allowing the Conkeys to avoid their
financial responsibility as members of the Association “is not only inconsistent with the law,
but also will provide an enormous incentive for members to pass the cost of collection onto
their neighbors when they do not pay their dues.”
The Conkeys appeal the December 22, 2016, and February 13, 2017, orders to this
Court.
III. Standards of Review
This Court’s consideration of the summary judgment entered for the Association
brings forth well-settled standards of review. “A motion for summary judgment should be
granted only when it is clear that there is no genuine issue of fact to be tried and inquiry
concerning the facts is not desirable to clarify the application of the law.” Syl. pt. 3, Aetna
5
The order awarded the Association $10,061.25 in attorney’s fees and $818.37 in
costs, totaling $10,879.62.
8
Cas. and Sur. Co. v. Fed. Ins. Co. of New York, 148 W.Va. 160, 133 S.E.2d 770 (1963).
Appellate review of summary judgment is de novo. Syl. pt. 1, Painter v. Peavy, 192 W.Va.
189, 451 S.E.2d 755 (1994) (“A circuit court’s entry of summary judgment is reviewed de
novo.”).
The facts in the current matter are undisputed, and the issues involve questions of law.
Those issues are contractual in nature insofar as they arise from the September 21, 1982,
amended Declaration of Restrictions. Therefore, de novo review is again implicated. See
Wood v. Acordia of W.Va., Inc., 217 W.Va. 406, 411, 618 S.E.2d 415, 420 (2005) (Summary
judgment based on contract interpretation is subject to de novo review because interpretation
of contract language is a question of law.). Accord, Consol Energy, Inc. v. Hummel, 238
W.Va. 114, 119, 792 S.E.2d 613, 618 (2016).]
IV. Discussion
A. Assessment Increases
The Subdivision’s 1982 amended Declaration of Restrictions provides that an
assessment may not be raised by more than 10% “per year” without the written affirmative
vote of two-thirds of the Association’s members. The Conkeys assert that the circuit court
disregarded the “per year” provision and, instead, considered the average increase in
assessments over a period of years. As the Association alleged in its motion for summary
9
judgment, in the course of thirty-four years, the assessment increases averaged about 3.6%
per year, well under the requirement of a two-thirds vote of the members.
The Conkeys’ assertion is without merit. Although the circuit court noted the
Association’s argument regarding the multi-year average, summary judgment was not
granted in favor of the Association on that basis. The December 22, 2016, order includes the
circuit court’s finding that “any increases in any single year which exceeded 10% over the
assessments for the previous year were approved by the affirmative vote of more than two-
thirds of the members voting.” (emphasis by the circuit court). That finding is supported by
the Association’s minutes for fiscal years 2002-03, 2005-06 and 2015-16 which show, for
each year, an assessment increase of more than 10%, approved by a vote of more than two-
thirds.
The Conkeys next assert that the assessment increases were invalid because the
Subdivision’s Association and Board of Directors failed to comply with the “written
affirmative vote” provision. According to the Conkeys, the two-thirds vote needed to raise
assessments by more than 10% per year requires the keeping of written votes from the
members themselves, rather than the written reporting of the votes in the minutes of the
Association’s meetings.
10
However, nothing in the amended Declaration of Restrictions elevates the manner by
which the members voted, whether by individual ballot or otherwise, above the Association’s
written minutes which constitute the formal record of the proceedings.6 The record includes
the minutes for the years in question, 2002-03, 2005-06 and 2015-16. Although the minutes
for 2015-16, reflect the Conkeys’ objection to the voting process, there is no evidence to
suggest that the respective votes for assessment increases of 30 to 12; 31 to 2; and 31 to 2,
were incorrect.
Moreover, the amended Declaration of Restrictions provides that an assessment may
not be raised by more than 10% per year without the written affirmative “vote” of two-thirds
of the Association’s members. The word “vote” appears in the singular, and its use in the
context of the Declaration is clear. The Association accurately states:
Notably, it is not “votes.” It is, instead, the vote. Thus, the “written
affirmative vote” obviously refers to the overall, aggregate vote, i.e., the
total of the individual votes of the members. The “affirmative vote” is the
aggregate number (or percentage) in favor of a question voted upon. By the
ordinary meaning of these words, it is the affirmative vote, i.e., the
“affirmative tally,” that must be written. * * *
The circuit court found correctly that in any year in which the
[Conkeys] argue that a vote was required in order for assessments to be
raised, a vote was held, and the affirmative vote, as written in the minutes,
6
See New Oxford American Dictionary 1115 (3rd ed. 2010) (minute - “a
summarized record of the proceedings at a meeting - an official memorandum authorizing
or recommending a course of action”).
11
was sufficient under the covenants and restrictions to make the increases
effective.
Syllabus point 2 of Bethlehem Mines Corp. v. Haden, 153 W.Va. 721, 172 S.E.2d 126
(1969), holds: “Where the terms of a contract are clear and unambiguous, they must be
applied and not construed.” Accord, syl. pt. 2, Citynet, LLC v. Toney, 235 W.Va. 79, 772
S.E.2d 36 (2015). Here, the words “written” and “affirmative” modify the word “vote”
(singular), not “votes” (plural). This Court concludes that the phrase “written affirmative
vote” in the Declaration of Restrictions clearly refers to the aggregate vote as reflected in the
Association’s minutes. The Conkeys’ assertion to the contrary is without merit.
B. Attorney’s Fees
The Conkeys’ next challenge concerns the award to the Association of $10,061.25 in
attorney’s fees. The Conkeys assert that the circuit court committed error in relying on
W.Va. Code, 36B-3-116 [1986], which, in subsection (a), provides an association with a lien
for assessments (including late charges and interest) and states, in subsection (f), that “[a]
judgment or decree in any action brought under this section must include costs and
reasonable attorney’s fees for the prevailing party.” According to the Conkeys, W.Va. Code,
36B-3-116 [1986], does not apply because this action was instituted by the Association to
collect an unpaid debt, i.e., delinquent assessments, not to enforce a lien. Therefore,
subsection (f) provides no basis for the award of attorney’s fees.
12
It is undisputed that the property purchased by the Conkeys was subject to a lien for
the benefit of the Subdivision. Each deed to the Conkeys’ four lots made specific reference
to the Declaration of Restrictions which provided the assessment lien and listed the
Subdivision’s covenants and restrictions. In Fleet v. Webber Springs Owners Ass’n, Inc., 235
W.Va. 184, 190, 772 S.E.2d 369, 375 (2015), this Court recognized that a lien of that nature
is a “consensual common law lien” against real property and is valid and enforceable in this
State.
Here, the Declaration of Restrictions, as amended in 1982, also addressed the subject
of attorney’s fees. According to the Declaration, the lien for the benefit of the Subdivision
included the assessment, other charges, and attorney’s fees incurred in the collection thereof.
Consequently, W.Va. Code, 36B-3-116(a) and (f) [1986], notwithstanding, the amended
Declaration of Restrictions, agreed to by the Conkeys, authorized attorney’s fees in
association with the collection of an unpaid debt, as well as making attorney’s fees a
component of the Subdivision’s lien.
Moreover, inasmuch as attorney’s fees are also a component of the lien, subsection
(f) is dispositive. Syllabus point 5 of United Bank, Inc.,v. Stone Gate Homeowners Ass’n,
Inc., 220 W.Va. 375, 647 S.E.2d 811 (2007), holds: “The plain language of W.Va. Code §
36B-3-116(f) (1986) (Repl. Vol. 2005) requires a judgment or decree in any action brought
13
under W.Va. Code § 36B-3-116 to include an award of costs and reasonable attorney’s fees
for the prevailing party.”7
Therefore, the Conkeys’ assertion that the Association’s action to recover delinquent
assessments and other charges precluded the Association from seeking attorney’s fees is
without merit.
C. The Consumer Credit and Protection Act
This Court is further of the opinion that no violations of the Consumer Credit and
Protection Act occurred regarding the Association’s debt collection efforts. The Conkeys
rely on W.Va. Code, 46A-2-128(d) [1990], which includes the following among debt
collection practices considered unfair or unconscionable:
(d) The collection of or the attempt to collect any interest or other
charge, fee or expense incidental to the principal obligation unless such
7
See also Article 4 of the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act. Although
Article 4 is entitled “Protection of Purchasers,” W.Va. Code, 36B-4-117 [1986], provides:
If a declarant or any other person subject to this chapter fails to
comply with any of its provisions or any provision of the declaration or
bylaws, any person or class of persons adversely affected by the failure to
comply has a claim for appropriate relief. Punitive damages may be
awarded for a willful failure to comply with this chapter. The court, in an
appropriate case, may award reasonable attorney’s fees.
(emphasis added)
14
interest or incidental fee, charge or expense is expressly authorized by the
agreement creating the obligation and by statute.
(emphasis added)8
The circuit court determined that the imposition of the late charges on the Conkeys’
delinquent assessments was expressly authorized by the amended Declaration of Restrictions.
The Declaration provided for a $5.00 late fee, 10% interest on delinquent assessments, and
reasonable attorney’s fees. In addition, the circuit court determined that the imposition of
the late charges was expressly authorized by the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act,
particularly W.Va. Code, 36B-3-116 [1986]. As discussed, subsection (a) of that statute
provides an association with a lien for an assessment (including late charges and interest),
and subsection (f) authorizes reasonable attorney’s fees. Moreover, subsection (e) provides,
in part, that W.Va. Code, 36B-3-116 [1986], “does not prohibit actions to recover sums for
which subsection (a) creates a lien.”
Thus, pursuant to the amended Declaration of Restrictions, and by statute, the circuit
court found no violation of the Consumer Credit and Protection Act. We find the circuit
court’s analysis correct.
8
Later amendments to W.Va. Code, 46A-2-128(d) [1990], are not relevant to this
appeal.
15
The record reveals a history of litigation between the Association and the Conkeys
over the payment of assessments. In the order awarding the Association attorney’s fees in
the current action, the circuit court stated that allowing the Conkeys to avoid their financial
responsibility as members of the Association “is not only inconsistent with the law, but also
will provide an enormous incentive for members to pass the cost of collection onto their
neighbors when they do not pay their dues.”
In support, the circuit court cited Justice Loughry’s concurring opinion in Fleet v.
Webber Springs Owners Ass’n, Inc., 235 W.Va. 184, 772 S.E.2d 369 (2015) which states that
the efforts of a homeowners association to collect assessments “arise out of the obligation
to ensure that the maintenance of the community is accomplished in a manner that is equally
borne by all those who benefit therefrom.” 235 W.Va. at 195, 772 S.E.2d at 380. Moreover,
the concurring opinion suggests that a dilatory property owner may cause an association to
incur expenses and legal fees in excess of available insurance coverage, resulting in special
assessments to be paid by fellow homeowners.9
9
Here, for fiscal year 2015-16 the Subdivision’s Board of Directors raised the
assessment by an additional 10% per lot to obtain “needed funds for road repairs /
maintenance and delinquent assessments.” (emphasis added).
16
This Court concludes that no violations of the Consumer Credit and Protection Act
occurred regarding the Association’s efforts to collect the late fee, interest on the delinquent
assessments, and reasonable attorney’s fees.
Finally, the 1982 amended Declaration of Restrictions provides for interest on
delinquent assessments “at the rate of ten (10%) percent per annum.” Asserting a further
violation of the Consumer Credit and Protection Act, the Conkeys contend that the 10%
interest is usurious. In support, the Conkeys cite the general, legal rate of interest of 8% set
forth in W.Va. Code, 47-6-5(b) [1974].10 The circuit court, however, found that the 10% was
not usurious and did not violate the law.
W.Va. Code, 36B-3-115(b) [1986], entitled “Assessments for common expenses,”
provides: “Any past due common expense assessment or installment thereof bears interest
at the rate established by the association not exceeding eighteen percent per year.” That
statute, specific to the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act, was in effect when the
Conkeys purchased the four lots between 1988 and 2002.
10
W.Va. Code, 47-6-5(b) [1974], states in part: “Parties may contract in writing for
the payment of interest for the loan or forbearance of money at a rate not to exceed eight
dollars upon one hundred dollars for a year[.]”
17
Moreover, although the creation of the Subdivision may be traced back to 1969, the
10% interest provision on delinquent assessments appears in the 1982 amended Declaration
of Restrictions. In that regard, the circuit court relied on W.Va. Code, 36B-1-206(a)(2)
[1986], which states:
(a) In the case of amendments to the declaration, bylaws or plats and
plans of any common interest community created before the effective date
of this chapter: * * *
(2) If the result accomplished by the amendment is permitted by this
chapter, and was not permitted by law prior to this chapter, the amendment
may be made under this chapter.
W.Va. Code, 36B-3-115(b) [1986], contemplates amendments to the covenants and
restrictions of pre-existing residential subdivisions and expressly permits interest on
delinquent assessments at a rate not exceeding 18% per year. In the current matter, the
interest did not exceed 10%. The interest allowed under W.Va. Code, 36B-3-115(b) [1986],
manifests the Legislature’s intent to define the narrative regarding common interest
ownership communities. We find no merit in the Conkey’s assertion of usury.
V. Conclusion
This Court affirms the Circuit Court of Morgan County’s December 22, 2016, order
granting summary judgment in favor of the Association and the February 13, 2017, order
awarding the Association attorney’s fees.
Affirmed.
18