FIFTH DIVISION
REESE, P. J.,
MARKLE and COLVIN, JJ.
NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
https://www.gaappeals.us/rules
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THE TIMES SET BY OUR COURT RULES.
July 28, 2020
In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A20A0895. HOLMAN et al. v. GLEN ABBEY HOMEOWNERS
ASSOCIATION, INC. et al.
COLVIN, Judge.
In June 2015, the City of Alpharetta notified appellee Glen Abbey
Homeowners Association, Inc. that the Association would be required to make more
than $1.9 million in repairs to a lake located in the Glen Abbey subdivision. A
majority of the owners of lots adjoining the lake amended the declaration of
covenants specific to them so as to shift responsibility for the repairs to all 535
members of the Association. When the Association denied that this amendment was
effective and assessed repair costs against the lake lot owners, a majority of them
voted to terminate the relevant declaration and brought this action for declaratory and
injunctive relief against the Association. The trial court later granted the Association
judgment on the pleadings on some of plaintiffs’ claims and on the Association’s
counterclaims, and we granted plaintiffs’ application for interlocutory review. On
appeal, plaintiffs assert that the trial court erred in its interpretation of the declarations
at issue, in its holding that an Alpharetta ordinance did not bind the Association, and
in its grant of injunctive relief to the Association. We affirm the trial court’s
construction of the declarations, but we vacate its remedy and remand for further
proceedings.
“On appeal, we review de novo the trial court’s decision on a motion for
judgment on the pleadings, and we construe the complaint in a light most favorable
to the appellant[s], drawing all reasonable inferences in [their] favor.” (Citations and
punctuation omitted). Reliance Equities, LLC v. Lanier 5, LLC, 299 Ga. 891, 893 (1)
(792 SE2d 680) (2016).
Thus viewed in their favor, the record shows that plaintiffs, the owners of 12
of the 16 lake lots, filed their complaint on January 30, 2019. The complaint alleged
that within the Glen Abbey subdivision is “a 4.5 acre lake that serves as the storm
water detention pond for the entire subdivision” and is “owned collectively” by the
16 lake lot owners and the Association, “which owns a large recreation area with a
lot[-]sized frontage along the lake.” The Glen Abbey subdivision is governed by a
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declaration of covenants and restrictions (“the Glen Abbey Declaration”), which
provides in relevant part:
Only the Owners of Lots which lie partially within the Lake will have
any rights with respect to the Lake covering their Lots and the Members
shall have the right to use that portion of the Lake contiguous to part of
the Common Area. The Association shall have no liability or duty
whatsoever with respect to the Lake, except to the extent that a portion
of th[e] Lake exists on a portion of the Common Area and then only to
the extent provided by a separate declaration addressing the lake. . . .
If the [developer,] the Association and such Owners do not maintain the
Lake in accordance with the terms of such recorded document, the
Association shall have the right, but not the obligation, to provide any
[maintenance] or repair required of the Lake in accordance with such
recorded document, and the additional costs and expenses so incurred
by the Association, beyond its pro rata contribution required under such
recorded document, shall become part of the assessments for which such
Owners are personally liable hereunder. . . .
(Emphasis supplied.)
A second declaration of covenants, restrictions, and easements (“the Lake
Declaration”) laid out the respective responsibilities of the lake lot owners and the
Association and was recorded on March 22, 1999. The Lake Declaration provides in
relevant part:
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Maintenance by Lake Lot Owners and Association. . . . [T]he Owners of
the Lake Lots and the Association shall . . . be responsible for and shall
perform all maintenance and repair of the Lake or the Dam which may
reasonably be necessary and for the costs of all such maintenance and
repair. Each Owner of a Lake Lot and the Association, as the Owner of
the Recreation Area, shall be responsible for an equal share of all costs
incurred in connection with the maintenance and repair of the Lake . .
..
Payment of Expenses. . . . Within thirty (30) days of [an annual meeting
concerning the maintenance and repair of the lake and the dam during
the coming year], each Owner of a Lake Lot and the Association shall
receive an invoice from the Association for his share of the cost of such
maintenance or repair (hereinafter the “Lake Assessment”). . .
General Type of Maintenance and/or Repair. The maintenance and/or
repair required hereunder shall include, but not be limited to . . . any
maintenance imposed upon the Owner[s] of the Lake Property by any
governmental body or agency.
The Lake Declaration also provided for its own duration and amendment:
Duration. The provisions of this Declaration shall run with and shall
bind the Lake Property and shall remain in effect for a period of twenty
(20) years after the date this Declaration is recorded, after which time
this Declaration shall be automatically extended for successive periods
of twenty (20) years, unless such extension is disapproved in writing by
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greater than a majority of the Owners of the Lake Lots and the
Association. . . .
Amendment. . . . This Declaration may be amended upon the affirmative
vote or written consent, or any combination thereof, of a majority of the
Owners of Lake Lots and the Association . . . . A meeting may be called
(but shall not be required to be call[ed]) to consider and vote upon any
such amendment.
(Emphasis supplied.) The Glen Abbey subdivision was annexed by the City of
Alpharetta in 2005.
According to a July 2016 summary sent to the Association, the projected cost
of repairs to the lake and the dam was $1,979,554. In 2018, the Association sought
to assess this amount from the lake lot owners, 13 of whom executed an Amendment
to the Lake Declaration, recorded on May 22, 2018. The Amendment provided in
relevant part that the Association was responsible for the maintenance and repair of
the lake and dam and “shall have the right . . . to assess the Association’s full
membership for the costs of all such maintenance and repair[.]” (Emphasis supplied.)
On July 27, 2018, the Association recorded a notice of its opinion that the lake lot
owners’ Amendment was invalid. On March 8, 2019, 12 lake lot owners also recorded
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a written Disapproval of the Lake Declaration so as to invalidate the Lake Declaration
within 20 years after its adoption, or on March 22, 2019.
As later amended, the complaint sought extensive declaratory relief, including
as to the meaning of the Lake Declaration, the validity of the Amendment and the
Disapproval, and the invalidity of the Assessment (Counts 1-3), and that a City of
Alpharetta ordinance making homeowners’ associations responsible for maintaining
storm water management facilities “take[] primacy over any portion of the unamended
Lake [Declaration]” (Count 4). The complaint also sought to restrain the Association
from collecting the Assessment (Counts 5-7), to quiet title concerning the
Association’s notice of the Amendment’s invalidity (Count 9), and to recover costs
and attorney fees under OCGA § 13-6-11 (Count 8).1 The Association answered and
counterclaimed for a declaration cancelling the lake lot owners’ amendment and
disapproval of the Lake Declaration (Count 1); to quiet title by “permitting the
Association to file any order in the land records . . . to effect canecllation of the
purported amendments” to the Declaration (Count 2). The counterclaims also sought
a permanent injunction, a money judgment for the unpaid Assessement, and costs and
1
With their original complaint, plaintiffs also filed a motion for a temporary
restraining order and a preliminary injunction staying the Association from collecting
any assessments concerning the lake.
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attorney fees under OCGA § 13-6-11 (Counts 3-5). The Association also moved to
dismiss some of plaintiffs’ claims on the ground that they were seeking declarations
as to events that had already occurred and for judgment on the pleadings.
After oral argument,2 the trial court granted the Association’s motion, finding
that the Amendment was invalid because it improperly shifted the burden of the lake
repair from the lake lot owners to the Association and because it did not gain the
approval of the Association; that when read with the original Glen Abbey
Declaration, the Lake Declaration expressed the intent that the 16 lake lot owners and
the Association share the expenses of maintenance and repair in “17 equal shares”;
and that the Alpharetta ordinance had no bearing on the dispute between the parties.
The trial court therefore invalidated the lake lot owners’ Amendment and Disapproval
and held the Lake Declaration “valid and remain[ing] in full force and effect[.]” In
a separate order, the trial court also dismissed the three counts of the complaint
seeking declaratory relief as to the Amendment, the Disapproval, and the Assessment
on the ground that it had no jurisdiction to issue an advisory opinion on these matters
arising in the past.
2
The transcript of an earlier hearing on a temporary restraining order has not
been included in the appellate record.
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On appeal, plaintiffs assert that the trial court erred in its construction of the
Declarations (including the validity of the Amendment and the Disapproval as well
as the import of the Alpharetta ordinance), in dismissing plaintiffs’ claims for
declaratory relief, and in granting the Association injunctive relief without conducting
an evidentiary hearing.
1. The crux of this appeal is plaintiffs’ assertions that the trial court erred in (a)
its construction of the Declarations, (b) declaring the Amendment invalid, and (c)
declaring the Disapproval invalid. We disagree.
The Supreme Court of Georgia has held that although restrictive covenants
must be strictly construed in favor of the landowner, they must also be construed “so
as to give a reasonable, lawful and effective meaning to all manifestations of intention
by the parties rather than an interpretation which leaves a part of such manifestations
unreasonable or of no effect.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Elite Realty Svcs.,
Inc. v. City of Auburn, 272 Ga. 195, 196 (528 SE2d 236) (2000). See also Garland
v. Carnes, 259 Ga. 263, 263 (379 SE2d 782) (1989).
(a) The Declarations. As the Glen Abbey Declaration emphasizes, “[o]nly” the
lake lot owners, and no other Glen Abbey landowners, “will have any rights with
respect to” the lake, with the Association having the “right, but not the obligation,”
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to assess maintenance and repair costs as “part of the assessments for which such
[o]wners” – that is, the lake lot owners – “are personally liable[.]” The Lake
Declaration is entirely consistent with the Glen Abbey Declaration when it provides
that the lake lot owners and the Association “shall . . . be responsible for and shall
perform all maintenance and repair” of the lake; that “[e]ach Owner of a Lake Lot and
the Association, as the Owner of the Recreation Area, shall be responsible for an
equal share of all costs incurred in connection with the maintenance and repair of the
Lake”; and that “[e]ach Owner of a Lake Lot and the Association” shall be invoiced
“for his share of the cost of such maintenance or repair[.]” Given the plain meaning
of these provisions, the trial court did not err when it concluded that the lake lot
owners and the Association are each responsible for 1/17 share of the cost of the
repairs.
(b) Validity of the Amendment. This Court has previously held that amendments
that remove restrictions “from less than all the lots” in a subdivision “are not valid
without the consent of the adversely affected property owners.” Licker v. Harkleroad,
252 Ga. App. 872, 876 (2) (c) (558 SE2d 31) (2001). “Amendments that do not apply
uniformly to similar lots or units are not effective without the approval of members
whose interests would be adversely affected unless the declaration fairly apprises
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purchasers that such amendments may be made.” (Punctuation and emphasis omitted.)
Id., citing Restatement (Third) of Property (Servitudes) § 6.10 (2) (2000); see also §
6.10 (2) (June 2020 update). “[C]ourts commonly protect the reliance interests of
community members and disfavor nonuniform amendments which shift the benefits
and burdens of community restrictions without the consent of those affected.” Id.,
citing Restatement (Third) of Property, § 6.10 (2), comment f. As we noted in Licker,
the relevant comment sets out “two exceptions to the rule disfavoring nonuniform
amendments: (1) a change in conditions rendering the restrictions unreasonable, or
(2) the declaration expressly puts purchasers on notice that such amendments may be
made.” (Citation omitted.) 252 Ga. App. at 876 (2).
Here, the Amendment adopted by the lake lot owners purports to shift liability
for the maintenance and repair of the lake to all the Glen Abbey homeowners, even
though (as the Glen Abbey Declaration provides) these homeowners have no
independent right of access to the lake and (as the Lake Declaration provides) only
the lake lot owners and the Association are responsible by “equal share of all costs
incurred in connection with the maintenance and repair” of the lake. Further, the
Amendment attempts to shift this liability to all the homeowners without their
consent, and there is no indication that either of the two exceptions identified in the
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Restatement – a change of conditions rendering the restrictions unreasonable, or
express notice to purchasers that nonuniform amendments were authorized – apply
here. As we suggested in Licker, it would be patently unfair to require a purchaser of
a non-lake lot to read the Lake Declaration as notice that the purchaser might face
liability for assessments to the Lake in the future. See 252 Ga. App. at 876, 877 (2)
(c) (the declaration at issue “did not fairly put the purchasers on notice that individual
lots could be removed from the effect of the restrictive covenants”; “construing the
scope of amendments to include nonuniform application would only frustrate the
express purpose of [the] community”). We also note that at the hearing on the
Association’s motion, plaintiffs conceded that each of them did have record or actual
notice of their responsibilities and rights, including maintainance of the lake, as laid
out in the Lake Declaration.
In short, we see no justification for departing in this case from the general rule
disfavoring nonuniform amendments such as the one attempted by the lake lot owners
here. The trial court did not err when it concluded that the Amendment was an
invalid, nonuniform restriction on the Association and its members. See Licker, 252
Ga. App. at 876-877 (2) (c) (reversing trial court’s determination that an amendment
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removing a restriction against commercial use was valid when the amendment was
adopted without the consent of the adversely affected lot owners).
(c) Validity of the Disapproval. Our affirmance of the trial court’s substantive
invalidation of the Amendment moots the question whether the Lake Declaration’s
amendment provisions require the approval of a majority of a single 17-member set
including the lake lot owners and the Association, or (as the trial court held) the
approval of a majority of the 16 lake lot owners as well as the “separate” approval of
the Association. We remain obliged, however, to consider the closely related question
of whether the lake lot owners had the authority to disapprove the Lake Declaration
without the consent of the Association.
On the subject of disapproval, the operative language of the Lake Declaration
is the same as that governing the amendment process: just as the Lake Declaration
authorizes amendment upon the vote or consent of “a majority of the Owners of Lake
Lots and the Association,” the Declaration is terminated after a 20-year term if an
“extension is disapproved in writing by greater than a majority of the Owners of the
Lake Lots and the Association.” By contrast, and as the trial court pointed out, the
Lake Declaration defines the term “Lake Property” as “all of the Lake Lots and the
Recreation Area,” and treats this set of 17 owners, including the Association, in a
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category it calls “Owner[s] of the Lake Property,” without differentiating between
them. Likewise, the Lake Declaration’s maintenance provision states that “[e]ach
Owner of the Lake Property [i.e., including the Association] agrees to pay the
Association” its respective proportionate share of lake expenses “when due[.]”
Given that the Lake Declaration uses two different terms to identify the groups
at issue, the only reasonable construction of the Declaration is that when its duration
and amendment provisions require a majority of the lake lot owners “and the
Association,” they require both a majority of the lake lot owners and the
separate approval of the Association. See Tyson v. McPhail Properties, 223 Ga. App.
683, 689 (6) (478 SE2d 467) (1996) (a contract “would not have used two different
terms in two sequential paragraphs to describe the same thing”). This construction
also preserves the Association’s standing as the representative of the vast majority of
the subdivision’s owners, all of whom are entitled to use the common recreation area,
but none of whom were responsible, except via each member’s pro rata share in the
costs of the Association, for repairs to the lake.
For these reasons, the trial court did not err when it found that the lake lot
owners’ purported Disapproval of the Lake Declaration was invalid without the
approval of the Association.
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2. Although plaintiffs assert that the trial court erred in concluding that an
Alpharetta ordinance did not bind the Association, their complaint did not quote the
ordinance, and they have failed to show us a certified copy of that ordinance in the
record. “City and county ordinances must be alleged and proven in order to be
considered by the superior and appellate courts of this State. The proper method of
proving a city ordinance is production of the original ordinance or a certified copy
thereof.” (Citations omitted.) Whitfield v. City of Atlanta, 296 Ga. 641, 641 (769
SE2d 76) (2015). We therefore decline to address this assertion of error. Id.; Strykr
v. Long County Bd. of Commrs., 277 Ga. 624, 626 (6) (593 SE2d 348) (2004)
(declining to address an assertion of error concerning an ordinance missing from the
appellate record).
3. Plaintiffs also assert that the trial court erred in (a) dismissing their claims
for declaratory relief and (b) granting the Association injunctive relief without an
evidentiary hearing.
(a) The trial court dismissed Counts 1 through 3 of plaintiffs’ complaint, which
sought declarations that the Amendment was effectively adopted without the
Association’s consent, that the termination of the Lake Declaration was proper, and
that the 2018 Assessments were invalid. To the extent that plaintiffs’ assertion of
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error is not mooted by our decision in Division 1, we agree with the trial court that
plaintiffs improperly sought the trial court’s validation or disapproval of past events.
There was no error in dismissing these counts. See Crittenton v. Southland Owners
Ass’n, Inc., 312 Ga. App. 521, 522-523 (1) (718 SE2d 839) (2011) (affirming the
dismissal of a complaint for declaratory relief concerning an election of directors of
a property owners association as moot when the election had already occurred).
(b) As the Association concedes, however, the trial court erred when it granted
the Association judgment on its counterclaim to quiet title without making any
specific declaration thereto. See Nelson v. Ga. Sheriffs Youth Homes, Inc., 286 Ga.
192, 193 (686 SE2d 663) (2009) (the Quiet Title Act, OCGA § 23-3-60 et seq.,
requires that a trial court make written findings of fact when ruling on such a claim).
It is also the case that a trial court “abuses [its] discretion when [it] grants an
injunction adverse to a party without any evidence to support such judgment[.]”
(Punctuation and footnote omitted.) Danos v. Thompson, 272 Ga. App. 69, 72 (2)
(611 SE2d 678) (2005) (reversing a judgment that covenants concerning docks had
an adverse impact without the benefit of evidence on that subject).
Apart from the exhibits attached to the pleadings, as to which the trial court
made findings of fact, no evidence concerning the actual effects of permanent
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declaratory or injunctive relief was introduced at the hearing on the Association’s
motion, and the Association’s claim for attorney fees remains pending below. In an
abundance of caution, then, we vacate the trial court’s direction to record its order or
a reasonable alternative in the Fulton County land records, and we remand for further
proceedings, including an evidentiary hearing, limited to the issues of permanent
declaratory and injunctive relief and the Association’s claim for costs and attorney
fees. Of course, the trial court is free to reenter any of its earlier findings of fact, as
warranted by its review of all the evidence in the case, as part of its final judgment.
Judgment affirmed in part and vacated in part, and case remanded with
direction. Reese, P. J., and Markle, J., concur.
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