11/01/2022
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
June 22, 2022 Session
GARY HAISER ET AL. V. MICHAEL MCCLUNG ET AL.
Appeal from the Chancery Court for Cumberland County
No. 2011-CH-508 Robert E. Lee Davies, Senior Judge
No. E2021-00825-COA-R3-CV
This appeal involves a long-running dispute between two groups of property owners in the
real estate community development of Renegade Mountain over composition of the board
of directors and resultant control of the community organization. Plaintiffs, members of
the Renegade Mountain Community Club, Inc. (“RMCC”), a homeowner’s association,
brought this action in 2011, seeking a declaratory judgment affirming their status as
directors and officers of RMCC. The Defendants contested the validity of the election at
which Plaintiffs were allegedly elected. Plaintiffs also sought a declaration of whether the
purported developer possessed developer’s rights. After two prior appeals and a
subsequent retrial, the trial court held that Defendant Moy Toy, Inc., a property owner,
does not have developer’s rights. The trial court further ruled that Plaintiffs were properly
elected as members of RMCC’s board and enforced an easement of enjoyment to use
certain property in the development that was designated as “common areas,” in favor of
Plaintiffs and all other members of RMCC. Defendants appeal. We vacate the trial court’s
findings that the parties stipulated that the old golf course property was not “common
property,” and that Plaintiffs “have no interest” in it because the parties agreed and
stipulated only that the old golf course property was “not an issue” in this case. We affirm
the judgment of the trial court in all other respects.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court
Vacated in Part and Affirmed in Part; Case Remanded
KRISTI M. DAVIS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY,
C.J., and JOHN W. MCCLARTY, J., joined.
Scott Hall, Sevierville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Michael McClung, Phillip Guettler,
Darren Guettler, and Moy Toy, LLC.
Melanie E. Davis, Maryville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Gary Haiser, Joel Matchak,
Renegade Mountain Community Club, Inc., John Moore, and Gerald Nugent.
OPINION
I. BACKGROUND
This is the third appeal of this action. In the first appeal, we affirmed the trial court’s
denial of Plaintiffs’ request to certify the case as a class action. Haiser v. Haines, No.
E2013-02350-COA-R3-CV, 2014 WL 7010723 (Tenn. Ct. App. Dec. 12, 2014). The case
has been embroiled in litigation for over a decade. Its factual and procedural history is
long and convoluted. Much of the pertinent background has already been established by
this Court in the second appeal, Haiser v. McClung, No. E2017-00741-COA-R3-CV, 2018
WL 415087 (Tenn. Ct. App. Aug. 29, 2018) (“Haiser II”), which we quote in relevant part
at length:
This case involves two consolidated actions brought by opposing boards of
directors of a residential development community club, with each board
claiming legitimacy. The plaintiffs to the original action were owners of real
property in the development who held a special meeting in September 2011
in order to elect a new board of directors for the community club. The
previous board of directors and defendants to the original action contested
the validity of the election, claiming that none of the counted votes were cast
by members in good standing. The defendants subsequently met in
November 2011 and again in March 2012 to ratify their positions on the
community club board of directors. In December 2011, the “new” board of
directors, purportedly elected in September 2011, filed a declaratory
judgment action against the original board of directors in the Cumberland
County Chancery Court, requesting that the court declare which board of
directors was legally in control. The complaint also requested that the court
declare whether the purported developer properly possessed developer’s
rights and that the court award damages to the new board for breach of
fiduciary duties by the original board. . . .
In 1972, the [RMCC] was established as a non-profit homeowners’
association for Renegade Mountain, and by-laws and restrictive covenants
were put in place to govern its operations. . . [T]he original developers . . .
adopted the Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions in 1972 for Renegade
Mountain, with the stated intention of developing “a residential and
commercial community with streets, water and sewer systems, recreational
facilities of various types, and other common facilities for the use and benefit
of the owners of the said properties described herein.” This document
granted the developers the ability to plat and improve land and designate
certain areas as “common areas” for the use of RMCC members. The
2
“developer’s rights” contained therein also entitled the developers to ten
votes for each lot or living unit owned by a developer, as opposed to one vote
of regular membership, without the obligation to pay yearly dues. Pursuant
to the Declarations, the developer’s rights were transferrable[.]
In 1987, RMCC adopted a set of by-laws and amended its restrictive
covenants with a new set of controlling documents. The developed and
undeveloped real property . . . changed ownership several times over the
course of the years along with, purportedly, the developer’s rights. The
Renegade Mountain development included, over time, a sports complex, a
pool, a golf course, gated security, and a network of private roads.
By January 2000, an entity named Cumberland Gardens Acquisitions
Corporation had acquired a large portion of real property in Renegade
Mountain and allegedly the developer’s rights as well. . . . Renegade Resort,
LLC, ultimately purchased the real property at Renegade Mountain and
interests therein held by Cumberland Gardens Acquisitions Corporation. Joe
Looney, an attorney assisting Cumberland Gardens Acquisitions Corporation
with the sale of its real property in Renegade Mountain, testified that
developer’s rights were not discussed during the negotiations concerning this
sale. In contrast, Phillip Guettler, a controlling partner of Renegade Resort,
LLC, testified that he entered into the transaction believing that the sale
included developer’s rights.
In March 2000, RMCC held a members’ meeting announcing the sale of the
properties owned by Cumberland Gardens Acquisitions Corporation to
Renegade Resort, LLC. According to the minutes of RMCC taken at this
meeting, Edward Curtis, Phillip Guettler, and Michael Haines were elected
as directors and officers of RMCC. In June 2000, a meeting of the members
of RMCC was conducted. The record indicates that this was the last
members’ meeting that occurred until 2011.
According to the deposition of Joseph Wucher, Renegade Resort, LLC,
began conveying improved and unimproved real property to different entities
involved in the development of Renegade Mountain shortly after its
acquisition of the real property and purported developer’s rights from
Cumberland Gardens Acquisitions Corporation. J.L. Wucher Company,
owned by Mr. Wucher, was one such entity that purchased property in
Renegade Mountain. Another such entity was LKM Group, LLC, which
executed a contract to purchase the unimproved real property and
3
developer’s rights of Renegade Resort, LLC, in September 2005. Also in
2005, Mr. Wucher became a member of the RMCC Board of Directors.
On October 26, 2005, a document entitled, “Amended and Restated
Declaration of Amended Covenants and Restrictions for Renegade
Mountain” (“First 2005 Amendments”), was recorded . . . Among the other
changes to the existing declarations and restrictive covenants of Renegade
Resort, the First 2005 Amendments granted developer’s rights specifically to
Renegade Resort, LLC. The First 2005 Amendments were dated October 20,
2005 . . .
Also on October 26, 2005, two additional documents, entitled, “By-laws of
Renegade Community Club” (“2005 By-laws”) and “Renegade Resort First
Amendment to Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions” (collectively,
“Second 2005 Amendments”), were filed in the Cumberland County Register
of Deeds office. The Second 2005 Amendments are similar to the First 2005
Amendments, with one exception being the specification of “Renegade
Resort, LLC, a Tennessee limited partnership,” as the developer. . . . The
Second 2005 Amendments were signed by the same parties on the same day
as the First 2005 Amendments.
. . . The lots owned by LKM Group were later sold to TIG Holdings, LLC,
(“TIG Holdings”) in March 2011 through a foreclosure sale. On September
28, 2010, Renegade Resort, LLC, and J.L. Wucher Company conveyed the
improved and unimproved real property they respectively owned in
Renegade Mountain to Moy Toy, LLC (“Moy Toy”), a company owned in
part by Michael McClung and, indirectly, Phillip Guettler. [The sellers] also
separately conveyed any existing developer’s rights they respectively
claimed in Renegade Mountain to Moy Toy.
After Moy Toy purchased the improved and unimproved real property and
purported developer’s rights, Phillip Guettler, acting as the vice president of
RMCC, reinstated RMCC as a non-profit corporation with the Tennessee
Secretary of State. On June 23, 2011, Phillip Guettler purportedly appointed
himself and Mr. McClung to the RMCC Board of Directors.
Subsequently, acting on behalf of RMCC, Mr. McClung and Phillip Guettler
ceased maintenance and upkeep of the roads, amenities, street lighting, and
private security at Renegade Mountain. By December 2010, the roads were
no longer being cleared of winter snow or being repaired, the street lights had
been shut off, and the private security had been removed. Throughout 2011,
4
several homeowners of Renegade Mountain attempted to contact the
directors of RMCC, expressing their dissatisfaction with the state of affairs
within Renegade Mountain. These homeowners requested that a special
meeting be called and also requested access to the financial records and
membership lists of RMCC. Receiving no response, a number of dissatisfied
homeowners, believing themselves to be members in good standing,
organized a special meeting to elect a new RMCC Board of Directors to
RMCC and to amend the RMCC by-laws.
On August 24, 2011, TIG Holdings, the holder of 325 of the LKM Group
lots sold at a foreclosure sale, executed a document granting Mr. McClung
the proxy votes associated with the lots. On September 2, 2011, the
homeowners held the special meeting, which Mr. McClung attended as
president of RMCC. At the meeting, Mr. McClung appeared and
immediately attempted to adjourn, alleging that none of the homeowners
calling the special meeting were members in good standing. The gathered
homeowners refused to allow adjournment.
During the September 2, 2011 meeting, the homeowners voted the existing
Board of Directors out of office with an ostensible majority vote. Mr.
McClung challenged this vote by claiming proxy votes for TIG Holdings,
which outnumbered the collective votes of the gathered homeowners. The
homeowners rejected these proxy votes as invalid, however, asserting that
the TIG Holdings’ votes were not properly registered in advance and that
TIG Holdings was not a member in good standing, having never paid dues
since its purchase of real property in Renegade Mountain. The homeowners
also rejected Mr. McClung’s assertion that Moy Toy could claim ten votes
for each of the lots it owned through its purported developer’s rights. As a
result, Mr. McClung was only able to cast three votes.
After voting the existing RMCC Board out of office, the homeowners voted
in a replacement Board (“Owner Board”) for RMCC with Joel Matchak,
Gary Haiser, and Judy Patterson elected as directors. The homeowners at the
September 2, 2011 meeting also approved a new set of amendments to the
RMCC by-laws. Contesting the validity of the September 2, 2011 meeting,
Mr. McClung and Phillip Guettler executed a document on September 22,
2011, appointing Phillip Guettler’s son, Darren Guettler, to the Board of
Directors of RMCC. Mr. McClung, Phillip Guettler, and Darren Guettler
later held a “properly noticed Annual Meeting of Members” on March 1,
2012, and voted to ratify their positions on the RMCC Board of Directors
(“Moy Toy Board”).
5
On December 22, 2011, Mr. Haiser and Mr. Matchak, identifying themselves
as acting members of the Owner Board, filed a complaint in the [trial court]
on behalf of RMCC against Mr. McClung, Mr. Haines, Phillip Guettler, Mr.
Wucher, and Moy Toy (“Owner Complaint”). The complaint alleged, inter
alia, that Renegade Mountain had fallen into a state of disrepair due to the
neglect of the defendants and that the Owner Board was properly elected as
the RMCC Board of Directors on September 2, 2011, despite the Moy Toy
Board’s continuing claims. The plaintiffs requested a declaratory judgment
as to which Board of Directors controlled RMCC and which set of
restrictions and by-laws were in legal effect, as well as damages for breach
of fiduciary duty.
Shortly after the Owner Complaint was filed in the trial court, Moy Toy
purchased the 325 lots in Renegade Mountain owned by TIG Holdings. On
April 10, 2012, the Moy Toy Board filed a separate action in the trial court,
individually and on behalf of RMCC, against the individuals on the Owner
Board (“Moy Toy Complaint”). The Moy Toy Complaint essentially
mirrored the allegations of the Owner Complaint and sought a declaratory
judgment determining which Board of Directors was properly in place, an
injunction preventing the Owner Board from acting on behalf of RMCC, and
damages for allegedly converted funds that the Owner Board had collected
as annual assessments.
* * *
On May 14, 2012, Mr. McClung and Phillip Guettler filed a joint answer to
the amended Owner Complaint, denying all substantive allegations and
alleging as an affirmative defense that the declaratory judgment action
challenging the by-laws was missing indispensable parties. According to the
answer, “[i]n order to make such a challenge, the Plaintiffs will be required
to join each and every owner subject to the Bylaws and Declarations of
Renegade [Mountain].” On May 14, 2012, the Owner Board also filed an
answer to the Moy Toy Complaint, denying all substantive allegations and
the validity of the Second 2005 Amendments.
* * *
On July 23, 2013, the Owner Board filed another motion to amend its
complaint, adding a request that the trial court order Moy Toy to convey real
property classified as “common areas” to RMCC and a request for class
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action certification in order to include other property owners in Renegade
Mountain as plaintiffs. . . .
* * *
The third amended complaint challenged Moy Toy’s purported developer’s
rights, requested that the trial court order Moy Toy to convey title to all
“Common Property” in Renegade Mountain to RMCC, and requested that
the court declare RMCC the controlling entity for the private roads of
Renegade Mountain.
Haiser II, 2018 WL 4150877, at *1-5 (footnotes omitted).
The trial court held a seven-day trial ending on April 14, 2016. The trial court held,
in pertinent part, that (1) neither the Owner Board of Directors nor the Moy Toy Board of
Directors was validly elected; (2) Plaintiffs acted in good faith in trying to call the Sept. 2,
2011 meeting, and Moy Toy had unclean hands; and (3) the first and second 2005
Amendments were valid because the statute of limitations to challenge them had run. The
trial court made several alternative rulings in the event that its ruling on the statute of
limitations issue was reversed, stating:
As an alternative ruling, if the Court of Appeals determines that the statute
of limitations issue does not bar the challenge of the prior recorded
Restrictions and By-Laws, the Court finds that based on the evidence that the
By-Laws and Amendments recorded in 2005 are invalid because they were
not enacted in accordance with their terms. In such event, the By-Laws and
Restrictions in 1987 . . . would be the valid By-Laws and Restrictions for
Renegade [Mountain]. The 2005 Restrictions and By-Laws were never
approved by the members of the RMCC which were required for the
amendment to be valid.
* * *
[T]he Court has not ruled or determined that Moy Toy is the developer under
the 2005 Restrictions which are [the First 2005 Amendments], where
Renegade Resorts, LLC named itself as developer. The court has only
determined that the [Owner Board] cannot obtain an affirmative ruling from
this court that Moy Toy is not the developer because the statute of limitations
has run out on that claim for declaratory relief before the [Owner Complaint]
was filed. As an alternate ruling in the event the Court is incorrect on the
statute of limitations issue, the Court finds that the evidence in this case is
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that Moy Toy, LLC received no developer rights when it purchased what is
now Renegade [Mountain], then Renegade Resorts, LLC and or any other
entity. . . . There is no evidence by deed or contract of the legitimate transfer
of developer rights to Moy Toy, LLC. The Court finds that though [the First
2005 Amendments] states developer rights existed, they did not exist because
there was a breach in title that occurred and these rights were not properly
conveyed in the chain of title or possession of such rights to Moy Toy, LLC
or its predecessor in title except through what is stated in the 2005 Amended
Restrictions.
Haiser II, 2018 WL 4150877, at *6, *7.
On the second appeal, this Court did in fact reverse the trial court’s statute of
limitations ruling, finding that the statute was inapplicable to bar the court from
determining the issues of the validity of the First and Second 2005 Amendments and
whether Moy Toy had developer’s rights. But the Haiser II Court also found that Moy Toy
should have been allowed to present proof on these issues, concluding as follows:
we determine that the issue of the validity of the 2005 Amendments must be
remanded to the trial court for further hearing and determination. On remand,
the trial court should allow both sides to present evidence concerning the
process of adoption of the 2005 Amendments and whether the requirements
for such adoption were properly followed. The validity and applicability of
the 2005 Amendments not only affects the issue of Moy Toy’s possession of
developer’s rights but also the remaining issues raised on appeal. . . . The
court should allow both sides to present evidence concerning the chain of
title of developer’s rights in Renegade Mountain.
* * *
Having determined that the six-year statute of limitations is inapplicable to
the Moy Toy Board’s reliance on the 2005 Amendments as valid instruments
and that the issue of whether Moy Toy possessed developer’s rights must be
remanded to the trial court, we are unable to determine . . . whether the
special master properly counted 3,363 votes for Moy Toy during such
election. For this reason, the August 25, 2017 special election results are
vacated. The trial court must first make a determination concerning the issue
of whether Moy Toy validly possessed developer’s rights before another
special election can be held.
8
The Owner Board contends that the special meeting held on September 2,
2011, was valid because the members calling and attending the meeting were
in good standing. . . .
We note that resolution of this issue turns on the applicability and resultant
interpretation of the 2005 Amendments. Without a determination by the trial
court regarding the validity of the 2005 Amendments, after hearing all of the
evidence from both sides, this Court cannot properly rely upon the provisions
contained within those Amendments to determine which members were in
good standing at the time of the September 2, 2011 special election. This
Court also cannot consider whether any prior versions of the Restrictions
and/or By-Laws would or should be applied to such determination.
Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s ruling on this issue and remand the
issue for further determination.
Haiser II, 2018 WL 4150877, at *14-15.
Following the second remand, Defendants filed a motion asserting that all property
owners within the resort must be joined in this action in order for the court to have
jurisdiction, arguing they are “necessary and indispensable parties.” The trial court denied
this request, stating, “the Moy Toy Defendants continue to take the position that every
owner must be made a defendant. Nowhere in the Court of Appeals’ opinion is there any
suggestion that this needs to be done on remand.”
Later, twenty-one property owners filed a “complaint in intervention” seeking to
intervene in this action. The trial court held, “[w]ith regard to any of the Intervenors who
were property owners at Renegade Mountain prior to September 2019, the Court finds their
motion to intervene is not timely in that they knew or reasonably should have known of
their interest in this case when the trial court entered its judgment regarding these issues
on June 29, 2016 and when the Court of Appeals entered its judgment on August 29, 2018.”
The trial court further reasoned as follows:
there is no impairment to any of the Intervenors’ ability to protect their
interest because the relief which all of the Intervenors are requesting and the
position which all the Intervenors are taking is identical to that of Moy Toy’s.
. . . If either party to the underlying suit can adequately represent the
Intervenors’ interest, then the intervention serves no purpose. That being the
case, the Intervenors are not necessary and indispensable parties to this
proceeding.
9
The trial court allowed two landowners who acquired their property after September 2019
to intervene but barred them from raising “any new theories, claims, defenses, or issues of
fact which have not been disclosed by Defendant Moy Toy in discovery.”
Before the retrial, Defendants filed motions in limine arguing that the action should
be dismissed for lack of standing and failure to join all necessary and indispensable parties.
The trial court denied these motions.
The lengthy retrial began in September and ended in December of 2020. The trial
court entered an extensive 36-page order of judgment containing detailed factual findings
and legal conclusions. As summarized by Defendants in their appellate brief, the trial court
generally held:
(1) that Moy Toy has no developer rights, such rights not having been
conveyed in a previous foreclosure on the last developer identified by the
Court, Cumberland Gardens Limited Partnership, thus breaking the chain of
title leading to Moy Toy. Alternatively, any such developer’s rights were
conveyed to an entity other than Moy Toy, LKM Group, LLC.;
(2) the 2005 Amendments [and] bylaws were all invalid, having been
improperly adopted, wherein Moy Toy was deemed to have failed in carrying
its burden of proof regarding their validity;1
(3) the specially-called RMCC meeting of September 2, 2011, was legitimate
and the Court endorsed actions taken there, reinstating the board as
composed of the Plaintiffs;
(4) an easement of enjoyment for the benefit of Plaintiffs was imposed on
common areas and properties otherwise belonging to Moy Toy. In
furtherance of that the Trial Court invoked reliance on Innerimages, Inc. v.
Newman, 579 S.W.3d 29 (Tenn. [Ct. App.] 2019)[.]
(5) Unplatted roads, on Moy Toy’s property, currently in use by residents
were to be maintained and controlled by RMCC, though Moy Toy was free
to redevelop such trails thereafter as it wished.
(Citations to record omitted; footnote added). Defendants Michael McClung, Phillip
Guettler, Darren Guettler, and Moy Toy, LLC, filed a timely notice of appeal.
1
Defendants have not appealed the trial court’s ruling that the First and Second 2005 Amendments are
invalid and “null and void.”
10
II. ISSUES
We address the following issues raised by Defendants:
1. Whether the trial court erred in holding that the proposed intervenors who owned
property prior to September 1, 2019, were not necessary and indispensable parties, and
denying their request for joinder in the case.
2. Whether the trial court erred in holding that Plaintiffs had standing to challenge Moy
Toy’s entitlement to developer’s rights.
3. Whether the trial court erred in ruling that Moy Toy had no developer’s rights.
4. Whether the trial court erred by holding that Plaintiffs’ actions were not barred by the
statute of limitations.
5. Whether the trial court erred in holding that all members of RMCC, including Plaintiffs,
have an easement of enjoyment to use the roads and all common areas of the community
development.
6. Whether the trial court erred in upholding the September 2, 2011 special election where
the board consisting of Plaintiffs was elected.
Plaintiffs, in their posture as appellees, raise the following additional issues:
7. Whether the trial court erred in its definition of common properties in Renegade Resort.
8. Whether the trial court erred in holding that Plaintiffs have no interest in the former golf
course property of the resort.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Our review of this non-jury case is de novo upon the record with a presumption of
correctness as to the findings of fact unless the preponderance of the evidence is otherwise.
See Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Bowden v. Ward, 27 S.W.3d 913, 916 (Tenn. 2000). “In order
for the evidence to preponderate against the trial court’s findings of fact, the evidence must
support another finding of fact with greater convincing effect.” Wood v. Starko, 197
S.W.3d 255, 257 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006). “The trial court’s determinations regarding
witness credibility are entitled to great weight on appeal and shall not be disturbed absent
clear and convincing evidence to the contrary.” Haiser II, 2018 WL 415087, at *10 (citing
Jones v. Garrett, 92 S.W.3d 835, 838 (Tenn. 2002)). Our review of the trial court’s
11
conclusions of law, including its interpretation of a written agreement, is de novo with no
presumption of correctness. See Dick Broad. Co. of Tenn. v. Oak Ridge FM, Inc., 395
S.W.3d 653, 659 (Tenn. 2013); Ray Bell Constr. Co., Inc. v. State, Tenn. Dep't of Transp.,
356 S.W.3d 384, 386 (Tenn. 2011).
IV. ANALYSIS
A. Proposed Intervenors’ Request to Intervene
Defendants argue that the trial court erred in denying the proposed intervenors’
motion to intervene, which was first made by twenty-one landowners after roughly eight
and a half years of litigation, a week-long first trial, and two appeals. The trial court noted
the proposed intervenors’ “position that as homeowners, they do not wish their HOA fees
to increase because of expenses which may be associated with the development and
maintenance of the common area[s] in the event Plaintiffs are successful.” The proposed
intervenors also “assert[ed] that it is their unified position the 2005 first amendments are
valid and binding, and that Intervenors are ‘diametrically opposed’ to the claim of Plaintiffs
that Moy Toy lacks developer rights which were lost by way of a broken chain of title of a
previous developer.”
Our standard of review of this issue is as follows:
The standard of review on appeal for the denial of intervention as of right is
de novo, except for the timeliness of the application which is reviewed under
an abuse of discretion standard. Michigan State AFL-CIO [v. Miller], 103
F.3d [1240] at 1245 [(6th Cir.1997)]. The standard of review for the denial
of permissive intervention is abuse of discretion. Chaille v. Warren, 635
S.W.2d 700, 703 (Tenn. App. 1982). An abuse of discretion exists when the
reviewing court is firmly convinced that the lower court has made a mistake
in that it affirmatively appears that the lower court’s decision has no basis in
law or in fact and is therefore arbitrary, illogical, or unconscionable. See
Ballard v. Herzke, 924 S.W.2d 652, 661 (Tenn. 1996); State v. Carter, 890
S.W.2d 449, 454 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994).
Parking Guys, Inc. v. Metro. Gov’t. of Nashville & Davidson Cnty. ex rel. Traffic &
Parking Comm’n., 605 S.W.3d 451, 460 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2019) (quoting State v. Brown &
Williamson Tobacco Corp., 18 S.W.3d 186, 191 (Tenn. 2000)).
In support of their motion to intervene, the proposed intervenors stated to the trial
court that they “assert four means by which the Court may permit their intervention in this
case: 1) pursuant to Tenn. R. Civ. Rule 24.0[1] (Intervention as of Right); 2) Tenn. R. Civ.
12
Rule 24.02 (Permissive Intervention); 3) Tenn. R. Civ. Rule 19.01; and 4) T.C.A. § 20-1-
115.”2 Rule 24.01 provides that
[u]pon timely motion any person shall be permitted to intervene in an action:
(1) when a statute confers an unconditional right to intervene; or (2) when
the movant claims an interest relating to the property or transaction which is
the subject of the action and the movant is so situated that the disposition of
the action may as a practical matter impair or impede the movant’s ability to
protect that interest, unless the movant’s interest is adequately represented
by existing parties; or (3) by stipulation of all the parties.
In State v. Brown & Williamson, the Supreme Court explained the burden of a
potential intervenor as follows:
A party seeking to intervene as of right under Rule 24.01 must establish that
(1) the application for intervention was timely; (2) the proposed intervenor
has a substantial legal interest in the subject matter of the pending litigation;
(3) the proposed intervenor’s ability to protect that interest is impaired; and
(4) the parties to the underlying suit cannot adequately represent the
intervenor’s interests. Grubbs v. Norris, 870 F.2d 343, 345 (6th Cir.1989).
The intervenor has the burden of establishing all four of these elements or
else the motion to intervene will be denied.
18 S.W.3d at 190-91. The trial court analyzed the motion to intervene in light of these four
elements and held:
With regard to any of the Intervenors who were property owners at Renegade
Mountain prior to September 2019, the Court finds their motion to intervene
is not timely in that they knew or reasonably should have known of their
interest in this case when the trial court entered its judgment regarding these
issues on June 29, 2016 and when the Court of Appeals entered its judgment
on August 29, 2018. Thus, with regard to all Intervenors who owned
2
On appeal, Defendants assert that the trial court should have applied Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-14-107(a),
which provides that “[w]hen declaratory relief is sought, all persons shall be made parties who have or
claim any interest which would be affected by the declaration, and no declaration shall prejudice the rights
of persons not parties to the proceedings.” However, it appears that nowhere in the pleadings filed by
potential intervenors or Defendants did they ever cite this statute or ask the trial court to apply it. Therefore,
this issue has been waived for failure to raise it with the trial court. See, e.g., Black v. Blount, 938 S.W.2d
394, 403 (Tenn. 1996) (“Under Tennessee law, issues raised for the first time on appeal are waived.”).
Moreover, we observe that none of the proposed intervenors is listed on the notice of appeal, so it is not
clear that any of them are even participants in this appeal.
13
property prior to September 1, 2019, the Court finds their motion is untimely
for the reasons set forth above.
With regard to the other elements set forth in State v. Brown & Williamson[,]
the Court finds that there is no impairment to any of the Intervenors’ ability
to protect their interest because the relief which all of the Intervenors are
requesting and the position which all the Intervenors are taking is identical
to that of Moy Toy’s. While it is true that the intervenors’ interests are
diametrically opposed to that of Plaintiffs, they are in lockstep with the
positions of Moy Toy. If either party to the underlying suit can adequately
represent the Intervenors’ interest, then the intervention serves no purpose.
That being the case, the Intervenors are not necessary and indispensable
parties to this proceeding.
This Court has set forth the factors to consider in determining whether a motion for
intervention is timely as follows:
The timeliness of an intervention is governed by equitable principles, and is
determined by the facts and circumstances of each particular case. In
determining whether an intervention is timely, courts consider the following
factors:
(1) the point to which the suit has progressed; (2) the purpose for which
intervention is sought; (3) the length of time preceding the application during
which the proposed intervener knew or reasonably should have known of his
interest in the case; (4) the prejudice to the original parties due to the
proposed intervener’s failure after he knew or reasonably should have known
of his interest in the case to apply promptly for intervention; and (5) the
existence of unusual circumstances militating against or in favor of
intervention.
In re Estate of Smith, No. W2017-02035-COA-R3-CV, 2018 WL 4859045, at *5-6 (Tenn.
Ct. App. Oct. 8, 2018) (quoting Am. Materials Techs., LLC v. City of Chattanooga, 42
S.W.3d 914 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000); internal citations omitted).
The trial court correctly analyzed the proposed intervenors’ claim for intervention
as of right under Rule 24.01. We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s decision
that the motion was not timely filed by proposed intervenors who owned property before
September of 2019. As the trial court held, they knew or should have known of this case
and their interest in it and waited to file their motion until a very late point in the
proceedings. Furthermore, there is no error in the trial court’s finding that the proposed
14
intervenors were not necessary and indispensable parties, because all of their positions
were “in lockstep with the positions of Moy Toy” and thus adequately represented.
Regarding permissive intervention, Tenn. R. Civ. P. 24.02 provides that “[u]pon
timely motion any person may be permitted to intervene in an action: (1) when a statute
confers a conditional right to intervene; or (2) when a movant’s claim or defense and the
main action have a question of law or fact in common.” The trial court ruled that only
those proposed intervenors who bought property after September of 2019 filed timely,
stating:
the Court will not consider permissive intervention for any property owners
with a recorded interest prior to September 2019 because of their failure to
show proper diligence in the timeliness of their request for intervention.
American Materials Tech., LLC. v. City of Chattanooga, 42 S.W. 3d 914,
916 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).
In exercising its discretion for the remaining Intervenors, the Court was
concerned with the potential prejudice to the Plaintiffs regarding discovery.
However, counsel for Intervenors stipulated that his clients would waive
discovery, be bound by the discovery responses of Moy Toy, and be ready
for trial in September 2020.
In balancing all of the above interests, the Court, exercising its discretion,
will allow the Intervenors set forth in the complaint who had an interest in
the Renegade Mountain Resort after September 1, 2019 to proceed as parties
in this case. However, Intervenors will be prohibited from introducing any
new theories, claims, defenses, or issues of fact which have not been
disclosed by Defendant Moy Toy in discovery. All other Intervenors have
failed to qualify under Rule 24.02 as being untimely.
As we have already held, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding the
majority of the proposed intervenors did not timely file their motion to intervene. Our
Supreme Court has observed that in exercising the discretion afforded under Rule 24.02,
“the court must consider whether the intervention will unduly delay or otherwise prejudice
the rights of the original parties.” Brown & Williamson, 18 S.W.3d at 192. In this case, as
in Brown & Williamson, “it cannot be said that the trial court’s denial of permissive
intervention had no basis in law or fact or was otherwise arbitrary, illogical, or
unconscionable[.]” Id. at 192-93.
Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 19.01 requires joinder of a party who is
indispensable and necessary to an action. It provides in pertinent part:
15
A person who is subject to service of process shall be joined as a party if (1)
in the person’s absence complete relief cannot be accorded among those
already parties, or (2) the person claims an interest relating to the subject of
the action and is so situated that the disposition of the action in the person’s
absence may (i) as a practical matter impair or impede the person’s ability to
protect that interest, or (ii) leave any of the persons already parties subject to
a substantial risk of incurring double, multiple, or otherwise inconsistent
obligations by reasons of the claimed interest. If the person has not been so
joined, the court shall order that the person be made a party.
This Court has recently reiterated that “[o]nly a party who will be directly affected by a
decree and whose interest is not represented by any other party to the litigation is an
indispensable or necessary party, that is, one without which no valid decree may be entered
settling the rights between the parties that are before the [c]ourt.” Locke v. Locke, No.
M2021-01454-COA-R3-CV, 2022 WL 3650806, at *4 (Tenn. Ct. App. Aug. 25, 2022)
(quoting Moore v. Teddleton, No. W2005-02746-COA-R3-CV, 2006 WL 3199273, at *6
(Tenn. Ct. App. Nov. 7, 2006)).
In this case, the trial court expressly held that “the Intervenors are not necessary and
indispensable parties to this proceeding” as a result of its finding that “there is no
impairment to any of the Intervenors’ ability to protect their interest because the relief
which all of the Intervenors are requesting and the position which all the Intervenors are
taking is identical to that of Moy Toy’s.” The positions taken and arguments presented in
the proposed intervenors’ complaint in intervention ̶ that none of the Plaintiffs “are duly
elected as purported or putative members of any alleged Board of the RMCC,” that “the
2005 First Amendments are valid and binding,” and that Moy Toy has valid developer
rights on Renegade Mountain ̶ were all identical to Moy Toy’s strenuously-litigated
positions at trial. As in Moore and Locke, the proposed intervenors were correctly
determined not to be necessary and indispensable parties for purposes of Rule 19.01. See
Locke, 2022 WL 3650806 at *5 (“any interest [the proposed intervenor] may have held in
the Disputed Property was represented by Defendants”); Moore, 2006 WL 3199273 at *7
(“although [the proposed intervenor] was affected by the chancellor’s decree in the Kyle
suit, he and the Moores would appear to have had an identity of interests”).3
3
We apply a similar analysis and reach the same result under Tenn. Code. Ann. § 20-1-115, which is quoted
only in passing in Defendant’s brief, and states, “[i]n actions for the recovery of property, any person not a
party to the action, on showing interest in the subject matter of the suit, may be allowed to appear as
defendant in the action.” (Emphasis added). The language of the statute is permissive, which suggests that
the trial court is afforded discretion in determining its application. Defendants cite no authority interpreting
it, which is unsurprising given that our research indicates only fourteen appellate opinions citing it, half of
which were issued in the nineteenth century.
16
B. Standing
Defendants argue that the trial court should have held that Plaintiffs have no
standing to “effectively intervene in th[e] contract arrangement[s]” composing the chain of
title to the rights at issue here, including the pivotal question of developer’s rights. In
Haiser II, however, this Court expressly directed the trial court to “allow both sides to
present evidence concerning the chain of title of developer’s rights in Renegade Mountain.”
2018 WL 4150877, at *14. The issue of standing, first raised by Defendants after two
appeals to this Court and at least eight years of litigation, is thus outside the scope of Haiser
II’s mandate upon remand.
In Lovlace v. Copley, 418 S.W.3d 1, 17 (Tenn. 2013), the Supreme Court observed
that “[w]hen a statute creates a cause of action and designates who may bring an action,
the issue of standing is interwoven with that of subject matter jurisdiction and becomes a
jurisdictional prerequisite.” (quoting Osborn v. Marr, 127 S.W.3d 737, 740 (Tenn. 2004)).
In this case, Defendants do not cite or rely upon such a statute creating a cause of action or
designating who may bring an action. They merely argue as follows:
Plaintiffs were attacking the contractual arrangements between third parties
in their effort to establish that such contract did not come with the contingent
developer’s rights. . . . As strangers or third parties to this contract, Plaintiffs
herein have no standing to effectively intervene in this contract arrangement
long after the fact, where there is no evidence they were intended third party
beneficiaries of it.
The opinion issued in Haiser II constitutes the law of this case upon remand. As we have
stated, Haiser II expressly directs the trial court to allow and consider evidence from both
sides regarding whether developer’s rights transferred to Moy Toy. Under the particular
circumstances presented by the long odyssey of this case, the question of Plaintiffs’
standing was not “interwoven with that of subject matter jurisdiction” as in Lovlace. We
find no error in the trial court’s decision to follow Haiser II’s mandate and reject
Defendant’s untimely attempt to raise standing as a defense.
C. Statute of Limitations
In their appellate brief, Defendants argue that “[a]fter Haiser II returned the case to
the Trial Court to retry certain issues, Defendants . . . renewed [their] argument that
Plaintiffs’ effort to seek construction of Moy Toy’s developer rights, through declaratory
action, was barred under the six-year limitations period governing contract rights, pursuant
to Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-109(a)(3).” This argument is made despite the fact that a
primary focus and holding of Haiser II was “that § 28-3-109(a)(3) is inapplicable to the
17
case at bar. We therefore reverse the trial court’s ruling that the 2005 Amendments were
valid due to expiration of the six-year statute of limitations.” 2018 WL 4150877, at *13.
Defendants’ “renewed” argument regarding the statute of limitations is without merit.
D. Developer’s Rights
Defendants argue that the trial court erred in finding that Moy Toy did not have
developer’s rights. In this case, it appears that the primary, and perhaps only, practical
significance of the developer’s rights at issue pertains to voting rights to determine control
of the RMCC.4 A holder of developer’s rights does not have to pay yearly dues to maintain
good standing in the community association. Only members in good standing are able to
cast a vote. A holder of developer’s rights also would have ten votes for each residential
unit owned by the developer, as opposed to a single vote allowed an ordinary resident.
In 1991, the owner of the remaining unsold lots and undeveloped land was an entity
called Cumberland Gardens Limited Partnership. It defaulted on loans made from a
German bank, and Cumberland County attorney Joseph Looney, acting as substitute
trustee, foreclosed on the property in June of 1991. A primary issue at trial was whether
developer’s rights transferred at foreclosure, because if not, then there were no developer’s
rights passed along the chain of title to Moy Toy. The trial court summarized the testimony
it heard as follows, in pertinent part:
Mr. Looney prepared the trustee’s deed for DG Bank that transferred the
property at foreclosure to Cumberland Gardens Acquisitions Corp
(“CGAC”). According to Mr. Looney, the sole purpose of the trustee’s deed
was to take title in the property, and only the real property was conveyed.
No personal property was conveyed, and Mr. Looney testified that
developer’s rights were not discussed when CGAC received the property at
foreclosure. CGAC was the wholly owned subsidiary of DG German Bank.
Mr. Looney had no knowledge of the original loan documents between DG
Bank and Cumberland Gardens Limited Partnership; however, his client’s
(CGAC’s) intent was to maintain the property as a whole for sale. CGAC
was not interested in developing the property and over the nine years that
CGAC owned the property, there was no development at all. Its goal was
simply to maintain the property for a potential buyer, and the only marketing
which was done was for attracting players to the golf course.
Edward Hill, an attorney from Connecticut represented Renegade Resort,
LLC, the buyer in the transaction with Cumberland Gardens Acquisition
4
It appears undisputed that no significant traditional “development,” in the sense of marketing or selling
lots, or construction, has been done on Renegade Mountain for at least thirty years.
18
Corp. . . . Mr. Hill dealt mainly with Mr. Looney, the authorized
representative for CGAC, and it took approximately a year to negotiate the
contract. At the time, Renegade Resort, LLC was acquiring an eighteen-hole
golf course, a lodge, and a water system which was being run by CGAC.
Although Mr. Hill believed the contract for sale contained language in
paragraph 1.01 (“All rights in connection therewith”) which would include
developer rights, he acknowledged that nowhere in any of the purchase and
sale documents was “developer rights” ever mentioned. His testimony is also
consistent with Mr. Looney’s testimony that the issue of developer rights was
never brought up between the two negotiators. Schedule 101B to the contract
for sale is a schedule of intangible personal property which is being
transferred to the buyer; however, it fails to list developer rights. Although
Mr. Hill indicated that this was not an exhaustive list of intangible personal
property, one would expect to see these rights if they were as important to
the transaction as indicated by Mr. Hill. Perhaps the explanation for Mr.
Hill’s conduct concerning developer rights is because he had a title insurance
policy which protected his client. As a result, he intentionally did not
investigate whether Cumberland Gardens Acquisition Corp obtained
developer rights when it foreclosed on the German developers.
* * *
Each side presented expert proof. The Owner board called Jack Atkins and
Moy Toy called Joe Huey. Both Mr. Huey and Mr. Atkins have been
practicing attorneys since the 1970’s or 1980’s. Both of these gentlemen
made excellent witnesses. Each was well qualified, gave straightforward
answers, and advocated for their client’s positions.
Mr. Atkins testified that developer rights are based upon the restrictive
covenants and the plat recorded in the Register of Deeds office. These
documents establish the developer’s rights to govern the homeowner’s
association and add property to the development, along with amenities. In
this particular case, Mr. Atkins noted that no property has been added to the
plan since 1987, and there has been no development since that time. Mr.
Atkins noted that the substitute trustee’s deed to Cumberland Gardens
Acquisition Corp on June 4, 1991 did not have broad language that could
arguably include developer rights such as “all rights, title and interest.” This
deed only conveyed real property, no personal property. When CGAC
conveyed the property to Renegade Resort, LLC on January 6, 2000, it was
the same property that CGAC received from the trustee’s deed in 1991. The
only evidence of developer rights was when Wucher and Renegade conveyed
19
the property to Moy Toy. Those bills of sale do have specific language which
includes developer rights. However, Atkins opined that neither Wucher nor
Renegade had developer rights to convey in the first place because it does
not appear that CGAC retained developer rights when it received the property
from the DG German bank upon foreclosure. The only purpose of this
corporation was to sell the property. There was never any development, only
maintenance.
* * *
Joe Huey was actually involved when Moy Toy purchased the property. Mr.
Huey reviewed the chain of title performed by Atkins, Atkins’ prior affidavit,
Ed Hill’s deposition, and Joe Looney’s trial testimony. . . . Although Mr.
Huey indicated that Mr. Atkins limited himself to looking only at the deeds,
that conclusion is incorrect. If Mr. Huey focused only on the Atkins affidavit,
that might be true, but Mr. Atkins’ trial testimony went far beyond the deeds.
Mr. Huey did agree that Joe Looney’s substitute trustee deed only conveyed
real property, and that Mr. Looney indicated he did not believe that CGAC
maintained any developer rights to convey. Mr. Huey also acknowledged
that although Ed Hill and Mr. Looney negotiated for many months over this
particular transaction, there was no specific mention of developer rights
being conveyed. Finally, Mr. Huey admitted that his opinion was based upon
the assumption that DG Bank acquired developer rights in its security
instruments when it foreclosed on Cumberland Gardens.
After assessing this testimony, the trial court concluded:
when Attorney Edward Hill representing Renegade Resort, LLC negotiated
the purchase of the property, neither he nor Mr. Looney ever discussed
developer rights, and there is no evidence in any of the ancillary documents
such as the contract for sale that mentions the transfer of developer rights in
the property. The Court concludes that at the time CGAC transferred the
property to Renegade Resort, LLC, it had no developer rights to convey. Joe
Looney’s testimony indicated that all he intended to transfer was the real
property and no personal property. He also indicated that there was no other
collateral document which existed to transfer developer rights to Renegade
Resort, LLC. Thus, there was a break in the chain of title where developer
rights were not transferred in the foreclosure sale and the substitute trustee’s
deed from Cumberland Gardens Limited Partnership to Cumberland Gardens
Acquisition Co. While Mr. Hill and Renegade Resort, LLC may have
possessed the intent to purchase developer rights from CGAC, this intent was
20
never communicated either orally or in any document. On the other hand,
Mr. Looney testified that he intended to convey only the personal property
identified in the bill of sale, and developer rights were not included. Both
parties had excellent attorneys representing them, the negotiations lasted for
a year, so if developer rights were intended to be included, they would have
been mentioned or referenced somewhere in the conveyance documents.
Since Renegade Resort, LLC did not acquire title to developer rights through
the chain of title, Moy Toy cannot possess developer rights because of this
break in the chain of title.
Developer’s rights “are typically held and exercised by a real estate developer, and
can be encumbered under a mortgage or deed of trust held by a lender who finances such
a development.” Civis Bank v. Willows at Twin Cove Marina Condo. & Home Owners
Ass’n, Inc., No. E2016-00140-COA-R3-CV, 2016 WL 7468202, at *5 (Tenn. Ct. App.
Dec. 28, 2016). They are also sometimes called “declarant’s rights.” Id.; see also Tenn.
Funding, LLC v. Worley, No. M2018-01099-COA-R3-CV, 2019 WL 631243, at *3 (Tenn.
Ct. App. Nov. 26, 2019). In Civis Bank, we observed that “[t]he Supreme Court addressed
the issue of whether such rights were transferred in a sale from the initial property
developer to a successor developer in Hughes v. New Life Dev. Corp., 387 S.W.3d 453,
465-67 (Tenn. 2012),” and concluded as follows:
We glean two pertinent points from the Hughes decision. First, . . .
developer’s or declarant’s rights can be transferred by general language.
Specific and precise language describing what property is to be conveyed is
preferable and potentially more effective. But Hughes teaches that a general
transfer of, for instance, “all personal property” or “all contract rights” can
be effective to transfer declarant’s rights, provided the intent to make such a
transfer is evident from an examination of the pertinent documents and the
conduct of the parties. . . .
Second, the Supreme Court in Hughes strongly suggests that as a general
matter, declarant’s or developer’s rights are personal interests, which,
although freely transferable, do not run with the land. Id. at 466-67.
Civis Bank, 2016 WL 7468202, at *6; see also Tenn. Funding, 2019 WL 6331243, at *3
(“Unlike restrictive covenants, declarant’s rights are not property interests; they are
considered personal property.”).
In the present case, many of the ancillary transactional work product documents,
such as loan agreements, security instruments, or other documents describing the rights
relative to the transfer of property, were destroyed by Mr. Looney in the ordinary course
21
of business due to the passage of time, before he became aware of this litigation. The trial
court thus properly relied on the testimony of the witnesses to ascertain their intentions at
the time the property was transferred in foreclosure to Cumberland Gardens Acquisitions
Corp. in 1991. Defendants argue that the trial court “misstated, mischaracterized and failed
to give proper effect to the testimony of the witnesses.” We disagree. The evidence does
not preponderate against the trial court’s findings, as summarized in the lengthy quote
above from the trial court’s judgment. Mr. Looney was asked “what did you intend to
convey?” He responded, “It was real property . . . It had no personal property ̶ we conveyed
no personal property.” Mr. Looney also testified, “I have no recollection of developer
rights being mentioned at any time during the course of these negotiations, and I think we
went over this last time and concluded that this bill of sale does not mention developer
rights.”
Mr. Hill, the attorney who represented Renegade Resort, LLC, testified as follows
in his deposition:
Q. Are developer rights listed anywhere in any deed or any document that
you’ve encountered, as far as a conveyance to Renegade Resort, LLC,
specifically using those words?
THE WITNESS: You and I both looked at the deed and the bill of sale. And
I -- and that term is not used in the -- in those documents. It’s not used in the
contract. And I would have to review every other one of the documents in
the closing binder to answer your question completely.
Q. Are you aware of one, such a document?
A. As I sit here, no. But I don’t remember what the other documents were.
Q. Okay. Were developer rights ever discussed with anyone?
* * *
THE WITNESS: I don’t think that we ever said that term was ever used
throughout all of the discussions. It was always presumed.
The trial court’s findings were informed in significant part by its ability to view and assess
the demeanor and credibility of the witnesses on both sides. The evidence supports the
trial court’s findings. We affirm its decision that no developer’s rights passed to
Cumberland Gardens Acquisitions Corp. in 1991, and therefore none passed through the
chain of title to Moy Toy.
22
E. Validity of September 2, 2011 Board of Directors Special Election
The trial court, addressing the questions of who possessed a valid vote and whether
the September 2, 2011 election of the owners’ board of directors was properly conducted,
held that “there were findings made by the prior trial court which were not appealed, and
therefore were final determinations which could not be retried.” Among those, the trial
court found:
1. The Moy Toy Board consisting of Phillip Guettler, Michael McClung and
Darren Guettler was not elected by the membership. Instead, they appointed
themselves and their family as board members, which was not in compliance
with state statutes or the relevant bylaws.
2. The Plaintiffs . . . acted in good faith in attempting to call the September
2, 2011 meeting. The residents in Renegade Resort made repeated requests
to the Moy Toy Board to see the books and minutes of the RMCC. Those
requests were ignored. The indifference demonstrated by the Moy Toy
Board regarding the termination of services in the resort in 2010 and 2011
would have upset any reasonable resident.
3. Moy Toy, LLC, Michael McClung and Phillip Guettler had unclean hands
in its action towards the residents of Renegade Mountain.
(Paragraphs renumbered). The trial court found as follows in pertinent part regarding the
story of the contested election:
Once Moy Toy took over, there was no communication with any of the
homeowners in 2010. Both McClung and Guettler and later, Guettler’s son,
claimed to be the only board members of the RMCC from 2011 to 2016. . .
. In 2011, McClung appointed himself as president of the RMCC. McClung
directed that the streetlights be turned off. He also terminated the guards at
the guardhouse. Moy Toy has never marketed, has never advertised any lots
for sale, and has conducted no development since its purchase in 2010. It has
never prepared a development plan or any proposed plats. As a result of its
purchase, Moy Toy owned three condominiums, the two German houses
inside the platted properties, and twenty-five hundred additional acres of
unplatted lots. This is the same status that existed at the time of trial, ten
years later. Not a single lot has been developed.
For reasons that remain unexplained, Moy Toy never sent an invoice to the
homeowners to pay dues in 2011. In fact, the first statement sent by Moy
23
Toy for dues occurred in January of 2012, and it was an invoice for 2011 and
2012 dues.
The winter of 2010 - 2011 was a tough one. Moy Toy stopped clearing the
roads of snow. When spring approached in 2011, Moy Toy failed to mow the
common areas. Two culverts collapsed in 2011. Although Moy Toy paid
for the stone, the labor was provided by the residents.
One of the owners, John Moore, began meeting with his neighbors.
Together, they created a list of complaints, which Moore presented to
McClung in April 2011. When the meeting produced no results, the residents
then requested records from the officers that were identified by the filings in
the Secretary of State’s office. Again, there was no response.
The homeowners, lead by Moore, decided to call a special meeting of the
homeowners. Gerald Nugent sent a letter dated June 23, 2011 to the
registered agent for the RMCC requesting a special meeting. Mr. Nugent
bought a lot on Renegade Mountain in 1987. He testified that at the time he
wrote his letter in June 2011, the gated community was gone; the golf course,
along with the swimming pool and tennis courts were closed. Mr. Nugent
paid his dues in 2010 at the rate of $20 a month; however, since he received
no invoice for 2011, he did not pay anything. The residents then attempted
to qualify various homeowners as members in good standing by requesting
records and cancelled checks for dues which had been paid in 2009 for the
2010 year. After going through the cancelled checks, the residents came up
with twenty-seven members who were considered to be in good standing for
2010. . . .
The meeting on September 2, 2011 took place. . . . McClung initially chaired
the meeting and objected to the calling of the meeting. Moy Toy contended
that the special meeting had insufficient signatures of members in good
standing and that it controlled three hundred and twenty-five votes which it
received as a proxy from TIG Holdings on August 24, 2011. Several
members then objected that TIG had not offered any proof that it had paid
their dues. In fact, TIG had not paid any membership dues and of course,
neither had LKM Group. McClung claimed that the only members in good
standing at the September 2, 2011 meeting were himself and his family
members since he was the only one who paid dues for 2011. However, the
reason for that is due to the fact that Moy Toy never sent an invoice to any
member to pay 2011 dues. The Court finds that there were eighty-six eligible
votes present either in person or by proxy at the meeting of September 2,
24
2011, more than the ten percent quorum required of eligible members.
Additionally, the TIG proxy of three hundred twenty-five votes were not
authorized due to the fact that no dues had ever been paid by LKM Group;
nor did LKM Group have developer rights to excuse its nonpayment of dues;
nor did TIG make any application for membership as required for voting
rights to attach to the new owners of these lots. As a result, Moy Toy only
had three votes and even if Moy Toy had ten votes to every one of its lots, it
would still only have thirty votes and would not control the HOA.
* * *
The minutes of the September 2, 2011 RMCC special meeting certify that
there was a total of 115 potential members in good standing, and that 89
voting memberships were present (either in person or by proxy), or a quorum
of seventy-seven percent present. The minutes of the meeting confirmed the
vote removing the RMCC officers and directors by a vote of eighty-one to
three, with four abstentions; the adoption of new bylaws by a vote of eighty-
six to three; and the approval of three new directors for the RMCC.
(Footnotes and citation to record in original omitted). The court concluded that “the
September 2, 2011 RMCC meeting was legitimate and that the actions approved at this
meeting were legal.”
On appeal, Defendants do not challenge any of the trial court’s factual findings,
which comprise the tale of the homeowners’ long struggle to take care of their
neighborhood property. Defendants only briefly argue that “the trial court’s treatment of
the election is inconsistent with the trial court’s finding that there has been no valid
developer [for the past 30 years] for the resort since developer rights were not transferred.”
This argument is neither particularly pertinent to the issue of the validity of the special
election, nor is it persuasive. Again, the trial court’s factual findings are driven in large
part by its evaluation of the demeanor and credibility of the various witnesses. We affirm
the trial court’s ruling on this issue.
F. Roads and Common Areas of Renegade Mountain
As the trial court found, “[s]ince 1972, Renegade Resort was a planned community
which provided a golf course, swimming pool, tennis courts, sports park and a guard shack
for many years.” The trial court held that all RMCC members have an easement of
enjoyment to use the roads, “both platted and unplatted,” from Highway 70 to their
property, and to use the “common properties . . . subject to the governing documents for
Renegade Resort.” In support of this conclusion, the court held and reasoned as follows:
25
Since Moy Toy purchased the property in 2010, it has not sold a single lot,
undertaken any construction, and has failed to market the property in any
significant way. In fact, from the very beginning, Moy Toy elected to allow
the amenities to fall into disrepair and eliminate expenses for maintenance of
roads, signs, security, lights, etc. Any reasonable amount of time for
development by any purported developer has long since passed.
Numerous members and residents testified that they or other members used
the common properties in question; were promised the common properties in
question to purchase their property; relied on those promises; and paid dues
which in the past were used to improve and maintain these common
properties. Attorney Looney confirmed that RMCC members were allowed
to use common properties; that he considered those properties in question to
be common properties; and that he was unaware these common properties
were not platted.
Considering the testimony and exhibits, the Court finds that the entrance
area, guard shack, platted roads, certain unplatted roads, sports park, pool
and tennis courts were all intended, promised, promoted, used, operated and
maintained in the past as common property for the benefit of the developer
and the RMCC members. Control of this unplatted land, which was intended
and used as common properties in this community by the developer is not
absolute, and the property remaining in the hands of a developer may be held
in equity to be subject to these rights of enjoyment. Innerimages, [Inc. v.
Newman, 579 S.W.3d 29, 45 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2019)]; Land Developers, Inc.
v. Maxwell, 537 S.W. 2d 904, 912 (Tenn. 1976); Stracener v. Bailey, 737
S.W. 2d 536 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1987). While the common areas in Renegade
Resort are not shown on plats, they are referenced in all versions of the
restrictions, and lots were sold in reliance on these recorded equities. An
easement of enjoyment is identified in every set of restrictions and in the
1987 bylaws for members of the RMCC who are in good standing. Here,
Moy Toy effectively negated the RMCC’s members[’] easement of
enjoyment by failing to maintain these common areas, thereby making them
impossible to enjoy.
In making the above findings, the trial court has hit on each salient point explaining
why it is equitable to enforce the easements of enjoyment of the common areas of Renegade
Mountain held by the property owners who are in good standing. The recorded 1972
declaration of restrictive covenants expressly provides that “every member, so long as such
membership shall continue, shall have a right and easement of enjoyment in and to the
Common Properties and such easement shall be appurtenant to and shall pass with the title
26
to every Lot or Living Unit.” The definition in the 1972 declaration of restrictive covenants
provides that “Common Properties . . . shall specifically include, but not to the exclusion
of other improvements which may hereinafter be designated as Common Properties by the
Developer, the following: Roads and streets, golf course, tennis courts, swimming pools,
permanent parks, and permanent recreational plots.” As the trial court found, although “the
common areas in Renegade Resort are not shown on plats, they are referenced in all
versions of the restrictions.”
The trial court heard from landowners and club members Norman Renaud, Joel
Matchak, John Peters, Thomas Bauer, and John Moore, who testified that, as generally and
accurately summarized by the trial court, “they or other members used the common
properties in question; were promised the common properties in question to purchase their
property; relied on those promises; and paid dues which in the past were used to improve
and maintain these common properties.” Mr. Matchak provided copies of roughly a
decade’s worth of budgets for RMCC showing that funds, provided by members’ dues,
were budgeted and spent on maintenance of the common areas such as the roads, pool,
sports park, and guard shack entrance.
In Innerimages, Inc. v. Newman, 579 S.W.3d 29, 45 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2019), this
Court considered “whether a developer who has failed to establish a homeowners
association and provides only minimal services may continue to enforce restrictive
covenants against residents in a common-interest community.” We stated:
“A property owner’s right to own, use, and enjoy private property is a
fundamental right.” Hughes v. New Life Dev. Corp., 387 S.W.3d 453, 474
(Tenn. 2012) (citations omitted). “Not surprisingly, then, Tennessee law
does not favor restrictive covenants, because they are in derogation of the
rights of free use and enjoyment of property.” Id. at 474-75. Generally,
restrictive covenants are only enforceable in equity if: (1) the restrictions
“‘touch and concern’ the land”; (2) the original parties intended that the
restrictions would “run with the land and bind remote grantees”; and (3) the
remote grantees had notice of the restrictions. Gambrell v. Nivens, 275
S.W.3d 429, 437 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008) (quoting Tennsco Corp. v. Attea, No.
M2001-01378-COA-R3-CV, 2002 WL 1298808, at *2 (Tenn. Ct. App., filed
June 13, 2002)).
Here, the trial court determined that [the restrictive covenants], as initially
drafted, were valid and therefore binding on remote grantees. We agree. The
restrictions, which govern the use and appearance of property in The Village,
certainly “touch and concern the land.” The restrictions also expressly state
the developer’s intent that the restrictions “run with the title to said land[.]”
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Finally, the developer presented proof that the restrictions were recorded and
appear in the chain of title to each of the defendants’ properties, thus putting
the defendants on constructive notice.
Id. at 41. The Innerimages Court adopted and applied the Restatement (Third) of Property:
Servitudes § 6.19(1)-(2) (Am. Law Inst. 2000), which provides that
(1) The developer of a common-interest-community project has a duty to
create an association to manage the common property and enforce the
servitudes unless exempted by statute.
(2) After the time reasonably necessary to protect its interests in completing
and marketing the project, the developer has a duty to transfer the common
property to the association, or the members, and to turn over control of the
association to the members other than the developer[.]
Id. at 45 (emphasis in original omitted). We held that “developers have a duty (1) to create
an association and (2) to turn over control to that association ‘[a]fter the time reasonably
necessary to protect its interests in completing and marketing the project,’” observing in
pertinent part as follows:
The developer and the purchasers of property in a common-interest
community have interests in controlling the common property and the
association that may come into conflict. The developer’s primary interest is
in completing and selling the project, while that of the purchasers is in
maintaining their property values and establishing the quality of life they
expected when buying the property. Both the developer and the purchasers
have substantial investment interests that are affected by the amount of
assessments, the level of maintenance and capital improvements, and the
establishment of reserves for future maintenance and replacement of
common property. The developer needs to retain control of the association
long enough to avoid changes that will jeopardize its ability to sell the
remainder, while the purchasers need to stabilize assessments and take
charge of the rules governing operation of the community. The longer the
developer retains control, the greater the likelihood of conflict. Accordingly,
modern common-interest-community statutes specify timetables within
which the developer must turn over control to the members.
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Comment (b) elaborates:
In determining when control of a project reasonably must be
turned over to the members, the percentage of lots or units that
have been sold, the interval since the first unit was sold, and
the level of the developer’s construction and marketing
activities are relevant. The Uniform Common Interest
Ownership Act [UCIOA] provides a timetable for turnover of
control based on these factors. In the absence of a controlling
statute, a court may look for guidance to such a timetable in
determining when the developer is required to cede control.
* * *
Thus, under the Restatement, developers have a common law duty to create
an association and to turn over control “[a]fter the time reasonably necessary
to protect its interests in completing and marketing the project[.]” Rest.
(Third) of Property: Servitudes § 6.19(1)-(2). The Restatement recommends
considering three factors in determining “the time reasonably necessary to
protect [the developer’s] interests”: (1) “the percentage of lots or units that
have been sold”; (2) “the interval since the first unit was sold”; and (3) “the
level of the developer’s construction and marketing activities.” Id. at § 6.19
cmt. b. In states that have not adopted the UCIOA, such as Tennessee, the
Restatement also recommends looking to the UCIOA as a barometer of
reasonableness. Id.
* * *
The trial court also found that the developer had not constructed a new home
since 2007. Under the UCIOA, a developer must cede control “two years
after any right to add new units was last exercised.” UCIOA § 1-103(d)(3).
If that is any measure of reasonableness, then ten years without construction
of a new home is patently unreasonable. . . .
The evidence in the record does not preponderate against the court’s finding
that the developer has only constructed four homes and provided minimal
services in the twenty-four years since The Village’s conception. Because
the developer has failed to discharge its duty to create a homeowners
association and to turn over control “[a]fter the time reasonably necessary to
protect its interests in completing and marketing the project,” we affirm the
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judgment of the trial court to the extent that it prohibits the developer from
exercising any further control over the defendants and their property.
Id. at 45-48.
In the present case, the trial court correctly applied the factors and principles
espoused in Innerimages in holding that “all control, access, maintenance, and operation
of these unplatted properties,” defined by the court as “the entrance area, guard shack,
platted roads, certain unplatted roads, sports park, pool and tennis courts,” 5 is “transferred
to the RMCC” in order to secure and enforce the members’ easement of enjoyment of these
common properties. Defendants argue that Innerimages applies to developers, and that
Moy Toy was determined not to be a “developer” here. This is true in the respect that the
developer’s rights at issue did not pass to Moy Toy. But Moy Toy’s central position
throughout the litigation, and its actions leading to the lawsuit, was that it was the
developer. Moy Toy, as the owner, is still trying to maintain complete control over the
areas designated and long-used as “common properties” on Renegade Mountain. Although
there are some differences in the factual scenarios of this case and Innerimages, they are
similar in that they both involve a developer (or a party claiming to be and acting as one),
who desires to maintain perpetual power and control over the development, without
shouldering the responsibility and expense of maintaining its common areas, at a time when
any actual “development” of the residential community has long passed.
As a final matter, Plaintiffs raise an issue of relatively uncomplicated semantics
regarding the property where the golf course was. Both sides agree that the trial court’s
post-trial order incorrectly stated that the golf course was included as common property.
The old golf course property is owned by an entity that was apparently never a party to this
action. The parties stipulated that “the golf course is not an issue” at the trial. In response
to both sides’ motion to alter or amend, the trial court issued an order stating “that both
parties agreed that the golf course property was stipulated not to be considered a common
property” and finding that “Plaintiffs have no interest in the former golf course property.”
On appeal, Plaintiffs argue that this language is overbroad, imprecise, and incorrect. They
express concern that it might conceivably be used against them in a future dispute. The
transcript indicates that the stipulation was that the golf course property was “not an issue”
before the court, not that the property was not considered as common property. It appears
that the parties agreed before the trial court that it was being asked to make no
determination whatsoever regarding the old golf course property because it was “not an
issue.”
5
Plaintiffs point out on appeal that this definition of “common properties” in the trial court’s order is
somewhat different from the language used in the trial court’s order disposing of the issues raised in the
parties’ motion to alter or amend the judgment. To the extent that the definitions are inconsistent, we hold
that the trial court’s more expansive definition, quoted above, is the correct one.
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V. CONCLUSION
We vacate the trial court’s findings that the parties stipulated that the old golf course
property was not to be considered “common property,” and that Plaintiffs “have no
interest” in it. We affirm the trial court’s judgment in all other respects. Costs on appeal
are assessed to the appellants, Michael McClung, Phillip Guettler, Darren Guettler, and
Moy Toy, LLC, for which execution may issue if necessary.
______________________________________
KRISTI M. DAVIS, JUDGE
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