2009
WI App 9
court of appeals of
published opinion
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2009 WI App 9
COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND FILED December 23, 2008 David
R. Schanker Clerk of Court of Appeals |
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This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See Wis. Stat. § 808.10 and Rule 809.62. |
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Mark J. Solowicz, Jesse E. Soltis and Stephen J. Havey,
Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Forward National Sales Center, LLC, Geneva National Retail Corp., Condominium Master Assoc., Inc., Geneva Woods, Inc., Harlow GN, LLC, Lowell Management Services, Inc., GN Storage II, LLC, Community Services, LLC, Corp., Foxwood at Land Development, LLC and Paloma
Defendants-Respondents. |
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APPEAL
from an order of the circuit court for
Before Brown, C.J.,
¶1 BROWN, C.J. The
novel issue in this case is whether the Wisconsin Condominium Ownership Act, Wis. Stat. ch. 703 (2005-06),[1]
limits the duration of a developer’s control over a master-planned
community. In
¶2 The relevant facts of this case are undisputed. The
plaintiffs, Mark J. Solowicz, Jesse E. Soltis and Stephen J. Havey
(collectively, “Solowicz”), are three condominium unit owners in Geneva
National. The defendants are listed in
the footnote below.[2] For ease of reference, we will refer to them
as the Developer, the Trust or the Association.
We begin by explaining the people, documents, and organizations that
govern Geneva National because, at bottom, Solowicz’s complaint focuses on the
community’s governing structure.
¶3 Geneva National is a master-planned community near
¶4 The Condominium Declaration formed, under Wis. Stat. § 703.155, the
Condominium Master Association, Inc. The
Condominium Master Association serves all residential and select commercial
condominiums at Geneva National. The
Developer has no control over the Condominium Master Association; control is
always vested in the members. Its
services are limited to maintenance and administration, and Solowicz does not
challenge its powers.
¶5 The Restrictive Covenant promotes the orderly development of Geneva National. Its purpose is to control the effect of the development to preserve the natural environment, maintain the recreational areas and roadways, and to benefit the property, all according to the Covenant’s terms. The Covenant controls development through two governing bodies: the Community Association and the Geneva National Trust. It also reserves certain rights for the Developer.
¶6 Geneva National Trust preserves and maintains the natural
environment in Geneva National. The
Trust does so by presiding over the Architectural Review Committee, adopting
and enforcing architectural standards, implementing rules and regulations
governing use of the property, and granting variances to restrictions set forth
in the Covenant. The Trust’s expenses are
ultimately paid by the unit owners through the Association’s annual and special
assessments.
¶7 The Trust is governed by the majority vote of three trustees,
who act “in their sole and absolute discretion, and in so doing, the decisions
of the Trustees shall be final in all respects.” When a Trustee must be replaced, upon
resignation, death or inability to act, the remaining Trustees appoint the
successor. The Trust has no obligation
to seek prior or subsequent approval from the Association for its actions. If the Trust “is unable or fails or refuses
to act” according to its duties, then the Developer may exercise the Trust’s
powers.
¶8 The Association maintains Geneva National’s private roadways, medians, entrances and property, and provides utilities. To do this, it can obtain loans and hire outside management or other professionals. The Association can also levy assessments on property owners and “take any other lawful action necessary in the sole and absolute discretion of the Board of Directors to exercise all powers and discharge all duties and responsibilities and all liabilities of the … Association pursuant to [the Covenant,] and to carry out the purposes and intents of this [Covenant].” For example, at the Developer’s request, the Association’s board approved an upgrade of a front gate and gazebo. The Association assessed unit owners $850,000 to fund this upgrade. To make a special assessment like this, the board need not seek the unit owners’ approval, though it may seek input from them.
¶9 Five classes of voting members control the Association’s
board of directors: club owners, including the golf club, commercial property
owners, multiple-family unit owners, single-family unit owners, and the
Developer. Each class elects a
representative to sit on the Association’s board of directors. Each representative may cast four votes,
except that the commercial property representative may cast only three votes,
for a total of nineteen votes.
¶10 Article IX of the Covenant also grants the Developer power to
appoint and remove officers or directors, amend the Covenant and execute
documents and take actions necessary or desirable to its power. To appoint or remove, the Developer must
determine that such member, officer or company is prejudicial to the
Developer’s rights. When the Developer
amends the Covenant, it must get approval from the unit owners unless it
ensures that the amendment does not materially alter or change any unit owner’s
right to the use and enjoyment of their unit.
¶11 The Developer has amended the Covenant four times. In 2001, the Developer lowered the percentage
of assessments the Association would levy on the golf course owner and changed
the Association’s voting structure. In
2004, an amendment allowed the Association to purchase utility infrastructure
for $8.5 million. It acquired the $8.5
million through a loan that, if the Association defaulted, would allow the
mortgagee to “levy a special assessment against all Unit owners in such amounts
as necessary to pay the Loan in full.”
Finally, in 2005, the Developer altered a prohibition against timeshares
to allow them on certain parts of Geneva National.
¶12 The Developer’s powers expire upon the conveyance by the
Developer of eighty-five percent of the maximum number of residential
units. The power to permit expansion
does not expire, though no evidence shows that the Developer is contemplating
expansion. The maximum number of units
is determined from time to time pursuant to the provisions of applicable zoning
laws, ordinances, use permits, amendments, and other government laws. The current maximum number of units is
1960. As of April 2007, the Developer
has conveyed 1015 units, or approximately fifty-two percent of the maximum
number. Therefore, to reach eighty-five
percent, the Developer must convey 651 more units. The Developer expects that, based on current
sales forecasts, it will reach the eighty-five percent trigger within the next
five to ten years. No other term exists
to transition the Developer’s control; the Covenant does not set a total number
of units nor a maximum amount of time.
¶13 Solowicz sued for declaratory judgment, alleging that Geneva
National’s governing structure granted the Developer too much control—an
unreasonable amount of control that violated
¶14 As a solution, Solowicz sought a declaration from the circuit court that the Developer must relinquish control to the unit owners. Solowicz claimed that the Covenant is a condominium instrument and as such, Wis. Stat. ch. 703 dictates that the Developer’s control should have ended years ago, either three or ten years from the start of the development. Anticipating the Developer’s defense that Geneva National was a master-planned community and thus outside the confines of ch. 703, Solowicz argued that the Covenant was still subject to ch. 703 because it controlled the condominiums within Geneva National. Finally, Solowicz asserted that even if the Covenant was held to be outside ch. 703, it was nonetheless unreasonable, ambiguous and vague, and against public policy, and therefore void.
¶15 The circuit court ruled for the Developer on the parties’ cross
motions for summary judgment, holding that the Covenant is not a condominium instrument
nor otherwise subject to Wis. Stat.
ch. 703. The court also held that the
Covenant was clear and specific, and since the law informs that clear and
specific restrictive covenants are not subject to a separate reasonableness
evaluation, the court went no further.
Solowicz appeals, presenting the same arguments to this court that he
raised before the circuit court. We
review a motion for summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard as the
circuit court. Green Springs Farms v. Kersten,
136
APPLICATION OF
¶16 We first address Solowicz’s argument that Geneva National’s
Restrictive Covenant violates
A. Condominium Instruments
¶17 Solowicz asserts that the Covenant is a condominium instrument because the Developer attached the Covenant to the individual condominium declarations. He reasons that Wis. Stat. ch. 703 applies to any condominium instrument and to all property with a duly executed condominium declaration. Therefore, he contends that ch. 703 must supersede any contradictory provisions in any document controlling the Geneva National property. According to Solowicz, since ch. 703 dictates that the Developer has only three years to develop the property or ten years if it is an expandable condominium, and both time limits have long passed, the Developer must cede control.
¶18 The Developer argues that the Covenant is exactly what it purports to be: a restrictive covenant running with the land that controls Geneva National’s development and infrastructure as a master-planned community, which has nothing to do with the day-to-day maintenance of the individual condominiums’ common areas. It points out that Geneva National is not simply a collection of condominiums; in fact, major parts of the development are not designated as condominiums. Further, the Developer explains that Wis. Stat. ch. 703 requires documents to follow certain formalities before the property may come under ch. 703. On its face, the Developer notes, the Covenant conforms to no such prerequisites.
¶19 In
¶20 The Covenant contains none of the above. It refers to condominiums only when it speaks to the Condominium Declaration and the parcels designated as condominiums within it. The only documents or “instruments” containing condominium in its name and specifying the Developer’s intent to create a condominium are the Condominium Declaration and the documents creating the individual condominiums. Therefore, the Covenant is not a condominium instrument subject to Wis. Stat. ch. 703.
B. Master-Planned Communities
¶21 Solowicz also argues that even if the Covenant is not a condominium instrument, it is still a Wis. Stat. ch. 703 document because it is designed, in pertinent part, to control the condominiums lying within the Geneva National property. He posits that the Covenant creates an umbrella organization just like that authorized under Wis. Stat. § 703.155(7), and that organization controls the condominiums.
¶22 The Developer counters by explaining that Geneva National is a master-planned community, not a condominium venture, and points out what it considers to be the vast differences between condominiums and master-planned communities. The Developer explains that master-planned communities present a complex development method, distinct from condominiums, requiring the Developer to retain control so that it may react to varying market and government conditions in seeing its vision through and its investment secured.
¶23 We agree that master-planned communities are an entirely
different type and level of development than condominiums. A condominium is “an apartment house, office
building, or other multiple-unit complex, the units of which are individually
owned, each owner receiving a recordable deed to the individual unit purchased,
including the right to sell, mortgage, etc., that unit and sharing in joint
ownership of any common grounds, passageways, etc.” The
Random House Dictionary of the English Language 426 (2d ed. 1987). A master plan develops or improves “(land, a
community, a building complex, or the like) through a long-range plan that
balances and harmonizes all elements.”
¶24 Geneva National fits the definition of a master-planned community and its scope goes beyond a condominium venture. Geneva National has a master plan (the Restrictive Covenant) that guides the development of 1600 acres of land into the Developer’s vision—a distinct golf and leisure community. And the Covenant’s restrictions, preserving the natural environment and maintaining a cohesive community through architectural standards, in concert with its golf courses and other leisure offerings, create this community. The community’s inhabitants have a common interest in those offerings, and potential buyers who dislike the balance of amenities and restrictions, need not purchase property within the community.
¶25 Still, Solowicz persists, citing three cases from other jurisdictions that, he avers, use condominium law to limit a developer’s control over master-planned communities. He contends that these cases involved restrictive covenants creating governing schemes similar to Geneva National.
¶26 First Solowicz cites Fox v. Kings Grant Maintenance Ass’n, Inc.,
770 A.2d 707 (N.J. 2001), holding that an umbrella association controlled by
nonunit owners could not irrevocably manage the day-to-day maintenance of the
common areas of its individual condominium communities.
¶27 Solowicz asserts that Fox stands for the proposition that
a developer cannot have lingering control over a condominium by delegating
powers to an umbrella association.
However, he leaves out one significant detail about the court’s
rationale. The Fox court distinguished
between the power to exercise control over common elements of an individual
condominium community as opposed to the power to develop the entire
master-planned community.
¶28 With that distinction in mind, Fox actually supports the Developer in this case, not Solowicz. Here, the umbrella association manages only what Fox says it can manage—the “common roadways, common open space, and common recreational facilities.” See id. And the condominium association, not the umbrella association, manages the common elements of each individual condominium. Thus, Fox is no help to Solowicz.
¶29 The second case is Ainslie at Century Village Condominium
Ass’n, Inc. v. Levy, 626 So. 2d 229 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1993). The court there held that unit owners in a
community with sixteen condominiums had the right to use condominium law to void
a contract and lease between the developer and a management firm.
¶30 Here, the Developer does not have a lease or contract to provide maintenance for the individual condominiums’ common areas. Once again, the Covenant in this case does not control the individual condominium property, only the community property. And moreover, Ainslie, as far as we can tell, involved only condominiums, albeit multiple condominiums. We note that the Ainslie court did not refer to any other type of residential, commercial or other property type besides condominiums. See id. at 230. Therefore, Ainslie is inapplicable.
¶31 Finally, Brandon Farms Property Owners Ass’n, Inc.
v.
Brandon Farms Condominium Ass’n, Inc., 852 A.2d 132 (N.J. 2004), held
that the developer cannot require the condominium association to be responsible
for past-due assessments owed to an umbrella organization.
¶32 Like Fox and Ainslie, the court in Brandon Farms evaluated the lawfulness of restrictive covenants as they applied to the individual condominium association’s duties or its common areas. Here, the umbrella association assesses the unit owners directly; it does not pass the assessments through the condominium association. And our search of the record did not turn up any facts showing that the Developer meddled with the governance of the individual condominiums or the associated duties of the Condominium Master Association.
¶33 All of Solowicz’s complaints relate to how the community as a whole—the master plan—is being developed; he has not registered any complaints that the Developer is meddling in individual condominium affairs. The assessments that Solowicz complains he is beholden to have nothing to do with the individual condominiums’ common areas and everything to do with paying his share of the cost of improving the community as a whole, something he agreed to do when he purchased his unit. The cases he cites do not support him. We conclude that, just because a master-planned community has condominiums as part of the plan, the overriding covenant is not subject to Wis. Stat. ch. 703.
C.
¶34 While Solowicz’s arguments are confined to assertions that the
Restrictive Covenant is subject to Wis.
Stat. ch. 703, the begging question remains: Was ch. 703 promulgated
with the intent to include master-planned communities? The answer must be “no.” First, we recite our standard of review. “[T]he purpose of statutory interpretation is
to determine what the statute means so that it may be given its full, proper,
and intended effect.” State
ex rel. Kalal v. Circuit Ct. for Dane County, 2004 WI 58, ¶44, 271
¶35 Reviewing Wis. Stat. ch. 703, it unambiguously provides no reference whatsoever to master-planned communities. So, the plain meaning of the chapter is that it simply does not contemplate such communities.
¶36 A review of extrinsic sources confirms the plain meaning, in that they suggest Wis. Stat. ch. 703 never contemplated master-planned communities. Since the chapter’s creation in 1978, the legislature has not changed the time limit relating to the relinquishment of a developer’s control over condominiums. See 1997 Wis. Act 333; 2003 Wis. Act 283 § 24; 1997 A.B. 537; 1977 S.B. 383, ch. 407. The year 1978 was well before the idea of master-planned communities took off. It is hardly conceivable that the legislature, as it existed in 1978, intended for master-planned communities to come under ch. 703. In fact, extrinsic history suggests the opposite. As explained by the drafting committee chair to the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act,[6] Carl Lisman:[7]
Times have changed [since 1976] and … more than half the homes started in the United States are homes that will end up in Common [Interest] Communities and this gets bigger and bigger everyday and it needs more and more attention on a legislation level.
….
We put [a seven year time limit on the Developer’s
control] in the original [1975] Condominium Act and decided after a while that
was a really bad idea. Every project is
of a different size and complexity. They
all change so we finally concluded that the right answer was to say let the
developer choose the time period and as long as the developer discloses it,
then buyers will know, and they will make a meaningful decision.
As Lisman said, times have changed. The vision of condominium development in 1978 did not countenance master-planned communities like those that are sprouting today.[8]
¶37 In verifying the plain meaning of the statute, it is also
helpful to consider the purpose of the chapter as it relates to master planned
communities. Here, the Wisconsin
Realtor’s Association’s amicus brief is helpful. As the Realtor’s Association notes, under
Reasonableness
of the Restrictive Covenant
¶38 Solowicz’s next argument is that Article IX of the Covenant is void because the timeframe for the Developer’s control is unreasonable, ambiguous and vague, and against public policy. First, Solowicz asserts that even when a restrictive covenant is clear and specific, it must be reasonable. He claims that all of his complaints about what the Developer can control and how the Developer has acted, by purchasing an $850,000 gate and amending the Covenant, show that the Developer’s control is patently unreasonable. He asserts that the Developer’s actions were for its own self-interest, not for the benefit of the unit owners or the community. And again, he refers to Wis. Stat. ch. 703, postulating that seventeen years, with no end in sight, is unreasonable compared to the three or ten year limit in ch. 703.
¶39 Solowicz also argues that the Covenant fails because it is not clear and specific. He asserts that Article IX must state the maximum number of allowable units and clearly define the term “convey.” In his view, the Covenant is designed so that the Developer may expand its construction plan in such a way that it never reaches the eighty-five percent threshold. If the court does not intervene, Solowicz contends, then the Developer will never have to turn over control and this could last into infinity. Solowicz wants Article IX excised, which would transfer the Developer’s control to the Association and Trust. If that occurs, then, he thinks, the unit owners will finally have a say in how the land is governed and how their money is spent.
¶40 The Developer responds that under Pertzsch v. Upper Oconomowoc Lake Ass’n, 2001 WI App 232, ¶10 and n.3, 248 Wis. 2d 219, 635 N.W.2d 829, this court’s inquiry must end if we conclude that the Covenant is clear and specific, which, it asserts, the Covenant is. The Developer explains that in reading the Covenant, it is easy for the reasonable person to calculate the specific number of units it must convey to reach eighty-five percent. The Developer contends that the Covenant need not state a specific maximum for it to be clear and specific.
¶41 The interpretation of a restrictive covenant is a question of
law, as is the determination of whether the language of a restrictive covenant is ambiguous. Zinda
v. Krause, 191
¶42 Courts
use the rules of contract interpretation to ascertain the meaning of restrictive covenants. See
Siler v. Read Inv. Co.,
273
The interpretation must be upon the entire instrument and not upon disjointed or particular parts of it. It must be borne in mind that the office of judicial construction is not to make a contract conform to the wishes of a party manifesting itself after the agreement has been made, but to determine what was agreed and set forth in the instrument itself.
¶43 Article IX states that the Developer’s control will end before the Developer conveys eighty-five percent of the maximum number of units. The maximum number of units is calculated “from time to time” based on zoning and other applicable government ordinances and restrictions. The maximum number of units at the start of the project was 1900, and now it has increased sixty units, or about three percent.[9] Though the Developer has explained the term “convey” differently, every explanation ultimately states that a conveyance occurs when the Developer sells or “conveys” a parcel to an owner or to a third-party developer who has platted the parcel.[10] These terms are unambiguous and provide a clear and specific method to determine when the Developer will turn over control.
¶44 Though, under Pertzsch, we could end our analysis here, the gravity of what we call Solowicz’s “taxation without representation into infinity” claim leads us to examine the Covenant’s reasonableness by comparing the timetable in Article IX with the timetable and policy of the 1994 Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act. We also find it important to reiterate the special needs of master-planned communities to allow developers to turn their vision into a community.
¶45 Under the Uniform Act, if a master-planned community has at least 500 residential units on at least 500 acres, then the declaration, or restrictive covenant, need not state a maximum number of units. UCIOA §§ 2-123(a)-(c), 2-105(a)(3)-(14) (1994). Instead, Section 3-103(d)(i)-(iii) explains that the latest a developer can turn over control is the earlier of sixty days after the conveyance of seventy-five percent of possible units or two years after the developer ceased to add new units or offer units for sale. The developer, of course, must abide by any timeline in the declaration or other recorded instrument if that timeline is shorter than § 3-103(d)(i)-(iii). See UCIOA § 2-123(g).
¶46 The policy behind the Uniform Act’s timeline explains why an
eight-five percent trigger is reasonable.
The Restatement (Third) of
Property: Servitudes § 6.19(2)
(1998)[11] states that turnover should occur “[a]fter
the time reasonably necessary to protect [the developer’s] interests in
completing and marketing the project.”
This reflects one of the Uniform Act’s principle goals—“to maximize the
flexibility available to a developer seeking to adjust the size and mix of a
project to the demands of the marketplace, both before and after
creation.” UCIOA § 1-103 cmt. 15. The Uniform Act recognizes that if the
developer has to relinquish control before fully developing the land, then the
unit owners could dictate further development, potentially destroying the
developer’s investment along with the property values in the community.
¶47 But Solowicz asserts that Article IX is also unreasonable because it does not fix an ending point on the Developer’s power to expand Geneva National. In his view, the Developer can keep expanding the number of units on the property so that it will never obtain eighty-five percent conveyance. However, we agree with the circuit court that Solowicz has not presented any evidence that the Developer intends to expand, is “over-developing,” or is deviating from the original intent or development plan in the Covenant. Indeed, it is in the Developer’s interest to maintain its vision in the community by balancing the level of development with the preservation of open space. And it would be against the Developer’s own interest to intentionally fail to sell the units and land it owns. Therefore we cannot find that the Covenant is unreasonable as a matter of law.
¶48 This case would be different if the Developer had promised Solowicz that the Association’s fees would be less than a certain dollar amount; if the Developer had reached the eighty-five percent figure but held onto control; or if the Developer continued its control years after development and new home sales stopped, even if eighty-five percent of the maximum number of units had not yet been sold. But here, the Developer did not promise Solowicz what its assessments would be, and the Developer is still building and selling single- and multi-family houses and condominiums to reach the eighty-five percent figure.
¶49 Of great importance to the drafters of the Uniform Act was that buyers be given full disclosure of the rights and interests of the Developer of a master-planned community. Here, in the circuit court’s words, Solowicz bought-in with his “eyes wide open.” If Solowicz is now opposed to how the Developer maintains this unique community, if he now dislikes the Developer’s power to amend the Covenant and make capitol improvements so as to realize the fruits of its investment, then his remedy is to sell his condominium to end the contract. We will not void an entire method of community development because a few condominium owners have formed their own ideas about what the future of planned communities should be. Nor will we make a public policy decision to limit this type of development when the Covenant complies with contract principles and provides clear and specific standards that follow the policy of the Uniform Act and the Restatement. Therefore, we affirm the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment for the Developer.
By the Court.—Order affirmed.
[1] All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2005-06 version unless otherwise noted.
[2] Forward Geneva National, Geneva National Trust, Geneva National Sales Center, LLC, Geneva National Retail Corp., Geneva National Community Assoc., Inc., Geneva National Condominium Master Assoc., Inc., Geneva Woods, Inc., Harlow GN, LLC, Lowell Management Services, Inc., GN Storage II, LLC, Lowell Properties, LLC, Geneva National Community Services, LLC, Geneva National Development Corp., Foxwood at Geneva National, LLC, Bayside Pointe Land Development, LLC and Paloma Geneva National, LLC.
[3] The full name of the Condominium Declaration is “Declaration of Condominium Ownership and of Easements, Restrictions, Conditions and Covenants for Geneva National Condominium No.__” (with the particular condominium unit number indicated). It was recorded in the register of deeds office on May 22, 1990.
[4] The full name of the Restrictive Covenant is “Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, Restrictions and Easements for Geneva National Community.” It was recorded in the register of deeds office one day before the Condominium Declaration, on May 21, 1990.
[5] Fox v. Kings Grant Maintenance Ass’n, Inc., 770 A. 2d 707, 710 (N.J. 2001), describes Kings Grant as a “planned-unit development;” but we consider it to be the same as a “master planned community” for the purpose of this issue.
[6] The Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act creates a law to govern all common-interest communities. The National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws originally drafted it in 1982 and created a new version in 1994. A common-interest community “means real estate with respect to which a person, by virtue of his ownership of a unit, is obligated to pay for real estate taxes, insurance premiums, maintenance, or improvement of other real estate described in a declaration.” UCIOA §1-103(7) (1994). This includes both condominiums and master-planned communities.
[7] Carl Lisman is
the Treasurer of National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws and
chaired the drafting committee for the 1994 revisions to the Uniform Common
Interest Ownership Act. He is also a
shareholder in Lisman, Webster, Kirkpatrick & Leckerling, P.C. in
[8] We
recognize that the
[9] The original plan in 1989 called for 1900 residential units. In 1993, though, the Developer increased the density by 200 units, raising the maximum number of units to 2100 units. In 1999, the Developer expanded the golf courses, reducing the maximum number of units to 1960. The maximum number of units remains at 1960.
[10] In 2006, the Developer explained that a “conveyance” required a Certificate of Occupancy or that the property be placed on Geneva National’s assessment roles. In 2007, the Developer responded to an interrogatory by explaining that “conveyed by Declarant” requires the Developer to sell a parcel to a third party developer who has platted the parcel, or to an individual third party purchaser. This makes sense when one remembers that the entire property is not already platted; instead, when the Developer obtained its Conditional Use Permit it designated parcels for a particular purpose. So when the Developer sells a parcel to a third party developer, that developer must then seek a building permit to develop a certain number of units according to its plat. See Wis. Stat. §§ 236.03, 703.11. Until the third party developer plats the parcel, the density of that particular parcel is unknown. Thus, until the third party developer plats the parcel, the Developer cannot answer how many units it conveyed to the third party developer.
[11] The National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws promulgated both the Restatement (Third) of Property: Servitudes ch. 6 (1998) and the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act.
[12] Carl Lisman, Treasurer, NCCUSL, Address at the MD Dept. of Hous. and Cmty. Dev. Task Force on Common Ownership Communities (Jan. 23, 2006) (transcript available at http://www.ahrc.com/new/index.php/src/news/sub/article/action/ShowMedia/id/2929, last visited Oct. 21, 2008).