The issue raised by this appeal is whether the covenants upon which the Property Owners’ Association relies to assess defendants are sufficiently certain and definite to be enforceable. We hold that they are not. Accordingly, we do not address the question whether the covenants run with the land so
It is, of course, true that “[a] grantee, who accepts a deed
containing otherwise valid covenants purporting to bind him, thereby becomes bound for the performance of such covenants.”
Cummings v. Dosam, Inc.,
Examining the three covenants at issue in the present case, we find no sufficient standard by which to measure the defendants’ liability for assessments. None of the covenants identifies with particularity the property to be maintained. The first covenant, being the one incorporated by reference into the deeds for lots in the Ski-Way Tract of the Beech Mountain subdivision, refers to “reasonable annual assessment charges for road maintenance and maintenance of the trails and recreational areas,” and the two other covenants refer more generally to assessments for “road maintenance.” Although the parties stipulated that as of 2 May 1979 the Property Owners’ Association was maintaining fifty-eight miles of gravel roads within the resort complex, as well as hiking trails, nothing in the record reflects that any of the defendants could have known at the time they accepted their deeds what roads or trails would be required to be maintained with revenues from assessments. Even more important is that there is nothing in the covenant which can guide the court should it be called upon to review the determination by the Property Owners’ Association as to what particular roads and trails it elects to maintain. Two of the covenants refer to assessment charges for “recreational fees” or “recreational areas,” but again no specific recreational areas are either described or referred to which are to be maintained. Even though Carolina Caribbean Corporation owned certain recreational facilities at Beech Mountain at the time the defendants acquired title to their lots, the covenants do not refer specifically to those facilities or require that the assessments be used to maintain those particular facilities.
Further, even if it be assumed that the defendants and others who purchased property at the time the original Articles of Incorporation of the Beech Mountain Property Owners’ Association were on record had constructive notice of their contents, the statement in those articles of the purposes for which the Association was organized is equally as indefinite as the covenants themselves. They recite in pertinent part that the Association was organized for the purpose of establishing “reasonable annual
It may well be that the Property Owners’ Association performs a desirable function and that its activities enhance the value of all properties within its area of service. That, however, furnishes no sufficient basis for the court to decree enforcement of the assessments here in question.
Affirmed.
