OPINION
This аppeal involves a dispute concerning the interpretation of the declarations of a planned unit development in Sumner County. After the owner of a rental apartment complex in the planned unit develоpment recorded conflicting declarations, the development’s homeowners association filed suit in the Chancery Court for Sumner County seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. On cross motions for summary judgment, the trial court held that the development’s declarations required the owner of the rental apartment complex to record declarations and that the rental apartment complex’s declarations were incоnsistent with the development’s declarations. The owner of the rental apartment complex asserts on this appeal that the trial court misinterpreted the development’s declarations and that it was not requirеd to record declarations of its own. We agree and hold that the owner of the rental apartment complex, not the homeowners association, is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. Therefore, we reverse the summary judgment for the homeowners association.
I.
Music City Land Development, Inc. acquired two tracts of property in Sumner County amounting to approximately twenty-eight acres to develop a planned unit development called The Maples. In July 1975, it recorded an “Amended Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions” for the entire development (“Maples Declarations”) as required by the Horizontal Property Aсt [TenmCode Ann. §§ 66-27-101, -123 (1993) ]. These declarations anticipated future development of property in The Maples, and accordingly, Article VII(2) provides, in part:
Any developer of a multi-family complex shall as a condition рrecedent to the development of the same cause to be prepared covenants and restrictions of the type and nature which may be enforced in a court of equity for the benefit of all of the residents of said multifamily complex.
The remainder of Article VII(2) deals with the contents, duration, approval, and re-cordation of the covenants required by Article VII(2)
The Maples Declarations contain a fairly standard set of land use restrictions as well as a mechanism for their enforcement. They establish a homeowners association whose membership consists of the “owners of lots” in The Maples, 1 and Article VII(l) provides, in part:
The Association, or any Owner, shall have the right to enforce, by any proceeding at law or in equity, all restrictions, conditions, covenants, reservations, liens and charges now or hereinafter imposed by the provisions of this Declaration.
In December 1993, T & R Nashville Ltd. Partnership (“T
&
R”) purchased approximately thirteen acres of property in The Maples and constructed an apartment
The Maples homeowners association continued to press the issue. Finally, in September 1995, T & R mailed the homeowners association a copy of a set of declarations it intended to record in the office of the Sumner County Register of Deeds (‘Waterview Declarations”). Section 3, the enforcement provision of the Water-view Declarations, provides:
Enforcement of these Covenants and Restrictions shall be by any proceeding at law or in equity against any person or persons violating or attempting to violate any covenant or restrictions, either to restrain the violation or to recover damages. These Covenants and Restrictions are intended to benefit the Residents, the Owner or future owners of the Apartments. The Owner is the only person entitled to enforce these Covenants and Restrictions. No third person or entity is entitled to do so. Failure by Owner to enforce any Covenant or Restriction herein contained shall in no event be deemed a waiver of thе right to do so thereafter. In no event shall Owner have any liability to any Resident or any third party by virtue of the failure to enforce any Covenant or Restriction herein contained.
In its transmittal letter, T & R reiterated its belief that Article VII(2) did not require it tо file declarations and that neither the homeowners association nor the other lot owners in The Maples could proceed directly against the Waterview Apartment’s tenants for violations of either the Maрles Declarations or the Waterview Declarations. T & R recorded the Water-view Declarations on September 8, 1995.
On October 6, 1995, the homeowners association filed suit in the Chancery Court for Sumner County seeking a deсlaration that Section 3 of the Waterview Declarations was inconsistent with Article VII(l) of the Maples Declarations and requesting the court to order T & R to conform the Waterview Declarations to the Maples Dеclarations. Ultimately, both parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment based on their respective interpretations of the Maples Declarations. On June 26, 1996, the trial court granted the homeowners association’s motiоn for summary judgment. The trial court concluded, as a matter of law, (1) that the Maples Declarations applied to the Waterview Apartments, (2) that the Waterview Apartments was a “multi-family complex” for the purpose of Article VII(l) of the Maples Covenants, (3) that the Maples Declarations required T & R to record declarations for the Waterview Apartments, and (4) that Article YII(l) of the Maples Declarations permitted the homeownеrs association or any other lot owner in The Maples to enforce the Waterview Declarations directly against tenants living in the Water-view Apartments.
II.
The pivotal issue on this appeal involves an interpretаtion of the Maples Declarations. T & R asserts that the Waterview Apartments is not a “multi-family complex” and, therefore, that Article VII(2) does not require it to prepare declarations. If T & R is correct, then the issue cоncerning whether the homeowners association or the other lot owners in The Maples may enforce the Waterview declarations must be decided in T & R’s favor.
A.
Covenants, conditions, and restrictions such as the ones contаined in the Maples Declarations are property interests that run with the land.
See Turnley v.
The courts enforce restrictions according to the clearly expressed intentions of the parties manifested in the restrictions themselves.
See Lapray v. Smith,
When the restriction’s terms are capable of more than one construction, we should adopt the construction that advances the unrestricted use of the property.
See Southern Advertising Co., Inc. v. Sherman,
B.
The Maples Declarations do not define “multi-family сomplex,” and thus we must look to other portions of the document to garner meaning for the phrase. The declarations require that all the lots in this planned unit development must be “used for residential purposes exclusivеly” and provide that the lots may contain either “single family residential units” dr “residential units within a multi-family unit structure or complex.” The present dispute does not involve single family residences.
The declarations envision two varieties of multi-fаmily complexes. The first includes multi-family complexes in which’ persons own the residential units (i.e., a condominium complex). The second includes multi-family complexes in which the residential units are leased to tenants (i.e., an apartment complex). The issue to be decided is whether the phrase “multi-family complex” as it is used in Article VII(2) includes both condominium complexes and apartment complexes.
When Article VII(2) is read in its entirety, the only conclusion to be drawn is that the “covenants and restrictions” to which it refers are those required to be filed by the Horizontal Property Act.
See
Tenn.Code Ann. §§ 66-27-102(a)(10), -107(a). The reason for this conclusion is straightforward. Article VII(2) requires that these covenants and restrictions shall be “subject to amendment by approval of two-thirds
(%)
of the unit owners of the complex.” Condominiums have unit owners,
Based on our interpretation of Article VII(2), the trial court erred by construing Article VII(2) to require T & R to prepare and record declarations and covenants because the Waterview Apartments is not a condominium complex. Since the Maples Declarations do not require the preparation or filing of the Waterview Declarations, it also follows that Article VII(l) of the Maples Declarations does not give the Maples Homeowners Association the authority to enforce the Waterview Declarations.
III.
We reversе the summary judgment for the Maples Homeowners Association and remand the case to the trial court for the purpose of entering an order granting a summary judgment to T & R Nashville Limited Partnership. We tax the costs of this appеal to the Maples Homeowners Association, Inc. for which execution, if necessary, may issue.
Notes
. See Maples Declarations, Art. 111(B). The declarations define "lot" as "any plot of land shown upon any recorded subdivision map of the Properties with the exception of the Common Area,” Maples Declarations, Art. 1(5), and define "owner” as “the record owner ... of a fee simple title to any Lot which is part of the Properties....” Maples Declarations, Art. 1(2).
