[¶ 1] The Broad Cove Shore Association appeals from a summary judgment entered by the Superior Court (Cumberland County, Crowley, J.) in favor of Helen Muther and Paul Woods on count IX of their amended complaint seeking to enforce a settlement agreement between the parties. The Association argues primarily that summary judgment was inаppropriate because genuine issues of material fact remain regarding both the existence and enforceability of a binding settlement agreemеnt. We affirm the judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
[¶ 2] In November 2005, Muther and Woods, in an attempt to clarify the scope of an easement that burdens their property in Cape Elizabeth, filed a complaint in the Superior Court against the Association, a nonprofit homeowners association comprising approximately 243 households locatеd in and around the Broad Cove portion of Cape Elizabeth, and two individuals.
[¶ 3] The parties agreed that the settlement would be reduced to a stipulated judgment for judicial signature at a later date. However, the Association refused to sign a draft of the stipulated judgment proposed by Muther and Woods, arguing that it contained terms that were materially different frоm those understood by the Association on the day of the settlement conference. Subsequent attempts to agree on the terms of a stipulated judgment failed. By leave of the court, Muther and Woods amended their complaint to add a count of breach of settlement agreement and then filed a motion for summаry judgment on that count.
[¶ 4] The motion court (Crowley, J.) determined that the twenty-nine page transcript of the settlement agreement as read into the record at the conclusion of the settlement conference reflected an enforceable agreement between the parties and entered summary judgment in favor of Muther and Woods. Aftеr giving the parties an opportunity to object to the accuracy of that transcript as written and disposing of several other post-judgment motions, the cоurt entered a final judgment on the complaint, and this appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
[¶ 5] The Association’s principal argument on appeal is that no enforceable settlement agreement exists because the parties merely entered into an agreement in principle or an “agreement to agree” аt the settlement conference. The Association specifically contends that the parties’ subsequent inability to reduce the settlement to a stipulatеd judgment reveals remaining disagreements on several material terms.
[¶ 6] Settlement agreements are analyzed as contracts, and the existence of a binding sеttlement is a question of fact. Marie v. Renner,
[¶ 7] However, when, as here, the parties to a dispute report to the court that they have reached a sеttlement, read the terms of the agreement into the record with the assistance of counsel, and then express clear consent to those terms as recited, that settlement becomes an enforceable agreement and, upon acceptance by the court, is incorporated as a judgment of the court. See Toffling v. Toffling,
[¶ 8] In the instant matter, the transcript of the settlement agreement, without more, conclusively establishes the existence of a binding settlement agreement as a matter of law, and subsequent disputes that arose while attempting to reduce the settlement to a stipulated judgment did not affect the authority of the court to enforce the agreement through the entry of a judgment incorporating the terms previously stipulated to by the parties. See Toffling,
[¶ 9] The Association’s two remaining contentions on appeal are similarly unpersuasive. First, we discern no clear error in the court’s finding that the transcript of the settlement agreement was accurate as written. See York Hosp. v. Dep’t of Health and Human Servs.,
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. The Association and the two individually named defendants filed joint briefs on appeal аnd maintained identical arguments throughout these proceedings. For convenience, we refer to these parties collectively as the Associatiоn in this opinion.
. Counts I through VIII of the original complaint were understood to have been resolved through the settlement and count IX was added when the parties failed in their attempts to reduce the settlement to a stipulated judgment. Although count IX was nominally a count of breach of settlement agreement, both parties fоcused their arguments before the motion court on the issue of whether the settlement conference between the parties re-suited in a binding agreement and thus, as a practical matter, used that count to litigate the existence of the agreement. Accordingly, the court's order granting summary judgment was expressly limited tо the determination that a binding agreement existed. This determination resolved counts I through VIII, and the court found in favor of Muther and Woods on count IX, thus finally resolving all counts.
