STEVEN F. TVARDEK, JR., ET AL. v. POWHATAN VILLAGE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC.
Record No. 150456
Supreme Court of Virginia
February 12, 2016
OPINION BY JUSTICE D. ARTHUR KELSEY
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE CITY OF WILLIAMSBURG AND JAMES CITY COUNTY, Michael E. McGinty, Judge
I.
In 2013, the Tvardeks filed a declaratory judgment complaint against their homeowners’ association, Powhatan Village Homeowners Association, Inc. (the “HOA“). They challenged the validity of a 2008 amendment to the Powhatan Village Declaration of Protective Covenants and Restrictions (the “2008 Amendment“) on the basis that it unlawfully deprived them of a preexisting right to rent their home, which they purchased in 2006.
After the Tvardeks filed an amended complaint amplifying their claim, the HOA filed a special plea in bar asserting that the case should be dismissed as untimely under the one-year statute of limitations prescribed by
The debate over the statute of limitations turned on a single uncontested fact: the text of a certification attached to the 2008 Amendment, which was recorded in the land records of the clerk of the circuit court. The certification stated:
CERTIFICATION REQUIRED BY
VIRGINIA CODE § 55-515.1.F The undersigned President of the Association does hereby certify that this Amendment has been approved by a vote of two-thirds of the Class A votes in the Association, as evidenced by the results of the meeting at which the vote was taken, such evidence on file with the Association, as required by Section 9.2 of the Declaration.
EXECUTED on the date first written above by the duly authorized officer оf the Association.
POWHATAN VILLAGE
HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC.,
a Virginia Nonstock CorporationBy: /s/ Barbara G. Moody
Barbara Moody, President
This certification was important because the one-year statute of limitations prescribed by
Agreemеnt of the required majority of lot owners to any amendment of the declaration shall be evidenced by their execution of the amendment, or ratifications thereof, and the same shall become effective when a copy of the amendment is recorded together with a certification, signed by the principal
officer of the association or by such other officer or officers as the declaration may specify, that the requisite majority of the lot owners signed the amendment or ratifications thereof.
II.
On appeal, the Tvardeks argue that the HOA filed a certification that did not comply with
A.
“The common law of England was brought to Virginia by our ancestors” in large part “to settle the rights of property.” Briggs v. Commonwealth, 82 Va. 554, 557 (1886).1 At that time, English common law had developed a highly skeptical view of restrictions running with the land that limited the free use of property. “Histоrically, the strict-construction doctrine was part of the arsenal of restrictive doctrines courts developed to guard against the dangers imposed by servitudes.” Restatement (Third) of Property: Servitudes § 4.1 cmt. a (2000); cf. § 1.3(1) (“A covenant is a servitude if either the benefit or the burden runs with land.“); id. at intro. note (treating easements, covenants, and servitudes as part of “an integrated body of doctrine“).
A restrictive covenant running with the land that is imposed on a landowner solely by virtue of an agreement entered into by other landowners who are outside the chain of privity would have been unheard of under English common law. See generally 7 William Holdsworth, A History of English Law 287 (1925) (“Whether or not the burden of other covenants would run with the land, and whether or not the assignee of the land could be sued by writ of covenant, seem to have been matters upon which there is little or no mediaeval authority.“). Privity has long been considered an essential feature of any enforceable restrictive covenant. Bally v. Wells (1769) 95 Eng. Rep. 913, 915; 3 Wils. 26, 29 (“There must always be a privity between the
B.
The Virginia Property Owners’ Association Act,
In this case, the certification stated only that the “Amendment has been approved by a vote of two-thirds” of the eligible members and that “evidence on file” with the HOA confirmed this fact. J.A. at 109 (emphasis added). The HOA contends that this language adequately satisfied the definition of “effective” used in
Defending the circuit court‘s interpretation, the HOA urges us to adopt a loose interpretаtive interplay between subsections E and F of
We reject this argument, as it takes us perilously close to rewriting the statute under the subtle “guise of judicial interpretation.” Holly Hill Farm Corp. v. Rowe, 241 Va. 425, 431, 404 S.E.2d 48, 51 (1991). The fact that a defective certification might be viewed by a title examiner as effective does not make it so. Nor would it warrant a binary interpretation of the same statutory word even if true. In legal cоdes, as in ordinary conversation, “a word is known by the company it keeps.” Sprietsma v. Mercury Marine, 537 U.S. 51, 63 (2002) (quoting Gustafson v. Alloyd Co., 513 U.S. 561, 575 (1995)). Subsections E and F use exactly the same word and are in close company. No textual or contextual grounds support the conclusion that “effective” should have dissimilar meanings in these adjacent subsections of
The HOA next argues, in the alternative, that its certification actually did cоmply with the requirement that it certify “that the requisite majority of the lot owners signed the amendment or ratifications thereof.”
We reject this interpretation as well. The issue here is not whethеr the certification declared that the requisite majority approved the 2008 Amendment — but, rather, whether it certified that each member of that majority signed the amendment or ratifications of it. A bare reference to some unspecified “evidence on file” adds nothing to the analysis. J.A. at 109. That evidence could be nothing more than minutes of the meeting, perhaps signed only by the association‘s secretary and by none of the majority voters.
This discussion of the statutory text returns us to our first observation. The Virginia Property Owners’ Association Act authorizes the creation and enforcement of restrictive
C.
Anticipating our interpretation of the statute, the HOA makes its last stand with an invocation of the anti-absurdity principle. Any interpretation requiring that certificаtions must “strictly comply” with
In this context, the anti-absurdity limitation has a legal, not colloquial, meaning. Our fidelity to the statutory text does not permit us to wеigh policy arguments for and against legislation, holding out the possibility that we would fashion an interpretation based upon avoiding policies that a litigant thinks to be absurd. We have no constitutional authority to judge whether a statute is “unwise, improper, or inequitable,” Holly Hill Farm Corp., 241 Va. at 431, because the legislature, not the judiciary, is the sole “author of public policy,” Campbell v. Commonwealth, 246 Va. 174, 184 n.8, 431 S.E.2d 648, 654 n.8 (1993).
Consequently, the anti-absurdity рrinciple — understood in its legal sense — serves only as an interpretative brake on irrational literalism. This fail-safe applies in situations in which a
In this case, the HOA argues that a literal interpretation of
III.
In sum, we agree with the Tvardeks that: (i) the one-year limitations period in subsection E of
Reversed and remanded.
