FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The plaintiffs are West Cove Marina Corporation and sixty (60) individual unit owners of West Cove Marina Condominiums. The defendant is the city of West Haven. The plaintiffs filed their complaint in this action on May 22, 1996. In the first count of the complaint they appealed the real estate tax assessments of West Cove Marina Condominiums on the October 1, 1995 list of the city of West Haven. In the second count they alleged that the assessments by the city of West Haven were excessive, disproportionate and illegal.
Prior to trial, on April 28, 1998, the parties reached an agreement and stipulated to a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs. Said stipulation required the following: "[T]he total fair market value of all condominium units shall be reduced to one million seven hundred and ninety eight thousand seven hundred dollars. ($1,798,700.00). The assessor shall revalue each unit according to the size of the unit, . . . And a written stipulation assigning such revised value shall be filed with the court and shall be become the revised valuation of each unit. In the event that plaintiff West Cove Condominium Association shall convert itself from [a] condominium to . . . a cooperative form of ownership or shall dissolve the condominium declaration then the assessor agrees that she shall revalue the subject premises as an interim reassessment based upon such unified or single ownership in accordance with applicable law." (Transcript of hearing April 28, 1998, p. 2.).
The parties agree that, in compliance with the stipulated judgment, the assessor of the city of West Haven reduced the assessment on the subject property for the list of October 1, 1998. The assessor has not, however, filed a written stipulation of the pro-rata reduction of the units with the court.2 In addition, the assessor has refused to reassess the property as a cooperative claiming that the plaintiffs have not properly converted the property to a cooperative in accordance with the Common Interest Ownership Act (CIOA), General Statutes §
According to the plaintiffs, the original condominium was created by declaration, recorded on October 15, 1987, in the West Haven land records in volume 815 at page 108, subject to and in compliance with the Common Interest Ownership Act.3 Said declaration of condominium required approval by 75 percent of the unit owners to amend the declaration. The CT Page 15215 parties agree that the required number of unit owners voted to amend the declaration of condominium to convert the condominium to a cooperative form of ownership. They agree that on September 29, 1998, an amended declaration was filed in the West Haven land records in volume 1070 at page 100 along with the consent and deeds of 108 of 122 unit owners conveying their interests in the condominium to the cooperative. The amended declaration incorporates a property description attached as Schedule A, a survey showing 122 units attached as Schedule B, and a chart of allocated interests to all 122 units attached as Schedule C.
ARGUMENTS OF THE PARTIES
The plaintiff's claim that the defendant's assessor must reassess their property as a cooperative. Essentially, the plaintiffs assert that because they are converting their ownership interest from one form of common interest community (i.e., a condominium) to another (i.e., a cooperative) they may do so by following the requirements for amending their declaration. By implication, they argue that they are not "creating" a common interest community and thus are not bound by the requirement that all the subject real property be conveyed to the association.
In opposition, the defendants argue that the assessor is not required to reassess the property because the plaintiffs have not converted the property to a cooperative pursuant to the Common Interest Ownership Act. The defendant maintains that the plaintiffs can only convert the condominium into a cooperative by terminating the condominium,4 filing the proper documents5 and conveying all 122 units to the cooperative.
ISSUE IN DISPUTE
By agreement of the parties, the issue in dispute for this court to resolve is whether a condominium can be converted to a cooperative form of ownership by recording an amended declaration and conveying to the cooperative 90 percent of the land subject to that declaration. For reasons more fully explained below, this court holds that, in accordance with the Common Interest Ownership Act, a condominium cannot be converted to a cooperative by recording an amended declaration and conveying to the cooperative less than 100 percent of the land subject to that declaration.
LEGAL DISCUSSION Common Interest Ownership Act
The determination of whether or not the plaintiffs properly converted CT Page 15216 from a cooperative to a condominium requires examination of the Common Interest Ownership Act. The Common Interest Ownership Act "is a comprehensive legislative scheme that governs the creation, organization and management of all forms of common interest communities." Fruin v.Colonnade One at Old Greenwich Ltd. Partnership,
"[CIOA] has five major parts. Part I of the act contains general provisions, including definitions of the three forms of common interest ownership: the condominium; General Statutes §
Conversions of Common Interest Ownership Properties
Although the statute does not set forth a procedure for converting from one form of ownership to another, it does provide the necessary procedure for the creation of a cooperative form of ownership: "A common interest community may be created pursuant to this chapter only by recording a declaration executed in the same manner as a deed and, in a cooperative, by conveying the real property subject to that declaration to the association. " General Statutes §
The relevant statutes, legislative history and prior case law do not address the issue of whether a cooperative can be established by amendment of a declaration of condominium and a conveyance of less than 100 percent of the land subject thereto. Courts have, however, addressed the requirements for the creation of other forms of common interest communities under the Condominium Act of 1976, General Statutes §
As noted above, General Statutes §
In this case, although the parties disagree on the question of whether the plaintiffs' amended declaration meets statutory requirements, it is undisputed that less than 100 percent of the real property subject to the CT Page 15218 plaintiffs' declaration was conveyed to the association. The amended declaration describes the land subject to the cooperative as all that land previously in the condominium and all 122 units of the original condominium. By the plaintiffs' own admission only 90 percent of that land has been deeded to the cooperative.
In addition, other statutory provisions, the plaintiffs' own declaration of condominium and case law all indicate that regardless of whether it is created or converted, a cooperative can only be established if the ownership complies with the requirements of General Statutes §
The plaintiffs cite Townhouse III Condominium Assn., Inc. v. Mulligan,
Superior Court, judicial district of Tolland at Rockville, Docket No. 50183 (March 13, 1995, Klaczak, J.) (
CONCLUSION
This court concludes, that absent the unanimous consent of the condominium unit owners, the association may not legally convert to a cooperative unit. This conclusion is mandated by the language of the pertinent statutes and the fact that the conversion changes property rights of the owners. Therefore, the defendant's assessor has not failed to properly assess the property.
Angela Carol Robinson, J.
