Callawasie v. Gregory Martin ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •           THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
    In The Supreme Court
    The Callawassie Island Members Club, Inc., Respondent,
    v.
    Gregory L. Martin and Rebecca L. Martin, Defendants,
    and
    The Callawassie Island Members Club, Inc., Respondent,
    v.
    Michael J. Frey and Grace I. Frey, Defendants,
    and
    The Callawassie Island Members Club, Inc., Respondent,
    v.
    Mark K. Quinn and Sherry B. Quinn, Defendants,
    Of Whom Michael J. Frey is the Petitioner.
    Appellate Case No. 2020-000667
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Appeal From Beaufort County
    J. Ernest Kinard, Jr., Circuit Court Judge
    Opinion No. 28102
    Heard November 9, 2021 – Filed August 3, 2022
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    Ian S. Ford, Neil Davis Thomson, and Ainsley Fisher
    Tillman, all of Ford Wallace Thomson, L.L.C., of
    Charleston, for Petitioner.
    Andrew F. Lindemann, of Lindemann and Davis, P.A., of
    Columbia; M. Dawes Cooke Jr., John W. Fletcher, and
    Bradley B. Banias, all of Barnwell Whaley Patterson &
    Helms, L.L.C., of Charleston; Stephen P. Hughes, of
    Howell Gibson & Hughes, of Beaufort; and James Andrew
    Yoho, of Boyle, Leonard & Anderson, P.A., of Charleston,
    for Respondent.
    CHIEF JUSTICE BEATTY: The Callawassie Island Members Club, Inc.
    ("the Club"), brought separate actions against three couples—the Martins, the Freys,
    and the Quinns—following a dispute over membership dues. The circuit court
    granted the Club's motion for summary judgment. The court of appeals consolidated
    the parties' appeals and affirmed. Callawassie Island Members Club, Inc. v. Martin,
    Op. No. 2019-UP-393, 
    2019 WL 6897780
     (S.C. Ct. App. filed Dec. 18, 2019). We
    granted a petition for a writ of certiorari filed by Michael J. Frey ("Frey") challenging
    the award of summary judgment.1 Frey contends material questions of fact exist as
    to whether the Club improperly billed him for continuing membership dues,
    particularly where his membership was suspended over a decade ago and
    membership was undisputedly optional when he joined. We reverse and remand.
    I. FACTS
    1
    Frey's wife, the Martins, and the Quinns are not participating in the appeal to this
    Court.
    The Club is a social and recreational organization operating within a private,
    gated, residential community on Callawassie Island, an area in Beaufort County.
    Frey purchased a Golf Membership in 1995 for a capital contribution of $22,000.00
    from the Club's predecessor, the Callawassie Island Club, Inc. ("the Island Club"),
    thus becoming an equity member. In addition, he purchased real property on
    Callawassie Island in a separate transaction.
    The Island Club was established as a South Carolina nonprofit corporation to
    provide amenities for the Callawassie Island development, including a golf course,
    clubhouse, tennis facilities, and swimming pools. The Island Club had a specified
    number of equity memberships available, which corresponded to the capacity of its
    facilities: Golf Memberships (595), Spring Island Founder Memberships (40), and
    Social Memberships (850 less the number of outstanding Golf Memberships).
    Payment of an initial capital contribution, monthly dues, monthly food and beverage
    minimums, and any special assessments were required to be an equity member of
    the Island Club.
    At the time Frey joined, equity memberships were not required to own
    property on Callawassie Island. Rather, according to the Island Club's 1994 "Plan
    for the Offering of Memberships in the Callawassie Island Club" ("the 1994 Plan"),
    memberships were options to be offered "to purchasers of residential units or lots in
    Callawassie and such other persons as the Club determines appropriate from time to
    time." 2 The 1994 Plan, along with the Island Club's Bylaws and General Club Rules,
    made up the core of the Island Club's organizational documents.
    The Island Club's facilities, including the real property, equipment, and
    supplies, were initially owned by the Callawassie Island Company, L.P., a Delaware
    limited partnership ("the Partnership"). The 1994 Plan contemplated the eventual
    transfer of ownership and control of the facilities from the Partnership to the Island
    Club's equity members. In 2001, the transfer of assets was completed, and the Island
    Club began operating under its current designation, the Club. In August 2001, the
    Club issued a membership plan adopted by the board of directors ("the 2001 Plan"),
    along with its own Bylaws and General Club Rules, which were similar in form to
    the organizational documents of the Island Club.
    2
    The Island Club reserved the right to offer recallable "non-equity associate
    memberships" on an annual or seasonal basis to prospective members who were not
    current property owners in order to promote the sale of residential units and lots on
    Callawassie Island.
    The Club's organizational documents were amended several more times after
    the Club assumed control in 2001. Among the notable changes that occurred in 2001
    was an amendment to the Callawassie Island development's covenants to provide
    that all persons who purchased property on Callawassie Island after December 1,
    2001 were required to purchase an equity membership in the Club and retain it so
    long as they owned their property. 3 Although the new membership requirement did
    not apply to existing property owners like Frey, he nevertheless encountered
    difficulties in exiting the Club.
    After nearly fifteen years as a dues-paying member, Frey wished to end his
    Club membership, and he stopped paying dues in October 2009. There is evidence
    in the record that the Club formally deemed Frey's account delinquent and placed
    Frey's membership on the Club's suspension list in 2011.4 Frey retained ownership
    of his property on Callawassie Island.
    In 2012, the Club brought the instant action against Frey to collect allegedly
    delinquent dues, fees, and assessments based on claims of breach of contract and
    quantum meruit. The Club maintained that, when Frey purchased his property in
    1995, he "could have elected to decline a membership with the Club at the time," but
    his purchase of an equity membership and ownership of a lot "require[d] [him] to
    remain [a member] in good standing under the terms and conditions of the governing
    documents, including the Plan and the Declaration."5 According to the Club, Frey
    3
    The membership requirement was included in the "Amended and Restated General
    Declaration for Callawassie Island and Provisions for the Callawassie Island
    Property Owners Association, Inc." ("the 2001 Property Declaration"), which was
    adopted on December 1, 2001.
    4
    The record contains a published list of the Club's suspended members as of
    November 15, 2011, which includes Frey. In addition, a "Member History" prepared
    by the Club (for the time period of 11/1/07 to 2/27/14) shows Frey's status as "S,"
    i.e., suspended, and an affidavit dated March 3, 2014 from the Club's General
    Manager, Jeff Spencer, confirms in relevant part that the Club "ha[d] been forced,
    owing to non-payment, to suspend [Frey's] membership rights and privileges
    pursuant to the applicable documents."
    5
    "The Plan" apparently referred to the Club's 2001 Plan, as may be amended, and
    "the Declaration" referred to the 2001 Property Declaration, see supra note 3. The
    Club is a distinguishable entity from the Callawassie Island Property Owners
    Association, Inc., which is not involved in this action. When Frey obtained his
    was required to continue paying dues until his membership was reissued by the Club
    to a new member.
    Frey, in turn, asserted Club membership was not contingent upon or linked to
    the ownership of his property on Callawassie Island. Further, the organizational
    documents at the time he signed a membership agreement provided a suspended
    member "shall" be expelled after four months of nonpayment. Frey alleged he
    should have been expelled from the Club four months after he stopped paying dues,
    which would have terminated his membership and the accrual of additional financial
    obligations. Frey contended the expulsion provision was unilaterally changed by the
    Club by amending the Club Rules (around 2007 to 2008) to make expulsion subject
    to the Club's discretion rather than compulsory. Frey further contended this change
    was made without notice to, or voting by, the equity members, contrary to provisions
    in the organizational documents that required any material alterations in the
    controlling terms affecting equity members to be approved by a majority of the
    members.
    Frey additionally asserted the Club was obligated to keep a Resale List
    whereby memberships would be reissued pursuant to an agreed-upon protocol, but
    the Club did not do so and it has refused to provide full disclosure of its resale
    activities. Frey stated the Club selectively permitted some individuals to leave the
    Club without imposing the ongoing accrual of dues. In Frey's case, however, the
    Club insisted—and continues to insist, more than a decade after Frey was suspended
    from his "optional" membership—that Frey has a continuing obligation to pay dues
    until the Club reissues his membership. It is undisputed that the Club has never
    reissued Frey's membership. Frey alleged the Club effectively prevented him and
    other members from leaving because only the Club can expel a member and reissue
    memberships.
    Based on the foregoing, Frey asserted several defenses and counterclaims
    regarding the Club's policies and contended he had no further obligations to the Club.
    Among his allegations, Frey maintained the Club violated South Carolina's
    Nonprofit Corporation Act of 1994 ("the NCA") by (1) failing to treat members of
    the same class the same with regard to their rights and obligations, particularly as to
    their rights of transfer; (2) improperly restricting transfer rights; (3) failing to allow
    members to approve fundamental membership changes; (4) improperly refusing to
    equity membership in the Island Club (now the Club) in 1995, it was purchased in a
    separate contractual agreement and the membership did not run with the land.
    expel Frey and, thus, end his ongoing financial obligations; and (5) failing to have
    and maintain a fair and reasonable process for the termination of memberships. 6
    The circuit court granted the Club's motion for summary judgment and
    dismissed Frey's counterclaims. The circuit court awarded the Club damages of
    $58,744.23 and attorney's fees of $9,132.23, for a total judgment of $67,876.46. The
    circuit court reasoned that, even if Frey were expelled, he was obligated to continue
    paying dues, fees, and assessments until the Club reissued his membership pursuant
    to the Club's organizational documents, and it noted the decision whether to expel a
    member had been changed from the time Frey became a member and was now solely
    within the Club's discretion, rather than mandatory. The circuit court found it was
    irrelevant whether the Club had improperly amended any of the organizational
    documents regarding expulsion because the obligation to pay dues, fees, and
    assessments until a membership was reissued was evident in the original 1994 Plan.
    The circuit court rejected any relief under the NCA, finding "no violation of the
    statutory provisions relied upon by" Frey. The circuit court reasoned that the NCA
    recognizes a member of a nonprofit corporation is not relieved of "obligations
    incurred or commitments made" to the corporation prior to the member's resignation,
    suspension, or expulsion, so Frey's obligations were ongoing despite his suspension.
    See 
    S.C. Code Ann. § 33-31-620
    (b) (2006) (obligations made prior to resignation);
    
    id.
     § 33-31-621(e) (obligations made prior to suspension or expulsion). It also
    rejected Frey's contention that discovery was prematurely ended by the grant of
    summary judgment.
    Frey appealed (along with his wife, who was then still a party). The Freys
    and two other couples who were challenging the Club's policies (the Martins and the
    6
    See, e.g., 
    S.C. Code Ann. § 33-31-610
     (2006) ("All members have the same rights
    and obligations with respect to voting, dissolution, redemption, and transfer, unless
    the articles or bylaws establish classes of membership with different rights or
    obligations. All members have the same rights and obligations with respect to any
    other matters, except as set forth in or authorized by the articles or bylaws."); § id.
    33-31-611(c) ("Where transfer rights have been provided, no restriction on them is
    binding with respect to a member holding a membership issued before the adoption
    of the restriction unless the restriction is approved by the members and the affected
    member."); id. § 33-31-620(a) ("A member [of a nonprofit organization] may resign
    at any time."); id. § 33-31-621(a) (providing members of nonprofit corporations may
    not be expelled or suspended, and no membership in such corporations may be
    terminated or suspended, "except pursuant to a procedure that is fair and reasonable
    and carried out in good faith").
    Quinns) attempted to consolidate their appeals with that of Ronnie and Jeannette
    Dennis, who had resigned from the Club and also disputed their ongoing
    membership dues. The court of appeals declined to consolidate the appeals at that
    time and instead allowed the Dennises' case to proceed first. The court of appeals
    reversed the circuit court's grant of summary judgment to the Club and remanded
    the Dennises' case for trial, finding genuine issues of material fact existed as to
    whether the Dennises were liable for dues accruing after their resignation and
    whether the Club's organizational terms violated the NCA. See Callawassie Island
    Members Club, Inc. v. Dennis, 
    417 S.C. 610
    , 
    790 S.E.2d 435
     (Ct. App. 2016)
    ("Dennis I").7
    The court of appeals thereafter filed three unpublished opinions ruling on the
    Martin, Frey, and Quinn appeals, in which it affirmed in part, reversed in part, and
    remanded the cases to the circuit court. The court of appeals relied on its decision
    in Dennis I and found the grant of summary judgment was error, noting the Club's
    view would create an unreasonable situation in which the Club could refuse to ever
    allow a member to terminate his or her membership. 8
    During this interval, this Court issued a writ of certiorari to review the decision
    in Dennis I. We reversed in Dennis II, thereby reinstating summary judgment for
    the Club,9 but we remanded the case to the court of appeals to rule on the Dennises'
    remaining issues challenging summary judgment that were not ruled upon by the
    7
    There are three appeals involving the Dennises that will be discussed herein. To
    distinguish them, the appeals shall be denominated Dennis I (the initial decision by
    the court of appeals reversing the circuit court's grant of summary judgment), Dennis
    II (this Court's decision reversing the court of appeals and reinstating summary
    judgment, but remanding the case to the court of appeals to rule on the remaining
    issues challenging summary judgment), and Dennis III (the decision of the court of
    appeals on remand, which reversed the summary judgment order).
    8
    See Callawassie Island Members Club, Inc. v. Martin, Op. No. 2018-UP-178, 
    2018 WL 2059555
     (S.C. Ct. App. filed May 2, 2018); Callawassie Island Members Club,
    Inc. v. Frey, Op. No. 2018-UP-179, 
    2018 WL 2059557
     (S.C. Ct. App. filed May 2,
    2018); Callawassie Island Members Club, Inc. v. Quinn, Op. No. 2018-UP-180,
    
    2018 WL 2059558
     (S.C. Ct. App. filed May 2, 2018).
    9
    We note the parties and the courts have used a variety of shortened monikers to
    identify the parties over the course of this litigation, and in Dennis II the Club was
    referred to as "the Members Club."
    court of appeals after it found other issues dispositive. Callawassie Island Members
    Club, Inc. v. Dennis, 
    425 S.C. 193
    , 
    821 S.E.2d 667
     (2018) ("Dennis II").
    After this Court's decision in Dennis II, the court of appeals granted rehearing
    in the Frey, Martin, and Quinn cases, consolidated the appeals, and issued the
    opinion that is now before this Court pursuant to Frey's petition for a writ of
    certiorari. See Callawassie Island Members Club, Inc. v. Martin, Op. No. 2019-UP-
    393, 
    2019 WL 6897780
     (S.C. Ct. App. filed Dec. 18, 2019). In this revised decision,
    the court of appeals affirmed the grant of summary judgment to the Club, along with
    damages and attorney's fees, and determined there was no evidence the Club's
    membership provisions violated the NCA. The court of appeals indicated it felt
    constrained to reach this result, however, based on the precedent from this Court in
    Dennis II. See, e.g., Martin, 
    2019 WL 6897780
     at *4 ("Because the governing
    documents at issue in [Dennis II] are the same documents at issue in the instant
    cases, we affirm the grant of summary judgment to the Club on its claims against
    Appellants."); id. at *6 ("In light of the supreme court's holding in [Dennis II], we
    have no choice but to hold the requirement that members continue to pay dues, fees,
    and other charges after resignation until their membership is reissued is not
    prohibited by the Act.").
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    "When reviewing the grant of summary judgment, the appellate court applies
    the same standard applied by the trial court pursuant to Rule 56(c), SCRCP."
    Fleming v. Rose, 
    350 S.C. 488
    , 493, 
    567 S.E.2d 857
    , 860 (2002); see also Rule 56(c),
    SCRCP (stating summary judgment shall be granted "if the pleadings, depositions,
    answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if
    any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving
    party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law").
    "When determining if any triable issues of fact exist, the evidence and all
    reasonable inferences must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving
    party." Fleming, 
    350 S.C. at
    493–94, 
    567 S.E.2d 857
     at 860 (citing Summer v.
    Carpenter, 
    328 S.C. 36
    , 
    492 S.E.2d 55
     (1997)).
    This Court applies de novo review to questions of law, so it need not defer to
    the determination of the court below. See Brock v. Town of Mount Pleasant, 
    415 S.C. 625
    , 628, 
    785 S.E.2d 198
    , 200 (2016) (stating "[t]he interpretation of a statute
    is a question of law," and "[t]his Court may interpret statutes, and therefore resolve
    this case, 'without any deference to the court below'" (citations omitted)); Milliken
    & Co. v. Morin, 
    399 S.C. 23
    , 30, 
    731 S.E.2d 288
    , 291 (2012) (observing actions for
    breach of contract and "[w]hether a contract is against public policy or is otherwise
    illegal or unenforceable" are generally questions of law that are reviewed de novo
    by an appellate court (citations omitted)).
    III. DISCUSSION
    Frey, the sole remaining petitioner here, 10 challenges the propriety of
    summary judgment in this matter. Frey argues that in revising its original decision,
    the court of appeals misconstrued this Court's precedent in Dennis II; disregarded
    established principles of contract law, the NCA, and public policy; improperly
    denied his counterclaims and discovery requests; and deprived him of appellate
    review of the issue of attorney's fees.
    As to the precedent involving the Dennises, Frey argues his formal
    suspension—and the expulsion that should have followed—are distinguishable from
    the situation involving the Dennises, which concerned different provisions in the
    governing documents and the NCA governing resignation. Frey states members who
    are expelled, unlike those who resign, are banned from the Club for life and, thus,
    can never remain members. However, the Club unilaterally altered the expulsion
    provision to make it discretionary rather than mandatory, which violated the terms
    of the organizational documents and substantially affected his financial liability
    without notice to him or the membership at large.
    Frey contends summary judgment is particularly inappropriate in light of
    material questions concerning the Club's potential contractual and NCA violations.
    For example, Frey asserts that, even though he was suspended by the Club, it
    continued to impose ongoing dues and fees in reliance on provisions in the
    organizational documents that stated membership dues terminated when the Club
    "reissued" a membership. Frey states other provisions in the organizational
    documents, however, simultaneously required the Club to formally expel a
    suspended member after four months of nonpayment. Upon expulsion, Frey
    maintains his equity membership should have terminated and his membership
    certificate should have been reissued by the Club in accordance with established
    protocols, thus ending any further financial obligations. Frey maintains the Club
    would have been more than adequately compensated for any time that elapsed before
    his membership was reissued because the organizational documents allowed the
    10
    Frey's case is one of dozens pending in the state and federal courts involving
    disputes between the Club and its members over the Club's membership policies.
    Club to impose a forfeiture in these circumstances up to the amount of a member's
    capital contribution to the Club.
    Frey asserts Club membership is a contractual relationship that is distinct from
    the ownership of his property. Membership was optional for Callawassie Island
    residents when he joined, so Frey states it was improper for the Club to change the
    operational terms of their agreement to force him to remain a dues-paying member
    at ever-increasing membership rates, with no end in sight, while also selectively
    allowing other members to quietly exit the Club. Frey opines the perpetual fees are
    "too steep a price to pay for croquet and mah-jongg."
    Frey notes that, because only the Club can reissue a membership, he cannot
    exit the Club by simply selling his property. As a result, Frey argues, he is
    effectively barred from exiting the Club unless the Club deigns to reissue his
    membership—which it has never done in the decade-plus since his suspension, and
    perhaps never will—prompting the court of appeals in Dennis I to liken the Club to
    the "Hotel California." See Dennis I, 417 S.C. at 618, 790 S.E.2d at 439 (observing
    Club members could "be trapped like the proverbial guests in the Eagles' hit Hotel
    California, who are told 'you can check-out anytime you like, but you can never
    leave'" (citation omitted)). Frey contends the Club's conduct and membership
    policies in this regard cannot comport with any rational public policy.
    The Club, in contrast, maintains it can continue imposing dues and fees on a
    former member such as Frey because the Club's organizational documents have
    always provided that these expenses shall continue until a membership is reissued;
    it has never reissued Frey's membership; and the terms of the Club's rules were
    changed to no longer require the expulsion of a member for nonpayment. The Club
    asserts that, because it is no longer required to expel Frey, dues and fees can continue
    to accrue. The Club maintains it has the authority to unilaterally impose a change in
    the Club documents, its actions do not violate the NCA or any other principle of law,
    and it has not breached any contractual provisions with Frey. The Club maintains
    summary judgment was appropriate and the case was not ended prematurely.
    A. Impact of Dennis II
    As an initial matter, we agree with Frey that the Dennis II decision, standing
    alone, is not determinative of his case. In altering its original disposition, the court
    of appeals believed our decision in Dennis II was conclusive of the issues concerning
    the Club's membership policies, although the court of appeals notably expressed its
    reluctance in reaching this result. This Court's decision in Dennis II, however,
    concerned whether the court of appeals erred in holding specific portions of the
    Club's organizational documents regarding resignation were ambiguous and in
    interpreting a portion of the NCA that is applicable to resignations. Frey, in contrast,
    was formally suspended by the Club. This status triggers different provisions in the
    Club's organizational documents. See, e.g., Dennis II, 425 S.C. at 204, 821 S.E.2d
    at 673 ("Here, no suspension ever occurred; the Dennises resigned. Therefore, the
    four-month suspension period that leads to expulsion was never triggered."). In this
    case, Frey argues his suspension should have resulted in an automatic expulsion,
    which would, in turn, render him permanently ineligible for membership in the Club.
    In addition, Frey raises arguments about the resulting effect of perpetual
    liability resulting from the Club's unilateral decision to change substantive
    provisions of the Club's rules, in direct contravention to other organizational
    documents. In Dennis II, however, we specifically acknowledged that we were not
    addressing the potential for perpetual liability at that time, so a conclusive holding
    was not made in that regard. Id. at 202, 821 S.E.2d at 671–72 ("We are not deciding
    whether the governing documents could support perpetual liability under these or
    any other facts.").
    Moreover, we agree with Frey that, even if some points involve established
    matters of law, the grant of summary judgment in his case prematurely ended the
    parties' discovery process. We believe questions about the application of the law to
    the relevant facts, which shall be discussed herein, preclude the grant of summary
    judgment. See generally Wade v. Berkeley Cnty., 
    330 S.C. 311
    , 316, 
    498 S.E.2d 684
    , 687 (Ct. App. 1998) ("Summary judgment is inappropriate when further
    inquiry into the facts is desirable to clarify proper application of the law.").
    Lastly, we note the case involving the Dennises did not actually end in
    summary judgment with the issuance of Dennis II. Although this Court reinstated
    summary judgment after finding no ambiguity in the organizational documents'
    terms regarding resignation, we remanded the matter to the court of appeals to
    address the Dennises' remaining issues challenging summary judgment that had not
    been addressed by the court of appeals after it found other points to be dispositive.
    See Dennis II, 425 S.C. at 195–96, 821 S.E.2d at 668 (observing "the court of appeals
    found it unnecessary to address all issues raised before it, so we [remand] this case
    to the court of appeals to address the other issues").
    On remand, the court of appeals considered the Dennises' additional issues
    and affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded the matter for trial. Callawassie
    Island Members Club, Inc. v. Dennis, 
    429 S.C. 493
    , 
    839 S.E.2d 101
     (Ct. App. 2019)
    ("Dennis III"). In relevant part, the court of appeals reversed the grant of summary
    judgment after concluding "a genuine issue of fact exists as to whether the Club
    violated the [NCA] by allowing some [C]lub members to concede their memberships
    and not others." Id. at 502, 839 S.E.2d at 106. Thereafter, this Court denied cross
    petitions by the Dennises and the Club for a writ of certiorari to review Dennis III.
    See Callawassie Island Members Club, Inc. v. Dennis, Appellate Case No. 2020-
    000670 (S.C. Sup. Ct. Order filed Jan. 22, 2021) (order denying cross petitions for a
    writ of certiorari). As a result, the matter involving the resignation of the Dennises
    was ultimately remanded for trial.
    B. Propriety of Summary Judgment
    As noted, the case involving the Dennises ultimately ended in the reversal of
    summary judgment after the court of appeals (1) found genuine issues of material
    fact existed regarding whether some Club members were allowed to concede their
    memberships, while others were not; and (2) concluded it was also up to the trier of
    fact to determine whether the Club's conduct violated provisions of the NCA. See
    Dennis III, 429 S.C. at 502, 839 S.E.2d at 106.
    In reaching this conclusion, the court of appeals observed in Dennis III that
    section 33-31-610 of the NCA generally requires all members to have the same rights
    and obligations with respect to matters such as the transfer of membership. See id.
    at 499, 839 S.E.2d at 104 (citing section 33-31-610); see also 
    S.C. Code Ann. § 33
    -
    31-610 (2006) ("[A]ll members have the same rights and obligations with respect to
    voting, dissolution, redemption, and transfer, unless the articles or bylaws establish
    classes of membership with different rights or obligations. All members have the
    same rights and obligations with respect to any other matters, except as set forth in
    or authorized by the articles or bylaws.").
    In addition, the court of appeals observed that subsection 33-31-611(c) of the
    NCA provides that where transfer rights have been provided in the articles or bylaws,
    the addition of restrictions on those rights must be approved by the members of the
    nonprofit corporation, i.e., the Club's members. See Dennis III, 429 S.C. at 499, 839
    S.E.2d at 104–05 (citing subsection 33-31-611(c)); see also 
    S.C. Code Ann. § 33
    -
    31-611(c) (2006) ("Where transfer rights have been provided, no restriction on them
    is binding with respect to a member holding a membership issued before the
    adoption of the restriction unless the restriction is approved by the members and the
    affected member.").
    Most importantly, the court of appeals held in Dennis III that the circuit court
    erred in treating the issue concerning violation of the NCA as a question of law,
    when it is "more appropriately an issue to be determined by a factfinder." Dennis
    III, 429 S.C. at 500, 839 S.E.2d at 105.
    We similarly hold that Frey's case presents a genuine issue of material fact as
    to whether the Club violated the NCA by failing to afford each of its members the
    same rights and obligations as to their transfer rights and in making changes that
    affected those rights and obligations without the vote of the affected members.
    There is evidence in the record that the Club selectively allowed some
    members to concede their memberships, while others, such as Frey, found
    themselves lingering on the elusive Resale List controlled by the Club. For example,
    a letter from the Club's Treasurer, J. Richard Carling, dated February 19, 2007,
    advised a couple (the Carpenters) that they had previously been informed their
    membership had been suspended for nonpayment and that the Club's rules provided
    anyone who was suspended "shall" be subject to expulsion and required to turn over
    his or her certificate of membership for reissuance by the Club to a new member:
    As you know, your membership in the Callawassie Island
    Members Club, Inc. was suspended by the Board of
    Directors in accordance with Section 13.3.1 of the
    Callawassie Island Members Club, Inc. General Club
    Rules for failure to pay dues, fees, assessments and
    charges associated with your account.
    Please refer to Paragraph 13.1.1 of the Club Rules that
    states "any member whose account is not settled within the
    four (4) months period following suspension shall be
    expelled from the club." Paragraph 14.1.5 states that
    "Any Member of the Club who has been expelled shall
    not again be eligible for membership nor admitted to
    Club Facilities under any circumstances. An expelled
    member shall be so notified by registered mail and shall
    have the obligation to surrender his or her
    membership certificate for reissuance by the Club to a
    new member.
    As a result of current management changes we would like
    to offer delinquent members another opportunity to bring
    their accounts current. This correspondence serves as
    written notification that your account needs to be settled
    by March 1, 2007.
    If you decide to pass on this opportunity, and do not bring
    your account up to date within ten (10) days of this
    correspondence, you will be expelled from membership in
    the Callawassie Island Members Club, Inc., and the
    following procedures will be put in motion to collect the
    debt [describing the commencement of a debt collection
    action].
    (Emphasis added.) Frey notes the Club has admitted that it has made offers to other
    members that allowed them to concede their memberships and forfeit the return of
    their equity payments in exchange for a termination of their obligations. That such
    offers were made is readily apparent from a 2014 affidavit from a member of the
    Club's board of directors, Harman Switzer, although the Club argues some of those
    offers were made under distinguishable circumstances. The record contains a
    sampling of offers made to other members, some of which included the admonition
    that the recipients must keep any such transactions "confidential." In addition, there
    is evidence from a Club employee who was the membership coordinator and
    managed the Resale List that the Club secretly allowed some members to concede
    and/or resign memberships for years, reportedly due to the extremely slow
    progression of the Club Resale List. By the terms of the organizational documents,
    the Club had an agreed-upon protocol for reissuing memberships.11 Consequently,
    the manner in which the Club made its decisions regarding the reissuance of
    memberships is an appropriate topic for further development at trial.
    Membership in Callawassie's social organization was not a requirement to
    own a residence on Callawassie Island when Frey became a member, and neither
    was perpetual membership. Frey argues the problems that arose in this case came
    about because the Club was having trouble selling all of its memberships. It appears
    the protocol established in the organizational documents for the reissuance of
    memberships was either inadequate or subverted in order to favor certain members.
    It is unclear why the Club has not reissued Frey's membership following his
    suspension from the Club over a decade ago. Frey contends the Club did reissue
    memberships for other residents on a selective basis that was not made available nor
    11
    Until all of the original memberships were sold, every fourth equity membership
    was to come from the Resale List of resigned memberships. The memberships were
    to be reissued on a first-come, first-served basis (subject to the Callawassie Island
    Partnership's right of first refusal). Members who resigned were generally liable for
    dues until the Island Club reissued their equity memberships to new members. Upon
    reissuance, the member was entitled to receive the greater of (1) the membership
    contribution that the resigned member paid, or (2) eighty percent of the membership
    contribution paid by the purchaser of the resigned member's membership.
    disclosed to all members, thereby unfairly subjecting him to disparate treatment, and
    the Club has effectively attempted to impose membership dues and fees in perpetuity
    in order to make up for the Club's shortage of new members. At a minimum, Frey's
    allegations in this regard present questions of fact that should not be decided by a
    court as a matter of law.
    Under the Club's theory of the case, even though membership at the time Frey
    joined was strictly optional, a member can never actually terminate his or her
    membership following a delinquency after the Club unilaterally changed the terms
    of the organizational documents. The organizational documents of the Island Club
    and the Club both stated dues obligations would continue until a membership was
    reissued, but at the time Frey joined this reissuance provision operated in tandem
    with other provisions that stated a member who was delinquent could be suspended
    (which Frey was) and that after four months any suspended member must be
    expelled and their payments forfeited.12
    We find the alteration of one part of the equation, i.e., the provision for
    expulsion and the forfeiture of all payments, is evidence that may support Frey's
    claim that the Club has effectively made it impossible for members to terminate their
    obligations if the Club chooses not to reissue a membership. This is, arguably, a
    material, substantive change that alters the parties' original documents and adversely
    affects the rights of the members. Consequently, it required a majority vote of the
    affected equity members pursuant to the terms of the original organizational
    documents. The Club does not deny that it unilaterally made this change, but it
    argues it was free to do so without the consent of the equity members. Under this
    scenario, a suspended member could theoretically be forced to pay membership dues
    in perpetuity.
    Turning to the opinion of the court of appeals in this matter, however, we note
    that it found "the evidence [did] not raise a genuine issue of material fact regarding
    whether the governing documents were properly changed and whether the
    mandatory expulsion provision was still in effect at the time of [Frey's] suspension[]
    from the Club." Callawassie Island Members Club, Inc. v. Martin, Op. No. 2019-
    12
    In comparison, when the Club has suspended a member for improper conduct, the
    suspension is specifically limited to one year. Thus, if Frey had been suspended for
    "misconduct," there would have been some type of limitation on the length of the
    suspension, whereas the Club apparently now has no limit on the length of time a
    member may be suspended and obligated to continue paying dues and expenses due
    to the delinquency.
    UP-393, 
    2019 WL 6897780
    , at *5 (S.C. Ct. App. filed Dec. 18, 2019). The court of
    appeals found Frey incorrectly relied "on language in the Plan rather than the
    amendment provision in the Rules." 
    Id.
     The court of appeals stated the 2007 and
    2009 General Club Rules now provide as follows:
    [T]he Board of Directors reserves the right to amend or
    modify these rules when necessary and will notify the
    membership of such changes. Any such amendments or
    modifications shall be subject to and controlled by the
    applicable provisions of the By-Laws and the Plan for
    the Offering of Memberships.
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added). We disagree with the court of appeals to the extent it finds the
    2007 and 2009 General Club Rules controlling on the issue of modification. As
    emphasized in the language quoted above, the General Club Rules were always
    "subject to and controlled by" the Plan and the Bylaws. The Plans and Bylaws
    originally required a majority vote of the equity members in these circumstances,
    and the Club could not subvert this protection on voting rights by making a unilateral
    change in the General Club Rules for its own benefit that materially and adversely
    affected the financial interests of equity members like Frey. Provisions that
    surreptitiously purport to permanently lock in Club members in this manner violate
    the NCA.
    For all the foregoing reasons, we agree with Frey that the court of appeals
    erred in affirming the circuit court's grant of summary judgment to the Club, along
    with the attendant awards of damages and attorney's fees. See generally Camburn
    v. Smith, 
    355 S.C. 574
    , 581, 
    586 S.E.2d 565
    , 568 (2003) ("An award of attorney's
    fees will be reversed [when] the substantive results achieved by counsel are reversed
    on appeal."); Dennis III, 429 S.C. at 501–02, 839 S.E.2d at 106 (holding, upon
    remand, that an award of attorney's fees would be reversed where the grant of
    summary judgment to the Club was reversed). Because Frey's counterclaims are
    inextricably linked to the issues on appeal and were prematurely ended in this case,
    we likewise reverse the grant of summary judgment to the Club in this regard.
    On remand, the parties shall be permitted to ask the circuit court for any final
    discovery material that they believe is pertinent to fully address the issues on remand
    before proceeding to trial. Cf. Baughman v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 
    306 S.C. 101
    , 113,
    
    410 S.E.2d 537
    , 544 (1991) (acknowledging that while more than three years had
    elapsed between the filing of the actions and the grant of partial summary judgment,
    the plaintiffs had acted with due diligence and should not be precluded from having
    a reasonable time to procure discovery on remand for trial).
    IV. CONCLUSION
    We reverse the decision of the court of appeals and remand Frey's case to the
    circuit court for further proceedings.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    KITTREDGE, HEARN, FEW and JAMES, JJ., concur.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 28102

Filed Date: 8/3/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/3/2022