Vista Del Mar v. Vista Del Mar, LLC ( 2023 )


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  •         THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
    In The Court of Appeals
    Vista Del Mar Condominium Association; Dennis M.
    Merritt, Trustee of the Dennis M. Merritt Living Trust;
    John J. Hawkins; and Eleanor N. Hawkins, Plaintiffs,
    v.
    Vista Del Mar Condominiums, LLC; Atlantic
    Development Company, LLC; Atlantic Coast Funding,
    LLC; John Doe, a nominal Defendant representing all
    persons or entities unknown who may claim an interest in
    the property that is the subject of this action, Defendants,
    And
    Atlantic Development Company, LLC and Atlantic Coast
    Funding, LLC, Third-Party Plaintiffs,
    v.
    Barbara P. Swartz; Nancy S. Case; Winston Salem Daly
    Development, LLC; Charles F. Webber; Mark L.
    Skowron, as Trustee of Mark L. Skowron Revocable
    Trust dated April 24, 2002 and Gail L. Skowron, as
    Trustee of the Gail L. Skowron Revocable Trust dated
    04/24/2002; Norman W. Taylor, Trustee of the Norman
    W. Taylor Revocable Living Trust dated April 28, 2008;
    Tim Mitchell Development, LLC; Eric R. Sklut and Lori
    Levine Sklut; Fred C. Warehime and Patricia F.
    Warehime; James W. Blackburn, III and Peggy S.
    Blackburn; Barbara I. Bowser; KHDH, LLC; Beth G.
    Bauknight; Roderick D. Sanders (or his successor), as
    Trustee of the Amended and Restated Revocable
    Declaration of Trust of Anne Mallard Sanders u/a/d
    January 16, 2015; GGK Properties, LLC; Leon Levine
    and Sandra Levine; Joseph Moglia and Amy H. Moglia;
    Angela M. Mason, as Trustee of the Angela Mason
    Revocable Trust dated June 9, 2003 and amended and
    restated May 27, 2007; Dexter R. Barbee, Sr.; Daniel M.
    Talbert, Sr.; Craig W. Lawton; David N. Dalton; Janet
    W. Weed, Trustee of the Janet W. Weed Revocable Trust
    under Trust Instrument dated April 17, 2013; Robert H.
    Messier, Jr. and Janice H. Messier; Jeffrey Schneider,
    Trustee for the Jeffrey Schneider Revocable Trust dated
    August 1, 2017; Phillip Kleinman and Charisse D.
    Kleinman; Stephen Gatto and Camille Gatto; Lutz Real
    Estate, LP; Astorg Imports, Inc.; ABLP Properties, LLC;
    Sutton Children, LLC; Daniel C. Schuster and Mardell J.
    Schuster; Roy C. Putrino and Eileen M. Putrino; Spencer
    Squier and Sherri Squier; VDM 1004, LLC; Roger B.
    Matherly and Bonnie V. Matherly; ITAC 203 LLC;
    Rebecca R. Shroff and Kersi S. Shroff; Sandra P. Levine
    and Lori Ann Sklut, Co-Trustees of the Irrevocable Trust
    F/B/O Amy Beth Levine dated September 18, 1986;
    David E. Lukowski; Richard B. Kline and Leslie Kline;
    James P. Aplington and Carol D. Aplington; Michael L.
    Van Glish and Judith K. Van Glish; Anna A. Olsen;
    Anne Marie Murray; William J. Pridemore and Irina V.
    Pridemore; William B. Davidson and Julia Davidson;
    Bruce Alexander Henderson and Valerie Sokolov; Mark
    W. Lee; Sue David Kline; Thomas McKiernan and Anne
    McKiernan; Philip H. Strobl and Amy Mott Strobl;
    James M. Faircloth and Sylvia Faircloth; Cheryl Jackson
    and Phillip H. Jackson; Weldon Riggs and Tiffiany
    Riggs; Janet P. Merritt, Trustee of the Janet P. Merritt
    Living Trust U/A dated March 24, 2000; Melia Mooney
    Pavoris; William L. Mansfield and Patricia S. Mansfield;
    Stuart W. Gibbs and Helen R. Gibbs; Michael R.
    Blackburn and Pamela M. Blackburn; Jeffrey G. Edwards
    and Teresa T. Edwards; Michael J. Wilk, Third-Party
    Defendants,
    Of which Vista Del Mar Condominium Association;
    Dennis M. Merritt, Trustee of the Dennis M. Merritt
    Living Trust; John J. Hawkins; Eleanor N. Hawkins,
    Barbara P. Swartz; Nancy S. Case; Winston Salem Daly
    Development, LLC; Charles F. Webber; Mark L.
    Skowron, as Trustee of Mark L. Skowron Revocable
    Trust dated April 24, 2002 and Gail L. Skowron, as
    Trustee of the Gail L. Skowron Revocable Trust dated
    04/24/2002; Norman W. Taylor, Trustee of the Norman
    W. Taylor Revocable Living Trust dated April 28, 2008;
    Tim Mitchell Development, LLC; Eric R. Sklut and Lori
    Levine Sklut; Fred C. Warehime and Patricia F.
    Warehime; James W. Blackburn, III and Peggy S.
    Blackburn; Barbara I. Bowser; KHDH, LLC; Beth G.
    Bauknight; Roderick D. Sanders (or his successor), as
    Trustee of the Amended and Restated Revocable
    Declaration of Trust of Anne Mallard Sanders u/a/d
    January 16, 2015; GGK Properties, LLC; Leon Levine
    and Sandra Levine; Joseph Moglia and Amy H. Moglia;
    Angela M. Mason, as Trustee of the Angela Mason
    Revocable Trust dated June 9, 2003 and amended and
    restated May 27, 2007; Dexter R. Barbee, Sr.; Daniel M.
    Talbert, Sr.; Craig W. Lawton; David N. Dalton; Janet
    W. Weed, Trustee of the Janet W. Weed Revocable Trust
    under Trust Instrument dated April 17, 2013; Robert H.
    Messier, Jr. and Janice H. Messier; Jeffrey Schneider,
    Trustee for the Jeffrey Schneider Revocable Trust dated
    August 1, 2017; Phillip Kleinman and Charisse D.
    Kleinman; Stephen Gatto and Camille Gatto; Lutz Real
    Estate, LP; Astorg Imports, Inc.; ABLP Properties, LLC;
    Sutton Children, LLC; Daniel C. Schuster and Mardell J.
    Schuster; Roy C. Putrino and Eileen M. Putrino; Spencer
    Squier and Sherri Squier; VDM 1004, LLC; Roger B.
    Matherly and Bonnie V. Matherly; ITAC 203 LLC;
    Rebecca R. Shroff and Kersi S. Shroff; Sandra P. Levine
    and Lori Ann Sklut, Co-Trustees of the Irrevocable Trust
    F/B/O Amy Beth Levine dated September 18, 1986;
    David E. Lukowski; Richard B. Kline and Leslie Kline;
    James P. Aplington and Carol D. Aplington; Michael L.
    Van Glish and Judith K. Van Glish; Anna A. Olsen;
    Anne Marie Murray; William J. Pridemore and Irina V.
    Pridemore; William B. Davidson and Julia Davidson;
    Bruce Alexander Henderson and Valerie Sokolov; Mark
    W. Lee; Sue David Kline; Thomas McKiernan and Anne
    McKiernan; Philip H. Strobl and Amy Mott Strobl;
    James M. Faircloth and Sylvia Faircloth; Cheryl Jackson
    and Phillip H. Jackson; Weldon Riggs and Tiffiany
    Riggs; Janet P. Merritt, Trustee of the Janet P. Merritt
    Living Trust U/A dated March 24, 2000; Melia Mooney
    Pavoris; William L. Mansfield and Patricia S. Mansfield;
    Stuart W. Gibbs and Helen R. Gibbs; Michael R.
    Blackburn and Pamela M. Blackburn; Jeffrey G. Edwards
    and Teresa T. Edwards; Michael J. Wilk, are the
    Appellants,
    And
    Of Which Vista Del Mar Condominiums, LLC, Atlantic
    Development Company, LLC, Atlantic Coast Funding,
    LLC and John Doe, a nominal Defendant representing all
    persons or entities unknown who may claim an interest in
    the property that is the subject of this action are the
    Respondents.
    Appellate Case No. 2020-000528
    Appeal From Horry County
    Larry B. Hyman, Jr., Circuit Court Judge
    Opinion No. 6016
    Heard June 15, 2023 – Filed August 16, 2023
    AFFIRMED
    Kenneth Ray Moss and Paul J. Ekster, both of Wright,
    Worley, Pope, Ekster & Moss, PLLC, of North Myrtle
    Beach; and Robert E. Lee, of Robert E. Lee, LLC, all for
    Appellants.
    Demetri K. Koutrakos and Harry Alwyn Dixon, both of
    Callison Tighe & Robinson, LLC, of Columbia, for
    Respondents Atlantic Development Company, LLC;
    Atlantic Coast Funding, LLC; and John Doe.
    James Christopher Clark, of McAngus Goudelock &
    Courie, LLC, of Myrtle Beach, for Respondent Vista Del
    Mar Condominiums, LLC.
    VERDIN, J.: Vista Del Mar Condominium Association (the Association) and the
    individual unit owners (Unit Owners) of the Vista Del Mar Horizontal Property
    Regime (the Regime) (collectively, Appellants) appeal the circuit court's order
    granting summary judgment to Atlantic Development Company and Atlantic Coast
    Funding, LLC (collectively, Respondents), quieting title in favor of Respondents to
    a 2.58-acre tract (the Property), which had been a part of the Regime, and declaring
    Respondents had a valid easement (Access Easement) that ran with the title to the
    Property. On appeal, Appellants argue the circuit court erred in upholding the
    removal of the Property from the Regime because (1) the removal of the Property,
    which was a common area, was a violation of the Horizontal Property Act 1 (the
    Act); and (2) the developer, Vista Del Mar, LLC (Developer), no longer had
    authority to take any action concerning the Regime at the time of the removal. In
    addition, Appellants argue Developer did not have authority to grant an express
    easement over Regime property that benefitted the Property. We affirm.
    FACTUAL/PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On December 4, 2003, Developer filed the Master Deed creating the Regime,
    which consisted of 5.853 acres. The Master Deed provided Phase I of the Regime
    was composed of Building Number 1, which contained twenty-five units. With the
    filing of the Master Deed, a transition period began (the Transition Period), during
    which Developer had authority to expand or contract the Regime and act on behalf
    of the Association. The Master Deed specified that Developer was entitled to
    expand the Regime in five additional phases to a total of 250 units. It also
    authorized Developer to "subdivide portions of the [c]ommon [a]rea from the
    [Regime] which are unimproved with structures[] and to remove the subdivided
    portion" through the use of an amendment of the Master Deed, with Developer
    acting on behalf of itself and as attorney-in-fact for all unit owners.
    1
    
    S.C. Code Ann. §§ 27-31-10
     to -430 (2007 & Supp. 2022).
    Developer submitted an additional five acres to the Regime with the First
    Amendment to the Master Deed filed June 27, 2006. The First Amendment also
    described Building 2, which consisted of forty-one units. Developer subsequently
    removed the Property, which was comprised of portions of the original acreage and
    the five acres added in the First Amendment to the Master Deed, by filing the
    Corrected Fourth Amendment to the Master Deed on April 6, 2009. The Corrected
    Fourth Amendment to the Master Deed referenced a plat that described the
    Property and showed the Access Easement.
    On December 19, 2013, Developer sold the Property to GDMB Ocean, LLC
    (GDMB Ocean) and assigned the developer rights to GDMB Operations, LLC
    (GDMB Operations). On November 7, 2014, GDMB Operations filed an
    amendment to the Master Deed surrendering its Class B Membership, which it
    contended triggered the three-month phase to end the Transition Period. The
    Association subsequently granted GDMB Ocean an express easement consistent
    with the Access Easement shown on the plat referenced in the Corrected Fourth
    Amendment to the Master Deed.
    GDMB Ocean sold the Property and an additional 26.53-acre tract to Atlantic
    Development Company (Atlantic Development) on January 6, 2016. Atlantic
    Development secured a promissory note from Atlantic Coast Funding for
    $24,600,000.00 with a mortgage on both tracts.
    The Association and three unit owners brought this action seeking a declaration
    that the removal of the Property from the Regime was not effective and the
    Property remained a common area of the Association. Respondents filed
    counterclaims and a third-party complaint against all of the remaining Unit Owners
    seeking to quiet title and a declaratory judgment that Atlantic Development owned
    the Property and had rights to the Access Easement. Respondents filed a motion
    for summary judgment, which the circuit court initially denied. However, on
    Respondents' motion to alter or amend, the circuit court granted that motion and
    summary judgment to Respondents. It held Developer had the authority to remove
    the Property from the Regime pursuant to the Master Deed and the Act did not
    prohibit the removal. In addition, it found (1) GDMB Operations, acting on behalf
    of the Association pursuant to its developer rights, had the authority to grant the
    express Access Easement and (2) Respondents had an implied easement by plat.
    This appeal followed.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The appellate court reviews the grant of summary judgment by applying the same
    standard the circuit court applied pursuant to Rule 56(c) of the South Carolina
    Rules of Civil Procedure. Englert, Inc. v. LeafGuard USA, Inc., 
    377 S.C. 129
    ,
    133-34, 
    659 S.E.2d 496
    , 498 (2008). Summary judgment is appropriate when
    "there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and . . . the moving party is
    entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." Stoneledge at Lake Keowee Owners'
    Ass'n v. Clear View Constr., LLC, 
    413 S.C. 615
    , 620, 
    776 S.E.2d 426
    , 429 (Ct.
    App. 2015) (omission in original) (quoting Rule 56(c), SCRCP). "When the circuit
    court grants summary judgment on a question of law, we review the ruling de
    novo." 
    Id.
     Furthermore, "[i]n determining whether any triable issue of fact exists,
    the evidence and all inferences which can reasonably be drawn therefrom must be
    viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party." Stoneledge at Lake
    Keowee Owners' Ass'n, 413 S.C. at 620, 776 S.E.2d at 429. "Once the moving
    party carries its initial burden [of demonstrating the absence of a genuine issue of
    material fact], the opposing party must do more than rest upon the mere allegations
    or denials of his pleadings, but must, by affidavit or otherwise, set forth specific
    facts to show that there is a genuine issue for trial." Lord v. D & J Enters., 
    407 S.C. 544
    , 553, 
    757 S.E.2d 695
    , 699 (2014). "However, it is not sufficient for a
    party to create an inference that is not reasonable or an issue of fact that is not
    genuine." Stoneledge at Lake Keowee Owners' Ass'n, 413 S.C. at 620, 776 S.E.2d
    at 429 (quoting Town of Hollywood v. Floyd, 
    403 S.C. 466
    , 477, 
    744 S.E.2d 161
    ,
    166 (2013)).
    LAW/ANALYSIS
    I. Transition Period
    Appellants argue the circuit court erred in finding no genuine issue of material fact
    existed as to whether the Transition Period ended before Developer filed the
    Corrected Fourth Amendment to the Master Deed, which removed the Property
    from the Regime. We disagree.
    "When a motion for summary judgment involves a question as to the construction
    of a deed, the [circuit court] must first determine whether the language of the deed
    is ambiguous." Edgewater on Broad Creek Owners Ass'n v. Ephesian Ventures,
    LLC, 
    430 S.C. 400
    , 406, 
    845 S.E.2d 211
    , 214 (Ct. App. 2020). "The language in a
    deed is ambiguous if it is reasonably susceptible to more than one interpretation."
    
    Id.
     (quoting Penza v. Pendleton Station, LLC, 
    404 S.C. 198
    , 204, 
    743 S.E.2d 850
    ,
    853 (Ct. App. 2013)). "It is a question of law for the court whether the language of
    a contract is ambiguous." Harbin v. Williams, 
    429 S.C. 1
    , 8, 
    837 S.E.2d 491
    , 495
    (Ct. App. 2019) (quoting S.C. Dep't of Nat. Res. v. Town of McClellanville, 
    345 S.C. 617
    , 623, 
    550 S.E.2d 299
    , 302-03 (2001)). If a court determines the language
    is ambiguous, the question of the parties' intent becomes a question of fact, and the
    court may admit evidence to show the intent of the parties. 
    Id.
     "On the other hand,
    the construction of a clear and unambiguous deed is a question of law for the
    court." 
    Id.
     (quoting S.C. Dep't of Nat. Res., 
    345 S.C. at 623
    , 
    550 S.E.2d at 303
    ).
    "In construing a deed, 'the intention of the grantor must be ascertained and
    effectuated, unless that intention contravenes some well settled rule of law or
    public policy.'" Windham v. Riddle, 
    381 S.C. 192
    , 201, 
    672 S.E.2d 578
    , 582-83
    (2009) (quoting Wayburn v. Smith, 
    270 S.C. 38
    , 41, 
    239 S.E.2d 890
    , 892 (1977)).
    "In determining the grantor's intent, the deed must be construed as a whole and
    effect given to every part if it can be done consistently with the law." Id. at 201,
    
    672 S.E.2d at 583
     (quoting Gardner v. Mozingo, 
    293 S.C. 23
    , 25, 
    358 S.E.2d 390
    ,
    391-92 (1987)). "The intention of the grantor must be found within the four
    corners of the deed." 
    Id.
     (quoting Gardner, 
    293 S.C. at 25
    , 
    358 S.E.2d at 392
    ).
    "Therefore, 'summary judgment is proper and a trial unnecessary whe[n] the
    intention of the parties as to the legal effect of the [deed] may be gathered from the
    four corners of the instrument itself.'" Edgewater on Broad Creek Owners Ass'n,
    430 S.C. at 407, 845 S.E.2d at 214 (quoting HK New Plan Exch. Prop. Owner I,
    LLC v. Coker, 
    375 S.C. 18
    , 23, 
    649 S.E.2d 181
    , 184 (Ct. App. 2007)).
    The Master Deed provided the Transition Period ended on the earlier of option 1:
    December 31, 2017; option 2: three months after the sale of 99% "of the maximum
    number of Units to be contained in all phases of the Regime"; or option 3: three
    months after Developer surrendered its authority as a Class B member of the
    Association. 2
    Appellants contend that option 2 is ambiguous as to whether the end of the
    Transition Period was triggered upon the sale of 99% of the Units actually
    constructed, as they interpret the provision, or upon the sale of the maximum
    number of Units that could have been constructed if all phases had been added to
    the Regime, as Respondents claim and the circuit court found. Appellants assert
    that because only the first two phases of the Regime were completed, the
    2
    The Association's Articles of Incorporation designated Developer as a Class B
    member, authorizing it to have three votes for every vote held by Type A
    members, plus one vote, and granting it the right to appoint or remove any member
    of the Association's Board of Directors.
    Transition Period ended around March 31, 2008, which was three months after
    99% of the units in the completed buildings were sold; thus, Developer no longer
    had the authority to remove the Property from the regime on April 6, 2009.
    We hold option 2 is not reasonably susceptible to more than one interpretation, and
    thus, it is not ambiguous. See Edgewater on Broad Creek Owners Ass'n, 430 S.C.
    at 406, 845 S.E.2d at 214 ("The language in a deed is ambiguous if it is reasonably
    susceptible to more than one interpretation." (quoting Penza, 404 S.C. at 204, 743
    S.E.2d at 853)). This option triggered the end of the Transition Period with the
    sale of 99% "of the maximum number of Units to be contained in all phases of the
    Regime." (emphasis added). The Master Deed clearly contemplated Developer
    constructing the Regime in phases and allowed it the authority to expand and
    contract the Regime as it desired. The Transition Period was to end the earlier of
    December 31, 2017 (option 1); when Developer completed the entire Regime
    (option 2); or when Developer chose to end the development by surrendering its
    authority as a Class B member (option 3).
    Furthermore, we hold option 2 was never triggered because Developer never
    completed all phases of the Regime contemplated in the Master Deed. Instead, the
    Transition Period did not end until February 2015, which was three months after
    GDMB Operations filed an amendment to the Master Deed surrendering its Class
    B authority. Accordingly, we hold the circuit court did not err in finding the
    Transition Period had not ended and Developer still possessed the authority to
    remove the Property from the Regime on April 6, 2009.
    II. Removal of a Common Area
    Appellants argue the circuit court erred in allowing Respondents to divide the
    common elements and remove the Property from the Regime because the plain
    language of section 27-31-70 of the Act explicitly bars such division. We disagree.
    "The cardinal rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and effectuate the intent
    of the legislature." Hodges v. Rainey, 
    341 S.C. 79
    , 85, 
    533 S.E.2d 578
    , 581
    (2000). "The legislature's intent should be ascertained primarily from the plain
    language of the statute." Hinton v. S.C. Dep't of Prob., Parole & Pardon Servs.,
    
    357 S.C. 327
    , 333, 
    592 S.E.2d 335
    , 339 (Ct. App. 2004). "Statutes must be read as
    a whole and sections which are part of the same general statutory scheme must be
    construed together and each given effect, if it can be done by any reasonable
    construction." 
    Id.
     "The interpretation of a statute is a question of law."
    DomainsNewMedia.com, LLC v. Hilton Head Island-Bluffton Chamber of Com.,
    
    423 S.C. 295
    , 300, 
    814 S.E.2d 513
    , 516 (2018) (quoting Sparks v. Palmetto
    Hardwood, Inc., 
    406 S.C. 124
    , 128, 
    750 S.E.2d 61
    , 63 (2013)).
    "The rights and authority of [a horizontal property r]egime must be gleaned from
    the . . . Act and from the master deed." Roundtree Villas Ass'n v. 4701 Kings
    Corp., 
    282 S.C. 415
    , 421, 
    321 S.E.2d 46
    , 49 (1984). "The Act requires the
    developer of the regime to record a master deed which expresses a comprehensive
    list of particulars." Heritage Fed. Sav. & Loan v. Eagle Lake & Golf Condos., 
    318 S.C. 535
    , 539, 
    458 S.E.2d 561
    , 564 (Ct. App. 1995); see, e.g., § 27-31-100 (setting
    forth the particulars a master deed must contain). A developer may "reserve
    certain rights provided he states those rights with specificity in the master deed."
    Heritage Fed. Sav. & Loan, 318 S.C. at 541, 458 S.E.2d at 565. Specifically, a
    developer may reserve the right to amend the master deed without the consent of
    all of the unit owners. Id. If the developer plans to develop the property in phases,
    the master deed must contain a general description of the plan of development
    including (1) the maximum number of units in each future phase; (2) the date the
    developer will elect whether to proceed with each phase; (3) a general description
    of any additional common elements; and (4) a chart showing each original unit
    owners' percentage interest in the common elements if the developer elects to
    proceed with all stages of development. § 27-31-100(g). In addition, the
    developer must attach to the master deed a plot plan and building plans showing
    proposed improvements and common elements. § 27-31-110.
    Generally, the unit owners in a horizontal property regime hold the common
    elements as tenants in common. See Baker v. Town of Sullivan's Island, 
    279 S.C. 581
    , 584, 
    310 S.E.2d 433
    , 435 (Ct. App. 1983) ("[T]he . . . Act provides that the
    ownership of the land upon which is built a condominium is held as co-tenants by
    the owners . . . ."); § 27-31-60(a) (stating the unit owners in a horizontal property
    regime "have a common right to a share, with the other co-owners, in the common
    elements of the property, equivalent to the percentage representing the value of the
    individual apartment, with relation to the value of the whole property"); § 27-31-80
    ("Each co-owner may use the elements held in common in accordance with the
    purpose for which they are intended, without hindering or encroaching upon the
    lawful rights of the other co-owners."). Usually when parties share in the
    co-ownership of property, they have a right to request partition of the property.
    See 
    S.C. Code Ann. § 15-61-10
    (A) (Supp. 2022) (allowing "joint tenants and
    tenants in common" to request partition of . . . lands, tenements and
    hereditaments"); 
    S.C. Code Ann. § 15-61-50
     (2005) (allowing the court of
    common pleas to order the partition of "real and personal estates held in joint
    tenancy or in common"). The unit owners in a horizontal property regime,
    however, do not have a right to partition the common elements. Section 27-31-70
    of the Act provides, "The common elements, both general and limited, shall remain
    undivided and shall not be the object of an action for partition or division of the co-
    ownership. Any covenant to the contrary shall be void." See Baker, 279 S.C. at
    584, 310 S.E.2d at 435 (stating the unit owners' tenants in common ownership of
    common elements is not subject to partition). Thus, the unit owners cannot
    partition their interest in common elements from other apartment owners, nor can
    they divide their ownership interest in the common elements from their ownership
    interest in their units.
    The Act clearly allows for a developer to develop a regime in phases and requires a
    developer to set forth in the master deed and plot plan the details of proposed
    buildings and common elements. See § 27-31-100(g) (setting forth the particulars
    the developer must have in the master deed to develop the regime in two or more
    phases). The Act also contemplates that a developer may choose to forgo
    completing all phases of the development. Section 27-31-60(b) of the Act grants
    unit owners "the right to require specific performance of any proposed common
    elements for recreational purposes set out in the master deed which are included in
    the next stage of the development that applies to recreational facilities in the event
    the additional stages of erection do not develop." The Act does not grant unit
    owners similar rights to demand specific performance of the remaining common
    elements that are not recreational. However, this court recognized "once common
    elements are set aside and vested in the co-owners, such co-owners may not be
    unilaterally deprived of their interests in the common elements by the actions of
    the developer." Reyhani v. Stone Creek Cove Condo. II Horizontal Prop. Regime,
    
    329 S.C. 206
    , 211, 
    494 S.E.2d 465
    , 468 (Ct. App. 1997).
    Considering the Act as a whole, we hold Section 27-31-70's prohibition of partition
    or division of common elements concerns the unit owners' rights in the common
    elements and does not prohibit a developer from removing non-recreational
    common elements from a regime unless those common elements have vested in the
    unit owners pursuant to the terms of the master deed. Therefore, we look to the
    terms of the Master Deed to discern whether Developer's removal of the Property
    from the Regime was valid.
    The Master Deed authorized Developer to expand or contract the Regime and act
    on behalf of the Association during the Transition Period. It also allowed
    Developer to "subdivide portions of the Common Area from the Project which are
    unimproved with structures and to remove the subdivided portion" with an
    amendment of the Master Deed, with Developer acting on behalf of itself and as
    attorney-in-fact for all unit owners. Because Developer had the right to
    unilaterally remove common areas unimproved with structures from the Regime,
    the common areas did not become vested in the Unit Owners until they were
    improved or the Transition Period ended. See Vested, Black's Law Dictionary
    (11th ed. 2019) (defining "vested" as "[h]aving become a completed, consummated
    right for present or future enjoyment; not contingent; unconditional; absolute).
    Appellants have not presented any evidence the Property was improved with
    structures. See Lord, 407 S.C. at 553, 757 S.E.2d at 699 (stating that "once the
    moving party carries its initial burden [of demonstrating the absence of a genuine
    issue of material fact], the opposing party must do more than rest upon the mere
    allegations or denials of his pleadings, but must, by affidavit or otherwise, set forth
    specific facts to show that there is a genuine issue for trial"). Accordingly, we hold
    Developer's removal of the Property from the Regime was valid and the circuit
    court did not err in granting Respondents summary judgment. 3
    III. Access Easement
    As to the circuit court's findings concerning the Access Easement, we affirm
    pursuant to Rule 220(b), SCACR, and the following authorities: Skywaves I Corp.
    v. Branch Banking & Tr. Co., 
    423 S.C. 432
    , 451, 
    814 S.E.2d 643
    , 653-54 (Ct. App.
    2018) ("Under the two[-]issue rule, whe[n] a decision is based on more than one
    ground, the appellate court will affirm unless the appellant appeals all grounds
    because the unappealed ground will become the law of the case." (alterations in
    original) (quoting Jones v. Lott, 
    387 S.C. 339
    , 346, 
    692 S.E.2d 900
    , 902 (2010),
    abrogated on other grounds by Repko v. County of Georgetown, 
    424 S.C. 494
    , 
    818 S.E.2d 743
     (2018))).
    3
    We note the circuit court erred in holding the Property was not a statutory
    common element. Section 27-31-20 of the Act defines "general common
    elements" in part as "[t]he land whether leased or in fee simple and whether or not
    submerged on which the apartment or building stands" and "[a]ll other elements of
    the property . . . rationally of common use or necessary to its existence, upkeep,
    and safety." The Master Deed defined "common area" as "all of the Regime
    property after excluding the Units . . . ." The Master Deed's use of the term
    "common area" was the equivalent of the statutory term "common element"; the
    Property, which indisputably was a common area of the Regime, was, therefore, a
    common element.
    CONCLUSION
    Based on the foregoing, the circuit court's order granting summary judgment to
    Respondents is
    AFFIRMED.
    WILLIAMS, C.J., and GEATHERS, J., concur.