Earlier this year, the Essex Superior Court (Feeley, J.) issued a decision providing that (1) the statute of repose does not begin to run, with respect to a phased condominium, until the final phase is recorded; and (2) a developer may waive its rights, under the statute of repose, by executing a tolling agreement.
There had previously been no reported appellate court decisions — or even trial court decisions — concerning these issues in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
The case is captioned Board of Trustees of the Regency at Methuen Condominium Trust v. Toll MA Land Limited Partnership, et al., Essex County Superior Court, Civil Action No. 1777-CV01924.
The condominium initiated the lawsuit seeking to recover damages related to certain alleged widespread deficiencies in the design and construction of the common areas and facilities of the condominium.
The case involves the Regency at Methuen Condominium — an age-restricted (55+), gated community located in Methuen — which was developed and constructed by Toll Brothers.
The condominium initiated the lawsuit seek ing to recover damages related to certain alleged widespread deficiencies in the design and construction of the common areas and facilities of the condominium. The condominium’s master deed was recorded in 2011. Thereafter, 66 phasing amendments were recorded over the next four years as additional units were constructed and added to the condominium.
“Phasing” of a condominium permits a developer to expand the size and scope of a condominium project in response to market conditions. In a phased condominium development, groups or stages of units are completed over a period of several years and become part of the condominium by successive amendments to the master deed.
Phasing is not a statutory term, but is a usage that has grown out of the general enabling provisions of G.L.c. 183A. Queler v. Skowron (2002), quoting Podell v. Lahn (1995).
After the final phasing amendment for the Regency at Methuen Condominium was recorded, the condominium contained 240 units.
Toll Brothers filed a motion to dismiss, contending that many of the association’s claims were barred by the statute of repose. The statute of repose provides, in pertinent part, that “in no event shall [an action arising out of any deficiency in the construction of an improvement to real property] be commenced more than six years after the earlier of the dates of: (1) the opening of the improvement to use; or (2) substantial completion of the improvement and the taking of possession for occupancy by the owner.” G.L.c. 260, §2B.
Simply put, most of an association’s construction defect claims are absolutely time barred six years from the date that construction of a condominium is completed.
Toll Brothers contended that the Trust’s tort claims — as to the first 15 phases and first 60 units of the condominium — were time barred by the statute of repose. These particular phases/ units were opened/substantially completed before Dec. 22, 2011 — more than six years before the association’s complaint was filed on Dec. 22, 2017.
To be clear, although Toll Brothers had signed an agreement with the condominium association — explicitly providing that it would not raise the statute of repose as a defense to a lawsuit — Toll Brothers proceeded to advance a motion to dismiss, arguing that “a tolling agreement cannot operate to revive a Plaintiff ’s claims.”
Toll Brothers — relying almost entirely upon the U.S. Supreme Court’s Waldburger decision — contended that “Statutes of Repose are absolute bars, which are not subject to any form of tolling.”