Alexander v. Title Insurance & Trust Co.

119 P.2d 992, 48 Cal. App. 2d 488, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 827
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 1941
DocketCiv. 13318
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 119 P.2d 992 (Alexander v. Title Insurance & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Title Insurance & Trust Co., 119 P.2d 992, 48 Cal. App. 2d 488, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 827 (Cal. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

SCOTT (R. H.), J. pro tem.

Defendants appeal from judgment for plaintiff in suit to remove restrictions on certain real property.

Plaintiff brought this action for declaratory relief and to quiet title to lot 162, tract 3912, located on the southwest corner of Wilshire Boulevard and Tremaine Street in the city of Los Angeles. In February, 1921, the corporation defendant, as owner of the real property known as tract 3912, executed and had recorded a declaration of restrictions, including one limiting the use of the lots to single residences. This ease was brought on the theory that conditions in the district where the lots were located had so changed as to make it inequitable to enforce the provisions limiting it to use for single residences. It was tried in May, 1940, and judgment was rendered for plaintiff against the corporation defendant as trustee and defendant Barry. The restriction *490 was held to be no longer valid or binding upon plaintiff’s property and therefore unenforceable. Other restrictions concerning the same property were not affected by the decree.

Three questions are submitted for our consideration on this appeal:

(1) Was the evidence sufficient to uphold the finding that it would be inequitable to enforce the restriction ?
(2) Had the defendant corporation as trustee waived and abandoned the restriction and reversionary right so as to be estopped from asserting it?
(3) Was the plaintiff required to serve the beneficiaries for whom defendant corporation as trustee held the reversionary right?

The trial court found that defendant Barry is representative and manager of a syndicate which has as its sole assets the reversionary interests in tract 3912 together with some money which it received as consideration for relinquishment of this reversionary interest in certain lots in the tract. It does not own any of the real property in the tract. Whenever any transaction or litigation has arisen concerning the reversionary interests held by defendant corporation as trustee it has been referred to Barry. He has secured legal counsel, disposed of reversionary rights and paid the costs. The syndicate which Barry represents in all these matters has acted through defendant corporation as trustee.

Tract 3912 is bounded on the north by Wilshire Boulevard, on the east by Rimpau Avenue, on the south by Olympic Boulevard and on the west by Longwood Avenue. At the time this suit was brought 1114.17 feet of frontage of the tract on Wilshire Boulevard was already unrestricted as to business use; only 650.17 feet remained subject to the restriction. The southeast corner of Wilshire and Rimpau, opposite to the corner of this tract, is improved with a three-story building occupied by an insurance company. The only improvements on Wilshire frontage of the tract are plaintiff’s house and the residence of a neighbor on the lot adjoining it on the west. Across Wilshire, on the north side, the lots contiguous to or facing on the boulevard and opposite to and extending east of the tract, are unimproved except for the grounds of a high school. The last residence built on Wilshire Boulevard from a point many blocks east and extending *491 west about five miles to the Los Angeles city limit is that of plaintiff, built in 1926.

It appears that about 1921 a portion of an old ranch was subdivided and sold under an instrument of trust held by defendant corporation as trustee. Wilshire Boulevard was then a narrow country road. It has since been widened, paved and lighted. Assessments and taxes have greatly increased; public transportation and private vehicles fill it with noises, odors and other disturbances. The trial court found that the property is no longer suitable or desirable for residential purposes; that it now has only a small market value for such purposes and is now wholly business property, and that a large gasoline service station occupies a lot diagonally across Wilshire Boulevard from plaintiff’s lot.

It further appears that Barry, who is a defendant in this case, brought suit against this corporation defendant in 1928 to quiet title to two lots, numbers 212 and 213, in this same tract, for the purpose of removing the same restrictions, and obtained a judgment accordingly. He brought another suit against all the individual lot ovmers in the tract, except those whose property already had been exempt from operation of the restriction, for the purpose of securing individual judgments against them to like effect. Judgment was obtained against all of them by default, waiver or consent. In a suit against this trustee corporation one Leon Kaufman obtained a similar judgment as to lots 28, 29 and 30, which are 847 feet east of plaintiff’s lot 162. They start at Wilshire Boulevard and extend south to the next street.

In his suit against defendant corporation Barry paid $5000 to the corporation for permitting him to get a consent decree. In the suit brought by Kaufman to release the three lots it cost him $8000, which he paid the corporation, to obtain a similar decree.

Changes which have taken place in this section of the city of Los Angeles have resulted in the removal of similar restrictions affecting adjacent and nearby tracts of land. In Forman v. Hancock, 3 Cal. App. (2d) 291 [39 Pac. (2d) 249], judgment was upheld relieving plaintiff of restrictions on land located to the west and across Wilshire boulevard. In that case the court said, at page 296: “The evidence adequately supports the findings and judgment to the effect that the changed conditions surrounding the premises in question *492 which have occurred since the purchase of the lots render it inequitable and unreasonable to enforce the restrictive clauses of the deeds limiting the use of the lots to residential purposes, relieving the grantees therefrom and authorizing the plaintiff to construct structures thereon and use the same for business purposes. It is the established law of this state that a grantee of real property is entitled to be relieved of the restrictive provisions of his deed of conveyance before the breach thereof which limits the use of his property to residential purposes and prohibits the erection or use of buildings thereon for business or commercial purposes when it appears that conditions affecting the property which have occurred since the purchase thereof have changed so as to render the property unsuitable or useless for the purpose to which it was originally confined. (Citing numerous eases.) ”

Our Supreme Court in Hurd v. Albert, 214 Cal. 15 [3 Pac. (2d) 545, 76 A. L. R. 1348], at p. 23, has declared the leading ease in this jurisdiction to be Downs v. Kroeger, 200 Cal. 743 [254 Pac. 1101], decided in 1927. Since that year numerous cases have arisen, including some of those relied upon in Forman v. Hancock, supra. In each of these cases, however, the facts were measured by the same equitable rule.

In the instant case the evidence adequately supports the findings and determination in favor of plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
119 P.2d 992, 48 Cal. App. 2d 488, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-title-insurance-trust-co-calctapp-1941.