Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District//Cross-Appellants, John C. Robbins and Theresa M. Robbins v. John C. Robbins and Theresa M. Robbins//Cross-Appellee, Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 8, 2005
Docket03-04-00369-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District//Cross-Appellants, John C. Robbins and Theresa M. Robbins v. John C. Robbins and Theresa M. Robbins//Cross-Appellee, Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District (Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District//Cross-Appellants, John C. Robbins and Theresa M. Robbins v. John C. Robbins and Theresa M. Robbins//Cross-Appellee, Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District//Cross-Appellants, John C. Robbins and Theresa M. Robbins v. John C. Robbins and Theresa M. Robbins//Cross-Appellee, Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-04-00369-CV

Appellant, Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District//Cross Appellants,

John C. Robbins and Theresa M. Robbins



v.



Appellees, John C. Robbins and Theresa M. Robbins//Cross-Appellee,

Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY, 368TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 01-535-C368, HONORABLE BURT CARNES, JUDGE PRESIDING

O P I N I O N



This appeal arises from an Anderson Mill neighborhood controversy regarding John and Theresa Robbinses' parking of a thirty-foot travel trailer at their residence and constructing of a fourteen-foot tall trailer-port to house it. The Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District obtained a judgment enforcing restrictive covenants to bar the Robbinses' actions, but the district court declined to award attorney's fees to the District. On appeal, the parties' dispute centers on whether the district court was required to award the District its attorney's fees.

In its sole issue, the District argues that section 54.237 of the water code made such an award mandatory. See Tex. Water Code Ann. § 54.237 (West 2002). While the Robbinses concede that section 54.237 is a mandatory attorney's fee statute, they respond with various grounds they contend could support the judgment. They also bring a four-issue cross-appeal attacking the District's right to relief under section 54.237 and, to the extent it is based on that claim, the judgment enforcing the restrictive covenants. Under section 54.237, we are required to reverse and render judgment awarding the District's attorney's fees and otherwise affirm the judgment.



BACKGROUND



In 1974, Anderson Mill Joint Venture, the developer of Village Two at Anderson Mill, a subdivision in Williamson County, imposed and recorded deed restrictions and restrictive covenants upon properties in the subdivision. There are three sections of the restrictive covenants that are at issue in this case:



  • Section A-2, entitled "Architectural Control," requires prior approval, by an "architectural control" committee, of any plans to construct, place or alter any building on a lot. However, such approval is not required, and compliance with the related covenants is deemed, if the committee or its designated representatives "fails to approve or disapprove within 30 days after plans and specifications have been submitted to it, or in any event, if no suit to enjoin the construction has been commenced prior to the completion thereof."


  • Section A-4 states that "No building shall be located on any lot nearer than 5 feet to the interior lot line . . . ."


  • Section A-9, titled "Temporary Structures or Emplacements" prohibits the "structure or placement of a temporary character, mobile home, trailer, . . . that are larger than 8 feet by 10 feet in width and length and 8 feet high [from being] erected, placed, driven, altered or permitted to remain on any lot at any time, either temporary or permanent, without the prior written consent of the Architectural Control Committee."


It is undisputed that these covenants ran with the land.



In 1994, the Robbinses purchased a home on Split Rail Parkway in Anderson Mill. A primary theme of the Robbinses at trial was that, notwithstanding the restrictive covenants, Anderson Mill had been allowed to become an "outdoor-friendly area" where recreational vehicles, campers, boats, and structures to house them were commonplace. According to the Robbinses, before they purchased their home in Anderson Mill, they drove through the neighborhood and ascertained that it was an "outdoor-friendly area" where many residents kept boats, trailers, and recreational vehicles parked in driveways. There was evidence that, in the years that followed, the Robbinses had--without resistance from the District or homeowner's association--kept trailers or other recreational vehicles of varying sizes at their residence and had built a second driveway to accommodate these vehicles.

In April 2001, the Robbinses purchased a thirty-foot travel trailer for approximately $31,000. They parked the trailer in their residence driveway and began constructing a fourteen-foot tall metal-framed structure to house the trailer. These actions evidently alarmed some area residents. Shortly after construction began, an anonymous flyer entitled "URGENT MESSAGE" was circulated to neighborhood residents complaining about the size of the trailer-port construction. Having learned of the controversy, the District's general manager, Mike Bamer, went to the Robbinses' home and urged them to stop construction because the trailer-port violated deed restrictions. The District followed up with a letter to the Robbinses asking them to attend its next board meeting on April 25. At the meeting, the District's board stated that the trailer-port violated deed restrictions. The Robbinses agreed to remove the trailer-port, and subsequently did so. However, their large travel trailer remained in their driveway.

In May, the Anderson Mill Neighborhood Association sent a letter to the Robbinses stating that parking the trailer in the driveway was in violation of deed restrictions, and if the violation was not remedied, the case would be referred to the District for further action. In July, the Association sent an e-mail to Bamer, alleging that the Robbinses had violated deed restrictions and stating that it believed the violation, if allowed to continue, would "have a negative impact on the property values in that area of the District." A few days later, Bamer sent a letter to the Robbinses notifying them that the Association had filed a complaint with the District concerning the parking of a travel trailer on the Robbinses' property. The letter explains that the Association "contend[s] that these alleged violations reduce property values." The Robbinses were summoned to the July 19 District board meeting, where "the Board of Directors will determine whether the alleged violations reduce property values in the area."

Having previously accommodated the District's demands by removing their trailer-port, this time the Robbinses stood firm in their position. At the meeting, they advised the board that they would refuse to remove the travel trailer from their driveway. Also, the Robbinses claim that, by this time, they had re-initiated construction of the trailer-port. They reasoned that if they were going to have to defend a lawsuit to keep their travel trailer, they might as well also defend their right to construct the trailer-port in which they desired to house the trailer. The Robbinses allege that the trailer-port construction was completed prior to the District's August meeting.

As completed, the trailer-port was fourteen feet tall. It extended to within three inches of neighbor Pascual Marquez's property line.

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Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District//Cross-Appellants, John C. Robbins and Theresa M. Robbins v. John C. Robbins and Theresa M. Robbins//Cross-Appellee, Anderson Mill Municipal Utility District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-mill-municipal-utility-districtcross-appellants-john-c-robbins-texapp-2005.