Baldwin v. Barbon Corp.

773 S.W.2d 681, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 1986, 1989 WL 87881
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 7, 1989
Docket04-88-00294-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 773 S.W.2d 681 (Baldwin v. Barbon Corp.) 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.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Barbon Corp., 773 S.W.2d 681, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 1986, 1989 WL 87881 (Tex. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

BUTTS, Justice.

Wayne Baldwin, plaintiff, appeals from a take nothing judgment in favor of the Bar-bón Corporation, defendant, in a declaratory judgment suit. A 1985 document removed certain covenants from part of a 534 acre tract of land located in Jim Wells County. Baldwin sued to have the document declared invalid. The trial court upheld the document permitting the removal of the covenant restrictions by the 1985 document. The court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law.

Barbón acquired the 534 acre tract in 1968 and that same year filed “Subdivision Restrictions” apparently to apply to the entire tract. At that time all of the tract was ranch land. In 1969 the surveyed subdivision plats of Barbón Estates I and Bar-bón Estates II were recorded. These showed that one portion of the Estates consisted of a roadway running parallel to Lake Corpus Christi shore with one tier of lake front lots on one side of the road and “inside lots” on the other. Barbón Estates occupied approximately 59 acres of the tract. Baldwin acquired his lot in Barbón Estates II in January 1978. Some parcels of waterfront property not located within the Barbón Estates had also been sold.

The Barbón Corporation reserved the right to amend the subdivision restrictions. In 1969 there was an amendment which added an additional restriction “covering the property therein described_” Another amended document was filed in 1975, still covering the entire tract. In 1982, still another amendment document was filed, which apparently applied to the entire tract of 534 acres.

The right to amend the restrictions was contained in a provision of the “Subdivision Restrictions.” This same reservation was part of each new set of restrictions:

16. The directors of Barbón Corporation reserve the right in their sole discretion to amend or alter these restrictions without the consent of the owners of lots in the Subdivision until such time as all lots in the subdivision are owned by others than Barbón Corporation if it is, in the opinion of the Directors of Barbón Corporation, for the best interest of all property owners. Where the term “Barbón Corporation” is used herein, it shall mean Barbón Corporation and its successors and assigns.

It was the amending document filed on September 5, 1985, which gave rise to the present lawsuit. The 1985 amendment provided the restrictions did not apply to the entire 534 acre tract, but only to the property located in Barbón Estates I and II, plus the earlier sold waterfront properties outside the Estates.

Baldwin sued Barbón, contending that Barbón lost its right to amend the restrictions in September because it held an absolute auction on August 30, 1985, to dispose of all the property in the 534 acres which remained unsold. He also alleged that the amendment was not in the best interest of the property owners. He asked that the 1985 document be declared void.

The trial court filed many findings of fact and conclusions of law. The pertinent findings are:

9. It was the intention of Barbón Corporation to make the restrictive covenants applicable to the residential lots in Barbón Estates Subdivisions 1 and 2, but *683 through mistake the entire 534 acres was described as the applicable tract.
10. The restrictions were amended by instrument dated January 28, 1969, ... to add paragraph 19 requiring a minimum of 1200 square feet in any dwelling house built on a lot.
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12. Barbón Corporation began selling residential lots in the subdivisions shortly after the plats were filed of record.
13. [A new document was filed in November 1975. It was] entitled “Amendment of Subdivision Restrictions” which provided in part that “All Lots in said subdivision shall be known, described and used only as residential lots and for no other purpose.”
14. The property description attached to the amendment of 1975 contains an erroneous property description, purporting to be the 534 acre tract.
15. It was the intention of the president and authorized officer[s] of Barbón Corporation to restrict only the Barbón Estates Subdivisions 1 and 2 as residential lots and not the upland pasture land, which was at all times and still is being used as [a] cattle ranch.

There was a finding that only the board of directors was the approving authority for any proposed residences to be constructed in the two subdivisions. Further, the trial court found that Joe Hendricks and E.E. Baldwin (shown to be the plaintiff’s father) had divided their properties, and Hendricks and his wife became sole owner and officers and directors of Barbón Corporation in 1976); and that the Baldwins owned land only within the Barbón Estates. The court further found that the corporation conveyed other waterfront tracts not within the Estates and expressly declared them to be subject to the residential subdivision restrictions which covered the Estates. The trial court also found that the 1982 amendment (“Amendment to Subdivision Restrictions”) applied to the Estates and the waterfront properties. It found the document applied to “the one family residences built on small residential lots and was not applicable to the upland ranch land, although, through mistake, the description of the entire 534 acres was attached for location purposes only.”

In finding 24 the court found that the remaining 453.508 acres were being used as a cattle ranch and not as a residential subdivision. That “Barbón Corporation ran cattle, horses, ... pigs and other animals on the upland acres and erected barns, corrals, pens, water troughs, and in no way considered the upland ranch of 453.508 acres subject to the residential restrictions.”

Another finding was that the corporation had purchased more ranch land, making a total of 1136.87 acres of upland ranch property. Finding of fact 26 is that all the ranch land was reported to the appraisal district and valued as ranch land for agricultural use. Taxes were assessed based on this use from 1982 thereafter.

In finding 28 the court found that five lots in the residential subdivision were not sold at the August 30, 1985, auction but were retained by Barbón. In addition, the sale of a ranch tract “fell through,” and was later sold. A similar finding was that Barbón still owned a small amount of land in the Estates including an access tract (road).

The court further found it was the title company which raised the question about the application of the restrictions. Because of the title company’s concern, the September 1985 amendment was recorded. The court found that the “vast majority” of those who owned the ranch tracts and those who purchased at the auction expressly ratified the September 1985 amendment. It was found that Barbón created the Barbón Ranch Subdivision on September 6, 1985, which excluded the residential waterfront lots.

The trial court found that Barbón Corporation still owned property in the “lakeside subdivision” and the ranch land at the time of the amendment.

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Bluebook (online)
773 S.W.2d 681, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 1986, 1989 WL 87881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-barbon-corp-texapp-1989.