BCH Development Corporation v. Bee Creek Hills Neighborhood Association

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 19, 1996
Docket03-96-00416-CV
StatusPublished

This text of BCH Development Corporation v. Bee Creek Hills Neighborhood Association (BCH Development Corporation v. Bee Creek Hills Neighborhood Association) 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
BCH Development Corporation v. Bee Creek Hills Neighborhood Association, (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

BCH Dev. Corp. v. Bee Creek Hills Neighborhood Assn

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-96-00416-CV



BCH Development Corporation, Appellant



v.



Bee Creek Hills Neighborhood Association, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 345TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 93-05664, HONORABLE JOSEPH H. HART, JUDGE PRESIDING



Appellee Bee Creek Hills Neighborhood Association ("the neighborhood association"), consisting of the owners of four lots in the Bee Creek Hills subdivision, sued the developer of the subdivision, appellant BCH Development Corporation ("the developer"), seeking to enjoin the developer's nonresidential use of one subdivision lot as being in violation of restrictive covenants. The developer counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment to determine what type of access is permitted to and from the same lot. Following a nonjury trial, the district court concluded that all lots in the subdivision were limited to residential use only and granted injunctive relief prohibiting the developer from any further violation of the restrictions. In addition, the court's judgment declared that access to and from the disputed lot was not restricted as the neighborhood association claimed. On appeal, the developer challenges the portion of the judgment that enjoins it from any nonresidential use of the disputed lot. The neighborhood association challenges the portion of the judgment concerning access to and from that lot. We will affirm in part and reverse and render in part.



FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The facts material to this case are, for the most part, undisputed and are reflected in various documents filed of record in the Travis County Deed Records. In November 1981, the Talstan Corporation filed of record a plat creating the Bee Creek Hills subdivision, consisting of thirty-five lots in Travis County, and also recorded a set of restrictive covenants for the subdivision ("the 1981 covenants"). In July 1983, the Talstan Corporation sold its interest to the developer. On December 13, 1983, the developer filed of record additional covenants and restrictions ("the 1983 covenants") applicable to the subdivision. The parties' dispute revolves around their respective rights and duties created by these documents.



Residential Use Only

The first part of the dispute relates to whether the applicable covenants restrict all lots in the subdivision to residential use only. The 1981 covenants, which applied to all lots in the subdivision, dealt exclusively with the establishment of a homeowners association (as distinguished from appellee "neighborhood association") and the fixing of an annual assessment to each homeowner for the purpose of paying for "all costs and expenses of operating and maintaining certain improvements benefiting the subdivision." Preceding the document's operative provisions, the 1981 covenants contained the following three recital or "whereas" paragraphs:



WHEREAS, Declarant, is the owner of the real property described in Article 2 of this Declaration and desires to create thereon a residential subdivision known as "Bee Creek Hills" with streets, utilities and certain other common facilities for the benefit of the said subdivision; and



WHEREAS, Declarant, desires to provide for the preservation of the values and amenities in said subdivision and for the maintenance of street lights and associated facilities located thereon, and to this end, desires to subject the real property described in Article 2 to the covenants, restrictions, easements, charges and liens hereinafter set forth, each and all of which is and are for the benefit of said property and each owner thereof[;] and



WHEREAS, Declarant, has deemed it desirable, for the efficient preservation of the values, attractiveness and desirability of the lots in said subdivision administering and enforcing certain covenants and restrictions hereinafter created . . . .



(Emphasis added.)

The 1983 covenants began with three "whereas" paragraphs that were essentially identical to those quoted above from the 1981 covenants. The operative provisions of the 1983 covenants restricted applicable lots to residential use only and mandated numerous other types of building and land use requirements and restrictions. Significantly, however, the 1983 covenants recited that the property to which the restrictions applied was "[a]ll lots in Bee Creek Hills, SAVE AND EXCEPT LOTS 1, 2, and 29 thereof." Lots 1, 2, and 29 fronted directly onto Bee Cave Road, a four-lane, heavily traveled thoroughfare. In 1985, lots 1 and 2 were combined to form lot 1-A, which was subsequently rezoned to allow for "limited office" use. In recent years, lot 1-A has been used intermittently by the developer for commercial purposes, and it is because of this use and plans for further commercial use that the neighborhood association filed suit seeking injunctive relief.

The trial court filed the following conclusions of law pertaining to this issue:



9. The 1981 Restrictions and 1983 Restrictions make the subdivision and all of the lots in the subdivision residential.



10. The 1983 Restrictions subject all lots, except 1, 2 and 29, to additional restrictions over and above those that are imposed in the 1981 Restrictions.



11. Nothing in the 1983 Restrictions or any other document or evidence makes any of the lots nonresidential. Rather, the 1983 Restrictions impose more specific restrictions on all lots, other than 1, 2 and 29.



12. Lots 1 and 2, now Lot 1-A, and Lot 29 remain residential, but without these specific restrictions that are found in the paragraphs numbered 3 through 35 of the 1983 Restrictions.



13. Defendant [the developer] has violated the residential restriction by allowing the commercial or nonresidential use of Lot 1-A. Therefore, Defendant should be enjoined from further violation of the residential restriction on Lot 1-A.



In addition to injunctive relief, the court awarded the neighborhood association $8,000 in attorney's fees.



Access to Lot 1-A

The other part of the dispute between the parties involves the means of access that is permitted to and from lot 1-A. The plat by which the subdivision was created shows lot 1 (now lot 1-A) to be on the corner of Bee Cave Road and Cañon Wren Drive. The 1981 plat contains the following note:



Lot 1 Access Restrictions



Drive access to lot 1 shall be restricted to Cañon Wren Drive. Direct access to Bee Cave Road shall be denied.



When lots 1 and 2 were replatted into lot 1-A in 1986, the new plat contained the following note:



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BCH Development Corporation v. Bee Creek Hills Neighborhood Association, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bch-development-corporation-v-bee-creek-hills-neig-texapp-1996.