Bresee v. Dunn

172 P. 387, 178 Cal. 96, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 419
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1918
DocketL. A. No. 4132. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 172 P. 387 (Bresee v. Dunn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bresee v. Dunn, 172 P. 387, 178 Cal. 96, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 419 (Cal. 1918).

Opinion

*98 MELVIN, J.

Judgment followed an order sustaining a general demurrer to the amended complaint. From said judgment plaintiff appeals.

The action was one whereby plaintiff sought to enjoin defendants from constructing a house on their property in alleged violation of a certain building restriction. The complaint avers substantially the following facts:

In October, 1901, Prudential Improvement Company, owner of a block of land in the city of Los Angeles, bounded by West Adams, Anita, Normandie and Twenty-seventh Streets, caused said land to be resubdivided and filed for record a plat showing the division thereof into lots, of which there were twenty-one of substantially uniform size. It was and ever since has been (according to the complaint) the intention and plan of the owners that the tract should be occupied only by residences so erected that those fronting on West Adams Street should be not less than thirty-five feet from the front line of the property and those fronting on Normandie and Anita Streets not less than twenty-five feet. It is further alleged that the owner of the property “in conveying the same did so restrict said property by express provisions contained in the respective conveyances of said lots. ’ ’ In November, 1901, Prudential Improvement Company conveyed lot 2, one of the five lots fronting on West Adams Street, to one Kennedy, and it is alleged in the complaint that the deed “for the benefit of the purchaser of said lot and for the benefit of the purchasers of the remaining lots of said tract, and the administrators, executors, heirs and assigns of each of them, and particularly of those lots fronting on West Adams Street, contained the following covenants and restrictions :
“ ‘That no building or buildings shall be erected, constructed, or placed upon the premises hereby conveyed, the front line of which shall be less than thirty-five (35.) feet from the front line of said premises, and that no building to be used as a dwelling-house shall be erected, constructed or placed upon said premises within five years from the date of this deed which shall cost less than twenty-five hundred dollars ($2,500.00) and that no fence shall be erected, placed or constructed in front of the front line of any building erected, constructed or placed upon the said premises.’ ”
*99 In April, 1909, plaintiff, by mesne conveyances, became the owner in-fee of lot 2, has ever since been the owner, and has his residence thereon.
In January, 1907, the Prudential Improvement Company (under a changed name) conveyed lots 3, 4, and 5 (also fronting on West Adams Street) to one Hundley. The deed contained the following conditions, also alleged in the complaint to have been for the benefit of the purchasers of all of the lots:
“This deed is made subject to the following express conditions, to wit: That no building or buildings shall be. erected, constructed or placed upon the premises hereby conveyed, the front line of which shall be less than thirty-five (35) feet from the front line of said premises on West Adams street; and that no fence shall be erected, placed or constructed in front of the front line of any building erected, constructed or placed upon the said premises within five years from the date of this deed.”

Thereafter by mesne conveyances the defendants, in February, 1914, became the owners in fee of lot 3, which adjoins plaintiff’s property, lot 2.

It is further alleged (but without the date being given) that lot 1, fronting on West Adams Street, was sold by the Prudential Improvement Company and conveyed by deed, which was duly recorded, said deed containing restrictions similar to those in the deed to lot 2 which we have quoted above.

When defendants became the owners of the property here involved they had knowledge and notice of the restrictions upon all the lots fronting on West Adams Street.

It is further averred that at all times prior to the date of the acquisition of title by defendants in 1914 “the said building restrictions upon said lots have been faithfully observed” (an allegation which respondents very justly term a mere conclusion).

Defendants were about to construct a building within „ thirty-five feet of the front line of their property, and plaintiff by this action sought to enjoin them from so doing.

Appellant believes that he has sufficiently pleaded the existence of enforceable covenants entered into with the design of carrying out a general plan for the development of real property subdivided into parcels, and he cites in this behalf *100 many authorities, such, for example, as De Gray v. Monmouth Beach Club House Co., 50 N. J. Eq. 329, [24 Atl. 388]; Brouwer v. Jones, 23 Barb. (N. Y.). 153; Korn v. Campbell, 192 N. Y. 490, [127 Am. St. Rep. 925, 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1, 85 N. E. 687]; Allen v. City of Detroit, 167 Mich. 464, [36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 890, 133 N. W. 317.]

Undoubtedly, covenants imposing building restrictions have been frequently upheld, but the courts are slow to declare such burdens upon real property to exist unless it clearly appears from the deeds of conveyance not only that a general scheme of improvement is contemplated, but also if a grantee of the original covenantee seeks to enforce the restriction, that it is not a mere personal covenant but passes with the land. In the pleading now under consideration it does not appear that there was any reversion left in the original covenantee. The complaint shows neither by direct averment nor by quotation from the original conveyances that any penalty attached to disobedience of the building restrictions. It does contain allegations to the effect that the fee .passed from the Prudential Improvement Company to the predecessors of plaintiff and defendants in the ownership of lots 2 and 3 and from them by mesne conveyances to these litigants respectively. The rule is that where the fee is passed to the covenantor and no reversion is left in the covenantee, there is no privity of estate or tenure between the parties, and the burden of the covenant, though imposed upon the land conveyed, is solely for the personal benefit of the covenantee, not passing with the realty to his grantee. (Los Angeles Terminal Land Co. v. Muir, 136 Cal. 36-42, [68 Pac. 308]; Berryman v. Hotel Savoy Co., 160 Cal. 559-565, [37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 5, 117 Pac. 677].)

There is nothing in either of the quotations from conveyances ' set forth in plaintiff’s pleading and nothing in the averments of the complaint to take the pleaded restrictions out of the category of purely personal covenants made for the original grantor’s benefit. For this reason the demurrer was properly sustained.

Respondents also insist, and we think correctly, that the covenants were intended to and did expire by limitation of time.

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Bluebook (online)
172 P. 387, 178 Cal. 96, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bresee-v-dunn-cal-1918.