Buysse v. Jones

808 S.E.2d 334, 256 N.C. App. 429
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 21, 2017
DocketCOA17-419
StatusPublished

This text of 808 S.E.2d 334 (Buysse v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buysse v. Jones, 808 S.E.2d 334, 256 N.C. App. 429 (N.C. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

TYSON, Judge.

*429 Adam and Susan Jones ("Defendants") appeal from an order granting Bob Buysse, Joan Guilkey, and Mike Miles ("Plaintiffs") specific performance of the restrictive covenants of the Gimghoul Neighborhood, requiring Defendants to remove the portion of their front porch addition that protrudes into a purported forty-foot setback from Gimghoul Road and a permanent injunction. We reverse and remand.

I. Background

A. The Restrictive Covenants

In 1923, The Junior Order of Gimghouls owned and endeavored to develop a tract of land into a residential neighborhood, later known as *430 the Gimghoul Neighborhood. The land was subdivided into various lots, including Lot 7 at issue in this case, and a plat was recorded in Plat Book 1 Page 51 in the Orange County Registry in 1923. This plat includes the handwritten notation "building line is 40 feet from Gimghoul Road" and shows a drawn line indicating the setback. This plat does not specify width or a specific right-of-way of Gimghoul Road.

Restrictive covenants were included in all the original recorded deeds. One of the covenants included the following restriction:

That no residences or buildings of any kind erected on the lot shall be nearer any street than the building line designated as "Residence Building Line," this being 40 feet from the northern boundary of Gimghoul Road , nor shall any residence be nearer either side line of said lot than ten feet, provided where two or more lots are combined to make a larger lot no residence shall be nearer either side line of the larger lot than ten feet. This does not apply to steps having no roof. (Emphasis supplied).

This restriction was included in the original deed of Lot 7, conveying the lot from The Junior Order of Gimghouls to "S.A. Stoudemire and Irene S. Stoudemire, his wife" on 5 May 1926, and recorded at Book 84 Page 286 in the Orange County Registry.

In 1950, an unsuccessful attempt was made to modify the original covenants. One proposed change referenced the setback: "[t]hat no residence or building of any kind erected on any lot shall be nearer any street than the building line designated as 'Residence Building Line' on said plot, and in no case less than 40 feet from the front property line ...." These proposed modifications were never executed by the lot owners nor recorded in the Orange County Registry.

In 1983, the Gimghoul Homeowners Association ("HOA") retained an attorney to opine on the validity of the original covenants and the HOA's ability to amend or add restrictions. Several drafts of proposed changes were produced, and several meetings were held to discuss the alterations. The setback requirement was not the focus of the revisions and not discussed until the final draft.

When questioned concerning the purpose of the proposed change, one HOA member claimed the modification was an effort to "simplify and clarify the setback for each lot since it was not clear what was intended by the 'northern boundary' building line" described in the original covenant. No objections were made to the resulting modification, and the *431 change above was reflected in the final draft, "[n]o residences or buildings of any kind shall be erected on a lot nearer any street than forty (40') feet ...." The term "street" was not defined in the 1984 Declaration.

The final draft of the 1984 Declaration was accepted by a majority of the lot owners and recorded in June of 1984. The 1984 Declaration stated the intention behind the changes was "to insure, as much as practical, that the basic purpose of the original restrictions and of the 1950 amendments are attained. That purpose was and continues to be the retention of the single family residential character of the neighborhood." Not all property owners of the subdivided lots shown on the 1923 plat signed the 1984 Declaration, but Sterling *336 A. Stoudemire and Mary Arthur B. Stoudemire, owners of Lot 7, did.

B. Lot 7

The Junior Order of Gimghouls conveyed Lot 7 to "S.A. and Irene S. Stoudemire, his wife" on 5 May 1926. On 30 May 1961, Sterling A. Stoudemire and Mary Arthur B. Stoudemire, as wife, conveyed Lot 7 to John T. Manning, who, along with his wife Elizabeth T. Manning, conveyed Lot 7 back to Sterling A. and Mary Arthur B. Stoudemire on the same day, on back-to-back recorded deeds. This conveyance was apparently made to place Mary Arthur B. Stoudemire into the chain of title. These deeds were recorded in Book 182 on Page 66 and 67, respectively.

On 9 June 1995, Mary Arthur B. Stoudemire conveyed Lot 7 to James C. Cusack and Julia C. Shivers, who had requested a survey be prepared of Lot 7 on 2 June 1995 by Charles R. Billings, RLS. This survey is not recorded. James C. Cusack and Julia C. Shivers then conveyed Lot 7 to Mary Wright Harrison on 17 July 2000, using the identical description contained in their 1995 deed.

Defendants purchased Lot 7, with a single family structure located thereon, from Mary Wright Harrison on 29 December 2006. Defendants' deed referenced and incorporated therein the unrecorded 1995 survey, which indicated a forty-foot building setback being measured from the property line adjoining Gimghoul Road, which is shown on the survey as having a fifty-foot right-of-way. Defendants assert they had not previously seen a copy of the unrecorded survey prior to litigation, but do not contest its inclusion in the description in their deed.

On 13 November 2013, Defendants submitted plans for a porch addition to the Chapel Hill Planning Department for a Certificate of Appropriateness ("COA"). These plans were reviewed by the Historic District Commission on 12 December 2013. A revised COA application *432 was submitted on 13 January 2014, indicating minor changes to the original plans.

On 27 February 2014, the Historic District Commission reviewed and approved Defendants' plans, and issued a COA. A zoning compliance permit was issued on 20 March 2014. A building permit was issued on 4 June 2014, and construction of the covered porch began.

Prior to Defendants beginning construction on their covered porch addition, the HOA asserted the Defendants were violating the forty-foot setback restriction. Despite repeated warnings of the purported setback violation, and several offers to assist with remedying the violation, Defendants completed construction of their addition. The covered porch extends to approximately thirty-three feet south of the Lot 7 property line, approximately forty-three feet from the edge of the pavement of Gimghoul Road, and approximately eighty-three feet from the "northern boundary of Gimghoul Road."

C. Procedural History

On 18 August 2014, Plaintiffs filed a complaint against Defendants, and sought specific performance of the restrictive covenant and a permanent injunction.

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Bluebook (online)
808 S.E.2d 334, 256 N.C. App. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buysse-v-jones-ncctapp-2017.