DeBorde v. St. Michael & All Angels Episcopal Church

252 S.E.2d 876, 272 S.C. 490, 1979 S.C. LEXIS 318
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 27, 1979
Docket20898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 252 S.E.2d 876 (DeBorde v. St. Michael & All Angels Episcopal Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeBorde v. St. Michael & All Angels Episcopal Church, 252 S.E.2d 876, 272 S.C. 490, 1979 S.C. LEXIS 318 (S.C. 1979).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

The order of the lower court sets forth and correctly disposes of all issues submitted to this Court on appeal. Let that order, with modifications, be printed as the directive of this Court.

“ORDER

“This matter came before the Court, by agreement of counsel, by way of petitioners’ declaratory judgment action seeking a determination as to whether the creation of a churchyard cemetery upon the premises of respondent was in violation of certain restrictive covenants imposed upon its property, and alternatively, whether the cemetery’s creation and operation thereon would constitute a private nuisance.

[493]*493“Respondent is an active Parish within the Diocese of Upper South Carolina of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States of America and has title to a 6.2 acre tract of land situated in a U-shaped intersection between North Trenholm Road and Bridgewood Road, in the area northeast of the City of Columbia, South Carolina. The property is bounded on the west by North Trenholm Road, which runs in a north-south direction, and on the north and east by Bridgewood Road, which exists on an easterly course from Trenholm and proceeds through a gentle curve to the right to a predominantly southerly direction along respondent’s property’s northern and eastern boundaries. It is generally bounded on the south by lots bordering on Shorebrook Road. The two exceptions are a lot immediately to the south on North Trenholm Road and a lot immediately to the southeast bordering on Bridgewood Road.

“At the southeastern corner of respondent’s property, Bridgewood Road commences a gentle turn to the left and continues for approximately 180° until it essentially parallels the portion fronting on respondent’s property. Lots front along the full periphery of Bridgewood Road.

“At the trial, W. Paul DeBorde, Curtis Gillespie, John E. Strawn and Alice J. Smith were the only individual petitioners to testify. None are parishioners of respondent. All own homes fronting on Bridgewood Road. Petitioner Gillespie resides on the same side of Bridgewood Road on which respondent’s property is located at the point where Bridge-wood Road runs approximately west to east before turning back in a northerly direction. His western property line is almost 2Ó0 feet east of respondent’s southeastern boundary, with two lots' intervening. He can see a portion of respondent’s property from a portion of his. The remaining individual petitioners who testified reside on the northerly stretch of Bridgewood Road, after the completion of its left turn, and are completely screened from view of respondent’s property by the loop created by Bridgewood Road’s 180 [494]*494degree reversal of course. By Bridgewood Road the nearest portions of their respective properties to that of respondent are approximately: Smith — 500 feet; Strawn — 750 feet; and DeBorde — 950 feet.

“Forest Lake Development Company, the common grantor in the chains of title of the individual petitioners and respondent, executed a 'Declaration’, dated February 27, 1956, and properly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Richland County, which allegedly imposed certain covenants, conditions and restrictions on specified lots within specific blocks designated in paragraph 12 thereof. These restrictions basically limited the development of those designated lots to single-family dwellings and empowered the owners of any of the lots listed therein to enforce these covenants and restrictions.

“Thereafter, on January 30, 1958, Forest Lake Development Company conveyed a portion of the property in issue to respondent and granted it options on the remainder of its 6.2 acre tract. All of the property conveyed and optioned to respondent was listed in paragraph 12 of Forest Lake Development Company’s 1956 Declaration as incorporating Lots 14 through 27 in Block 73 of a certain duly recorded plat. The deed conveying this property from Forest Lake Development Company to respondent, which was a printed form, containing virtually the identical restrictions as set forth in the Declaration of 1956, modified these restrictions by typed insertion authorizing respondent to construct church buildings on the property and otherwise use it for church purposes.

“Thereafter, on September 17, 1958, Forest Lake Development Company, along with two individuals, executed and had properly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Richland County, a Declaration and Agreement for the benefit of respondent. This Declaration and Agreement recited that the grantors were the owners of all lots in Blocks 73 and 74 listed in paragraph 12 of Forest Lake Development [495]*495Company’s Declaration of 1956, other than those owned by respondent, and that the grantors had no objection to respondent using both the property previously conveyed and that optioned to it for ‘church and/or recreation purposes’.

“Subsequently, Forest Lake Development Company transferred all of its unsold property, including that portion under option to respondent, to another company and forfeited its charter. Thereafter, by way of merger, Calhoun Life Insurance Company acquired title to this property and subsequently, conveyed it to respondent by a series of transactions in the mid-1960’s.

“Calhoun Life Insurance Company thereafter conveyed all of its unsold property to petitioner Trenholm Investment Company, which has since disposed of all of its assets in the general Trenholm Road-Bridgewood Road area, with the exception of two lakes, and has filed Statement of Intention to Dissolve with the Secretary of State of South Carolina. It now owns none of the lots described in paragraph 12 of Forest Lake Development Company’s Declaration of 1956.

“Title to the individual petitioners’ properties, all of which are situated in either Blocks 73 or 74 as identified by Forest Lake Development Company’s 1956 Declaration, was derived from one or more of the parties executing that document subsequent to the execution and recordation of Declaration and Agreement in 1958.

“In the intervening years, respondent, through construction of church buildings, a youth hut arid playground and landscaping, had developed roughly the northern half of its property. The southern portion remains undeveloped pine forest in essentially the same condition as when acquired by it. As another step in its long range plan to utilize its property and extend its ministry, in January of 1977, respondent’s Vestry, its governing body, created a committee to investigate the feasibility of establishing a cemetery within the undeveloped area. A landscape architect was retained as a consultant for the project. Upon receipt of his report, [496]*496including a colored rendering of his recommendations, the committee contacted all owners of property on Trenholm and Bridgewood Roads facing its lands, as well as those with lots bordering its southern boundary and advised them of its feasibility study. These neighbors were also invited to attend a meeting to discuss this development and to examine the preliminary rendering. This meeting attracted, not only respondent’s immediate neighbors, but property owners throughout the general area.

“The initial rendering proposed a vehicular access off of Bridgewood Road through the undeveloped area of respondent’s property to the cemetery site, with an exit onto Trenholm Road.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

O'Cain v. O'Cain
473 S.E.2d 460 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 1996)
DeBorde v. ST. MICHAEL & ALL ANGELS EPIS. CH.
252 S.E.2d 876 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 S.E.2d 876, 272 S.C. 490, 1979 S.C. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deborde-v-st-michael-all-angels-episcopal-church-sc-1979.