Duester v. Alvin

145 P. 660, 74 Or. 544, 1915 Ore. LEXIS 358
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 145 P. 660 (Duester v. Alvin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duester v. Alvin, 145 P. 660, 74 Or. 544, 1915 Ore. LEXIS 358 (Or. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moore.

It is contended that the complaint fails to show any legal right on the part of the plaintiffs to maintain this suit, for which reason theiro primary pleading does not state facts sufficient to entitle them to equitable interference, and that an error was committed in receiving any evidence on their part, to the introduction of all of which objections were made on that ground and exceptions saved.

1. It will be remembered that the restrictions imposed by the Overlook Land Company upon each grant of real property in Overlook Addition, except as to lots set apart for business purposes, provided that a violation of any of the covenants contained in the deeds should work a forfeiture of the estate of the grantee, his heirs or assigns, in or to the premises. It will thus be seen that the corporation reserved to itself a possible reversionary interest in the several lots conveyed, whereby the conditional estate granted might become forfeited for a violation of any of the restrictions pre[551]*551scribed. Such provision in the deeds was only a partial restraint, incident to a transfer of the title to real property, and is valid: Seeck v. Jakel, 71 Or. 35 (141 Pac. 211).

2. Covenants relating to a subject matter not in esse, as for the building of a fence or the erection of a structure upon designated real property, are personal, and do not run with the land so as to bind assignees, unless they are expressly named in the deed: Brown v. Southern Pacific Co., 36 Or. 128 (58 Pac. 1104, 78 Am. St. Rep. 761, 47 L. R. A. 409); Hisey v. Presbyterian Church, 130 Mo. App. 566 (109 S. W. 60).

3. Regulations and limitations placed upon the use of real property obtained their binding force and efficiency from the right which every owner of the fee has reasonably to regulate the manner of how the premises, when conveyed by him, shall be occupied, the kind and value of the structures to be erected, or the buildings to be placed thereon, and their location with respect to exterior or other lines.

4. When land is granted subject to such restrictions, the grantee, who had knowledge thereof before accepting a conveyance of the title to the premises, cannot equitably repudiate the restrictions, or refuse to comply with or fulfill them. A purchaser of real property subject to such limitations, if he secured the title with knowledge of the restrictions thus imposed, is bound thereby, and it would be unjust for him to trench upon or ignore the covenants and conditions which his immediate grantors assumed with respect to the premises: Whitney v. Union Ry. Co., 11 Gray (Mass.), 359 (71 Am. Dec. 715); Parker v. Nightingale, 6 Allen (Mass.), 341 (83 Am. Dec. 632).

Though the restrictions herein provide “that any violation of such covenants, or either of them, shall [552]*552work a forfeiture of the estate of the said grantee, ——. heirs or assigns, in and to said premises,” it is unnecessary to consider the nature of the covenant, for the testimony establishes the fact that, when negotiating for a purchase of a part of lot 9 in block E in Overlook Addition, the defendant was informed by Mrs. Nelson, the then part owner of the premises, of the restrictions imposed thereon by the original grantor. This covenant grants a conditional estate, in the nature of a negative easement, whereby each grantee who secured a title to any land in Overlook Addition with knowledge of the limitations prescribed became seised of a servient estate as to his own premises, and also the owner of a dominant estate in all other lots the deeds to which contained such conditions: Silberman v. Uhrlaub, 116 App. Div. 869 (102 N. Y. Supp. 299); Landsberg v. Rosenwasser, 124 App. Div. 559 (108 N. Y. Supp. 929).

5. The covenant in each deed executed by the corporation was made in pursuance of a general scheme adopted by it for the purpose of preserving the addition as desirable residence property. The restriction created an equitable servitude which must be regarded as of value to the whole property. It was inserted in the deeds for the benefit of those who became owners of separate parcels, and is binding in equity on a grantee of any portion of the premises who secured a title thereto with knowledge of such restriction: Boyden v. Roberts, 131 Wis. 659 (111 N. W. 701).

6. Courts of equity will enforce, by injunction, negative covenants and clauses in deeds, restricting the use of real estate, though such conditions do not, in law, constitute easements or covenants running with the land: Robinson v. Edgell, 57 W. Va. 157 (49 S. E. 1027).

[553]*553These restrictions, in the case at bar, prohibit each owner of real property so conveyed from violating the limitations pnt npon his premises, because a breach thereof would or might affect the dominant estate therein of some or all other owners of lots. Since his land is subjected to the burdens incident to a servient estate in the premises, he has the corresponding advantage of enforcing in equity his rights in and to the dominant estate as to all other real property the owners of which obtained their title with knowledge of the covenant, and he may prevent any infringement that would or might affect his land.

7. The rule prevails in this state that, when the creation or maintenance of a public nuisance would specially injure a private party in a manner distinct from that suffered by the public, he may maintain a suit to restrain its continuance: Parrish v. Stephens, 1 Or. 74; Luhrs v. Sturtevant, 10 Or. 170; Walts v. Foster, 12 Or. 247 (7 Pac. 24); Esson v. Wattier, 25 Or. 7 (34 Pac. 756); Blagen v. Smith, 34 Or. 394 (56 Pac. 292, 44 L. R. A. 522); Van Buskirk v. Bond, 52 Or. 234 (96 Pac. 1103); Moore v. Fowler, 58 Or. 292 (114 Pac. 472); Bernard v. Willamette Box & L. Co., 64 Or. 223 (129 Pac. 1039). The obstruction of a highway is a public nuisance constituting a misdemeanor, and, npon a conviction for a violation thereof, the party so found guilty may be punished: Section 2210, L. O. L. In such case, whether the state or a private party who has sustained a special injury prosecute the action for an infringement of the public right is unimportant, for the principal relief sought in either instance is identical. Other illustrations might be cited where the misapplication of public funds have been enjoined at the suit of a private party, in which case the state also could haye obtained the sarae relief, [554]*554In the case at bar, however, a suit by the Overlook Land Company against one of its grantees of real property in Overlook Addition to have a forfeiture decreed for an alleged breach of the covenant would essentially differ from a suit by one or more of the owners of lots in such addition who, by reason of their dominant estate, seek to enjoin a violation of such restrictions by the owners of other lots, though each suit might be predicated upon an allegation of the same facts.

8.

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Bluebook (online)
145 P. 660, 74 Or. 544, 1915 Ore. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duester-v-alvin-or-1915.