EDWARDS v. Surratt

90 S.E.2d 906, 228 S.C. 512, 1956 S.C. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 11, 1956
Docket17105
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 90 S.E.2d 906 (EDWARDS v. Surratt) 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
EDWARDS v. Surratt, 90 S.E.2d 906, 228 S.C. 512, 1956 S.C. LEXIS 2 (S.C. 1956).

Opinion

T. B. GreNEKEr, Acting Associate Justice.

This is a suit in equity instituted by the appellants, plaintiffs below, against the respondent, seeking an injunction prohibiting the respondent from using his property for any purpose other than for residential use and more particularly prohibiting him from proceeding with the erection of a filing station alleged to be in violation of certain restrictions placed thereon by Vance Edwards, now deceased. The matter came *515 on for a hearing before Honorable W. B. McGowan, Judge of the Greenville County Court, who on September 25, 1954 filed his order denying, plaintiffs the relief sought. The appellants now come to this court seeking a reversal of Judge McGowan’s order.

We gather from the record that Vance Edwards, the common predecessor in title of the plaintiffs and defendant, formerly owned a tract of land in Greenville County containing some seven hundred acres on or near what is now known as the Super Highway running from Greenville to Spartanburg; and it is alleged by the plaintiffs that Edwards intended to develop that property into an exclusive residential area and that he, from time to time, sold parts of this property; and in some of his conveyances, as an indication of his purpose, inserted certain restrictions. Annie Turner Lindsey, on June 16, 1941, purchased from Edwards a tract containing 3.47 acres, and the deed conveying this tract contained the following restriction: “Said property to be used for residential purposes for white people only”. Annie Turner Lindsey subdivided the 3.47 acres into five lots which were sold to various parties. The lot, which is the subject of this action is one of those five lots, and was acquired by the defendant Surratt in 1950 from Annie Turner Lindsey, and upon which he proposes to build a filling station.

On October 31,' 1953, all of the owners of lots within the 3.47 acre tract, which was purchased by Annie Turner Lindsey from Vance Edwards, executed an instrument, which was duly recorded on November 2, 1953, releasing the restrictions on all of the lots in that tract and declared that no action would be taken at any time for the purpose of enforcing the restrictions.

The appellants do not own any of the lots embraced in the Lindsey tract, which, as above pointed out, contains 3.47 acres. By reference to the Lindsey deed, we find this property described as follows: “All that piece, parcel or lot of land in Chick Springs Township, Greenville County, State *516 of South Carolina, at the intersection of Super Highway No. 29 and Lee Road, being triangular in shape and having, according to the survey and plat made by R. E. Dalton in June, 1941, the following courses and distances, to wit”: Any additional description was omitted from the transcript. No reference is made to the adoption of a master plat by which the conveyance was made, and we find none in the record; nor was there in the Lindsey deed any reference to any group of general or special restrictions governing the 3.47 acre tract such as we find in the record relating to Buena Vista, Pinehurst and Mayfair, other parts of the Edwards Property, but adopted several years later. It may be of passing interest to notice how the plaintiffs acquired their respective lots, and when and by whom were the restrictions placed thereon. Jane A. Neal acquired her lot in 1941 from Robert J. Edwards, who then and there placed the restrictions. Patterson’s property was acquired from Robert J. Edwards, Committee for James Edwards, in 1952 and the restrictions were accordingly placed. McKinney also acquired his property through the Committee for James Edwards in 1954 and the restrictions thereon were then and there placed.

The plaintiffs based their action upon the theory: first, that the restrictions in the Lindsey deed were intended for the benefit of the remaining property of Vance Edwards (about 720 acres) and were enforceable by his subsequent grantees; second, that there was a general scheme or plan of development which would give to the appellants the right to insist upon the compliance by the respondent with the restrictions contained in his chain of title.

When Robert J. Edwards, one of the plaintiffs, was being cross-examined, he was asked:

“Q. Are you plaintiffs asking the enforcement of the restrictions you put on the property or Vance Edwards put on the property?” Counsel for the appellants was given permission to answer that question and stated: “Our position is we are relying from the standpoint of Edwards,' upon *517 restrictions which were actually placed upon the Surratt property by Vance Edwards, we are relying on this so far as Robert Edwards is concerned from the standpoint he is an heir of Vance Edwards who placed those restrictions upon that property and as an heir of Vance Edwards, also he is an adjacent property owner”. The Court: “I didn’t think you were standing on restrictions these various heirs placed on the property”. Mr. Mann: “No, sir, we are standing on those of Vance Edwards”.

With this in mind, we consider the conveyances made by Vance Edwards and find that on September 15, 1938, he sold to Annie Turner Lindsey one acre with no restrictions as per plat of R. E. Dalton; made on the same day. After the conveyance of the 3.47 acre tract to Mrs. Lindsey in 1941, he conveyed one lot to Robert J. Edwards with no restrictions. Then on July 23, 1943, more' than two years after the Lindsey deed, Vance Edwards began to execute deeds which stated that the impressed restrictions on the property therein conveyed were for the benefit of the grantor, grantee and other persons owning property adjoining or in the vicinity. There were eleven such conveyances prior to his death. The exhibits, taken from the public records of Green-ville County, beginning in 1943, furnish the first evidence of any such intention of Mr. Edwards, and if it be that such expression of intention was sufficient to indicate that the restrictions were intended for the benefit of his other or remaining property, such restrictions could only operate as to subsequent purchasers but in no event to prior purchasers. After the property had passed from Vance Edwards, we scarcely think that even the most careful examiner of the records would be required to consider any later acts of Mr. Edwards 'relative to the property previously conveyed. The first conveyance by Mr. Edwards in 1938, as stated, contained no restrictions and a motor court was later erected thereon. This lot was according to plat made in 1938. The next three conveyances, all in September, 1940, according to a survey made in September, 1940, contained similar building restrictions; and next appears the Lindsey deed, *518 according to plat made in June, 1941. No reference is made in the Lindsey deed which would indicate that the property thereby conveyed was a part of a designated sub-division for which there had been provided general or special restrictions. In the transcript there are found governing restrictions for “Pinehurst”, “Mayfair” and “Buena Vista”, neighboring sub-divisions. However, these restrictions were not formulated until April, 1948 and April, 1949, while the Lindsey property was conveyed in 1941 by Vance Edwards who died in 1945.

By virtue of the holdings of this court in the cases of Pitts v. Brown, 215 S. C. 122, 54 S. E. (2d) 538 and

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E.2d 906, 228 S.C. 512, 1956 S.C. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-surratt-sc-1956.