Equestrian Ridge v. Equestrian Ridge Estates II

308 Neb. 128, 953 N.W.2d 16
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 2021
DocketS-20-239
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 308 Neb. 128 (Equestrian Ridge v. Equestrian Ridge Estates II) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Equestrian Ridge v. Equestrian Ridge Estates II, 308 Neb. 128, 953 N.W.2d 16 (Neb. 2021).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 04/02/2021 08:09 AM CDT

- 128 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 308 Nebraska Reports EQUESTRIAN RIDGE v. EQUESTRIAN RIDGE ESTATES II Cite as 308 Neb. 128

Equestrian Ridge Homeowners Association, appellee, v. Equestrian Ridge Estates II Homeowners Association, appellant. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed January 8, 2021. No. S-20-239.

1. Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. An appellate court’s review of whether the district court had subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law and, when it does not involve a factual dispute, is reviewed de novo. 2. Judgments: Appeal and Error. In a bench trial of a law action, the trial court’s factual findings have the effect of a jury verdict, and an appellate court will not disturb those findings unless they are clearly erroneous. 3. ____: ____. In a bench trial of a law action, an appellate court resolves a trial court’s determination of law independently of the lower court’s conclusions. 4. Standing: Jurisdiction: Parties. Standing refers to whether a party had, at the commencement of the litigation, a personal stake in the outcome of the litigation that would warrant a court’s exercise of its subject mat- ter jurisdiction and remedial powers on that party’s behalf. 5. Standing: Parties. To have standing, the plaintiff must have some legal or equitable right, title, or interest in the subject matter of the controversy. 6. ____: ____. A plaintiff does not generally have standing to bring a case on behalf of a third party. 7. Contracts: Standing: Parties. Third-party-beneficiary theory is a ­common-law doctrine that allows a nonparty to a contract to enforce an interest owed by a promisor under the contract. 8. ____: ____: ____. The fact that a third party would be better off if a contract were enforced does not give him or her standing to enforce the contract. 9. Contracts: Parties: Intent: Proof. To enforce a contract, a third party bears the burden of proving that he or she was an intended, not inciden- tal, beneficiary of rights under the contract. - 129 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 308 Nebraska Reports EQUESTRIAN RIDGE v. EQUESTRIAN RIDGE ESTATES II Cite as 308 Neb. 128

10. Contracts: Words and Phrases. An intended beneficiary is one whose rights and interest were apparently contemplated by the contract’s lan- guage itself. 11. Contracts: Parties: Stipulations: Intent. To be those of an intended beneficiary, a third party’s rights must appear by express stipulation or it must appear by reasonable intendment that the rights and interest of such unnamed parties were contemplated and that provision was being made for them. 12. Contracts: Proof. The person seeking enforcement of a contract has the burden of establishing the existence of a valid, legally enforceable agreement, consisting of an offer, acceptance, and some meeting of the minds. 13. Contracts. To be binding, an agreement must be definite and certain as to the terms and requirements upon its parties. 14. ____. An enforceable contract must identify the subject matter and detail the parties’ essential commitments to each other. 15. Contracts: Real Estate: Property: Words and Phrases. The difference between an analysis based in real covenant law and one based in con- tract law is that contracts concern primarily personal rights and duties, while real covenants concern rights that run with property. 16. Contracts: Real Estate. Whereas personal contract rights are not bind- ing on successors in interest, real covenants can be. 17. Contracts: Real Estate: Intent. There are generally three requirements for a covenant, whether affirmative or negative, to run with the land: (1) The grantor and the grantee must have intended that the covenant run with the land, as determined from the instruments of record; (2) the covenant must touch and concern the land with which it runs; and (3) the party claiming the benefit of the covenant and the party who bears the burden of the covenant must be in privity of estate. 18. Contracts: Real Estate: Intent: Appeal and Error. An appellate court determines whether the grantor and grantee of a covenant had the intent to bind successors in interest by referring to the instruments of record. 19. Contracts: Intent. Interpretation of instruments of record should be performed in a manner that will give effect to the true intention of the parties as expressed in the writings. 20. Contracts: Real Estate. As with any other contract, canons of construc- tion are used only insofar as they are necessary to resolve an ambiguity in the text of a covenant itself. 21. ____: ____. To touch and concern the land, the object of the covenant must be annexed to, inherent in, or connected with the land. 22. ____: ____. The touch and concern requirement of a real covenant is met when the covenant affects the legal relations—the advantages and - 130 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 308 Nebraska Reports EQUESTRIAN RIDGE v. EQUESTRIAN RIDGE ESTATES II Cite as 308 Neb. 128

the burdens—of the parties to the covenant, as owners of particular parcels of land and not merely as members of the community in gen- eral, such as taxpayers or owners of other land. The covenant must impose, on the one hand, a burden upon an interest in land, which on the other hand increases the value of a different interest in the same or related land. 23. ____: ____. The test of whether a covenant touches and concerns the land is whether it tends directly or necessarily to enhance its value or render it more beneficial or convenient to those by whom it is owned or occupied. Those covenants that are generally held to run with the land and to insure to the benefit of the assignee are such as ordinarily affect the land itself and confer a benefit on the grantor. 24. Actions: Parties. Privity requires, at a minimum, a substantial identity between the issues in controversy and a showing that the parties in the two actions are really and substantially in interest the same. 25. ____: ____. Privity depends upon the relation of the parties to the sub- ject matter and not their activity in a suit relating to it after the event. 26. Property: Parties: Words and Phrases. Privity is a mutual or succes- sive relationship to the same rights of property. In its broadest sense, privity is defined as mutual or successive relationships to the same right of property, or such an identification of interest of one person with another as to represent the same legal right or derivative interest between parties. 27. Contracts: Parties: Assignments. Whereas a party assigns rights under a contract, a party delegates duties. 28. Parties: Assignments. Parties should generally be free to assign rights and delegate duties as they see fit, subject to certain limitations. 29. Contracts: Public Policy. Contract duties are generally delegable unless prohibited by statute, public policy, or the terms of the con- tract. Contractual duties are also not delegable if they involve the personal qualities or skills of the obligor, in the absence of consent by the obligee. 30. Contracts. Delegation to a third party of the duty to perform under a contract requires an agreement between the obligor under the first con- tract and a delegate. That is, the delegate must agree to be delegated the obligor’s duty. 31. ____. A delegation of duties is not itself sufficient to bind its delegate to perform the duties delegated. 32. Contracts: Claims: Breach of Contract. The mere delegation of a performance imposes no duty on the delegate to perform. If the del- egate performs the duty, the duty is discharged. If the delegate does not perform the duty, the duty is not discharged, but any claim of the obligee for breach is against the delegating party and not against the - 131 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 308 Nebraska Reports EQUESTRIAN RIDGE v. EQUESTRIAN RIDGE ESTATES II Cite as 308 Neb. 128

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
308 Neb. 128, 953 N.W.2d 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equestrian-ridge-v-equestrian-ridge-estates-ii-neb-2021.