Faubian v. Busch

240 S.W.2d 361, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2084
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 12, 1951
Docket6140
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 240 S.W.2d 361 (Faubian v. Busch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faubian v. Busch, 240 S.W.2d 361, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2084 (Tex. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This suit was filed by appellees, Dan Busch, Fred Bush, Jr., Jack A. Spence and wife Ola M. Spence, against appellants, William C. Faubian and 36 other named defendants as property owners in the Palo Duro Addition to the City of Amarillo, Randall County, Texas. The suit is in the nature of a class action filed by appellees against the 37 named defendants individually and as representatives of all other persons, firms and corporations owning lots in the said Addition. Appellees are seeking a final judgment declaring the recorded building restrictions of no force and effect in so far as they apply to lots numbers 1 and 2 in Block No. 8 of the said Addition, owned by appellees Busch Brothers, who for some reason spell their last names differently, and lots numbers 12 and 13 in Block No. 1 of the said Addition, owned by appellees Jack A. Spence and wife Ola M. Spence, and for an order enjoining perpetually all named defendants and all others so situated from interfering with appellees’ use ■of the said lots for business purposes. All named defendants answered with a general denial and alleged that all of the lots in the said Addition were restricted for residential purposes only and sought in a cross action to enjoin appellees from further violation of the restrictions.

The case was tried to a jury and as a result of the verdict judgment was rendered for appellees setting aside the restrictions and holding them to be of no force and effect in so far as they applied to ap-pellees’ lots in question and enjoining appellants perpetually from interfering with appellees’ use of the said lots for business purposes. Appellants have perfected their appeal and have attacked the trial court’s judgment on numerous assigned grounds. The record is voluminous, containing a transcript of more than 150 pages and a statement of facts of more than 500 pages.

Appellees pleaded that the Addition is described by a !map or plat of the same designated as “John P. Mathis Amended Plat of Palo Duro Addition”, which is recorded in Randall County and that the lots are owned by several hundred persons; that the common dedication instrument under which all parties to the suit claim their property is an instrument of dedication executed on January 22, 1926, by John P. Mathis and others and the same is recorded in Volume 44, Pages 280-289, of Randall County deed records and that the same contains certain restrictions set out and pleaded at length by appellees. Among the restrictions pleaded by them is that “None of the lots shown on said amended plat shall be used for other than private residences * * * ” and that if any person, while owning any such lots, violates or threatens to violate such restrictions therein contained he shall be halted by injunction under the principles of equity. Appellees further pleaded that approximately 75% of the property owners in the said Addition have relinquished their rights to enforce the restrictions as to appellees’ said lots therein. However appellees must not be satisfied with such relinquishments since they sued all of these property owners along with those who had not relinquished any rights. Ap-pellees further pleaded that, because of changed conditions since the dedication and restrictions were made, they are entitled to the relief sought. They further pleaded that the general scheme of development of the Addition had been frustrated; that there had been a general abandonment by all property owners of the restrictive covenants contained in the sale of the lots in the said Addition; and that the general plan or building scheme has been abrogated as to appellees’ lots in question. They also pleaded that defendants and class defendants knew or should have known of some restriction violations already existing on appellees’ said lots, in which violations said defendants have acquiesced and they have therefore waived any right to complain and are estopped from making such complaints. Appellees have thus pleaded a uniform plan of the Addition as platted and dedicated so as to constitute a “general plan or scheme” as that term is used and recognized in law.

*364 Appellants charge in their first point of error that the trial court erred in overruling their motion for an instructed verdict on the grounds, in effect, that appel-lees failed to offer sufficient evidence of probative force to raise any material and ultimate fact issues for the jury to pass on.

The evidence reveals that Palo Duro Addition is located within the city limits and in the south part of Amarillo, composed of eight blocks, located between 34th Street on the north and 38th Street on the south and between Washington Street on the east and Lipscomb Street on the west (in that area there is no 35th Street or 37th Street). An east-west paved highway, follows 36th Street across the Addition carrying the traffic on U. S. Highways 60 and 87. There are 256 lots in the Addition and 85% of them have residences built on them and are occupied mostly by young couples with families as their homes. Some of them have been recently built, and others were under construction. There are no business establishments on any of the lots in the said Addition except on lots 12 and 13 in Block 1, located on the north side of and adjacent to the highway on 36th Street, owned and occupied by appellees Jack A. Spence and wife Ola M. Spence. Their business establishments so located consist of a small grocery store, a sandwich stand, an ice vending machine and malt machine all located on the front part of the said lots and operated by the said appellees, and a small egg and feed store located on the back part of the same lots and operated by another fellow. There had been a small business establishment of some sort known as the “Green Dart” selling brooms and mops located on the hack part of a lot in the Addition near Jack Spence’s place of business but a complaint for such had been previously made-against the operator to the city officials by some of the appellants. The city authorities said the operator had no permit to operate and they would stop such operation, but the evidence does not reveal whether or not he was still operating. These were the only business establishments shown by the evidence to exist in the Addition. Other than these and a few trivial violations of the restrictions with reference to infractions of the building code and living conditions in some places, the owners had generally observed the restrictions and insisted that all other owners do so. Spence had begun the improvements on his lots in 1946 and! had gradually added thereto. He testified that he had part of his building constructed before he realized about the restrictions. Ap-pellees, Busch Brothers, bought one of their lots across the highway and 36th Street south from Spence’s lots in 1946 and the other in 1947. They knew that the lots were restricted as residential property when they bought them, but one of them testified they bought them for business purposes. No improvements had been placed on either of their lots and there has been little change in general conditions affecting the Addition since they bought them, other than a natural growth and development of the Addition. When the Addition was dedicated, U. S. Highway 87 followed 34th Street along the north side of the Addition and has since been moved one block south to 36th Street. A farm-to-market road was being constructed along the east side of the Addition. The record further reveals that 12 of the 37 named defendants testified in the trial court while 25 of them did not testify.

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Bluebook (online)
240 S.W.2d 361, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2084, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faubian-v-busch-texapp-1951.