Gey v. Beck

568 A.2d 672, 390 Pa. Super. 317, 1990 Pa. Super. LEXIS 63
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 8, 1990
Docket1530
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 568 A.2d 672 (Gey v. Beck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gey v. Beck, 568 A.2d 672, 390 Pa. Super. 317, 1990 Pa. Super. LEXIS 63 (Pa. 1990).

Opinion

*320 BECK, Judge:

The question presented is whether a restrictive covenant that specifies that all lots in a residential development be known and designated as single family residential lots should be specifically enforced by requiring the developers to remove a road they constructed over one of the lots.

Appellants are homeowners who purchased lots in a plan known as the West Gate development. Appellee grantors and developers of the residential plan recorded the plan in 1983 and revised it in 1985. The revision increased the number of lots from 10 to 28. The plan calls for a cul-desac community with one road, bordered by residential lots with no intersecting roads. Appellees gave appellants a document containing “protective covenants,” which provided:

(A) These restrictions and covenants shall run as covenants with the land and shall be binding upon the undersigned [defendants Dennis and Patricia Beck], and all persons claiming under or through them____
(B) That Lot Nos. 1 through 29 [designated as Lots 201 through 228 on the recorded West Gate I Revised Plan], both inclusive, in said Plan shall be known and designated as single family residential lots.

Appellants also observed a large sign at the entrance to the plan stating that the lots came with “protective covenants” and showing a drawing of the plan which corresponded to the recorded plan, except for the numbering system used to identify the lots. One of the appellant purchasers was orally advised that the single road servicing the development would not be connected with or to any other streets or developments.

In 1986, appellees applied for approval of a new subdivision plan calling for a new street, “Cindi Drive.” The street was to be constructed on one of the lots of the West Gate Plan to connect it with other roads. Appellants objected to this plan at a borough meeting to no avail. The plan *321 was approved by the borough and appellees began construction of Cindi Drive.

Subsequently, appellants initiated an equity action seeking preliminary and permanent relief in the form of an injunction prohibiting appellees from using the residential lot to construct a road and directing appellees to record their covenants so as to give notice to all future grantees.

Appellants argued that the covenants restricted the lots to residential use, thus implying that no lot could be used to build a road and the street would remain a cul-de-sac. The Chancellor issued an adjudication in which he found appellants’ right to relief to be clear, noting that (1) the covenants prepared by appellees were binding upon them whether or not they were recorded or noted in the deeds and (2) the language of the covenants forbids the building of a public road on property designated as single family residential lots. A preliminary injunction was ordered granting the relief requested by appellants, contingent upon appellants posting a $100,000 bond for damages that might be suffered by appellees until trial and final adjudication. Appellants did not have the resources to post the bond and therefore the preliminary injunction never became final. The road was built and the matter came before the court for final adjudication.

In its adjudication dated May 19, 1988, the trial court adopted the following statement of facts as set forth in appellants’ brief:

The matter came before the Honorable Martin I. (sic) Wekselman on plaintiffs’ request for preliminary relief. After viewing the written documents and hearing testimony, on April 10, 1987, Judge Wekselman rendered an Adjudication in which he found plaintiffs’ right to relief to be clear. Of import to the instant proceedings is the fact that Judge Wekselman ruled in the course of the Adjudication that the Covenants prepared by defendants are binding upon defendants whether or not they are recorded or noted in defendants’ deeds, and that the language of those covenants forbids the building of a *322 public road upon property designed as “single family residential lots.” Subsequent to Judge Wekselman’s Adjudication, a Preliminary Injunction was issued granting the relief requested by plaintiffs, but contingent upon them posting a bond in the amount of $100,000 for damages that may be suffered by defendants until trial and final adjudication. As plaintiffs did not have the resources to post this bond without jeopardizing their savings and the homes they sought to protect, the preliminary injunction did not become final, the offending road was built, and the matter is now before the Court for final adjudication.

Against this factual backdrop, the court went on to consider whether enforcement of the covenant should be granted. The chancellor noted:

despite the fact that there is no specific mention in the restrictive covenants or in the deeds or anywhere else that the West Gate Plan would always be a development of homes along a one-street cul-de-sac, such specific reference is not required for enforcement. Everyone knew that the lots in the West Gate Plan were reserved for single-family residences only. Defendants had committed themselves to that and the construction of a road on one of the lots is an obvious violation of that negative easement.

Despite this finding, the court went on to conclude:

The Chancellor is, nevertheless, not disposed to grant the relief requested. The restrictive covenants in this case were designed primarily to maintain the overall tone of the community with respect to the types of dwellings to be erected and their value. Although plaintiffs might have been interested in maintaining a cul-de-sac, that does not appear to have been the overall or even principal purpose of the restrictive covenants, although they can be read to require that that condition remain in effect.

The court found that the properties had increased in value, and that appellants had not shown that the presence of Cindi Drive caused an increase in traffic or materially *323 affected the character of the property or appellants’ enjoyment of their property. The court entered an adjudication and decree nisi directing that the restrictive covenant be recorded but denying appellants’ other request. In denying appellants’ motion for post-trial relief, the chancellor concluded “although the covenants appear to have been breached, the specific enforcement sought by appellants would confer no significant benefit and would not be appropriate.” This appeal followed.

Appellants contend that the Chancellor erred in denying injunctive relief where: (1) he found that the covenants did prohibit the building of Cindi Drive, that appellants had relied on the covenants in purchasing their homes and that the covenants had been intentionally and willfully breached; (2) developers/appellees conveyed the property rights to appellants only a short time before the violation; and (8) the facts demonstrated that equitable relief was proper even though appellants could not show financial harm. Appellants also assert error inasmuch as the Chancellor prevented them from showing the injuries they will suffer as a result of the appellees’ violations, holding that this would call for speculation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
568 A.2d 672, 390 Pa. Super. 317, 1990 Pa. Super. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gey-v-beck-pa-1990.