Gordon v. Hoencke

253 S.W. 629, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 389
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 1923
DocketNo. 8440.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 629 (Gordon v. Hoencke) 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
Gordon v. Hoencke, 253 S.W. 629, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 389 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This appeal is from an interlocutory judgment of the court below refusing to grant a temporary injunction in a suit brought by the appellants against the appellees.

Appellants, who are owners of lots and residents in Montrose addition to the city of Houston, brought this suit against appellees, G. C. Hoencke, the owner of a portion of lot 21 in block 25 in said Montrose addition, G. C. Curtis, a building contractor, and Houston Land Corporation, the original owner of the addition, to restrain the erection on said portion of lot 21 of a drug store and grocery *630 store, in violation of building restrictions as to tbe character and location of buildings permitted to be erected in tbe addition under a general plan promulgated by tbe Houston Land Corporation when tbe addition was laid out in 1911 as strictly residential district and lots then placed on the market. These restrictions are recited in tbe deeds to all of the lots sold in the addition as covenants running with tbe land, except tbe'deed to appellee Hoencke to the portion of lot 21 owned by him. The following sufficiently accurate synopsis of tbe pleadings is copied from appellant’s brief:

“Plaintiffs’ petition alleges that at tbe time said addition was laid out in 1911 tbe Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railroad right of way traversed tbe same, but that lots on each side of said railroad right of way were sold as residential property with restrictions in each of the deeds; that during the year 1915 the Houston Land Corporation, the owner of the addition, acquired title to the railroad right of way, made application to the city of Houston to be permitted to make the same a part and parcel of Montrose addition, blocked the same into lots, blocks, and streets in conformity with the lots, blocks, and streets theretofore existing in the original district of Mont-rose, placed the same on tbe market as a residential district, and made no exceptions in the sale of the lots except the one complained of ini plaintiffs’ said petition.
“Plaintiffs further averred that defendant G. C. Hoencke purchased a portion of lot 21 in block 25 in November, 1915, and held the same during the time that plaintiffs were improving and beautifying their property as homesites, and that he intended at all times to violate the restrictions prevailing in said addition, but that these plaintiffs were unaware of his intentions so to do; said property so sold being a portion of the restricted district of Mont-rose addition, and being sold after an amended map of said addition had been filed, and after a city ordinance had been passed by the city of Houston permitting the Houston Land Corporation to make said railroad right of way a part of the original Montrose addition; that restrictions prevailed therein, and that the plaintiffs had each purchased subject to such restrictions, and that there had been established a general plan, and that all -purchasers of property in said addition, including defendant Hoencke, were bound thereby; that defendant Hoencke was seeking to erect a drug store and a grocery store on said portion of lot 21 in said block in violation of the property line restriction and all other restrictions prevailing in said addition.
“Defendant G. O. Hoencke answered, in substance, by general denial, general demurrer, and by way of answer on the mer-its stated that he had purchased in November, 1913, a portion of lot 1 in block 25 (not involved in this controversy), and that later defendant Houston Land Corporation proposed to purchase said railroad right of way, and, before and at the time negotiations were being conducted for the purchase of said right of way, said Houston Land Corporation proposed to the defendant G. O. Hoencke that they trade their property, in a rectangular form, for the triangular piece of property that he had theretofore bought, and that he agreed that, when the tracks were removed and the Houston Land Corporation had acquired title to the right of way, he would accept a deed to 50 feet-fronting on Grant avenue and 65 feet in depth, running along the south side of Pacific street, in exchange for the property theretofore purchased by the said G. C. Hoencke; that ⅛ pursuance of such agreement he deeded his interest in lot No. 1, block 25, by general warranty deed, to the Houston Land Corporation, and on the 6th day of November, 1915, secured a deed from the Houston Land Corporation to a portion of lot 21 in block 25; that he did not know of the existence of any restrictions or any plan or scheme existing in the addition of Montrose as originally planned or as it existed when the new arrangement was put into effect, prior to the time Repurchased; that he purchased a portion of lot 21 in block 25 without restrictions, and that, all other lot owners in said addition were placed upon notice thereby of the nonexistence of restrictions in his deed.”

This answer was duly verified by the affidavit of the defendant Hoencke.

The defendant Curtis filed a sworn answer, in which, after admitting that he had contracted to erect for the defendant Hoenqke a store building on the lot before mentioned, adopted as far as applicable the averments in the answer of his codefendant, Hoencke, and especially denied any knowledge of any building restrictions existing in Montrose addition. After ’considering the pleadings on the day set for a hearing of the application, the trial judge declined to permit either party to introduce testimony, and refused the prayer for a temporary injunction.

The only assignment of error presented by appellants is as follows:

“Where it is averred that a general building-plan had been adopted, and that restrictions as to the kind, character, location, and use of property prevailed generally, and that a purchaser with notice of such restrictions, being bound by same, is in the act of violating, the same, it is the duty of the trial judge to hear the cause when,same has been set for hearing, and all parties are present, and to permit parties to present evidence, .and to grant a temporary injunction to restrain the violation of prevalent restrictions pending the trial of the cause upon the merits.”

We know of no rule of procedure which requires a trial judge on the hearing of an. application for the temporary injunction to permit the parties to the proceeding to introduce testimony or any evidence other than the affidavits which are made a part of or presented with the pleadings. The final rights of the parties are not necessarily or-usually determined on the hearing for the-temporary injunction.

The primary purpose and office of a temporary injunction is to preserve the-status quo of the subject-matter of the suit against any act of a party which would tend-. *631 to render the final judgment in the case ineffectual. Article 4643, § 2, Vernon’s Sayles' Civil Statutes.

The'right of a trial court to determine from the petition and sworn answer of the defendant, without hearing testimony whether the act sought to be enjoined is violative of the applicant’s rights, and one which would tend to render final judgment in the case ineffectual, is recognized in numerous decisions of our appellate courts.

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 629, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-hoencke-texapp-1923.