Hackett v. Steele

297 S.W.2d 63, 201 Tenn. 120, 5 McCanless 120, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 474
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 297 S.W.2d 63 (Hackett v. Steele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hackett v. Steele, 297 S.W.2d 63, 201 Tenn. 120, 5 McCanless 120, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 474 (Tenn. 1956).

Opinion

*121 Me. Justice Swepston

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The original bill in this case was filed by the owners of certain lots in a residential subdivision restricted to ■residences for the purpose of having these restrictions cancelled on the basis that there had been such a radical change in conditions as to make the enforcement of said restrictions inequitable against the owners of the lots to be hereinafter described more in detail.

■ There was a demurrer on behalf of the defendants who are owners of other lots in the subdivision, which demurrer was sustained by the Chancellor and the complainants have appealed.

The substance of the allegations of the original bill which are material to a disposition of this appeal is as follows: The bill alleges that in 1922 one of the defendants, Mark K. Wilson, purchased an unimproved tract of land consisting of 130 acres located in Hamilton County, outside the City of Chattanooga, and east of Mis-sionary Ridge on what was then Bird’s Mill Road, the tract fronting- oh the south line of said road about 1,700 feet and. extending southwardly a distance of approximately three-fourths of a mile. Shortly after the pur- *122 • chase of said tract the defendant Wilson had it subdivided, streets platted and the land divided into blocks which were in turn, divided into about 500 lots. Blocks 1, 2, 3 and 4 are the ones involved in this controversy and they are the ones which front on said former Bird’s Mill Boad which has since become Brainerd Boad. Said blocks extend southwardly about 400 feet to the north line of what is now Sunbeam Avenue which runs south of and parallel to Brainerd Boad; they are bounded on the west by the present South Moore Boad and on the east by the present McBrien Boad except for a lot running about 130 feet on the Brainerd Boad at the southwest corner where it intersects with McBrien Boad but said lot is not included in this subdivision.

Through the lapse of time from 1922 until 1954, when this bill was filed, McCallie Avenue, which at that time extended only to the city limits of Chattanooga, which were at the tunnel under Missionary Bidge, has changed from a residential neighborhood to commercial and is a part of U. S. Highway No. 11, which runs east from McCallie Avenue out Brainerd Boad; this latter has been widened into a four-lane highway, is heavily traveled and now built up with various sorts of business establishments on out to where said subdivision is located and .the same is now within the city limits of Chattanooga. Both the north and south sides of said Brainerd Boad have been zoned “commercial” from the tunnel east-wardly to the city limits except for one small area not here concerned.

. On the north side of Brainerd Boad opposite said .Blocks 1, 2, 3 and 4 herein involved, there are a church, antique shop, sales agency, real estate agency, doctor, restaurant, several filling stations, a monument com *123 pany, pharmacy, beauty shop, dressmaker, barber shop, radio shop, hardware store, dry cleaners, etc.

• On the south side of said road there is a filling station at the southwest corner of Brainerd Boad and South Moore Boad and one at the southeast corner of Brainerd and McBrien Boad, although neither one has ever been a part of the subdivision property. Fronting on Brain-erd Boad there are in Block 1, three dwellings erected in 1920 and one dwelling in Block 2, erected in 1920, while the remainder of the lots in Blocks 1 to 4 on Brainerd Boad are unimproved and have remained vacant, although surrounded by business establishments.

The bill sets out the restrictions but the only ones material at the moment are as follows:

“ (1) That within a period of 50 years from this date no building other than a dwelling or building ordinarily appertaining to dwelling houses shall he erected, maintained or used by the grantees, their heirs 'or assigns or anyone deriving title or rights from or through them on the premises herein, conveyed.”

The deed then provides that in case of violation of the above restrictions, “the grantees, their heirs or assigns shall he subject at the suit of the grantor, its successors or assigns, or by the public authorities to he enjoined,” etc.

Again:

“The entire contract between the parties is stated in this deed and the question of further development either of the property .herein-conveyed or the properties of the grantor or of other public improvements is no part of the consideration, to all of which the purchaser agrees;”

*124 Also:

“Any contract or deed with any other purchaser or purchasers of any real estate in said subdivision has no reference to this deed, nor is the same any part of the consideration of this deed, to all of which the purchasers or grantees herein agree.”

The bill then avers as follows:

“Compellants aver that there has been a fundamental change in the physical condition of the property along the Brainerd Road in the vicinity of Blocks 1 to 4, due to a municipal expansion and the spread of-the commercial district of Chattanooga to the east, and that said restrictions have been rendered obsolete and out-dated by the passage of time, that the lots are no longer suitable for residential uses and, therefore, the purpose for which the restrictions were imposed can no longer be accomplished. All of the lots in said blocks fronting on the Brainerd Road except four, have remained unimproved during the thirty-year interval since the property was subdivided, and due to the restrictions are not worth as much now as they were when purchased, and if the restrictions remain the lots will further diminish in value.
“The owners have been paying taxes on the lots all these years, and notwithstanding the great increase in value of other lots located in this vicinity on both sides of the road, complainants ’ lots are for all practical purposes worthless.
‘ ‘ Complainants further aver that due to the changed conditions above described, restricting these lots to residential purposes has become detrimental rather than beneficial to the property and the enforcement of the restriction will not restore to the neighborhood a *125 residential character, but will lessen the value of the lots and will harass and injure the owners without effecting the purpose for which the restrictions were originally imposed. The owners of lots in other sections of the subdivision will not be adversely effected (sic) by removal of these restrictions and the parties to the bill are the only ones who can immediately be concerned with this litigation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 S.W.2d 63, 201 Tenn. 120, 5 McCanless 120, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hackett-v-steele-tenn-1956.