Hemphill v. Cayce

197 S.W.2d 137, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 574
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 4, 1946
DocketNo. 14788.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 197 S.W.2d 137 (Hemphill v. Cayce) 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
Hemphill v. Cayce, 197 S.W.2d 137, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 574 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

HALL, Justice.

The case at bar is one of an equitable proceeding brought in the form of an injunction by appellee W. B. Cayce and others against one J. H. Hemphill, appellant, restraining the appellant from violating a building restriction inserted in the deeds of both litigants. Several other property owners in the restricted area filed their intervention and adopted the plaintiffs’ pleadings.

By agreement of all parties, the case was heard before the court on its merits for a permanent injunction. The case was tried in the 17th District Court of Tarrant County, Texas, the Honorable Judge Frank P. Culver, Jr., presiding.

The trial court heard the evidence and granted a permanent’injunction restraining appellant Hemphill from erecting a business building on his property in said restricted area adjoining appellee’s property, and appellant appeals from said decision.

Mr. Hemphill will be referred to as appellant, Mr. Cayce as appellee, and other parties as interveners.

Appellant relies on three points to show why the injunction should be denied, towit:

1. Waiver of the restriction by appellee and interveners.

2. Change of conditions from residence to business property.

3. Plea of res judicata.

The property involved, belonging to appellant, is at the corner of Camp Bowie Boulevard and Tremont Avenue, and is Lot Number 14 in Block 16 of the Hill Crest Addition to the City of Fort Worth in Tarrant County, Texas, and is adjacent to Lot 13 in said block, which fronts on *139 Tremont Avenue, owned and occupied by-appellee as his private residence. For all practical purposes it was agreed by the parties that the Hill Crest Land Company is the common source of title. A portion of the restriction recited in all deeds in question is as follows: “In order to secure the erection of private residences, buildings of a good grade, insure uniformity and harmony in the character of such buildings and maintain the suitableness of the neighborhood for residential purposes and to carry out a general plan for the protection, benefit, use and convenience of' each and every purchaser of a lot or lots in the said Hill Crest Addition, and his heirs and assigns, this deed is made upon the following express conditions * * *.

“1. That no building shall be erected on said premises except a private dwelling house and outbuildings thereof.
“2. That no old house shall ever be erected or placed on said lot * * *.
“4. That no dwelling shall be erected upon said lot that shall cost less than $5000.00.
“5. That not more than one dwelling shall be erected upon one lot.
“6. That the front wall of the dwelling erected on this lot shall be 40 feet from the front line of the street upon which said lot fronts.
“7. That any barn, stable or garage which may be erected upon said premises shall be located on the rear line of said lot, or within twenty-five feet of said rear line * *

The warranty clause in said conveyance is the usual and customary form, with the exception of taxes for the year 1921 and thereafter, and with the further provision: “so long as the said Grantee, and his heirs and assigns, shall comply with the conditions hereinbefore set out; all of said conditions being covenants which shall run with the land hereby conveyed.”

Appellee purchased his property and moved on it in the year 1921. He built his new home in 1925 and has used it as a residence since that time. Appellant purchased the lot in question and moved onto it and started to erect an odd-shaped stone building 25 feet wide, 50 feet long, with one side 62.8 feet wide and 28 feet across the front. He was planning on using said building to place a business therein, to-wit, the sale of baby clothes.

Appellee contends that the erection of this building would damage his residence in the sum of some six or eight thousand dollars, which is substantiated by other testimony, as the back of it would run along the side of his residence.

The record shows that Hill Crest Addition, as shown by the plat, is composed of approximately 25 blocks containing over 600 lots.

Appellant shows some 17 violations to carry out his theory of waiver of restrictions.

The record further shows that some 7 or.8 of these alleged violations are business houses located in Block 23, and that the remainder of the violations either are garage apartments, lighted signs or people carrying on businesses in their residence, except a large brick church located on Lot 26 in Block 10 of Hill Crest Addition, and a fire hall in Lot 1 in Block 6.

While the appellee may have become negligent in not objecting to some of the minor infractions outlined by appellant, yet we do not think that such a departure from the usual restriction is destructive of the integrity of the scheme of development as a whole throughout the entire restricted area of 600 lots. It is obvious from this record that the original owners of the addition formulated and placed into execution a general plan to restrict it to the building of private residence only; that all restrictions placed in conveyances were restrictive covenants running with the land. Therefore, all parties interested in said, area may enforce such covenant.

54 A.L.R. 819; 85 A.L.R. 988; 103 A. L.R. 737, cites cases holding the fact that where more than ½ of the houses in ’a tract are still occupied as residences, although some of them are used in part for businesses, does not effect a change sufficient to cancel the restriction. Also cites other cases holding the fact that a factory, a public garage and a transfer *140 station maintained in a residential tract does not militate against its residential character.

It was held in the case of Allen v. Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co., 248 Mass. 378, 143 N.E. 499, 33 A.L.R. 669, in substance, that the general character of a large tract of residential property is not changed so as to make insufficient restrictive covenants inserted in the deeds for the benefit of residents by the fact that a few shops, picture galleries, doctors’ offices, clubs and one apartment house have been constructed in the district.

It was held, however, in Starkey v. Gardner, 194 N.C. 74, 138 S.E. 408, 54 A.L.R. 806, that a change from a residential to a business district in which the restriction had been waived or abandoned by 80% of the owners, made the restriction detrimental, rather than beneficial to the property. This was held to be such a change as to make the enforcement of the restriction inequitable.

Tex.Jur. Vol. 12, p. 173, states the following: “The mere fact that other violations not immediately affecting the value of the plaintiff’s property, and occurring on other blocks or in another part of the restricted district, have not been objected to has been held not to give rise to the waiver or estoppel as regards nearer violations affecting the value of the plaintiff’s property,” and thereafter citing the case of Green v. Gerner, Tex.Civ.App., 283 S.W.

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Bluebook (online)
197 S.W.2d 137, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hemphill-v-cayce-texapp-1946.