Hess v. Country Club Park

2 P.2d 782, 213 Cal. 613, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 569
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1931
DocketDocket No. L.A. 10786.
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 2 P.2d 782 (Hess v. Country Club Park) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hess v. Country Club Park, 2 P.2d 782, 213 Cal. 613, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 569 (Cal. 1931).

Opinion

WASTE, C. J.

This is an action to quiet title and to annul certain building restrictions contained in the deeds through which the plaintiffs deraign their title to lot 31 of tráet No. 1600 in the city of Los Angeles. Plaintiffs *614 seek to avoid the effect of the restrictions by reason of an asserted change of conditions in the character of the neighborhood, it being alleged that their property is no longer useful for residential purposes. The action was brought against the defendant Country Club Park, a corporation, the original owner and subdivider of the tract. Thereafter a complaint in intervention was filed by the remaining defendants who are owners of other lots in the tract. In due course the pleadings were amended and the interveners made parties defendant. Following a trial before the court sitting without a jury, judgment for plaintiffs was entered as prayed for. From this judgment all of the defendants, save and except the corporation, have appealed.

Citing the case of Strong v. Shatto, 45 Cal. App. 29, 37 [187 Pac. 159, 162], the appellants contend that the respondents are not, under the allegations of their complaint, entitled to the relief granted. That case declares, in part, that .“The doctrine that equity will not enforce restrictions on the use- of property, we think, only applies to cases where it is sought to enforce such restrictions by equitable proceedings, where the reason and justification for them has failed through changed conditions. In other words, under such circumstances a court of equity may deny the relief sought. But the rule does not go to the extent of permitting parties whose land is subject to the legal restraint of such limitations to bring action to quiet their title against such contractual obligations, because of changed conditions. Contractual obligations do not disappear as circumstances change. It is only the granting of equitable relief, and not the binding force of the restrictive covenant, that is affected by a change in the conditions. ... As there has been no breach of the conditions here, and no attempt to enjoin such a breach or to enforce a forfeiture, we think it premature, at least, to determine the equities of the parties as they might exist at some future time in the event of such breach. ’ ’

This court denied a petition for hearing in the Shatto case. However, subsequent to that decision, and in the year 1921 (Stats. 1921, p. 689), section 1060 of the Code of Civil Procedure was enacted. In brief, this section provides that “Any person interested under a deed, will or other *615 written instrument, or under a contract, or who desires a declaration of his rights or duties with respect ... to, in, over or upon property . . . may, in cases of actual controversy . . . bring an action . . . for a declaration of his rights and duties in the premises. ... He may ask for a declaration of rights or duties, either alone or with other relief. . . . The declaration may be either affirmative or negative in form and effect, and such declaration shall have the force of a final judgment. Such declaration may be had before there has been any breach of the obligation in' respect to which said declaration is sought.” (Italics ours.Tj

In the case of Strong v. Hancock, 201 Cal. 530, 542, 543 [258 Pac. 60, 65], counsel presented the question whether or not the enactment of section 1060, supra, required an abandonment of the rule, announced in Strong v. Shatto, that prior to the breach thereof an action would not lie at the suit of the owner of the servient tenement to quiet his title as against covenants or restrictions running with the land. We found it unnecessary to pass upon the point in that case for the reason that there had been filed by the defendant therein a cross-complaint alleging facts, found' to be true' by the trial court, entitling the defendant and cross-complainant to affirmative relief by way of approval and enforcement of the restrictions there involved. By reason of our conclusion to affirm the trial court’s findings and decree in that case we stated in the opinion that “We do not find it necessary to consider what the said plaintiff’s remedies might have been had we arrived at the conclusion that the cross-plaintiff was not entitled to the relief which the trial court accorded her.” However, in a special concurring opinion Mr. Justice Shenk expressed himself as satisfied that the declaratory relief statute set out above was sufficiently broad and comprehensive in its language to have application to this sort of action. He then stated: “This change in the law (the enactment of section 1060, supra) was . . . sufficient to enable the substituted plaintiff to proceed thereunder to have his status declared under the conditions as were then shown to exist, and this notwithstanding the old rule which required him to be hazardously active in the breach of such restrictions and passive in litigation.” We are inclined to agree with the *616 views of Mr. Justice .Shenk so succinctly stated in his concurring opinion in the Hancock case.

The pleadings in this case present a practical situation which calls for declaratory relief. The owner of a lot in a tract of land claims that certain restrictive covenants and conditions are no longer enforceable because of a change in the character of the neighborhood. The original grantor and the owners of other lots in the tract claim, on the contrary, that the covenants and conditions are still enforceable, that they constitute easements upon the lot in question and that their violation will be ground for injunctive relief and the forfeiture of the lot owner’s title. If the lot owner can obtain a declaration in his favor, he may safely proceed to improve his property as he wishes. If such a declaration is refused, he is put in the hazardous position of being obliged to violate the terms of the restrictions before he can know whether or not he must suffer the penalties mentioned. It is inconceivable that he must run the risk of forfeiting any further investment, or even his title to the land, in order to obtain an adjudication of his rights. It seems clear that the declaratory relief statute was intended to relieve a party from exactly such a dilemmarj Unless it can be availed of in a situation such as this, it will lose a large part of the value which, upon its enactment, was supposed to attach to it. Under the terms of the statute the declaration may be either affirmative or negative in form and effect, and in a case such as this the trial court is, therefore, empowered either to make a declaration, at the plaintiff’s request, that he is not under a duty to comply with the restrictive covenants, or, at the request of the defendants, to make a declaration that he is. That an “actual controversy” exists in such a case goes without saving.

This brings us to a consideration of the propriety of the findings and conclusion of the court below that the character of the neighborhood surrounding the plaintiffs’ lot has sufficiently changed to leave their property no longer useful or practical for residential purposes, thus rendering it inequitable and unjust to enforce the restrictions or to declare them to be valid subsisting easements.

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Bluebook (online)
2 P.2d 782, 213 Cal. 613, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hess-v-country-club-park-cal-1931.