Hill v. Trigg

272 S.W. 237, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 262
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 1925
DocketNo. 7354.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 272 S.W. 237 (Hill v. Trigg) 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
Hill v. Trigg, 272 S.W. 237, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 262 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

FLY, C. J.

This action was instituted by ■appellees R. K. Trigg, W. S. Ferrell, H. L. Crow, and Texas Woman’s College against Sid Hill, F. B. Remer, and Mrs. Bonnie Hay-slip, feme sole, through a voluminous petition ; the prayer being for the forfeiture of title to blocks 7 and 8 in West Handley, Tex., and its investiture in appellees and other lot owners in Erie Hill Place, a restricted residential district, the said blocks being divided into eight lots each. In the alternative was a prayer for a mandatory order requiring appellants “to arrange, change, and conform the buildings on their said lots so as to front on Private Park in keeping with said plat, general building scheme and said restrictive covenants of Erie Hill Place, and so as to prevent further injury to the plaintiffs in their property rights and in the peaceful, quiet enjoyment and use thereof.” Another alternative was presented that appellants pay ap-pellees damages in the sum of $10,000. The cause was submitted to a jury on 18 special issues by the court and four requested by appellants, and on the answers thereto judgment was rendered that Sid Hill be required, within 60 days; to “change and conform his lot or place O, in Erie Hill Place, in said Tar-rant county, Tex., so as to front north on Private Park in keeping with the plat, general building scheme, and restricted covenants of Erie Hill Place, so as to prevent further injuries to the plaintiffs in their property and property rights and in the peaceful and quiet enjoyment thereof.” It is recited in the judgment that' F. B. Remer and Mrs. Bonnie Hayslip had entered into an agreement with appellees, since the filing of the suit, to conform to the covenants in the deeds, and the suit had been dismissed as to them.

In answer to the issues submitted to them the jury found that Sid Hill, when he accepted a deed to his lot described as ¡'0,7 in the subdivision known as “Erie Hill Place,” had actual knowledge of the general plan, and scheme of the subdivision, and with such actual knowledge of the requirements and restrictions as to the direction the houses should face, namely, on a street .or highway known as “Private Park.” The jury also found that Sid Hill had constructive notice of the requirements as to the erection’ of buildings in the subdivision; that his father was his duly authorized agent in the purchase of lot O; that said agent had actual notice or knowledge of the general scheme and plan as to the subdivision; and that it required the facing of buildings erected on lot O towards the north on “Private.Park,” and acted as the agent of Sid Hill in the erection of buildings on lot O. The jury also found that appellees were damaged each in a certain sum by a refusal on the part of Sid Hill to conform to the requirements as to building in the subdivision. The jury in response to 'issues submitted by Sid Hill found that, when he received notice as to the scheme of building in the subdivision, he had not progressed so far in the construction of his house as to have sustained financial loss by a change so as to face the building towards the north; that Lewis Waters and Roy Brace- *238 well had notice of the building restrictions when they purchased their lots. Lewis Waters was the immediate vendor of appellant, and Roy Bracewell was the vendor of Lewis Waters. The findings of the jury are sustained by the statement of facts; and we further conclude that IX E. Phillips, who owned blocks 7 and 8 of West Handley, a portion of the G. N. Butts survey, adopted a plan for said blocks and named them Erie Hill Place, and placed on record in Tarrant county records of deeds the adoption of the plans, with a map thereof. This was done on May 26, 1910. On June 18, 1910, a warranty deed was executed by D. E. Phillips and Cora Phillips, his wife, to George Mulkey, conveying to him places A, H, M, and N, shown on the plat or map, and in that deed was the following condition or restriction:

“All residences which inay be built upon the land herein conveyed shall front the private parks as shown on the plat, and any failure so to do will cause forfeiture of all rights, title and interest to the property herein conveyed, and ownership shall, without release or conveyance or without suit or other action, be vested equally in the respective owners of each of the other places in this block.”

The same condition was carried into a deed by Phillips and wife, conveying to Mul-key place C on said plat,- and in a warranty deed by the same vendors to A. S. Carter to places E and E, and in warranty deed from the same vendor to Mrs. Tims to place B, and to Roy Bracewell to place O. In all these deeds the condition was made as in the deed to George Mulkey. Roy Bracewell and wife sold place O to Lewis Waters, who sold it to Sid Hill, and in the deed the land was described as:

“All that certain tract or parcel of land lying and being situated in Tarrant county, Texas, and more fully described as follows: Lot O, Erie Hill Place, a subdivision of Biles. Nos. seven (7) and eight (8), West Handley, Texas, and all improvements thereon.”

In the deed from the Bracewells to Waters the land was described as:

“All that certain lot of land known and described as place lettered ‘O’ Erie Hill Place, in Tarrant county, Texas." Shown by plat recorded in book 310, page 55, plat records of Tarrant Co., Tex.”

Not only was appellant put upon notice through his chain of title of the restrictions and conditions bearing upon his land, but he had actual knowledge of such conditions. He had an abstract of title showing the conditions of the deeds made by Phillips and wife. The plat of the land was in the abstract. He knew that the block's had been laid out with a park or street running through," and that the sidewalks had been built along the south side of the north lots and north side of the south lots. He knew that the houses being built on the two blocks were fronted on the-private park. Appellant alone of all the purchasers and residents seeks to place the rear of his place in the direction the others’ front, and he alone in contravention of the conditions made when the two blocks were made a residential district desires to front his building in a contrary direction from that of his-neighbors. Appellant bought with full knowledge of the conditions in the deed from Phillips to Bracewell, through whom he claims.

The evidence shows indubitably that there was a general scheme for the building district which Phillips had mapped, platted, and laid out, and that this scheme was open and apparent to every one who purchased a lot in-the addition designated Erie Hill Place. The idea was to lay out each block in eight lots; the blocks being separated from each other by a "50 foot street and a park or street 50 feet wide; 20 feet being allowed for a street along the north side of the south lots, and one the same width along the south side of the north lots, with a parking 10 feet wide between the two 20 feet streets. It was intended and so provided that each house built on the two blocks should front on the street running through the blocks. All these matters are-clearly evidenced by the recorded plat as well as by the provisions in the deeds made by Phillips. There was a general plan strictly adhered to until appellant chose to disregard it and to act in defiance of the plan for a restricted residential district. No lots were shown to have been sold by Phillips without the restrictions, but if there had been that would not destroy the well-laid plan shown by the recorded plat.

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Related

Atkinson v. England
22 S.E.2d 798 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1942)
Hill v. Trigg
286 S.W. 182 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 S.W. 237, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-trigg-texapp-1925.