Hohman v. Bartel

865 P.2d 1301, 125 Or. App. 306, 1993 Ore. App. LEXIS 2109
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 15, 1993
Docket91CV120; CA A77153
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 865 P.2d 1301 (Hohman v. Bartel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hohman v. Bartel, 865 P.2d 1301, 125 Or. App. 306, 1993 Ore. App. LEXIS 2109 (Or. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

Plaintiffs brought this action seeking a declaratory judgment and an injunction to prevent defendants from building a house on defendants’ land. Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment that denied their claims for relief. On de novo review, ORS 19.125(3), we reverse.

The dispute in this case involves ocean-front property in Brookings. In 1964, Archie and Florence Anderson owned three adjoining lots: Lot 201, the most northerly lot; Lot 204, the middle lot; and Lot 300, the most southerly lot. In February, 1964, the Andersons sold the lots by separate deeds to Roy Cate. Each deed described the premises being conveyed in metes and bounds, and included the following provision:

“This conveyance is made subject to a special limitation that unless a single family home * * * shall be built * * * within three [two1] years of the date of this deed, and unless such single family dwelling shall be completed and habitable within said time, then this deed shall become forfeited and the premises herein described and all rights herein conveyed shall at once revert to and revest in and become the property of [the Andersons].
“This deed is made upon the condition subsequent that not more than one home and no outbuildings be constructed upon the hereinabove described premises.”

In August or September of 1964, Cate sold Lot 201 to Charles and Dorothy Sabin. Thereafter, the Sabins sold the lot to Robert and Edith Fox; then the Foxes sold it to Gordon and Pearlie Miller, and the Millers sold it to plaintiffs Lauen and McCotter. All deeds in the chain of title of Lot 201 contain the 1964 provision quoted above.

In May, 1966, the Andersons and Roy and Tracie Cate entered into separate agreements regarding Lots 204 and 300. Each agreement says:

“It is the desire of all of the parties hereto to delete the said special limitation [of the 1964 deed] so that there will be no time limitation for the construction of the dwelling referred to therein and no forfeiture in the event of the [309]*309failure to construct a dwelling thereon within any particular time.
“Said Roy E. Cate and Tracie Cate hereby declare the real property in said deed described to be subject to the following covenants and restrictions running with the land [sic] shall bind all parties and persons claiming under them for a period of twenty-five (25) years from the date of these covenants, after which time these covenants shall be automatically extended for successive periods of ten (10) years unless the then adjoining landowners agree by document in writing and recorded [sic] the alteration of said covenants and restrictions, to-wit
“1. Not more than one home and no outbuildings shall be constructed upon the premises described in the deed referred to.”

The deed and agreement referable to each lot do not refer to the other lot.

In January, 1968, Cate sold Lot 204 to Lottie and Preston Pauli, subject to the

“conditions and restrictions concerning the construction of a dwelling house, including the terms and provisions thereof, as set forth in deed recorded February 3, 1964 * * * and modified by instrument, including terms and provisions thereof, recorded May 25, 1966.”

Sometime before the Paulis applied to the City of Brookings for a minor partition of Lot 204 in May 1980, a house was built on Lot 204. There is no evidence that plaintiffs received notice of the request for the partition. The city granted the partition in July, 1980, thereby creating Lot 200 within the easterly part of Lot 204.

In February, 1981, the Paulis sold Lot 204 to Alvin Bernhard, and in June, 1989, they sold Lot 200 to defendants. Both conveyances made reference to the restrictions contained in the 1964 deed and in the 1966 agreement between the Andersons and the Cates. Also, defendants received a title report that disclosed the same restrictions. In July, 1968, the Cates sold Lot 300 to William and Marie Bowes. Plaintiffs Hohmans purchased Lot 300 from the Bowes in October, 1989. Hohmans’ deed is subject to the 1966 agreement between the Andersons and the Cates.

[310]*310Beginning in July, 1989, defendants wrote letters to Michael Hohman regarding various proposals for an easement across their property for joint utility lines and for a joint sewage system. In those letters, they revealed their plans to build a house. In February, 1990, defendants advised the Millers, who were plaintiffs Lauen and McCotter’s predecessors in interest in Lot 201, that they intended to build on Lot 200. In June, 1990, the Millers objected to the proposal. In March, 1991, plaintiffs Lauen and McCotter also objected to defendants’ plans to build.

Later in 1991, plaintiffs brought this action seeking a declaration that the 1966 agreement relating to Lot 204 prevents defendants from building on Lot 200. They argue that the agreement is enforceable as a restrictive covenant or as an equitable servitude. For a restrictive covenant to have been created by the contracting parties, a transfer of an interest in land that was benefitted by the covenant must have occurred. Because the 1966 agreement between the Andersons and the Cates did not include an exchange of an interest in land, the covenant could not run with the land and bind defendants as successors in interest.2 Hall v. Risley and Heikkila, 188 Or 69, 96-97, 213 P2d 818 (1950).

However, an equitable servitude can exist apart from a restrictive covenant. In Ebbe v. Senior Estates Golf, 61 Or App 398, 404, 657 P2d 696 (1983), we held:

“[Ejven if all technical requirements for a covenant to run with the land are not met, the promise is binding as an equitable servitude if (1) the parties intend the promise to be binding; (2) the promise ‘concernís] the land or its use in a direct and not a collateral way’; and (3) ‘the subsequent grantee [has] notice of the covenant, either actual or constructive.’ ” (Citations omitted.)

It is clear from the language of the 1966 agreement that the parties intended that the restriction that only one [311]*311house be built on Lot 204 would be binding on subsequent parties:

“ [We] hereby declare the real property in said deed described to be subject to the following covenants and restrictions running with the land [sic] shall bind all parties and persons claiming under them for a period of twenty-five (25) years from the date of these covenants, after which time these covenants shall be automatically extended for successive periods of ten (10) years * * (Emphasis supplied.)

The restriction concerns the use of the land in a direct manner. The notice requirement has also been met. Defendants had constructive notice of the restriction because of the references in their title report and deed. Their parcel of land was included in the metes and bounds description of Lot 204 in the 1964 deed. They also knew at the time they bought the land that there was already a house on Lot 204.

Defendants argue that even if those elements of an equitable servitude are satisfied, the Andersons and the Cates did not intend that the restriction imposed on Lot 204 be for the benefit of Lots 201 and 300.

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Related

Hohman v. Royce M.
876 P.2d 347 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1994)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
865 P.2d 1301, 125 Or. App. 306, 1993 Ore. App. LEXIS 2109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hohman-v-bartel-orctapp-1993.