Holloway v. Ransome

43 So. 2d 673, 216 La. 317, 1949 La. LEXIS 1049
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 9, 1949
DocketNo. 38726.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 43 So. 2d 673 (Holloway v. Ransome) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holloway v. Ransome, 43 So. 2d 673, 216 La. 317, 1949 La. LEXIS 1049 (La. 1949).

Opinion

HAWTHORNE, Justice.

Defendants and appellants, Clyde Ran-some and Ernest E. Moise, have appealed devolutively from a judgment in favor of plaintiff and appellee, Ernest James Holloway, enjoining and restraining the defendants from continuing with the construction of any building to be used for commercial purposes on Lot L of the Kostmayer Subdivision in the Parish of Jefferson, Lot L being the front portion of the original Lots C and D of the subdivision, as per plan of Eugene C. Graveley, surveyor, attached to an act before George C. Walshe, notary public, on August 17, 1915.

Plaintiff acquired Lot 7 in the Kostmayer Subdivision by notarial act on February 4, 1938, from the Dryades Building & Loan Association, and among the restrictions on the use of the property found in the deed we note the following: “The purchaser agrees to follow restrictions, which the vendor agrees to embody in all contracts: * * * That he will not sell, lease, or use said property, for business or commercial purposes. * * * ”

As a cause of action, plaintiff alleges that he is the owner of Lot 7 in the Kostmayer Subdivision; that the defendants are the owners of Lot L in the same subdivision; that in plaintiff’s deed of acquisition of his lot there are certain restrictions as to the use of the property; that these restrictions not only are applicable to his property but also are applicable to all prior sales of lots or portions of ground in the subdivision; that the Kostmayer Subdivision is strictly a residential section, and that the defendants are violating the restrictions as to the use of the property in that they are now erecting on the lot owned by them a building in which they propose to conduct, operate, and maintain a commercial business, a fish market.

Defendants in their answer admit that they are the owners of Lot L; that they propose to use the lot for business and commercial purposes, and that they are erecting thereon a building for the purpose of operating a commercial business which they designate as a “seafood establishment”. They deny that they are violating any restrictions as to the use of the lot owned by them, and that they are in any way restricted *321 from using the property for commercial purposes, since their deed of acquisition does not contain any such restrictions.

At the hearing in the lower court, after which .the judgment granting the preliminary injunction was rendered, plaintiff filed in evidence his deed of acquisition of Lot 7 with the restrictions therein as to its use, which we have quoted hereinabove, but filed no other deed in his chain of title. He filed several other deeds or conveyances of other lots in the subdivision, made by and to persons who are not parties to this suit. In these deeds there are embodied certain restrictions as to the use of the property described therein, and in several of these instruments the purchaser obligated himself, among other things, not to use the property for commercial purposes, and the vendor in the latter instruments, John G. Kostmayer, agreed to embody these restrictions in all contracts.

Defendants in support of their contention also offered and filed in evidence numerous acts of sale covering lots in the subdivision other than those owned by the parties to this suit, and in these deeds there appear no restrictions as to the use of the property. They also filed in evidence their deed of acquisition and all deeds in their chain of title back to John G. Kostmayer, who, according to defendants’ brief, was the original owner and subdivider of the tract of land now known as the Kostmayer Subdivision. (This statement in the brief is in no way negatived by anything in the record.) There is no restriction whatsoever as to the use of the property described in defendants’ own deed, nor is there any such restriction in any of the deeds in their chain of title back to Kostmayer. On the contrary, in defendants’ own deed we find the following provision: “Property can be used for commercial no restrictions in title." In the record we find also a map or plat of the Kostmayer Subdivision, on which no restrictions as to the use of the property are shown.

Restrictions upon the use to which real property may be put have been likened by this court to servitudes, and the Civil Code recognizes the validity of a servitude similar in character to the restrictions sought to be enforced in the instant case.

Tn the case of Ouachita Home Site & Realty Co., Inc., v. Collie et al., 189 La. 521, 179 So. 841, 842, there was a stipulation in the defendants’ chain of title to the property that it could be used only for residential purposes. In recognizing the validity of this restriction as to the use of the property, this court in the course of its opinion had this to say:

“While a condition of perpetual inalienability of real estate under our law is void as putting property out of commerce and contrary to public policy, there is nothing in our law which forbids contracts for the use or nonuse of real estate, provided the use or nonuse of the property be not contrary to good morals or the public welfare. * * *

*323 * * * * . * *

"Restrictions upon the usé to which real' property may be put may be likened to servitudes which are specifically recognized and provided for under the Code, and it cannot be disputed that a servitude legally established and valid in character is enforcable. Article 709 of the Civil Code provides in part:

“ ‘Owners have a right to establish on their estates, or in favor of their estates, such servitudes'as they deem proper; provided, nevertheless, that the services be not imposed on the person or in favor of the person, but only on an estate or in favor of an estate; and provided, moreover, that such services imply nothing contrary to public order.’

“And Article 728 of the Civil Code expressly recognizes the validity of a servitude similar in character to the restrictions sought to be enforced in this case. The Codal article provides:

“ ‘Again, servitudes are either visible and apparent or nonapparent.

“ ‘Apparent servitudes are such as are to be. perceivable by exterior work; such as a dpor, a window, an aqueduct.

■ “ ‘Nonapparent servitudes are such as have no' exterior sign of their existence ; such, for instance, as the prohibition of building on an estate, or of building above a particular height.’ (Writer’s italics.)

“Under the jurisprudence and Codal articles to which we have referred, we do not think it can be disputed that building restrictions which restrain the use of real property for commercial purposes by prohibiting the construction of any building other than a residence or residences, and which insure a high type of construction by placing a minimum value upon any residence that may be built thereon, are not unreasonable and are not contrary to good morals, public order or express law, and, hence, they are not invalid and unforceable, since the restrictions are upon the use and not upon the alienability of the property.” (Italic-s ours.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 So. 2d 673, 216 La. 317, 1949 La. LEXIS 1049, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holloway-v-ransome-la-1949.