Johnson v. Poteet

279 S.W. 902
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 21, 1925
DocketNo. 9572. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 279 S.W. 902 (Johnson v. Poteet) 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
Johnson v. Poteet, 279 S.W. 902 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

* Writ of error refused March 3, 1926. This appeal is from a decree in favor of the appellees perpetually enjoining W. B. Johnson, owner, and Arthur Garwick, contractor, from erecting a business house on certain lots of land owned by Johnson in the second installment of University Annex, an addition to the city of Dallas.

At the outset appellees insist that the court should not consider appellants' assignments of error, because they were not filed in the trial court and brought up as a part of the transcript.

The record shows that final judgment was rendered in this cause on August 26, 1925, and that the court's conclusions of fact and of law were not filed until on the 15th day of September, following. In this situation, appellants were not required to file their assignments in the trial court, but were clearly within their rights in presenting them as they have done in their brief filed in this court. Busbee v. Busbee (Tex.Civ.App.) 231 S.W. 441.

Appellees, plaintiffs below, alleged that they and appellants Johnson owned lots in the addition just named, holding under deed from G. W. Weibusch and Nathan Powell, common grantors; that, in the deed under which all parties claim, there were placed certain provisions restricting the use of the lots to residential purposes only, and excluding their use for business or commercial purposes; that these restrictions were imposed in pursuance of and under a general scheme and plan to create an exclusive residential district; that the same constituted covenants running with the land; that the deed records of Dallas county fully and completely disclosed this general plan and scheme, and that Johnson had both actual and constructive knowledge of the same at the time he acquired title to the lots owned by him, and that he took title with the obligation to comply with these restrictions; that these covenants were intended for the benefit, not only of the common grantors, but for all purchasers of lots in said addition, and that the plaintiffs purchased their lots with reference to and in reliance upon said scheme and plan, and are entitled to enforce the same as against appellants; that, with full knowledge of these facts, appellants, on August 5, 1925, began the erection of store buildings to be used for commercial purposes on the lots owned by Johnson, being lots 1 and 2, and 7 1/2 feet off of the south side of lot 3, in block A, of said addition, and that, unless restrained by the courts, they will complete said buildings in violation of the covenants, with the result that the general scheme and plan for a restricted residential district will be destroyed; that the same will rapidly become a commercial section, occupied by stores and other commercial enterprises, to the irreparable injury and damage of appellees.

In the answer of appellants a number of special defenses were urged, only one of which will be noticed; that is, to this effect, that owing to the use of the contiguous property in said addition for business and commercial purposes, the land of appellant *Page 903 Johnson has become unsuited for residence purposes and is now valuable only for business or commercial uses, and that under these changed conditions it would be inequitable to enjoin the use of the land for business purposes, and to do so would render it worthless.

The facts that we deem material for our consideration are that on January 7, 1911, the Country Home Realty Company conveyed to G. W. Weibusch 19 acres of land, containing certain restrictions regulating the cost and location of residences to be erected therein, but containing no prohibition against the use of the land for business or commercial purposes. Subsequently Weibusch conveyed to Nathan Powell an undivided one-half interest in the land, and in November, 1912, the same was platted by them into blocks, lots, streets, and alleys, and the plat was recorded in the county clerk's office of Dallas county and designated as University Annex addition, second installment. In order to widen one or more of the streets, and before any of the lots in the addition were sold, except lots 5 and 6 in block A, then owned by Rice R. Jackson, they replatted the property, being joined therein by Jackson, and this plat was recorded in the county clerk's office of Dallas county on April 7, 1920. It appears that Weibusch and Powell agreed between themselves to make the addition a restricted residential district, and, to this end, all deeds executed by them conveying lots in the addition, some 40 or more in number, except lots specifically mentioned below and probably a few others, contained restrictions limiting the use of the property for private dwellings and necessary outhouses and regulating the location and cost of same.

Owing to the inconvenience to people out there having to go to Highland Park to trade, they exempted from the plan and scheme, for business purposes, lots 5 and 6 in block A, owned by Jackson at the time the last plat was recorded, and later it appears that they conveyed to Jackson lot 4 and substantially all of lot 3 in said block, also without restriction as to use for business purposes. Thus the lots owned by Jackson, to wit, 6, 5, 4, and the major portion of 3 in said block, were by the grantors released from the restriction against their use for business or commercial purposes and, accordingly, business houses have been erected thereon in which businesses are now being conducted, including a drug store, grocery stores, and a public garage, the garage located on lot No. 3 immediately north and substantially on the property line dividing Jackson's property from that of appellant Johnson.

We fail to find in either plat of the addition that was recorded, or in any deed or other document executed by the common grantors, or by any of the parties, any evidence in writing of their intention to make of this addition a residential district, or of any general or uniform plan or scheme of development, or that the restrictive covenant contained in the deeds were for the benefit of all purchasers of lots in said addition. The evidence on these points is furnished by the testimony of Powell that he and Weibusch agreed and intended to make the addition a residential district; that the deeds executed by them to purchasers (with the exceptions noted) contained similar restrictions limiting the use of the property to residential purposes, and that a statement to this effect was made to each purchaser when lots were sold, and also certain hearsay, extant in the neighborhood, was admitted in evidence to the effect that the addition was reputed to be restricted to residence only.

It appears that block A, in which the land of appellant Johnson is located, is composed of 28 lots. Lots 1 to 6, inclusive, constitute the east side of said block and face east on Hillcrest avenue. This group of lots extends from Asbury avenue on the south through the block to Roberts on the north, and extends west 155 feet to a 16-foot alley that runs through the block from north to south and completely separates the group of lots, 1 to 6, above mentioned, from the other lots in the block. Eleven of these lots face north on Roberts, and 11 face south on Asbury avenue. Thus we have the situation; The 6 lots now owned by Jackson and appellant Johnson constituting the east side of block A facing east on Hillcrest avenue, completely segregated from the remaining portion of the block by a 16-foot alley on the west, and, of the other lots, 11 face north on Roberts, and 11 face south on Asbury.

Appellant Johnson claims title under a deed from the common grantors to J. Leonard Rea, dated May 17, 1920, containing several restrictions or covenants, among others the following:

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Bluebook (online)
279 S.W. 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-poteet-texapp-1925.