Kraemer v. Shelley

198 S.W.2d 679, 355 Mo. 814, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 510
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 9, 1946
DocketNo. 39997.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 198 S.W.2d 679 (Kraemer v. Shelley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kraemer v. Shelley, 198 S.W.2d 679, 355 Mo. 814, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 510 (Mo. 1946).

Opinion

*819 DOUGLAS, J.

This is a suit to enforce restrictions against the occupancy of property by negroes. From a judgment holding the restrictions invalid, plaintiffs appeal.

In 1911 some of the owners of .the property fronting on both sides of Labadie Avenue in the double blocks between Taylor Avenue on the east and Cora Avenue on the west in the city of St. Louis signed the restrictive agreement set out below. Thirty out of a total of thirty-nine owners signed the agreement. Of the .nine owners who did not sign, five were negroes. Negroes had occupied one parcel since 1882. The entire district comprised fifty-seven parcels divided into sixty-one lots. The thirty parties who signed the agreement owned forty-seven parcels or forty-eight lots having a' total frontage of 1245 feet. The nine owners who failed to sign, including the five negroes, owned ten,parcels or thirteen lots having a total frontage of 324 feet. The parcels owned by the negroes bore house numbers 4562, 4604, 4608, 4610 and 4614. The parcel involved in this case, which is covered by the agreement, is number 4600. It was purchased from white owners through a real estate firm, placed in the name of a white person who was a straw party, defendant Fitzgérald, and transferred to defendants Shelley and his wife, negroes, who are occupying the premises. Plaintiffs are the owners of a parcel in the district covered by the agreement. They seek an injunction against defendants Shelleys’ occupancy and ask that title be divested out of them.

The agreement which was duly recorded in the office of the Eecorder of Deeds is as follows: “This contract of restrictions made and entered into by the undersigned, the owners of the property fronting *820 on Labadie Avenue in Blocks 3710-B and 3711-B between Cora Avenue on the West and Taylor Avenue on the East, Witnesseth: That for and in consideration of one dollar and other valuable considerations paid by the undersigned, one to the other, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, • each and every one of the undersigned persons hereby contract and agree with the • other and for the benefit of all to place, and do place and make upon the Real Estate fronting on Labadie Avenue and running back to the alley on the North and South sides of Labadie Avenue between Taylor Avenue and Cora Avenue, a restriction, which is to run with the title of said property in favor of each and every one of the undersigned parties, and their assigns and legal representatives and successors as the owners of this property, which shall not be removed except by the consent of all of the property owners by some instrument or Deed, made and Executed and put of -record, the said property is hereby restricted to the use and occupancy for the term of Fifty- (50) years from this date, so that it shall be a condition all the time and whether recited and referred to or not in subsequent conveyances and shall attach to the land as a condition precedent to the, sale of the same, that hereafter no part of said property or any portion thereof shall be, for said term of Fifty-years, occupied by any person not of the Caucasian race, it being intended hereby to restrict the use of said property for said period of time against the occupancy as owners or tenants of airy portion of said property for resident or other purpose by people of the Negro or Mongolian Race. It is further contracted and agreed that upon a violation of this restriction either one or all of the parties to this agreement shall be permitted and authorized to bring suit or suits at law or in equity to enforce this restriction as to the use and occupancy of said property in any Court or Courts and to forfeit the title tó any lot or portion of lot that may be used in violation of this Restriction for the benefit of each and every person that may now or hereafter, after the recording of this restriction, become the owner of any property on said street. To have and to hold each to the other their said property, subject, however, always and under all conditions to the terms of this restriction, each warranting to the other the compliance in every respect of the above restrictions. In Testimony whereof, the parties hereto have signed their name and seal this the 16th day of February, 1911.”

The chancellor ruled it was the intention of the parties to the restrictive agreement, as shown by the terms of the agreement, that all the property within the district was to be covered by the restrictions. Therefore, since the owners of some of the parcels did not sign the agreement leaving some of the property not covered, the chancellor concluded he was bound by the ruling in Thornhill v. Herdt (Mo. App.), 130 S. W. (2d) 175, and held the agreement never became final and complete and was of no force.

*821 The restrictive agreement in Thornhill v. Herdt designated as parties all of the owners of property within the proposed district, and the court there found it was essential to the intent of the agreement that all the property should be covered. That decision is applicable here only if we find that the agreement in this ease shows the same intent to bind all or none.

“The primary consideration in the construction of a restrictive agreement — just as in the case of the construction of any other character of instrument — is to ascertain and give effect to the true intention of the contracting parties as the same may be gathered from the terms of the agreement itself when considered in the light of all the facts and circumstances attending its execution.” Thornhill v. Herdt, supra.

Keeping this rule in mind we find it was' not the intention of the parties that the agreement in this case should become effective only if every owner in the district would join as a party to it, so that the chancellor’s conclusion to the contrary is erroneous. The agreement by its terms intended to cover only the property of those owners who signed it. Nowhere does the agreement designate all the owners as parties. It is limited to “the undersigned,” who are then described as “the owners of the property fronting on Labadie Avenue.” The expressed consideration passed between “the undersigned, one to the other.” It was “each and every one of the undersigned persons” who subjected their parcels to the restriction. The restriction runs*in favor of “the undersigned parties.” Only “parties to this agreement” are authorized to bring suit to enforce the restriction. It would seem to us by the repeated use of the term “undersigned” and the reference to the “parties” to this agreement that the agreement was intended to cover only the parcels owned by those who became parties'to it and to be effective as to them whether all signed or not. There is no mention in the agreement that its validity is conditioned on the joining of all or any particular number of the owners-.

When we look to the surrounding circumstances our view of the intent of the agreement finds even stronger support. At the time the agreement was executed negroes owned five parcels in the district. Could they be expected to join in an agreement which would make their occupancy of their own property a ground for forfeiting their title? We say emphatically not. Although these five parcels were occupied by negroes when the agreement was made the district was then some distance from predominately negro sections. Obviously it could not have been the intention of the parties to prevent any negro occupancy at all because that already existed.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W.2d 679, 355 Mo. 814, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kraemer-v-shelley-mo-1946.