Lakewood Heights Co. v. McCuistion

226 S.W. 1109, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1214
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 18, 1920
DocketNo. 8400.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 1109 (Lakewood Heights Co. v. McCuistion) 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
Lakewood Heights Co. v. McCuistion, 226 S.W. 1109, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1214 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

C. E. McCuistion and his wife, Susie McCuistion, defendants in error, hereinafter designated as plaintiffs, sued the plaintiffs in error, hereinafter designated as defendant, and Dan Sonnentheil to recover damages in the sum of $4,500. Plaintiffs alleged, in substance, that on the 1st day of March, 1915, the defendant Lakewood Heights Company, a private corporation, acting by and through its president, Dan Son-nentheil, and its secretary, Louis C. Sonnen-theil, conveyed to B. F. Germany lot No. 7 in block No. 8 in Lakewood Heights, an addition .to the city of Dallas, Tex., for the consideration of $4,350 paid and to be paid; that thereafter, on, to-wit, the 20th day of March, 1915, the said Germany and his wife, for and in consideration of $4,800 paid and secured to be paid by the said C. E. McCuistion, acting on behalf of the plaintiffs, sold and conveyed to the said C. E. McCuistion said lot of land, together with all improvements thereon, which then became the homestead of plaintiffs and the separate property of the plaintiff Mrs. Susie McCuistion; that on February 2, 1915, and prior to the execution of. the deed by the defendant to B. F. Germany, the defendant made and entered into a written contract with 'the said B. F. Germany whereby the defendant contracted to sell the lot of land in question to the said Germany for $850, and to supply him with funds with which to construct a two-story ten-room house thereon to cost not exceeding $4,250, and to furnish the said Germany sewerage, water, and electric lights by the time the house was completed, and, in the event a street car line should not be completed to Lakewood Heights at the time of the completion of the house, to furnish free transportation to the Belmont car line until street car service should be furnished at Lakewood, said street ear service or free transportation to begin not later than May 1, 1915. This contract was set out in hsec verba in the petition. Plaintiffs further allege that before they purchased said property they went over the same and inspected the premises and the adjoining lots for sale in said Lakewood Heights addition, “and found large placards or signboards on which there were large letters reading, in substance, that the Lakewood Heights Company, defendant herein, guaranteed -to purchasers of *1110 lots sewerage, gas, water, macadamized streets, and street cars”; that defendants through their agents issued and put in circulation and delivered to plaintiffs large pamphlets and printed documents, and caused to be published in newspapers the marvelous story of Lakewood I-Ieights addition development, in which they reiterated and repromised to the owner or any purchaser of any lot in said addition immediate gas, street car service or free transportation, a perfect sewer system, plenty of water, and macadamized streets; that the foregoing is the substance of the representations made by the defendants to the general public and especially to those desiring to purchase lots in Lakewood Heights addition. Plaintiffs further averred that the plaintiff O. E. Mc-Cuistion called upon the defendant Dan Son-nentheil, personally, before plaintiffs purchased the land involved in this suit from B. E. Germany and was shown the contract between the defendant and Germany and was promised and assured by the defendant through Sonnentheil, its agent, that defendant would render performance to plaintiffs of the said contract with Germany; that plaintiffs inquired of the said Sonnentheil, who was the agent of the defendant Lakewood Heights Company in making sales of lots in Lakewood Heights addition, as to the time within which said company would furnish said macadamized streets, sewerage, gas, water, and street railway in said addition for the use of the purchasers of lots in said addition, an'd when the same would be furnished with reference to the lot which had been sold to B. F. Germany, at the same time telling. the said Sonnentheil that he (McCuistion) was negotiating with the said Germany for the purchase of said lot, and that the said Sonnentheil assured him (plaintiff) “that all of said conveniences would be furnished the said addition by the 1st day of May, 1915, and told plaintiff that he could absolutely rely upon it in making the purchase of said property,” all of which representations and statements were false; that said statements, representations, and promises were made by the defendants for the purpose of inducing the plaintiffs to purchase from B. F. Germany the land and premises involved in this suit and to induce others to purchase other property in said Lakewood Heights addition owned by defendants; that plaintiffs, in purchasing the lot and premises in question from B. F. Germany, relied upon the statements, representations, promises, and assurances on the part of the defendants and believed they were made in good faith, and that their promises to furnish Lakewood Heights addition with street car service, sewerage, gas, water, and macadamized streets by May 1, 1915, would be fulfilled, otherwise they would not have bought from B. F. Germany. Plaintiffs alleged that the lot, with the improvements thereon, purchased by them from Germany, furnished with macadamized streets/ sewerage, gas, water, and electric lights, would have been, on May 1, 1915, of the reasonable value of $6,000, and without said conveniences the reasonable value thereof on • the 1st day of ¡May, 1915, was not more than $2,500. The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, and upon the findings made the court rendered judgment in favor of Sonnentheil and in favor of the plaintiffs against the defendant Lakewood Heights Company for $1,230, and said company perfected a writ of error to this court.

[1] The first question presented is whether or not the defendant’s .contract to furnish B. F. Germany sewerage, water, electric lights, and free transportation to the Belmont car line in the city of Dallas was a covenant running with the land. The plaintiffs assert that it was, and the defendant insists that it was not, and, standing alone, could not afford the plaintiffs, who were strangers to that contract, the basis of a cause of action against the defendant. We have reached the conclusion that under decisions of this state the appellant’s views are correct. In Railway Co. v. Smith, 72 Tex. 122, 9 S. W. 865, 2 L. R. A. 281, Guy M. Bryan had granted, by deed, to the railway company the right of way across a tract of land owned by him. There was a stipulation in the deed to the effect that, under certain conditions, the railway company should keep its right of way fenced. Bryan sold the land and a remote vendor brought suit against the railway company for damages for breach of the covenant. The court held that the covenant did not run with the land and that the plaintiff showed no cause of action. The court said:

“There has been much discussion in the eases turning upon this point ‘concerning express covenants and covenants in law, and which covenants run with the land and which of them are collateral and do not go with the land; and where the assignee shall be bound, without naming him, and where not.’ In Spencer’s Case, 3 Coke, 31, which is recognized as the leading authority upon this subject, the rule is said to be that when the covenant extends to- a thing in esse, part of the demise, the thing to be done by force of the covenant, is annexed and appurtenant to the thing demised, and shall go with the land and bind the assignee though he be not bound by express words; but when the covenant extends, to a thing which is not in being at the time of the demise made, it cannot be appurtenant or annexed to the-thing which has no being.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 1109, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakewood-heights-co-v-mccuistion-texapp-1920.