McKee v. Club-View Heights, Inc.

162 So. 671, 230 Ala. 652, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 300
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 27, 1935
Docket7 Div. 332.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 162 So. 671 (McKee v. Club-View Heights, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKee v. Club-View Heights, Inc., 162 So. 671, 230 Ala. 652, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 300 (Ala. 1935).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

The original bill was filed April 24, 1931, by appellee and twelve of its grantees, each the owner of a residence in Club-View Heights addition to the city of Anniston, Ala., against appellant to enjoin and restrain him from maintaining as a residence on a lot in said addition purchased by him from appellee, a combination servant’s house and garage erected at a cost of from $1,000 to $1,300, alleged to be in violation of the restrictive covenants in the deed of conveyance executed to him by appellee.

The bill alleges, in short, that all the land embraced in said addition was originally owned by appellee, Club-View Heights, Inc.; that appellee laid out and promoted said addition to said city as an exclusive residential district “in pursuance of a uniform scheme of residential planning”; that said addition consists of 140 lots, of which about 40 had been sold to different and sundry persons for residential purposes ; that in all conveyances made to the lots in said addition there was embodied the same restrictive covenants as those incorporated in the conveyance to appellant, except that the required costs of construction of residences varied, according to the location of the respective lots, from $2,500 to $5,000.

The conveyance to appellant was of lot No. 8 in block 565, as designated on the map of Club-View Heights, subdivision, and the restrictive covenants embodied are:

“This conveyance, however, is made on the following conditions, which shall be construed as covenants that run with the land, and shall be binding on the grantee and on his successors and assigns until November 1, 1946, as follows, to-wit:
“1. The said land shall be used only for residential purposes, and no business house or public garage shall be constructed thereon.
“2. That no dwelling house built on the said land shall be so constructed that its front line (which means the front line of any porch or other projection not counting steps) shall be less than thirty feet back > from the front property line of the said land.
“3. That the construction cost of all buildings, including garage and servant’s house, if any, erected on the land shall not be less than Thirty-five hundred dollars.
“4. That not more than one dwelling shall be constructed on each lot, except that necessary garages and servant’s house may be erected on the same.
“5. That not less than sixty feet in width of land, except where the lots as shown on the plat are less than sixty feet, shall be used for the premises of each dwelling built on the said land.”

By his answer the appellant disavows any knowledge as to what, if any, restrictive covenants were embraced in the deeds to other grantees, or as to the alleged “scheme of residential planning,” but admits that his deed embodied said covenants, of which he had knowledge, but he avers that said covenants “did not specify that the cost of all buildings, including servant’s house and garage, if any, should be erected contemporaneously, although specifying that the total cost of all three should be $3,500.00, it *654 did not specify that all three should he erected at the same time. * * * that the building that he erected on the rear end of said lot along the alley was erected to be used temporarily by him in good faith as a servant’s house and garage. He fully intended when the financial situation improves, which the respondent avers is now most acute, * * * to convert the property that he is now occupying and using into a servant’s house and garage, and that he is occupying it temporarily as a residence until he can erect his main residence, which at this time respondent avers is not practicable or feasible as he can not raise necessary finances to construct same. * * * • that the covenant in said deed to him from the Club-View Heights Company * * * prescribes neither time limit, nor exact order in which house shall be built on the lot, nor is there found 'any restrictive covenant in said deed as to the cost of servants’ houses, garages, etc., wherefore respondent says that the building he erected upon said lot, he did so with the bona fide intention within a reasonable time thereafter of erecting a main residence on the front end of the lot in strict compliance with the restrictive covenant contained in said deed, wherefore respondent says he has not violated in any manner any restrictive covenant of said deed.”

The answer was filed October 18, 1932, after a general demurrer for want of equity, interposed to the original bill, had been overruled.

Thereafter, on November 8, 1933, the respondent filed a demurrer to the original bill, questioning its sufficiency for failing to show any privity of contract between the complainants; grantees, and the respondent, and for failing to allege that the “uniform scheme of residential planning” was incorporated in the deeds executed to purchasers of lots in said addition, and on other grounds.

Thereafter, on September 7, 1934, the complainants amended the bill by striking as parties complainant all of the complainants, grantees, leaving the appellee, Club-View Heights, Inc., as the sole complainant.

The respondent thereupon refiled the demurrers filed in November, 1933, additional demurrers to the bill as amended, and several additional specific grounds of demurrer to the bill as amended.

However, it does, not appear from the record that the cause was submitted for decree on the demurrer filed in November, 1933, or as refiled with the additional grounds in September, 1934.

The testimony was taken by oral examination of the witnesses in the presence of the court, and was submitted for final decree on the bill as amended, the answer and the proof on January 24, 1935; and on February 13, 1935, the court entered a final decree granting the complainant relief, permanently enjoining the respondent, after the expiration of eighteen months from the date of the decree, “from maintaining upon that parcel of real estate situated in the City of Anniston, Calhoun County, State of Alabama, known and designated on the map of Club-View Heights subdivision as Lot No. 8, in Block No. 565, the structures now thereon, unless within eighteen months from this date there shall have been erected or built upon said tract, and completed, additional structures (consisting of garage or servant’s house or garage and servant’s house), costing not less than $2,300.00, or a combination (costing not less than $2,-300.00) of new structures and additions or extensions to present structures,” specifying further the manner of compliance, and the court retaining jurisdiction to enforce the decree.

It is well settled by the repeated decisions of this court that the owner of land, in making a sale thereof, may retain an easement or impose a servitude in the land sold, and, when not in restraint of trade, may retain in himself certain uses,, which would otherwise pass to the grantee. “Such retention, or limitation of the use,, being a condition upon which the estate is acquired, attaches as an infirmity in the estate itself, and as a privilege or easement in the estate .of the grantor, in whose favor the limitation is imposed.” Webb v. Robbins, 77 Ala. 176, 183.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 So. 671, 230 Ala. 652, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckee-v-club-view-heights-inc-ala-1935.