Metropolitan Investment Company v. Sine

376 P.2d 940, 14 Utah 2d 36, 1962 Utah LEXIS 245
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1962
Docket9622
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 376 P.2d 940 (Metropolitan Investment Company v. Sine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Investment Company v. Sine, 376 P.2d 940, 14 Utah 2d 36, 1962 Utah LEXIS 245 (Utah 1962).

Opinion

COWLEY, District Judge.

Plaintiff brought this action to quiet title to a parcel of property hereinafter described. The cloud alleged is a restrictive covenant contained in an assignment of contract and quitclaim deed. The case was tried to the court and from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff eliminating the restrictive covenant, defendants appeal.

This case involves a parcel of property located at 324 West North Temple Street, in Salt Lake City, Utah. The parcel is 40 feet wide and 97 feet deep. The 40 feet constitute frontage on the north side of North Temple Street between 2nd and 3rd West streets. Defendants purchased this property on September 24, 19SS, by contract from one Fendrelakis and resold it to A. P. Neilson on October 29, 1956. This latter transaction consisted of a quitclaim deed and the assignment of the Fendrelakis contract executed by Jerry Sine and Dora Sine, his wife, the defendants, in favor of A. P. Neilson. This property contained an old apartment house which had been remodeled from an older home, consisting of eight units which since has been razed. The quitclaim deed signed by the defendants was duly recorded in the office of the County Recorder of Salt Lake County, Utah.

At the time defendant Jerry Sine sold the subject property to A. P. Neilson he was dealing with Mr. Neilson’s real estate agent and upon learning that A. P. Neilson was the same Mr. Neilson who was interested in a large motel property in Salt Lake City, he, Jerry Sine, required as a condition of sale to A. P. Neilson that the following restrictive covenant be written in the assignment of contract and quitclaim deed, “This property shall not be used for the erection of a motel thereon.” This restrictive covenant was agreed to by A. P. Neilson at the time of the transaction, and is the subject of this lawsuit which plaintiff seeks to vitiate.

The record reveals that A. P. Neilson purchased the property in question not only for himself but on behalf of his two partners as well. On November 5, 1956, a few days after A. P. Neilson acquired the property from the defendants, he conveyed an undivided one-third interest to each of the *39 other two partners, W. Adrian Wright and W. Meeks Wirthlin. A short time thereafter, on November 21, 1956, the three named partners, their wives joining, conveyed their respective undivided one-third interest to the Metropolitan Investment Company, a partnership composed of the three above named persons, the plaintiff herein.

The defendants, Jerry Sine and Dora T. Sine, his wife, are partners who have engaged in the motel business for approximately 14 years. They operate two motels, one known as the Se Rancho Motor Lodge at 640 West North Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah, about three blocks west of the property in question, and Scotty’s Romney Motel located on North Temple Street, between 6th and 7th West, approximately four blocks west of the subject property. Both motels are located on the north side of North Temple Street as is the property in question. Said motel properties are separated from the subject property by the Salt Lake Viaduct and railroad tracks. It was these two motel properties that defendants were attempting to protect when they imposed the restrictive covenant in the assignment of contract and quitclaim deed conveyed to A. P. Neilson.

At the time of the purchase of the property by A. P. Neilson neither he nor the partnership, Metropolitan Investment Com'pany, which acquired title three weeks later, contemplated the construction of a motel! thereon, but purchased the property for other purposes. However, circumstances, have now changed which renders the use of the subject property desirable as part of a large motel development as will appear hereafter.

Plaintiff also purchased parcels of property surrounding the property in question,, except two parcels, and on September 30, 1960, sold the surrounding and subject property to the Western Travel, Inc., a corporation engaged in the motel business, for a large sum of cash and about 12% of the stock in Western Travel, Inc. The Western Travel purchased the two parcels mentioned from third parties directly. The motel company now owns in addition to the subject property all the adjacent property surrounding it on three sides. The Western Travel, Inc., plans to construct a motel development of approximately 130 units, together with a restaurant and swimming pool, on the entire tract, including the property in question, if allowed as a result of this appeal.

If the subject property can be utilized as part of this motel development, the architectural design for the frontage on North Temple Street will be more imposing and attractive, and the number of units can , be increased by approximately six. The subject property, therefore, is of such a nature as to prevent the optimum use of the adjoining properties owned by' Western *40 Travel since it constitutes a peninsula 40 feet by 97 feet into the surrounding properties. If the Western Travel is not permitted to use the property in question in its proposed motel development, the corporation intends, nevertheless, to construct a motel on the adjacent and surrounding properties, exclusive of the property in question.

There is no question of notice of the restrictive covenant in this case as all parties, including the motel corporation, had actual and constructive notice of the restriction.

The plaintiff, in selling the properties to Western Travel, agreed to test the restrictive covenant in question on behalf of the motel corporation and therefore brought this action as plaintiff. Other facts will appear in the opinion.

The trial court’s judgment for the plaintiff was based upon three findings which defendants attack on this appeal in seeking a reversal. They, are, (1) that since October, 1956, there has been a great and substantial change in the neighborhood and area of the property in question, (2) that the restrictive covenant is not a benefit to the defendants but only serves as a detriment to the plaintiff, and (3) that the said Restriction was intended to prevent A. P. Neilson personally from constructing a motel upon said premises. We shall discuss the above three issues in the order set forth.

The facts which the trial court found in support of the nullification of the restrictive covenant are facts which require clear and convincing evidence to support such findings. 1 This is an equity case in which we review the trial court’s findings of fact but overturn them only where it is manifest that the trial court has misapplied proven facts or made findings clearly against the weight of the evidence. 2

The trial court’s finding that there has been a great and substantial change in the neighborhood and area involved was based solely on the increased business construction and activity since October, 1956, when the restrictive covenant was imposed by the defendants. In 1956 there were at least four motels in operation on North Temple Street between West Temple and Third West Streets consisting of a total of 92 units. The increased business in this area since 1956 includes several new motels with a substantial increase in the number of units, Harmon Cafe, two Service Stations, at least one parking lot, and some older buildings which have been torn down or razed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
376 P.2d 940, 14 Utah 2d 36, 1962 Utah LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-investment-company-v-sine-utah-1962.