Miller v. Klein

160 S.W. 562, 177 Mo. App. 557, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 62
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 4, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 160 S.W. 562 (Miller v. Klein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Klein, 160 S.W. 562, 177 Mo. App. 557, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 62 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

ALLEN, J.

This is a suit to enjoin the defendants from erecting what is known as flats or apartment buildings upon certain parcels of land in the city of St. Louis, upon the ground that the same would be in violation of certain, restrictions imposed by deed upon the use thereof. Defendant Klein is the owner of the land in question, and the defendant Robinson had contracted with his co-defendant, Klein, to erect thereupon, for the latter, buildings of the character mentioned. Plaintiff is the owner of a lot of ground [564]*564in the vicinity of that of defendant Klein, subject to the same restrictions and imposed by the same deed as those affecting the property of defendant Klein, and upon which she has erected a residence. The court below found the issues in favor of plaintiff and entered a decree perpetually enjoining the defendants from erecting the buildings in question; from which judgment the defendants prosecute this appeal’.

It appears that in the year 1905 the West End Realty Company, a corporation, owned a tract of land in the city of St. Louis, bounded on the north by Delmar avenue, a street of said city, on the east by the River Des Peres and the right-of-way of the Wabash Railroad Company, on the south by the right-of-way of the St. Louis, Kansas City & Colorado’ Railway Company, and on the west by Slrinker road, another street of said city. Said property was then unrestricted, and the said West End Realty Company, on December 1, 1905, conveyed the same,- without restrictions, by deed of trust to the Missouri Lincoln Trust Company, a corporation, to secure the payment of certain notes. This deed of trust contained a provision for the release of lots in said tract, upon sales thereof being made by the owner of the equity of redemption.

On January 9, 1907, the West End Realty Company filed in the office of the recorder of deeds of the city of St. Louis a plat to the above described property, in which the same was designated as “Washington Heights,” and also described as being city blocks numbered from 5415 to 5428, inclusive, of the city of St. Louis. Such plat contained nothing showing restrictions, beyond a building line. As so platted, the said tract of land, or' subdivision, is intersected by but one street extending north and south, to-wit, Rosedale avenue, and by the following streets extending east and west, mentioned in their order from north to south, to-wit: Washington avenue, Westminster place, [565]*565Kingsbury avenue, McPherson avenue, Waterman avenue, and Berlin avenue.

After the execution of the deed of trust aforesaid, the West End Eealty Company, at various dates pri- or to March 21, 1908, conveyed certain lots in this tract, the aforesaid Trust Company executing releases thereto. These various lots were conveyed under deeds differing mnch in form. Some of the lots, chiefly upon the edges of the tract, were conveyed without restrictions of any kind, but it appears that the bulk of the property fronting on Washington avenue, Westminster place, Kingsbury avenue and McPherson avenue, and lying west of Eosedale avenue, was sold with restrictions against the building of flats.

On July 25, 1907, the West End Eealty Company conveyed to the November Investment Company a number of lots, amounting in all to about one hundred, located and fronting on Washington avenue, Westminster place, Kingsbury avenue, McPherson avenue, Waterman avenue and Berlin avenue. The deed by which the November Investment Company acquired these lots provided that the same were conveyed subject to the following restrictions:

“No business house shall be erected on any of said lots, nor shall any flats or apartments be erected on any of said lots, and only one residence shall be erected on any one lot, and no residence shall be erected on any of said lots to cost less than as follows, to wit: On lots fronting on Washington avenue, $4000; on lots fronting on Westminster place $4500; on lots fronting on Kingsbury and McPherson avenue, $5000; and on lots fronting Waterman avenue, $5500; but it is expressly covenanted that none of the foregoing restrictions shall apply to- any lot located on Berlin avenue, and also subject to the established ‘building line’ as is recorded with the recorder of the city of St. Louis, said established ‘building line’ to apply to all real estate [566]*566conveyed hereunder, but all of the foregoing restrictions shall expire and be of no force and effect after the first day of January, 1923.”

On March 21, 1908, the above mentioned deed of trust was foreclosed, and under such foreclosure a transfer was made to the Nina Realty Company of all of the lots which had not been previously disposed of as above mentioned. The title acquired by the Nina Realty Company to these lots carried with it no restrictions.

Both plaintiff and defendant Klein acquired their lots from the November Realty Company, being among the lots conveyed to the latter company by the West End Realty Company by the aforesaid deed of July 25, 1907, containing the restrictions above set out. Plaintiff acquired her lot by deed of March 27, 1909, and it is known as lot No. 12 in Block 5417, located on the south side of McPherson Avenue. Defendant Klein’s property was acquired by him by deed of March 8, 1910, and is known as lots 5 and 6 and the west ten feet of lot 7 in Block 5416, fronting on the south line of Waterman avenue, and being one block south of the property owned by plaintiff.

It is unnecessary for us to set out the pleadings in full. The petition avers the ownership by plaintiff and defendants of their respective parcels of land; the conveyances of the lots above mentioned by the West End Realty Company to the November Investment Company of July 25, 1907, of which the lands of plaintiff and defendant were a part; and sets out in full the restrictions in said deed which we have copied above. It is then averred that plaintiff and the defendant Klein acquired their respective parcels of land by mesne conveyances. Allegations are made respecting the character of the property in the vicinity; and it is averred that the defendant Klein had entered into a contract with defendant Robinson, as contractor, to erect fiats or apartment buildings upon said [567]*567land of defendant Klein, and that the defendants had actually begun to excavate preparatory to the erection of such buildings, in violation of the aforesaid restrictions.

The answer admits the conveyance by the West End Realty Company to the November Realty Company of the property above mentioned, as having been so conveyed on July 15,1907, subject to the restrictions against flats and apartments as set out in plaintiff’s petition; and admits that the defendant Klein had become the owner of his land by mesne conveyances from the November Realty Company. But the defendants aver that the restrictions “are, in equity and good conscience, no longer valid and enforcible as to the lots owned by defendants.” And as reasons for the latter defendants aver, in substance:

First, that the West End Realty Company, in undertaking to restrict its property had formulated a general scheme for the improvement of the entire tract known as “Washington Heights,” or practically all thereof, to prevent the same from being used except for high class residence property; but that such general scheme or plan of improvement had failed, in ■large part through the foreclosure of the deed of trust above mentioned, had been abandoned, and that the restrictions here in question had for that reason become void and unenforcible;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 S.W. 562, 177 Mo. App. 557, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-klein-moctapp-1913.