Osius v. Barton

147 So. 862, 109 Fla. 556
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 26, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 147 So. 862 (Osius v. Barton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osius v. Barton, 147 So. 862, 109 Fla. 556 (Fla. 1933).

Opinion

Davis, C. J.

This is an appeal in equity from an order adjudicating the insufficiency of a cross bill and sustaining a general and special demurrer thereto and striking certain portions of the same.'

The original bill alleged that the Alton Beach Realty Company, in pursuance of a general plan of developing and subdividing certain described property of which it was the owner, and for the general and common benefit of each and-every lot -located -in its subdivision, which was being developed as a high class residential property, did. in and by its conveyances of parcels' thereof, fix and establish certain restrictions upon said property, binding upon 'purchasers of lots in same, which restrictions it was intended should and would become covenants running with the separate parcels of the sub-divided land, the assumption and compliance with said covenants by future grantees being made express consideration for the grants thereof; that amongst the restrictions incorporated- in conveyances executed ac[559]*559cording to said plan of development were restrictions' to the effect that no house structure or building to be used as a business room, storage house, manufacturing establishment, machine shop or for any other business or commercial purpose whatsoever, should be constructed, erected or placed on any of the lots situate in said sub-division, and that no business or commercial enterprise .whatsoever should be operated or maintained thereon; that notwithstanding the restrictions aforesaid running with the land, and binding upon the defendants, Frederick J. Osius and Mary D. Osius, because of their acquisition of title to certain lots in said subdivision in subservance to said restrictions, that said defendants in defiance and disregard of said restrictions, and in breach of the covenants providing for the same, had rented, leased and demised their certain dwelling house situate on their said lots, for use as a beauty parlor for the purpose of conducting a commercial business thereon under the name of “Louise’s Beauty Saloon;” that defendants had boasted of their said act as having been done with intent to breach the said covenants; that the breach of the said restrictions was irreparably damaging the complainants as lot owners in the said subdivision; 'that complainants were entitled to enforce said covenants as covenants running with the land and that in order to do equity, the Court should grant to complainants an injunction enjoining and restraining the further conduct of said business known as “Louise’s Beauty Saloon” in violation of said covenants, and that in addition thereto the Court should issue its mandatory injunction ordering the defendants to remove all furniture, fixtures and paraphernalia of said business or commercial enterprise from the property involved.

The defendants answered and filed in connection therewith a cross bill seeking affirmative relief against the alleged restrictive covenants. The court sustained the sufficiency [560]*560of the answer but denied the sufficiency of the cross bill. So the proposition presented by this appeal is whether or not there is any equity in the cross bill, and if so, was the cross bill subject to the special demurrer to certain paragraphs, and to the motion to strike certain paragraphs by way of exception thereto.

The record shows that the deed under which defendant Frederick J. Osius claims title to his property was executed in December, 1921, and contained the restrictive covenants hereinbefore mentioned. It is also shown that his title deeds provided as follows: “All the conditions, covenants, stipulations and agreements, and each and every of them herein, contained are to have the effect of covenants running with the lands, * * * and the grantee, his heirs and assigns, by the execution, delivery and acceptance of this deed, each severally binds himself, his successor or successors, and assigns, to perform, fulfill, abide by and carry out each and every of said covenants, stipulations, and agreements, and further and at all times to acquiesce in the intent of the above grantor and the grantee to make, have and keep all of the said covenants, stipulations and agreements as to all of the parcels of land included within the boundaries and shown upon the recorded plat of Fisher’s First Subdivision of Alton Beach, and the successive owners thereof while in possession, but not in perpetuam, covenants, running with the land, and especially that the strip or parcel of land lying between the Atlantic Ocean and the private road running along the east side of Blocks 1, 28, 29, 55, 56 and 77 as shown by said plat, shall be used only for landscape purposes and to preserve the view of the ocean from the landward unobstructed except for the beautification by trees or shrubbery, and that no buildings of any kind or nature shall ever be erected thereon or on any accretions of and thereto by reason of .the recession of the waters of the Atlantic [561]*561Ocean; arid this covenant shall inure to the benefit of and be enforceable by the owner of any parcel of real estate contained in and subdivision aforesaid, his legal representatives, heirs, successors, and assigns, as well as by the said Alton Beach Realty Company, and the failure of said Alton Beach Realty Company or by any owner, however, long continued, to object to any violation of or to seek in court the enforcement of any one of said covenants or of this covenant, shall in no event be deemed a waiver of the right of any other lot-owner or any successor in title to any lot in said subdivision, to object and sue to abate, prevent, remove or restrain any breach of the same breach or as to any breach occuring prior or subsequent thereto.’ ”

The original bill rested upon the theory that complainants, as owners of the dominant estates, were entitled to enforce the restrictive covenants inuring to their benefit, by restraining the operation of any business or commercial enterprise on the north half of Lot 4, and Lots 5 to 18 of Block 54 of Fisher’s Subdivision of Alton Beach, as to which it was claimed that there was only one restriction or covenant running with the land involved in complainants’ case, that is, the restriction against the operation of business or commercial enterprises. The complainants, Shepard and Morris, traced their title to the property in the Subdivision through the Osius deed back to Alton Realty Company, while the others did not.

The theory of complainants’ original bill is therefore that since the entire"Fisher’s First Subdivision of Alton Beach was originally (with certain exceptions not necessary to be stated) restricted in use to a single family, private residential dwelling houses, with an inhibition against the use of any of the lots here involved for business or commercial purposes, which restrictions were carried forward into the deed to Frederick J. Osius, upon which his title rests, that [562]*562complainants, as fee simple owners of lots located in Fisher’s First Subdivision of Alton Beach, are entitled to enforce the restrictions by equitable proceedings, inasmuch as the restrictions sought to be enforced are, by their terms, covenants running with the land.

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 862, 109 Fla. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osius-v-barton-fla-1933.