Palmer v. Silveira CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 19, 2013
DocketH037588
StatusUnpublished

This text of Palmer v. Silveira CA6 (Palmer v. Silveira CA6) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmer v. Silveira CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 3/19/13 Palmer v. Silveira CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

ALAN B. PALMER, as Trustee, etc., et al., H037588 (Santa Cruz County Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants, and Super. Ct. No. CV163244) Respondents,

v.

ANTHONY P. SILVEIRA, as Trustee, etc., et al.,

Defendants, Cross-complainants and Appellants.

Plaintiffs Alan Palmer and Santa Cruz Properties LLC brought this action against neighboring landowners Anthony and Kandy Silveira, to expunge certain recorded agreements between defendants and the parties‘ common predecessors in interest insofar as those agreements might establish or give record notice of servitudes burdening plaintiffs‘ property. From a judgment in plaintiffs‘ favor, defendants appeal. Plaintiffs contend that defendants have not preserved their challenges to the judgment. We reject this contention, but conclude that defendants have not carried their burden of establishing reversible error. Accordingly, we will affirm the judgment. BACKGROUND It is undisputed that defendants own property at 4630 West Walnut Street in Soquel, unincorporated Santa Cruz County.1 Plaintiff Palmer owns property two doors to the west of defendants‘ parcel. Plaintiff Santa Cruz Properties owns two parcels fronting on Porter Street, the more northern of which touches defendants‘ southern boundary. Prior to 1986, all of these properties were apparently owned by May Gravenhorst Stauffer and Peter J. Gravenhorst (collectively, Gravenhorst/Stauffer). On June 21, 1985, defendants entered into an agreement to purchase 4630 Walnut Street from Gravenhorst/Stauffer. Although the record fails to competently establish many of the pertinent details of the sale, recitals in the documents at issue suggest that by the time the sale closed, the property was being used for partly residential and partly commercial purposes.2 According to defendants‘ trial brief, the purchase agreement ―was conditioned upon [their] ability to convert this property from residential to commercial property.‖ They assert that among the permit conditions was the provision of eight parking spaces, which was four more than were located on the 4630 Walnut parcel. The county also required that defendants enter into a joint parking and circulation agreement with Gravenhorst/Stauffer, to be reviewed and approved by county planners. 1 Exemplifying the seeming insouciance with which both sides seem have conducted this litigation, defendants‘ property is erroneously identified in both the complaint and cross-complaint as ―4630 Porter Street.‖ Moreover, in their trial brief plaintiffs describe defendants‘ property as being situated ―at the corner of Walnut Street and Porter Street,‖ though six lines later they describe it as ―parcel 11‖ on an attached map, which clearly shows a parcel 12 separating parcel 11 from Porter Street. 2 An October 1985 permit recites that a house on the property had burned down and been replaced by a structure ―constructed to meet the building code standards of a commercial building.‖ The document recited that the building was then being ―used as a dwelling,‖ but that its ―current proposed uses would include three offices on the first floor and two apartments on the second floor.‖ A year later , the use agreement referred to the building‘s ―partial current use as residential property.‖ The record does not competently establish the present use of the building.

2 In June 1986, the parties executed, and defendants recorded, the two agreements that are the subject of this action. One of them, entitled ―Use Agreement,‖ recited the parties‘ intention to address certain requirements ―to be imposed by‖ county planning authorities ―on the said property related to its partial current use as residential property.‖ As here relevant it provided that ―[i]n the event the County . . . imposed [sic] additional parking requirements and a recreational area requirement covering the residential use,‖ the sellers would ―make available to Buyer on adjacent properties owned by Seller . . . , . . . four parking spaces, and a required 400 Sq. Ft. vacant parcel to be improved and landscaped at Sellers[‘] expense as required by Santa Cruz County.‖ Defendants would pay $8,000 for the parking spaces and $6,000 for the vacant parcel. Under stated circumstances, defendants would be obligated to sell these spaces back to the sellers at the same price. The agreement addressed other matters as well, but is discussed by the parties only as it called for the sale of the parking spaces; we will therefore refer to it as the ―parking agreement.‖ The second agreement, entitled ―Road Maintenance and Circulation Agreement,‖ recited that it ―pertain[ed] to‖ a ―right of way described as Parcel Four‖ in an attached exhibit. The exhibit depicted a road or causeway apparently traversing or touching upon five properties, including defendants‘ property, two of plaintiffs‘ four parcels, and another property owned by the Bermans, who were named in the pleadings below but not brought into the action. The agreement set out certain rights and obligations with respect to the depicted roadway, stated that ―the rights and responsibilities contained in the Agreement shall constitute covenants running with the land,‖ and expressed the parties‘ intent ―to obligate themselves, their heirs, personal representatives, successors and assigns to maintain and improve said road in accordance with the terms and conditions of this agreement.‖ However the agreement further provided that ―[d]epending on when the commercial development/improvements are approved‖ for the remaining parcels,

3 ―vehicle, pedestrian, parking and circulation arrangements shall be planned and agreed in writing between each parcel mentioned above.‖ In addition, it was said to be the sellers‘ intention that they or their successors would ―further develop the existing vehicle and pedestrian right of way to enter off Porter Street to run through [three specified parcels] and cut out of [one of them] to ultimately exit into West Walnut.‖ The agreement also referred to an existing ―recorded right of way‖ already serving defendants‘ property. We will refer to this agreement as the ―road agreement.‖ Plaintiffs commenced this action on March 25, 2009, by a verified complaint in which they alleged that they were ―engaged in a business enterprise involving potential integration of their properties in connection with parking and traffic flow for . . . improvements to be constructed under the Santa Cruz County permit process.‖ The first cause of action sought declaratory relief, in that plaintiffs contended that the parking and road agreements ―rested upon specific conditions which never took place and for that reason endow[ed] defendants with no assertable rights,‖ whereas defendants contended that the instruments ―comprehend the eventual development of the properties now owned by plaintiffs and that the parking rights contained in these documents were paid for and persist in their vitality.‖ Plaintiffs sought ―a declaration of rights and duties of the parties respecting the validity‖ of the instruments in relation to plaintiffs‘ properties. In the second cause of action, plaintiffs sought a decree quieting title in themselves and declaring their property ―to be free and clear of any encumbrances, rights of way, or other obligations resulting or arising from the recordation of‖ the challenged instruments.

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Palmer v. Silveira CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-silveira-ca6-calctapp-2013.