Plauche v. Albert

42 So. 2d 876, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 644
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 25, 1949
DocketNo. 3166.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 42 So. 2d 876 (Plauche v. Albert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plauche v. Albert, 42 So. 2d 876, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 644 (La. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

In June, 1940, Joseph J. Boyd, who owned a large tract of land in the 9th ward of the Parish of East Baton Rouge, located on the continuation of Government Street and running back to Florida Street, laid the same out as a subdivision to be known as North Goodwood. He divided the area into blocks which were subdivided into lots to be sold to persons who would construct residences on them. He established certain restrictions pertaining to certain parts of the subdivision and had the same recorded in the Conveyance Records of the Parish of East Baton Rouge and any person buying a lot in that part of the subdivision governed by the restrictions purchased the same subject to the restrictions and agreed to abide by the same.

Among the restrictions was one which read as follows: "No building, except as herein specified, shall be erected nearer than 20 feet to either side line of said lot or lots, but this covenant shall not apply to garages or out-houses, located on any portion of the rear quarter of the lot or lots, which may be placed not nearer than 2 feet to the side lines and the rear line, but shall not be placed any nearer than 75 feet to any street." Another restriction with which we are concerned in this case reads as follows: "No building shall be erected on any part of the property hereinabove described other than a single family dwelling and a garage or out-house, to be used in connection with the said single family dwelling."

On February 13, 1942, the defendant herein, Harry J. Albert, bought one of the lots in that area in which these restrictions operated and his deed specifically recited that the property described therein was subject *Page 877 to the restrictions and servitudes of record of North Goodwood Subdivision.

The several plaintiffs in this suit are all owners of lots which they had acquired in the subdivision or which they owned prior to the time that the defendant started to construct a building upon the lot he had bought, in violation, as they allege, of the two particular restrictions which have just been quoted. They instituted this suit which is a proceeding for an injunction, seeking to prohibit and enjoin him from building any garage or out-house closer than 75 feet from Donmoor Avenue, one of the streets bounding his property, and to have him remove the building as presently constructed on his said lot.

In their petition, after setting out that they are the owners of the respective lots belonging to each and that the defendant is the owner of the lot which he acquired in February, 1942, subject to the restrictions which have never been abandoned and which are still in full force and effect, and after he had started the construction of a building upon the rear of the lot purchased by him, being Lot 1 of Square 3, and believing that the said building was a garage or other out-house which was being built in violation of the 75 feet restriction, they notified him that he was in violation of the restrictions. They alleged that the defendant informed them that he was not violating the restrictions and refused to inform them of the exact nature of the building he was constructing. They then alleged that when the building had reached a certain stage of completion believing that it was not being constructed in accordance with the restrictions, they again notified him by petition dated March 11, 1947, and in answer thereto they received a letter from an attorney at law, representing the defendant, in which it was stated that defendant had no intention of violating the restrictions and that he intended to abide by the same. They then aver that it was not until the building was completed that they became fully aware of the fact that the defendant did not intend to abide by the restrictions and the building which he had erected and completed was a garage apartment which violated one of the restrictions in that it is not a building for a single family dwelling nor is it to be used in connection with a single family dwelling and also that it violated a further restriction in being nearer than 75 feet to Donmoor Avenue.

A rule nisi was issued and the defendant was ordered to show cause why a permanent injunction should not be ordered as prayed for. In answer to the rule the defendant filed a motion in which he averred that the particular restrictions he was charged with having violated had been waived and abandoned by reason of the fact that there had been repeated, flagrant violations, previous to the filing of this suit by the plaintiffs, by a majority of owners of corner lots situated in the subdivision. In his motion defendant also suggested that he desired to submit expert testimony to the court with reference to the violations which he stated had existed, which expert testimony could only be produced by a surveyor, and he accordingly asked that the court appoint a surveyor to determine the nature and description of all violations of the restrictions as set out by him and that the matter be continued until such time as the survey and the report of the surveyor could be made. The court granted the continuance, at the end of which time defendant filed his answer to the rule for injunction in which he admitted that in constructing the garage on his premises, he located it nearer than 75 feet to Donmoor Avenue, and in a sense that was a violation of one of the restrictions but he again defends his action on the ground that that restriction had been waived, abandoned and relinquished by universal acquiescence and common consent by the land owners, and therefore there could be no right of action to enforce it against him and to seek the injunction that was being asked. As a further defense to the rule for injunction, defendant alleged that the lots he bought front on Florida Street and, that as is well known, all property fronting on that street has become highly commercialized within the past few years. He avers that the properties directly adjacent to his are being used for commercial purposes and that all property fronting on both sides of Florida Street previously subjected to building restrictions has *Page 878 changed to such an extent that there cannot equitably be any further enforcement of the original restrictions placed on the property which he acquired.

After trial of the rule in the court below there was judgment in favor of plaintiffs ordering an injunction prohibiting the defendant from using the building which he had constructed on the property for any other purpose than a garage located not nearer than 75 feet from Donmoor Avenue, or as a single family dwelling as provided for in the restrictions; further in the event he elected to use the said building as a garage and not as a single family dwelling he shall move the same a distance of 75 feet beyond Donmoor Avenue, such removal to be affected within 60 days, and failing in this he shall remove the same from the property altogether within 90 days. From that judgment the defendant has taken this appeal.

On the appeal a large portion of the argument of counsel for defendant is leveled at the form of, or the course which the proceeding took in the lower court. The contention is that the proceeding initiated in the lower court as a rule nisi for an injunction, that it was tried in that court solely on that rule and that there has never been a trial on the merits which was necessary in order that a final judgment might be rendered on the question as to whether or not there is to be a permanent injunction ordered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 So. 2d 876, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plauche-v-albert-lactapp-1949.