Preston Del Norte Villas Ass'n v. Pepper Mill Apartments, Ltd.

579 S.W.2d 267, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 4118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 29, 1978
Docket19655
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 579 S.W.2d 267 (Preston Del Norte Villas Ass'n v. Pepper Mill Apartments, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Preston Del Norte Villas Ass'n v. Pepper Mill Apartments, Ltd., 579 S.W.2d 267, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 4118 (Tex. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

GUITTARD, Chief Justice.

The trial court issued a permanent injunction restraining obstruction of a private roadway across a condominium project managed by defendant Preston Del Norte Villas Association. The injunction is based on an alleged easement reserved for the benefit of adjoining property in the declaration establishing the rights of the parties in the condominium project. Plaintiff, The. Pepper Mill Apartments, Ltd., is the owner of the adjoining property, on which an apartment project has been constructed. The injunction was issued for the benefit of plaintiff and its tenants. Purchasers of condominiums within the condominium project were joined as defendants and were included in the injunction. On this appeal defendants challenge the trial court’s finding of the existence of the easement on the ground that it was intended to be effective only if the condominium project should be enlarged to include the adjoining property now owned by plaintiff. They also complain of the exclusion of certain testimony tending to show such an intent on the part of the common predecessor in title, who made the declaration of condominium, and they further assert that the purported reservation of an easement in the declaration does not sufficiently describe and locate the roadway. We hold that the declaration of condominium reserves an easement for the benefit of the owners of the adjoining property, regardless of whether the property is included in the condominium project, and that the easement was sufficiently located by the acts of the parties. Consequently, we affirm the order granting the injunction.

The case turns on an interpretation of the provisions of the declaration of condominium. At the time of that declaration, Preston Centennial owned approximately twenty-one acres of land, of which only the easterly six acres, bordering on Preston Road, were declared to be subject to the condominium regime. The declaration refers to maps locating each of the condominium units, with the accompanying green areas, driveways, utility easements, and other common elements, and provides for deeds to convey the units with reference to these maps. The declaration also provides for ownership of undivided interests in the common elements and for ingress and egress to the units and common elements. Paragraph 13 provides that for a limited time the defendant, Preston Centennial, may amend the declaration to include all or part of the declarant’s remaining lands, consisting of approximately fifteen acres, described by metes and bounds, located to the west of the six acres, and further provides that in that event the remaining lands shall become part of the condominium project, the undivided interests of the owners in the common elements shall be adjusted accordingly. Paragraph 26 contains the easement reservation enforced by the trial court's injunction, as follows:

26. Declarant reserves the right to establish easements, reservations, exceptions and exclusions consistent with the Condominium ownership of the Condominium Project and for the best interests of the Condominium Unit Owners and the Association in order to serve the entire Condominium Project. Declarant, for itself, its successors and assigns, retains a permanent easement across and through the lands described in Exhibit “A”, hereto, for ingress and egress to the lands described in Exhibit “E”, hereto, regardless of whether such lands, or any part thereof, become a part of the Condominium Project as provided in Paragraph 13 hereof. [Emphasis added.]

After filing this declaration, Preston Centennial continued with development of the condominium project, including thirty-nine units and common elements consisting of a clubhouse, a swimming pool, roadways, alleys, and green areas. A guard house was built at the entrance of the project on Preston Road and a guard was stationed to control traffic and prevent use of the roadways by the general public. The fifteen-acre tract to the west of the condominium area was conveyed to other owners and *269 was subsequently purchased by plaintiff, The Pepper Mill Apartments, Ltd., which commenced the construction of apartment buildings on the fifteen-acre tract. Plaintiff permitted contractors to operate construction vehicles and equipment across the roadways within the condominium area. This use prompted defendants to place a chain across the roadway at the west end of the area. Plaintiff then filed this suit for an injunction restraining interference with access to its property across the six-acre' condominium area.

The trial court found that at the time of the execution and filing of the condominium declaration, it was the intention of Preston Centennial to retain for itself, its successors and assigns, a permanent easement across defendants’ six-acre condominium area for ingress and egress to the remaining fifteen acres now owned by plaintiff. Defendants challenge this finding as against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence, and they insist that the evidence establishes that Preston Centennial did not intend to create such a permanent easement as would benefit plaintiff and its tenants in the event the fifteen acres should be utilized for purposes other than condominiums. Defendants argue that at the time of the declaration, Preston Centennial intended to utilize the entire twenty-one acre tract for condominium purposes, and that in this context the easement reservation in paragraph 26 of the declaration should be construed as terminating when the fifteen-acre tract was put to a different use. They interpret the language of paragraph 26, “regardless of whether such lands [the fifteen acres] or any part thereof, become a part of the Condominium Project as provided in paragraph 13 hereof,” as equivalent to providing, “regardless of whether such lands or any part thereof, become a part of the Condominium Project as provided in paragraph 13 hereof, or some other condominium project, so long as such lands are used for condominiums similar to those within the original project.”

We conclude that paragraph 26 is not susceptible to this interpretation. Its meaning is clear in the light of other provisions of the declaration. The only land declared to be subject to the condominium regime is the east six acres of the twenty-one acre tract. Preston Centennial reserves the right to include all or part of the remaining fifteen acres in the condominium project and also reserves a permanent easement across the six-acre tract for ingress and egress to the remaining lands, regardless of whether such lands become a part of the condominium project. No limitation of use of the easement to owners of condominiums on the remaining lands is expressed or reasonably implied from any of the language of the declaration.

Neither would the evidence of the circumstances existing at the time of the declaration support a different interpretation, even if all the evidence had been admitted. Evidence admitted by the court tended to show that the owners of Preston Centennial contemplated use of the entire twenty-one-acre tract for condominiums, that a plat had been prepared showing development of all the land for that purpose, that the clubhouse and pool were designed to serve the entire project, that the thirty-nine condominiums on the six-acre tract were considered the first phase of the larger development, and that the owner intended to protect the remaining fifteen acres for condominium development.

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579 S.W.2d 267, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 4118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preston-del-norte-villas-assn-v-pepper-mill-apartments-ltd-texapp-1978.