Robert K. Trethewey and Shirley J. Trethewey v. Suzy Collins Bobby Collins Linda S. Woodall Robert J. Rolfes, Jr. Barbara J. Rolfes Denny Irion Clinton B. Robertson Melinda Robertson Gary A. Lynch John P. Kaufmann, III Terri Kaufmann Katherine M. Wells Daniel P. Larivey Ann Larivey

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 27, 2009
Docket03-07-00311-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Robert K. Trethewey and Shirley J. Trethewey v. Suzy Collins Bobby Collins Linda S. Woodall Robert J. Rolfes, Jr. Barbara J. Rolfes Denny Irion Clinton B. Robertson Melinda Robertson Gary A. Lynch John P. Kaufmann, III Terri Kaufmann Katherine M. Wells Daniel P. Larivey Ann Larivey (Robert K. Trethewey and Shirley J. Trethewey v. Suzy Collins Bobby Collins Linda S. Woodall Robert J. Rolfes, Jr. Barbara J. Rolfes Denny Irion Clinton B. Robertson Melinda Robertson Gary A. Lynch John P. Kaufmann, III Terri Kaufmann Katherine M. Wells Daniel P. Larivey Ann Larivey) 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
Robert K. Trethewey and Shirley J. Trethewey v. Suzy Collins Bobby Collins Linda S. Woodall Robert J. Rolfes, Jr. Barbara J. Rolfes Denny Irion Clinton B. Robertson Melinda Robertson Gary A. Lynch John P. Kaufmann, III Terri Kaufmann Katherine M. Wells Daniel P. Larivey Ann Larivey, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-07-00311-CV

Robert K. Trethewey and Shirley J. Trethewey, Appellants



v.



Suzy Collins, et al., Appellees



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF COMAL COUNTY, 207TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. C2006-0613B, HONORABLE CHARLES A. STEPHENS II, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



In this appeal, the parties dispute the validity and applicability of certain deed restrictions adopted by landowners in a subdivision known as Pleasant Valley Estates in Comal County. Appellants, Robert K. Trethewey and Shirley J. Trethewey, challenge the portions of the district court's judgment (1) declaring the deed restrictions to be valid and applicable, and (2) permanently enjoining the Tretheweys from using their motor home as a temporary or permanent residence on their lot. In three points of error, the Tretheweys argue that the restrictions on which the appellee landowners rely are unenforceable because they were rescinded and, alternatively, if the restrictions were not rescinded, they do not apply in this case. Finding the deed restrictions enforceable and applicable to the Tretheweys' motor home, we affirm the district court's judgment.



Background

Appellants, Robert K. Trethewey and Shirley J. Trethewey, purchased Lot 15 in the Pleasant Valley Estates, Unit 1, in May 2005. They challenge the enforceability and applicability of certain restrictive covenants prohibiting trailers, mobile homes, and trailer houses being used as residences on Pleasant Valley Estates lots. Appellees, who include eighteen Pleasant Valley Estate landowners, seek to enforce the restrictive covenants to prevent the Tretheweys from living in a motor home on their lot.

On June 30, 1978, Creekdale, Inc., the original developer and owner of the lots in the Pleasant Valley Estates, recorded deed restrictions for the Pleasant Valley Estates. The provisions at issue on appeal are the following:



No trailer, tent, shack, garage, barn, outbuilding, mobile home or trailer house shall be at any time used as a residence, temporarily or permanently. No existing structure shall be moved on said land and premises for the purpose of occupancy, and all improvements erected thereon, including fences, shall be of permanent type, character, and construction, and may be built simultaneously with or subsequent to erection of permanent residence only.



. . . .



The covenants shall run with and burden the land until December 31, 2000. These covenants may be extended at that time for successive periods of ten (10) years each, by written instrument executed by a majority of the then property owners and placed of record in the Deed Records of Comal County, Texas. Any of these covenants may be amended in whole or in part at anytime by a majority of the property owners executing a written instrument so amending and which instrument shall be recorded in the Deed Records of Comal County, Texas.



On September 20, 1978, Creekdale, Inc. recorded amendments to these covenants in its Amended Restrictions, Building Requirements and Landscaping Requirements for Pleasant Valley Estates, Unit 1, to the County of Comal, Texas. The restriction prohibiting trailers and other mobile structures as residences remained intact, but the original restriction relating to the term of the covenants was rescinded, and the following provision was added: (1)



These covenants shall be binding for a period of thirty (30) years from the date they are filed for record in the Deed Records of Comal County, Texas, unless changed or amended as provided herein. Said covenants shall be automatically extended, upon the expiration of said term, for successive periods of ten (10) years each. The record owners of legal title of fifty-one (51%) percent of the lots as shown by the deed records of Comal County, Texas, may amend or change said covenants in whole or part at any time. Any change or amendment shall be set forth and evidenced by a successor instrument bearing the signatures of the requisite number of record owners and the recording of same in the office of the County Clerk of Comal County, Texas. (2)



(Footnote added.)

On November 7, 2000, a majority of the Pleasant Valley Estate landowners recorded additional amendments to the restrictive covenants in their Second Amended Restrictions, Building Requirements and Landscaping Requirements for Pleasant Valley Estates, Unit 1, to the County of Comal, Texas. According to this document, the owners:



desire to change the restrictions having been filed pertaining to said subdivisin [sic] which are recorded in Vol. 272, pages 313-315, or the Deed Records of Comal County, Texas, which said restrictions shall have no force and effect and are hereby rescinded, and the owners of PLEASANT VALLEY ESTATES, UNIT I does [sic] hereby restrict said property as hereinafter set out, which restrictions shall be binding upon the owners of said lots, or any purchasers thereof, their heirs, administrators or assigns, and said restrictions shall be covenants running with the land, to wit: . . . .



The restriction relevant to this case relating to the use of mobile structures as residences remained the same through each revision of the restrictive covenants.

Although the Tretheweys own Lot 15, their children, Mark and Joanie Koenig, live in the house located there. The Tretheweys planned to spend the majority of their time traveling and living in their motor home on the road. Sometime after May 2005, the Tretheweys had a concrete slab built on Lot 15. They obtained residential utility service through a separate meter and began to intermittently park their motor home on this slab. When the Tretheweys were not traveling but were living in Comal County, they parked their motor home on the concrete slab and lived in the motor home.

On June 16, 2006, appellees filed their Petition for Declaratory Judgment and for Temporary and Permanent Restraining Order in the Comal County district court, seeking to prohibit the Tretheweys from parking their motor home on Lot 15 and living in it. Following a bench trial on April 3, 2007, the district court granted appellees' petition. The district court declared the deed restrictions to be valid and applicable, and permanently enjoined the Tretheweys from using their motor home as a temporary or permanent residence on Lot 15. In three points of error, the Tretheweys argue that the restrictions on which appellee landowners rely are unenforceable because they were rescinded and, alternatively, if the restrictions were not rescinded, they do not apply in this case.



Enforceability of restrictions

In their first point of error, the Tretheweys argue that the deed restrictions upon which appellees rely are unenforceable because they were rescinded and, therefore, could not be subsequently modified or amended. According to the Tretheweys, any subsequent modifications or amendments were void and unenforceable. Appellees respond that the property code mandates a liberal construction of restrictive covenants to give effect to the parties' intent.

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Robert K. Trethewey and Shirley J. Trethewey v. Suzy Collins Bobby Collins Linda S. Woodall Robert J. Rolfes, Jr. Barbara J. Rolfes Denny Irion Clinton B. Robertson Melinda Robertson Gary A. Lynch John P. Kaufmann, III Terri Kaufmann Katherine M. Wells Daniel P. Larivey Ann Larivey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-k-trethewey-and-shirley-j-trethewey-v-suzy-collins-bobby-collins-texapp-2009.