Robertson v. Nichols

206 P.2d 898, 92 Cal. App. 2d 201, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1673
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 6, 1949
DocketCiv. 16621
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 206 P.2d 898 (Robertson v. Nichols) 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
Robertson v. Nichols, 206 P.2d 898, 92 Cal. App. 2d 201, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1673 (Cal. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

WHITE, P. J.

Plaintiffs and appellants, purchasers of five lots in the “Henry J. Brown Wilshire Terrace Tract” in the city of Los Angeles, upon which they desired to erect apartment houses, brought an action to quiet title and for declaratory relief against some of (but not all) the owners of other property in the tract, seeking to have set aside restrictions to single family residence purposes which had been placed on all the lots in the tract by the original subdivider. The trial court upheld the restrictions and entered judgment accordingly, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The restrictions provided that no structure should be erected on any lot except a “first class private residence of at least two stories in height, with or without the customary outbuildings, including a private stable”; that such residence should cost not less than $3,500 and be set back 30 feet from the front line of the lot and should face the front line of the lot. It was further provided that a breach of the restrictions should cause the premises to revert to the grantor; that the restrictions should operate as covenants running with the land for the benefit of owners of all lots in the tract; and that a breach might be enjoined, abated or remedied by appropriate proceedings by any of such owners.

The tract in question, subdivided in 1908 by Los Angeles Trust Company, is bounded on the west by Bronson Avenue, on the north by Fifth Street, on the east by the rear property line of lots on the east side of Wilton Place, and on the south by Wilshire Boulevard. The tract is traversed east and west by Sixth Street and north and south by Norton Avenue and Van Ness Avenue. The area thus comprises six square blocks plus the lots on the east side of Wilton Place. At the time of the subdividing, the condition of the surrounding area was substantially as follows: The area immediately adjacent on the west was undeveloped and unsubdivided acreage, which was later subdivided as the Windsor Square Tract, containing very rigid building restrictions which have been strictly observed. The undeveloped acreage to the north was subsequently subdivided as the Van Ness Avenue Square Tract; the area to the east was then a residential subdivision known *204 as the Westminster Place Tract. The area to the south of Wilshire Boulevard, then sparsely improved with residences, was in succeeding years rapidly built up with substantial residences which in the more recent years have been used for business and residential income purposes.

Plaintiffs alleged that the original restrictions had become ineffective because with the growth of the city in the intervening years conditions had changed within and adjacent to the tract, in that Wilshire Boulevard and Sixth Street had become two of the most congested streets in the city with vehicular traffic, including bus lines on Wilshire Boulevard; that automatic traffic signals operate on Wilshire Boulevard; that Crenshaw Boulevard, running north and south one and one-half blocks west of the tract, is also a heavily congested street; that “there has been a change in the use of the property located in the samé tract and block as that of the plaintiffs, in that lots 20, 21 and 22, facing on Bronson Avenue, and being immediately adjacent to the plaintiffs’ property on the south, is improved with a garage building . . . lots 1, 2 and 3 of said tract are improved with the Los Altos Apartment. House, and lots 4, 5 and 6, . . . with a ‘Thriftymart’ public market. ...”

It was further alleged that the Planning Commission of the city of Los Angeles, prior to 1932, adopted a zoning ordinance by which the property on which the apartment house and market are located and the lots on the east side of Bronson, including the lots of plaintiffs, were placed in an R-4, or residential income, zone. In addition to the foregoing changes, many apartment houses and other commercial structures, it was alleged, have been erected outside the tract and in the neighborhood of the property of the plaintiffs and defendants.

Plaintiffs further alleged that when they purchased the property in 1945, all the foregoing changes were in existence and that they purchased on the representation of the record owner that the lots could be used for the erection of an apartment house; that if the building restrictions are enforced the lots are not worth more than $2,500 apiece, but as sites for apartment houses they are worth in excess of $7,000 each.

It was further alleged that by reason of the changes in the uses to which the property in the tract and in the neighborhood is being put, plaintiffs’ property is no longer residential, and it would be oppressive and inequitable to give effect to the building restrictions, and would irreparably damage plain *205 tiffs; that relieving plaintiffs’ property from such restrictions will not deprive defendants of the use of their properties for residence purposes or lessen the value thereof. The trial court found that the restrictions were valid and enforceable ; that although 17 lots in the tract along Wilshire Boulevard are now used for business purposes, the balance of the tract, approximately 100 lots, has been improved, used and occupied for residence purposes in accordance with the restrictions; that although by reason of the location of plaintiffs’ property and the growth westward of the city, their property has become more valuable for other than single family residences, nevertheless the property of both plaintiffs and defendants is suitable and desirable for single family residential purposes in accordance with the restrictions.

Appellants contend first that the restrictions as originally imposed did not create enforceable equitable servitude in favor of each lot owner against the others, and second,- that assuming the validity of the restrictions, the changed conditions in the tract itself and the surrounding neighborhood render their enforcement inequitable and oppressive.

Appellants assert that the restrictive covenants in the instant case are not such as run with the land under section 1468 of the Civil Code, as such covenants run only as between the original grantor and grantee, but are governed solely by section 1462 of the Civil Code (relating to covenants contained in a grant), and in such latter case “a burdensome covenant contained in a deed which in no way benefits the property conveyed is not binding at law upon the transferees of the grantee.” (Marra v. Aetna Construction Co., 15 Cal.2d 375, 377, 378 [101 P.2d 490].) It is next asserted that the restrictive covenants here in no way benefit the property of plaintiffs, and that the fact that the property has never been built upon shows that the existence of the restrictions has deprived the property from being used for the only practical use to which it could be put. Testimony is referred to that as far back as 1928 the property was not suitable for single family residences. This argument is fallacious, in that it assumes to determine the validity of the restrictions, when imposed, in the light of conditions as they now exist, rather than in the light of conditions and the plan and purpose of the subdivider in 1908. It may be assumed, as contended, that these lots were less desirable than others in the tract, and hence remained vacant, but this by no means *206

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Bluebook (online)
206 P.2d 898, 92 Cal. App. 2d 201, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-nichols-calctapp-1949.