Ryan v. Town of Manalapan
This text of 414 So. 2d 193 (Ryan v. Town of Manalapan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Paul Mark RYAN, etc., Petitioner,
v.
TOWN OF MANALAPAN, etc., et al., Respondents.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*194 C. Robert Burns of Steel, Hector, Davis, Burns & Middleton, Palm Beach, for petitioner.
James McC. Wearn of the Law Offices of James McCartney Wearn, West Palm Beach, and Charles F. Schoech, County Atty. and Clifford I. Hertz, Asst. County Atty., West Palm Beach, for respondents.
BOYD, Justice.
This cause is before the Court on petition for review of a decision of a district court of appeal, Ryan v. Town of Manalapan, 393 So.2d 633 (Fla. 4th DCA 1981). The district court of appeal certified that its decision passed upon a question of great public importance. Therefore we have jurisdiction to entertain the petition for review. Art. V, § 3(b)(4), Fla. Const. We approve the decision of the district court of appeal.
Petitioner Paul Mark Ryan is the owner, as trustee, of several contiguous oceanfront lots bounded by the Atlantic Ocean to the east and Lake Worth to the west. The strip of land comprises 1044 feet of ocean frontage. Immediately to the north of Ryan's lots is respondent Roy Talmo's lot with the same east and west boundaries and 300 feet of ocean frontage. The deed to petitioner's property contains restrictive covenants limiting the use of the land to single-family dwellings constructed on lots with a minimum of 150 feet of ocean frontage and extending westerly to the lake. After these covenants were established, the lot now owned by Talmo was conveyed subject to the same restrictions.[*]
The Town of Manalapan has a comprehensive zoning plan, and its regulations impose the same restrictions on the land in question as are imposed by the covenants. However, in May, 1978, Roy Talmo, Palm Beach County, and the Town of Manalapan entered into a written agreement which contemplates allowing Talmo to proceed with a development plan for his lot. The agreement provides that the County would relinquish "dedicatory rights" to part of Talmo's lot in exchange for the sum of $70,000, half to be paid by Talmo and half by the Town; Talmo would grant the County a ten-foot-wide easement at the north line of his lot for pedestrian access to the ocean; the Town would re-zone Talmo's lot to permit the eastern half of the north 230 feet to be used for multi-unit housing and the south 70 feet to be used for a single-unit dwelling with 70 feet of ocean frontage; and Talmo would grant the western half of the north 230 feet of his lot to the Town to be used for a town hall, fire or police station, or other municipal use.
Petitioner Ryan brought this declaratory judgment action to obtain a judicial determination of the effect of this agreement on his rights with relation to Talmo, the Town, and the County. He asserted that the land that is the subject of the agreement is encumbered by restrictive covenants and that if the agreement is put into effect the covenants would be violated in various ways. The covenants would be violated, he alleged, by the use of the north 10 feet of *195 the lot for pedestrian access rather than as part of a single-family residential lot; by the use of the eastern half of the north 230 feet of the lot for multi-unit housing rather than for single-unit residential lots with a minimum of 150 feet of frontage and extending from ocean to lake; by the use of the south 70 feet of the lot without observing the 150-foot minimum frontage requirement; and by the use of the western portion of the north 230 feet of the lot for municipal purposes.
The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint arguing that Talmo's lot is not subject to the restrictive covenants referred to in the complaint. The Town and the County moved for dismissal as to them on the ground that restrictive covenants in deeds are not enforceable against governmental bodies that acquire land for public purposes. The trial court granted the motions to dismiss of the Town and the County, and petitioner appealed.
On appeal, the district court affirmed and certified the question, saying the following:
As stated earlier in this opinion, the sole issue before us is whether a public body which acquires an interest in lands by means other than eminent domain is bound by private restrictions governing the use of the land. Although Board of Public Instruction v. Town of Bay Harbor I., supra [81 So.2d 637 (Fla. 1955)] involved land acquired by eminent domain, we see no distinction when the land is acquired by agreement or purchase. In either case the restrictive covenants do not "constitute property in those in whose favor such restrictions exist for which compensation must be made... ." Id. at 639, and thus, the covenants are not enforceable against the public body. Accordingly, the trial court correctly dismissed the suit as to the public bodies and his orders should be affirmed.
Nevertheless, we consider the difference between acquisition by eminent domain and acquisition by agreement or purchase to warrant consideration of this question by the Supreme Court, and we therefore certify to the Supreme Court the following question as one of great public importance:
DO RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS AFFECTING THE USAGE OF LAND APPLY TO A PUBLIC BODY WHICH ACQUIRES THE LAND BY PURCHASE AS OPPOSED TO ACQUISITION BY EMINENT DOMAIN?
393 So.2d at 635.
The district court was incorrect in saying that the case of Board of Public Instruction v. Town of Bay Harbor Island, 81 So.2d 637 (Fla. 1955), involved land acquired by eminent domain, although the Court there did discuss eminent domain at length. The case was an appeal from a trial court decree (1) requiring a school district to perform a contract to purchase land and (2) permanently enjoining it from building a school on the land in violation of plat restrictions allowing only for residential use. The appeal did not concern the decree for specific performance but only the question of whether the school district could be enjoined from building the school. The Court concluded that this question consisted of two component issues: (1) whether the subdivision restrictions could be enforced against the school district and (2) whether, if the land were used for a school, the school district would be required to compensate the beneficiaries of the restrictions for the loss in value of their property.
The Court focused its discussion on the second issue, finding that a negative answer would require that the first question also be answered in the negative. The analysis of eminent domain was utilized as follows. The Court reasoned that if a public body may acquire land for public purposes by eminent domain without being required to financially compensate the benefitted neighbors for violation of the restrictions, then it follows that when a public body acquires such burdened land by purchase, the restrictions are not enforceable against the public body.
The Court found there was a split of authority among the jurisdictions on the question of the enforceability of restrictive covenants against public bodies taking land *196 for public use. The Court concluded that the better view was that restrictive covenants are not interests in real property, as are easements, but are mere contractual rights, not compensable when destroyed by exercise of the power of eminent domain. All property owners are charged with notice, the Court reasoned, of the fact that property is held subject to the power of eminent domain.
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