W. F. White Land Co. v. Christenson

14 S.W.2d 369
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 1928
DocketNo. 11982.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 14 S.W.2d 369 (W. F. White Land Co. v. Christenson) 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
W. F. White Land Co. v. Christenson, 14 S.W.2d 369 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

The W. F. White Land Company has prosecuted this appeal from a judgment of the district court denying it the right to forfeit title of C. F. .Christenson and wife, Lula Christenson, to lot 3 in block 1, situated in what is known as Scenery T-Iill addition to the city of Fort Worth, all of which addition was originally owned by the White Land Company, having been taken out of a tract of land then owned by the White Land Company and the plat being duly recorded in the deed records of Tarrant county. '

The record shows that after the subdivision was platted, the land company, on September 20, 1924, sold lot 3 in block 1 and some 16 other lots in the same addition to P. L. Jones, who later sold lot 3 in block 1 to O. F. Christenson, and thereafter Christenson, joined by his wife, Lula. Christenson, borrowed from the Fidelity Building & Loan Association the sum of - $3,500, secured by a mortgage lien on the lot. Thereafter Christenson and wife gave to W. F. Suttles a mechanic’s lien upon the property for. improvements, which were erected on the lot. The loan company, guttles, and Jones were all made parties defendants. There were also other parties made defendants, but it is not necessary to mention them, since issues as to those defendants are not involved on this appeal.

The deed executed- by the land company to P. L. Jones contaj^ed the following provisions :

“1. No building shall be erected on said premises except a private dwelling house and outbuilding thereof, and no building erected thereon shall at any time be used except for such purposes.”
“4. If said party of the second part, his heirs or assigns shall build a residence on said lots the residence so built on lots fronting east on Oakland Avenue shall not cost less than five thousand ($5,000.00) dollars; those built on lots fronting west on Martel Avenue shall not cost less than forty-five hundred ($4,500.00) dollars; those fronting east on Martel Avenue shall not cost less than four thousand ($4,000.00) dollars.
“5. No residence shall be erected on lots fronting oast on Oakland Avenue nearer than fifty feet to front curb line. No house shall be erected fronting on Martel Avenue nearer than fifty feet to the curb lino. No house shall be erected on Oakland Avenue except of brick, brick veneer, stone or stucco construction.
“In case the said grantee, or his heirs,' executors, administrators or assigns, shall ever violate any one of said conditions contained herein and made a part of the covenants of this deed, the said land and all improvements therein shall immediately revert to and become the property of the grantor herein and its successors or assigns, and it shall be lawful for said grantor and its successors or assigns to re-enter said premises as in its first and former estate: and
“The said W. F. White Land Company does hereby bind itself and its successors and assigns to warrant and forever defend, all and singular the said P. L. Jones, his heirs and assigns against every person whomsoever lawfully claiming or to claim the same or any part thereof.
“The said grantee herein, for himself and his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, does agree with W. F. White Land Company and its successors that the conditions herein contained are intended to and shall run with the land, and that should the grantee, his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns, or any person claiming under him, violate any of the foregoing covenants, then W. F. White 'Land Company, or its successors, or any owner of any lot conveyed herein, shall have the right to enjoin the doing of same, and in the event the violation has already taken place, that then such remedy shall extend to the removal of the improvements placed on said premises in violation of any covenant herein.”

The record shows that the lot in controversy fronts east on Oakland avenue in said addition. It further shows that aUer the Christensons purchased the lot they erected a dwelling thereon, and the plaintiff’s suit was based upon allegations that the residence so constructed cost less than $5,000, and that it was erected loss than 50 feet from the front curb line of the street, and a right of forfeiture was based on allegations that by reason thereof the restrictions in the deed had been violated and the title to the lots with improvements thereon had been forfeited to the land company.

There was an alternative prayer in plaintiff’s petition that in the event it should be determined that plaintiff did not have the right to a forfeiture of the entire title, it should then be awarded a mandatory injunction requiring the defendants to remove the house that had been erected on the lot.

The case was tried before a jury, and judgment denying plaintiff any right of recovery was upon a verdict in favor of defendants rendered in obedience to a peremptory instruction therefor from the trial court.

No direct testimony was offered to show what Christenson actually paid out for the construction of the house, neither he nor the *371 contractor being called as a witness for either side, but plaintiff introduced witnesses who gave their opinions as to what it should have cost to build the house at the time it was erected. According to the testimony of W. B. Martel, who had been engaged in construction work of buildings for some 12 years, the house could have been constructed at the time it was built for the sum of §4,008.95. However, he further testified that the house had already been constructed when he made his estimate. The estimate was made only a few days before the trial, at which time he made an inspection of the house for the purpose of giving his estimate. He further testified that he did not go upon the roof to examine it, and other material used in the construction thereof had been covered up, so he could not determine their particular character of course. Nor could he tell how many brick piers had been put under the house, as he could not get under the house to examine them. In making his estimate, he itemized the cost of labor of the carpenters, and in that connection said: “The pay given to carpenters depends upon the class of carpenters you get. Carpenters get from four to nine dollars a day. As to whether I mean that it would take three four dollar carpenters or three nine dollar carpenters to build this house in twenty-five days. I will say that also depends a good deal; there is no two1 carpenters that will do the same amount of work, even though you pay them the same. But I figure that three good carpenters could build this house in twenty-five working days by taking the average of what carpenters will do. * * * These three carpenters would not get $27 a day unless they were union men.”

GeorgQ Williams, who also was a building contractor and who lived about 200 feet distant from the Christensons’ lot at the time the latter’s residence was constructed, testified at length to observations made by him as to the kinds of material and workmanship employed while the building was in course of construction, and also to examinations made by him before the trial along the same lines, lie gave estimates as to the market price of material and labor at the time the building was constructed, with all of which he said he was familiar. After giving those details, his estimate was that the total cost of the house at the time it was built was $3,417.15.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W.2d 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-f-white-land-co-v-christenson-texapp-1928.