Self v. Sharafi CA4/1 ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 9/20/13 Self v. Sharafi CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THOMAS WILLIAM SELF et al.,                                          D061181
    Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants and
    Respondents,
    (Super. Ct. No. 37-2010-00101291-
    v.                                                          CU-OR-CTL)
    SHAHRAM SHARAFI et al.,
    Defendants, Cross-complainants and
    Appellants.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Jeffrey B.
    Barton, Judge. Reversed with directions.
    Dillon & Gerardi, Timothy P. Dillon and Sunjina Ahuja for Defendants, Cross-
    complainants and Appellants.
    Boudreau Williams and Jon R. Williams for Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants and
    Respondents.
    Defendants and cross-complainants Shahram Sharafi and Fatemeh Falahat-Pisheh
    (the Sharafis)1 appeal from a judgment entered after the trial court granted summary
    judgment in favor of plaintiffs and cross-defendants Thomas William Self and Linda P.
    Self as co-trustees of the Thomas William Self and Linda P. Self Family Trust, executed
    May 10, 1995 (the Selfs) on the Selfs' first amended complaint for quiet title and
    declaratory relief and the Sharafis' cross-complaint for declaratory relief.
    The first amended complaint and cross-complaint concern adjoining parcels of real
    property owned by the Selfs and the Sharafis, respectively. In granting the Selfs' motion
    for summary judgment, the court ruled that a building restriction contained in a 1946
    deed, by which the prior common owner of the adjoining parcels conveyed the parcel the
    Sharafis now own and retained the parcel the Selfs now own, was a personal covenant
    that is not enforceable against the Selfs. The Sharafis contend the building restriction is
    enforceable as a covenant running with the land and as an equitable servitude. We
    conclude the building restriction is enforceable as a covenant running with the land under
    Civil Code2 section 1462 and, accordingly, reverse with directions to enter judgment in
    favor of the Sharafis.
    1      Defendants refer to themselves collectively as the Sharafis in their appellate briefs.
    2      Unless otherwise indicated, all further statutory references are to the Civil Code.
    2
    I
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In 1945 Elizabeth Fleet purchased a parcel of real property described as "Lot 4 in
    Block 'I' of the Resubdivision of a portion of Villa Tract, La Jolla Park, in the City of San
    Diego." In November 1946, Fleet conveyed a portion of Lot 4 to Jay M. and Nita
    Donovan by a grant deed, which provided that she was conveying "[a]ll of Lot 4
    EXCEPTING the following described property in Block 'I' . . . :" The deed then set forth
    the legal description of the portion of Lot 4 that Fleet retained.3 Under the heading
    "Restriction[,]" the deed stated: "A consideration of this sale is that no buildings will be
    erected now or at any future date on the [property retained]."
    In 1989, the Selfs purchased from successors in interest of Fleet the portion of
    Lot 4 that Fleet retained as well as some adjacent property. Although the grant deed
    conveying the Lot 4 property to the Selfs does not refer to the building restriction, the
    Selfs were made aware of the restriction before they purchased the property.4 The Selfs
    3       The 1946 grant deed sets forth the legal description of the retained portion as
    follows: "Beginning at the most Northerly corner of Lot 4, being also the Southerly line
    of Pepita Way: thence South 41° 19' West along the Northerly line of Lot 4, a distance of
    60 feet to the Northwest corner of Lot 4; thence South 38° 32' East along the Westerly
    line of Lot 4 to the most Westerly prolongation of a line that would be the Southerly line
    of Lot 7; thence Easterly to the Easterly line of Lot 4 and also the most Southwesterly
    corner of said Lot 7 in said Block 'I'; thence North 30° 54' West, a distance of 118.42 feet
    to the most Northerly corner of Lot 4."
    4      The building restriction was specifically noted in the sellers' Real Estate Transfer
    Disclosure Statement, which the Selfs signed to acknowledge their receipt of a copy of
    that document about a month before they completed the purchase of the property.
    3
    later transferred the property to their family trust. In October 2010, the Sharafis obtained
    title to the portion of Lot 4 that Fleet sold to the Donovans, and an adjoining lot.
    In January 2011, the Selfs filed a verified first amended complaint against the
    Sharafis for quiet title and declaratory relief, seeking an adjudication that they held title
    to their Lot 4 property free of the building restriction contained in the 1946 grant deed
    and that the building restriction is invalid and unenforceable. In March 2011, the
    Sharafis filed a cross-complaint for declaratory relief, seeking an adjudication that the
    building restriction is "binding, valid and enforceable against the Self's [sic] as the
    owners of the Restricted Property and as against all subsequent owners of the Restricted
    Property."
    The Selfs and the Sharafis both filed motions for summary judgment. The Selfs
    argued in their motion that, as a matter of law, the building restriction is not enforceable
    as a covenant running with the land or as an equitable servitude. The Sharafis argued the
    building restriction is enforceable as a covenant running with the land under two different
    statutes that define such covenants — section 1462 and former section 1468. They
    additionally argued that the building restriction is enforceable as an equitable servitude,
    and as a negative easement. The court granted the Selfs' motion and entered judgment in
    favor of the Selfs and against the Sharafis, ruling the building restriction is not a covenant
    running with the land, an equitable servitude, or a negative easement.
    4
    II
    DISCUSSION
    Because the material facts are undisputed, the legal significance of those facts
    presents a question of law, which we review de novo. (Hill v. San Jose Family Housing
    Partners, LLC (2011) 
    198 Cal.App.4th 764
    , 774; Oxford v. Foster Wheeler LLC (2009)
    
    177 Cal.App.4th 700
    , 707.)
    A.     Statutory Scheme for Covenants Running with the Land
    Section 1460 provides: "Certain covenants, contained in grants of estates in real
    property, are appurtenant to such estates, and pass with them, so as to bind the assigns of
    the covenantor and to vest in the assigns of the covenantee, in the same manner as if they
    had personally entered into them. Such covenants are said to run with the land." Section
    1461 provides: "The only covenants which run with the land are those specified in this
    Title, and those which are incidental thereto." A covenant can run with the land under
    either section 1462 or section 1468. (Monterey/Santa Cruz County Bldg. etc. Trades
    Council v. Cypress Marina Heights LP (2011) 
    191 Cal.App.4th 1500
    , 1517.) To run with
    the land, a covenant must touch and concern land, which means it must affect the parties
    as owners of the particular estates in land or relate to the use of land. (Anthony v. Brea
    Glenbrook Club (1976) 
    58 Cal.App.3d 506
    , 510 (Anthony).) "The primary characteristic
    of a covenant running with the land is that both liability upon it and enforceability of it
    pass with the transfer of the estate. The benefits or burdens pass by implication of law
    rather than under principles of contract." (Ibid.)
    5
    B.     The Building Restriction Is Not a Covenant Running with the Land Under
    Section 1468
    The former version of section 1468 that was effective in 1946 provided: "A
    covenant made by the owner of land with the owner of other land to do or refrain from
    doing some act on his own land, which doing or refraining is expressed to be for the
    benefit of the land of the covenantee, and which is made by the covenantor expressly for
    his assigns or to the assigns of the covenantee, runs with both of such parcels of land."
    (Stats. 1905, ch. 450, § 1, p. 610.) The Legislature amended section 1468 in 1968 and
    1969 to make covenants that run with the land analytically closer to equitable servitudes
    and to make the statute applicable to covenants between a grantor and grantee, as well as
    between separate landowners. (Citizens for Covenant Compliance v. Anderson (1995) 
    12 Cal.4th 345
    , 354 (Citizens).) However, those amendments "have been held to apply only
    to covenants postdating their enactment." (Ibid.) Accordingly, our determination of
    whether the building restriction at issue in this case is a covenant running with the land
    under section 1468 is governed by the former version of section 1468 in effect in 1946.
    We conclude that the building restriction is not a covenant running with the land
    under the former version of section 1468 because that statute "only applied to a covenant
    'made by the owner of land with the owner of other land,' and not to a covenant between a
    grantor and a grantee." (Citizens, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 353; Marra v. Aetna
    Construction Co. (1940) 
    15 Cal.2d 375
    , 377-378 (Marra).) Although Fleet and the
    Donovans were adjoining landowners before Fleet severed Lot 4 and conveyed a portion
    of it to the Donovans, the subject building restriction is contained in the grant deed by
    6
    which Fleet made that conveyance. The building restriction was not a covenant
    concerning other parcels that Fleet and the Donovans owned before or after that
    conveyance. Because the covenant at issue in this case is contained in a grant of real
    property and predates the amendments to the original version of section 1468, it is
    governed exclusively by section 1462. (Marra, at p. 377 ["Covenants . . . contained in a
    grant in fee of real property, are governed solely by section 1462 . . . ."].)
    C.     The Building Restriction Is a Covenant Running with the Land Under
    Section 1462
    Section 1462 provides: "Every covenant contained in a grant of an estate in real
    property, which is made for the direct benefit of the property, or some part of it then in
    existence, runs with the land." "The decisions have interpreted [section 1462] to mean
    that 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, supra, 15
    Cal.2d at p. 378.) Conversely, when a covenant benefits, and does not burden, the
    property conveyed, it runs with the land under section 1462 and is binding on transferees
    of the grantee. (Citizens, 
    supra,
     12 Cal.4th at pp. 353, 368.) Whether a covenant in a
    grant of real property benefits the conveyed property so as to run with the land under
    section 1462 is determined in light of the conditions existing at the time of the grant.
    (Robertson v. Nichols (1949) 
    92 Cal.App.2d 201
    , 205.) The fact that the covenant does
    not mention "assigns" is immaterial; the question must be determined from the nature of
    the covenant itself. (Sacramento Suburban Fruit Lands Co. v. Whaley (1920) 
    50 Cal.App. 125
    , 133 (Sacramento Suburban Fruit).)
    7
    The general test for determining whether a covenant runs with the land under
    section 1462 is whether the covenant "is 'made for the direct benefit of the property.' The
    phrase 'made for the direct benefit of the property' means, among other things, 'any
    covenant which affects the title to real property or any interest or estate therein of the
    covenantee. . . . [I]f the covenant is one which concerns the land itself, or in any manner
    or measure affects its title or any interest therein, then it is, within the meaning of . . .
    section 1462, "made for the direct benefit of the real property" to which it relates.' "
    (Carlson v. Lindauer (1953) 
    119 Cal.App.2d 292
    , 304-305.) The meaning of the phrase
    "direct benefit to the property" is not restricted to physical benefit that directly accrues to
    the land from the covenant. (Richardson v. Callahan (1931) 
    213 Cal. 683
    , 689;
    Sacramento Suburban Fruit, supra, 50 Cal.App. at p. 130.) Courts interpreting section
    1462 " 'have uniformly adopted the view that if the covenant tends to enhance or increase
    the value of the land, it is a direct benefit within the meaning of the [statute] and therefore
    runs with the land.' " (Anthony, supra, 53 Cal.App.3d at p. 511.)
    The building restriction in the present case touches and concerns the land because
    it relates to the use of the restricted land. (Anthony, supra, 58 Cal.App.3d at p. 510.) The
    restriction directly benefits the Sharafis' property that Fleet conveyed to the Donovans in
    1946 because it is the type of restriction that naturally enhances the market value of any
    property adjoining the restricted property. (Mock v. Shulman (1964) 
    226 Cal.App.2d 263
    , 266 [restriction imposed against all lots in a tract against growing any hedge over six
    feet in height within 15 feet of boundary line of adjoining lot was for the mutual benefit
    of the entire tract and the owners of the separate lots therein]; Whitinsville Plaza, Inc. v.
    8
    Kotseas (Mass. 1979) 
    390 N.E.2d 243
    , 247 [the purpose of all building restrictions is to
    enhance the market value of the promisee's land].)
    The Selfs argue that the building restriction is not a covenant running with the land
    under section 1462 because it burdens their portion of Lot 4, citing the rule that "[u]nder
    section 1462, a [covenant] that benefits the property may run with the land, but not one
    that burdens the property." (Citizens, 
    supra,
     12 Cal.4th at p. 353.) However, "the
    property" referenced in the Citizens court's articulation of the rule is the property
    conveyed by the grant containing the covenant, not property retained by the grantor.
    Section 1462 states that "[e]very covenant contained in a grant of an estate in real
    property, which is made for the direct benefit of the property, or some part of it then in
    existence, runs with the land." (Italics added.) The property referenced in the phrase
    "which is made for the direct benefit of the property" can only be the property granted
    (i.e., conveyed) referenced in section 1462's opening clause because the statute does not
    refer to any other property. "It is . . . 'generally presumed that when a word is used in a
    particular sense in one part of a statute, it is intended to have the same meaning if it
    appears in another part of the same statute.' " (Delaney v. Baker (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 23
    ,
    41.)
    Thus, on its face, section 1462 applies when the covenant contained in a grant
    deed directly benefits the conveyed property. Nothing in the statute defeats its
    application where a covenant benefitting the conveyed property correspondingly burdens
    property retained by the grantor or some other property. As the Supreme Court stated in
    Marra, "[t]he decisions have interpreted [section 1462] to mean that a burdensome
    9
    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, supra, 15 Cal.2d at p. 378,
    italics added; Taormina Theosophical Community, Inc. v. Silver (1983) 
    140 Cal.App.3d 964
    , 972 ["Only the benefit of a covenant runs; covenants which burden the
    covenantee/grantee's land will not bind subsequent transferees." (Italics added.)];
    Standard Oil Co. v. Slye (1913) 
    164 Cal. 435
    , 442 [covenant in a lease to renew the lease
    for an additional term runs with the land under section 1462 "because obviously a
    covenant for a renewal of a lease is for the direct benefit of the estate granted" (italics
    added)]; Los Angeles Terminal Land Co. v. Muir (1902) 
    136 Cal. 36
    , 41-42 (Muir)
    [covenant did not run with the land under section 1462 because it "was not made for the
    benefit of the lot conveyed, but purported to impose a burden thereon by restricting its
    use" (italics added)].)
    The rule that a covenant does not run under section 1462 if it burdens "the
    property" does not apply to the building restriction at issue in this case because the
    restriction burdens only the land that Fleet retained; it does not burden the land she
    conveyed by the deed containing the building restriction. The building restriction is a
    covenant running with the land under section 1462 because it is contained in a grant of
    real property and directly benefits the land conveyed. 5
    5       In Oceanside Community Assn. v. Oceanside Land Co. (1983) 
    147 Cal.App.3d 166
    (Oceanside), a developer of 932 residences on individual lots recorded CC&R's
    restricting property it owned adjacent to the residential development to be used as a golf
    course. (Id. at p. 172.) This court decided the golf-course restriction was enforceable as
    a covenant running with the land under the current version of section 1468 as to some
    10
    The Selfs argue that the building restriction is not enforceable as a covenant
    running with the land because it does not describe the dominant tenement — i.e., the
    property benefitted by the restriction. Among other authority, the Selfs cite the Citizens
    court's statement that in light of the statute of frauds, for restrictions to be enforceable
    "there ' " 'should be some written evidence' " ' indicating what property was affected by the
    restrictions." (Citizens, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 358.) The Selfs also cite MacDonald
    Properties, Inc. v. Bel-Air Country Club (1977) 
    72 Cal.App.3d 693
     (MacDonald) for the
    proposition that a deed restriction cannot be enforced as a covenant running with the land
    if the deed contains no particular description of the dominant tenement to be benefitted. 6
    homeowners and as an equitable servitude as to others. (Oceanside, at pp. 174-175.) In
    light of that determination, it was unnecessary for the Oceanside court to address whether
    the restriction was also a covenant running with the land under section 1462.
    Nevertheless, the court opined that the restriction was not enforceable under section 1462
    because although it benefited the homeowners' properties, it burdened the developer's
    property. (Oceanside, at p. 174.) The court cited Marra, supra, 
    15 Cal.2d 375
    , and
    Muir, supra, 
    136 Cal. 36
    , for the proposition that a covenant does not run with the land
    under section 1462 if it burdens property. (Oceanside, at p. 174.) However, both Marra
    and Muir involved covenants that burdened only land conveyed by a grant deed and not
    land retained by the grantor. Neither case supports the Oceanside court's apparent view
    that a restriction in a grant deed cannot be a covenant running with the land under section
    1462 if it burdens any other property. Because the Oceanside court's cursory analysis of
    the applicability of section 1462 was unnecessary to its decision, and its cited authority
    does not support its conclusion on that point, we do not view Oceanside as persuasive
    authority for the proposition that a covenant in a grant of real property that directly
    benefits the conveyed property does not run under section 1462 if it correspondingly
    burdens property the grantor retains.
    6      Although the MacDonald court stated that the plaintiffs in that case were
    "technically correct at law" in arguing that the covenant in question did not particularly
    describe the property benefitted by the covenant, it nevertheless decided the covenant
    was enforceable as an equitable servitude. (MacDonald, supra, 72 Cal.App.3d at
    pp. 699-701.)
    11
    However, the requirement addressed in MacDonald that the instrument containing a
    covenant must particularly describe the land benefitted (and the land burdened) by the
    covenant is a requirement under the current version of section 1468, subdivision (a); it is
    not a requirement under section 1462. (MacDonald, at p. 699.)7
    In any event, we conclude that the 1946 grant from Fleet to the Donovans satisfies
    the requirement that "there ' " 'should be some written evidence' " ' indicating what
    property was affected by the restrictions." (Citizens, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 358.) The
    1946 grant deed specifically described the portion of Lot 4 retained by Fleet and
    burdened by the building restriction, and sufficiently described the portion of Lot 4 being
    conveyed. Although the building restriction did not specifically state that the conveyed
    7       Before the current version of section 1468 was enacted, the courts in Chandler v.
    Smith (1959) 
    170 Cal.App.2d 118
     and Berryman v. Hotel Savoy Co. (1911) 
    160 Cal. 559
    decided that building restrictions imposed on the land conveyed in original grant deeds
    were not covenants running with the land in part because the deeds did not describe land
    to be benefitted by the covenants. However, these cases are inapposite. Unlike the
    building restriction at issue in the present case, the restrictions in Berryman burdened,
    rather than benefitted, the land of the grantee, and nothing in the deed gave notice to
    subsequent purchasers that the original grantor owned other property to be benefitted by
    the restrictions. Consequently, a subsequent purchaser was entitled to read the
    restrictions as not creating a covenant or servitude that would pass with the land.
    (Berryman, at pp. 564-565.) Similarly, the restrictions in Chandler burdened rather than
    benefitted the property conveyed, and it did not "appear that the restrictions . . . were
    inserted for the benefit of grantors' adjoining land." (Chandler, at p. 120.) In addition,
    the deed in Chandler expressly provided that title would not be forfeited or impaired for
    violation of the restrictions. Based on those facts, the Chandler court concluded that "the
    deed created a mere personal burden adhering exclusively to the original covenantor."
    (Ibid.) Unlike the deeds in Berryman and Chandler, the recorded 1946 deed in this case
    gives notice to subsequent purchasers of the property burdened by the building restriction
    (the property that Fleet retained) that Fleet conveyed adjoining property to be benefitted
    by the restriction.
    12
    portion of Lot 4 was the property intended to be benefitted by the building restriction, this
    intent is reasonably clear from the fact that the only properties referenced in the deed are
    the portion of Lot 4 retained and burdened by the building restriction and the portion of
    Lot 4 conveyed. We construe the building restriction as conferring a direct benefit on the
    parcel conveyed, which the Sharafis now own.
    The Selfs additionally argue that the building restriction is not a covenant running
    with the land because the 1946 grant deed does not express a joint intention that the
    restriction be binding on the grantor's and grantees' successors or assigns. The Selfs cite
    Oceanside for the proposition that a baseline requirement for a restrictive covenant to run
    with the land is an expression in the instrument in question that the restriction will be
    binding on the parties' successors and assigns. However, as the Oceanside court noted,
    the requirement a "covenant must state it is binding on the assigns of the covenantor" is a
    requirement under the former version of section 1468. (Oceanside, supra, 147
    Cal.App.3d at pp. 174-175 & fn. 4.)8 It is not a requirement under section 1462.9
    8       As noted, the original version of section 1468 provided: "A covenant made by the
    owner of land with the owner of other land to do or refrain from doing some act on his
    own land, which doing or refraining is expressed to be for the benefit of the land of the
    covenantee, and which is made by the covenantor expressly for his assigns or to the
    assigns of the covenantee, runs with both of such parcels of land." (Stats. 1905, ch. 450,
    § 1, p. 610, italics added.)
    9        At oral argument, the Selfs argued that a covenant under section 1462 must also
    state it is binding on heirs and assigns (i.e., future owners) of the covenantor, citing
    Citizens, 
    supra,
     12 Cal.4th at pp. 353-354. However, Citizens does not support that
    argument. On page 353, the Supreme Court set forth general background information
    about covenants running with the land. Regarding section 1462, the court noted that
    before the amendments to section 1468 in 1968 and 1969, section 1462 and 1468 "were
    13
    We conclude the building restriction in the 1946 deed is a covenant running with
    the land under section 1462.10 As a statutory covenant running with the land, by
    operation of section 1460 the building restriction "bind[s] the assigns of the covenantor
    and . . . vest[s] in the assigns of the covenantee, in the same manner as if they had
    personally entered into them." (§ 1460.) Accordingly, it is enforceable against the
    portion of Lot 4 that the Selfs now own. Where, as here, it appears from the record that
    there is only one proper judgment on undisputed facts, we may direct the trial court to
    enter that judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., § 43; Conley v. Matthes (1997) 
    56 Cal.App.4th 1453
    , 1459, fn. 7.)
    written and interpreted very narrowly." (Citizens, at p. 353.) The Citizens court went on
    to note that "[u]nder section 1462, a [covenant] that benefits the property may run with
    the land, but not one that burdens the property." (Ibid.) The Citizens court noted that the
    covenants (CC&R's) at issue in that case were not enforceable as covenants under section
    1462 because they burdened as well as benefitted the property conveyed. (Citizens, at
    p. 368.) The Citizens court did not address whether a covenant under section 1462 must
    state that it binds later owners, nor did it address that requirement in former section 1468.
    Regarding future owners, in its general background discussion the Citizens court simply
    noted, in accordance with section 1460, that "[a] covenant is said to run with the land if it
    binds not only the person who entered into it, but also later owners and assigns who did
    not personally enter into it." (Citizens, supra, 12 Cal.4th at p. 353, citing § 1460 and
    Scaringe v. J.C.C. Enterprises, Inc. (1988) 
    205 Cal.App.3d 1536
    , 1543.)
    10     In light of our conclusion that the building restriction is a covenant running with
    the land under section 1462, we need not consider whether it is also enforceable as an
    equitable servitude.
    14
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment in favor of respondents is reversed. The trial court is directed to
    enter judgment in favor of appellants on their cross-complaint and against respondents on
    their first amended complaint. Appellants are awarded their costs on appeal.
    IRION, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    NARES, Acting P.J.
    MCDONALD, J.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D061181

Judges: Irion

Filed Date: 9/20/2013

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/3/2024