Equestrian Ridge v. Equestrian Ridge Estates II , 308 Neb. 128 ( 2021 )


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    www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/
    03/26/2021 08:09 AM CDT
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    308 Nebraska Reports
    EQUESTRIAN RIDGE v. EQUESTRIAN RIDGE ESTATES II
    Cite as 
    308 Neb. 128
    Equestrian Ridge Homeowners Association,
    appellee, v. Equestrian Ridge Estates II
    Homeowners Association, appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed January 8, 2021.   No. S-20-239.
    1. Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. An appellate court’s review of whether
    the district court had subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law and,
    when it does not involve a factual dispute, is reviewed de novo.
    2. Judgments: Appeal and Error. In a bench trial of a law action, the trial
    court’s factual findings have the effect of a jury verdict, and an appellate
    court will not disturb those findings unless they are clearly erroneous.
    3. ____: ____. In a bench trial of a law action, an appellate court
    resolves a trial court’s determination of law independently of the lower
    court’s conclusions.
    4. Standing: Jurisdiction: Parties. Standing refers to whether a party had,
    at the commencement of the litigation, a personal stake in the outcome
    of the litigation that would warrant a court’s exercise of its subject mat-
    ter jurisdiction and remedial powers on that party’s behalf.
    5. Standing: Parties. To have standing, the plaintiff must have some
    legal or equitable right, title, or interest in the subject matter of
    the controversy.
    6. ____: ____. A plaintiff does not generally have standing to bring a case
    on behalf of a third party.
    7. Contracts: Standing: Parties. Third-party-beneficiary theory is a
    ­common-law doctrine that allows a nonparty to a contract to enforce an
    interest owed by a promisor under the contract.
    8. ____: ____: ____. The fact that a third party would be better off if a
    contract were enforced does not give him or her standing to enforce
    the contract.
    9. Contracts: Parties: Intent: Proof. To enforce a contract, a third party
    bears the burden of proving that he or she was an intended, not inciden-
    tal, beneficiary of rights under the contract.
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    EQUESTRIAN RIDGE v. EQUESTRIAN RIDGE ESTATES II
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    10. Contracts: Words and Phrases. An intended beneficiary is one whose
    rights and interest were apparently contemplated by the contract’s lan-
    guage itself.
    11. Contracts: Parties: Stipulations: Intent. To be those of an intended
    beneficiary, a third party’s rights must appear by express stipulation or
    it must appear by reasonable intendment that the rights and interest of
    such unnamed parties were contemplated and that provision was being
    made for them.
    12. Contracts: Proof. The person seeking enforcement of a contract has
    the burden of establishing the existence of a valid, legally enforceable
    agreement, consisting of an offer, acceptance, and some meeting of
    the minds.
    13. Contracts. To be binding, an agreement must be definite and certain as
    to the terms and requirements upon its parties.
    14. ____. An enforceable contract must identify the subject matter and detail
    the parties’ essential commitments to each other.
    15. Contracts: Real Estate: Property: Words and Phrases. The difference
    between an analysis based in real covenant law and one based in con-
    tract law is that contracts concern primarily personal rights and duties,
    while real covenants concern rights that run with property.
    16. Contracts: Real Estate. Whereas personal contract rights are not bind-
    ing on successors in interest, real covenants can be.
    17. Contracts: Real Estate: Intent. There are generally three requirements
    for a covenant, whether affirmative or negative, to run with the land:
    (1) The grantor and the grantee must have intended that the covenant
    run with the land, as determined from the instruments of record; (2) the
    covenant must touch and concern the land with which it runs; and (3)
    the party claiming the benefit of the covenant and the party who bears
    the burden of the covenant must be in privity of estate.
    18. Contracts: Real Estate: Intent: Appeal and Error. An appellate court
    determines whether the grantor and grantee of a covenant had the intent
    to bind successors in interest by referring to the instruments of record.
    19. Contracts: Intent. Interpretation of instruments of record should be
    performed in a manner that will give effect to the true intention of the
    parties as expressed in the writings.
    20. Contracts: Real Estate. As with any other contract, canons of construc-
    tion are used only insofar as they are necessary to resolve an ambiguity
    in the text of a covenant itself.
    21. ____: ____. To touch and concern the land, the object of the covenant
    must be annexed to, inherent in, or connected with the land.
    22. ____: ____. The touch and concern requirement of a real covenant is
    met when the covenant affects the legal relations—the advantages and
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    EQUESTRIAN RIDGE v. EQUESTRIAN RIDGE ESTATES II
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    308 Neb. 128
    the burdens—of the parties to the covenant, as owners of particular
    parcels of land and not merely as members of the community in gen-
    eral, such as taxpayers or owners of other land. The covenant must
    impose, on the one hand, a burden upon an interest in land, which on
    the other hand increases the value of a different interest in the same or
    related land.
    23.   ____: ____. The test of whether a covenant touches and concerns the
    land is whether it tends directly or necessarily to enhance its value or
    render it more beneficial or convenient to those by whom it is owned or
    occupied. Those covenants that are generally held to run with the land
    and to insure to the benefit of the assignee are such as ordinarily affect
    the land itself and confer a benefit on the grantor.
    24.   Actions: Parties. Privity requires, at a minimum, a substantial identity
    between the issues in controversy and a showing that the parties in the
    two actions are really and substantially in interest the same.
    25.   ____: ____. Privity depends upon the relation of the parties to the sub-
    ject matter and not their activity in a suit relating to it after the event.
    26.   Property: Parties: Words and Phrases. Privity is a mutual or succes-
    sive relationship to the same rights of property. In its broadest sense,
    privity is defined as mutual or successive relationships to the same
    right of property, or such an identification of interest of one person
    with another as to represent the same legal right or derivative interest
    between parties.
    27.   Contracts: Parties: Assignments. Whereas a party assigns rights under
    a contract, a party delegates duties.
    28.   Parties: Assignments. Parties should generally be free to assign rights
    and delegate duties as they see fit, subject to certain limitations.
    29.   Contracts: Public Policy. Contract duties are generally delegable
    unless prohibited by statute, public policy, or the terms of the con-
    tract. Contractual duties are also not delegable if they involve the
    personal qualities or skills of the obligor, in the absence of consent by
    the obligee.
    30.   Contracts. Delegation to a third party of the duty to perform under a
    contract requires an agreement between the obligor under the first con-
    tract and a delegate. That is, the delegate must agree to be delegated the
    obligor’s duty.
    31.   ____. A delegation of duties is not itself sufficient to bind its delegate to
    perform the duties delegated.
    32.   Contracts: Claims: Breach of Contract. The mere delegation of a
    performance imposes no duty on the delegate to perform. If the del-
    egate performs the duty, the duty is discharged. If the delegate does
    not perform the duty, the duty is not discharged, but any claim of the
    obligee for breach is against the delegating party and not against the
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    delegate. The delegate is under no duty to perform unless it has under-
    taken to do so.
    33.   Contracts: Assignments. Even if a delegate does not promise in so
    many words to perform the duty of the delegating party, a court may
    infer such a promise from the delegate’s conduct. Thus, if a party trans-
    fers the entire contract, assigning rights as well as delegating perform­
    ance, an assumption of those duties by the transferee will be inferred
    from the acceptance of the transfer, unless the language or the situation
    indicates the contrary.
    34.   Equity: Estoppel: Unjust Enrichment: Contracts: Real Estate.
    Implied reciprocal servitude, unjust enrichment, and equitable estop-
    pel are theories of recovery based not on the terms of a contract, but,
    instead, on circumstances that demand judicial action to remedy an
    injustice or inequity. They are generally conceived as alternatives to
    enforceable covenants or provisions in a contract.
    35.   Contracts: Real Estate. An implied reciprocal servitude is created by
    implication when no express real covenant applies.
    36.   Equity: Estoppel: Unjust Enrichment: Contracts. Unjust enrichment
    and equitable estoppel claims are contract substitutes that courts apply
    to prevent injustice.
    37.   Equity: Contracts: Real Estate. Where a contract or real covenant
    itself is enforceable, its terms will not be displaced in equity.
    38.   Actions: Claims: Equity: Contracts. Although a party is permitted to
    allege both a claim based in contract and in equity, once the terms of the
    contract are found to be enforceable, those terms will generally control
    and supersede other equitable actions.
    39.   Contracts: Appeal and Error. When the terms of a contract are
    clear, an appellate court interprets the contract according to its terms’
    plain meaning.
    40.   Contracts. Terms of a contract that are clear are given their plain and
    ordinary meaning as a reasonable person would understand them.
    41.   ____. A contract must receive a reasonable construction and must be
    construed as a whole.
    42.   ____. If possible, effect must be given to every part of a contract.
    43.   ____. A court is not free to rewrite a contract or to speculate as to terms
    of the contract which the parties have not seen fit to include.
    44.   Contracts: Intent. A court should avoid interpreting contract provisions
    in a manner that leads to unreasonable or absurd results that are obvi-
    ously inconsistent with the parties’ intent.
    Appeal from the District Court for Sarpy County: George
    A. Thompson, Judge. Affirmed.
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    EQUESTRIAN RIDGE v. EQUESTRIAN RIDGE ESTATES II
    Cite as 
    308 Neb. 128
    David L. Welch and Lisa M. Meyer, of Pansing, Hogan,
    Ernst & Bachman, L.L.P., for appellant.
    Thomas M. Locher and Amy M. Locher, of Locher, Pavelka,
    Dostal, Braddy & Hammes, L.L.C., for appellee.
    Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke,
    Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ.
    Heavican, C.J.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    This case concerns the cost of maintenance for a private
    street that connects two subdivisions to public roads. In 2010,
    the subdivisions’ developers agreed to adopt covenants requir-
    ing the subdivisions to share maintenance costs for the pri-
    vate street. Both developers adopted such covenants. But in
    2016, one subdivision modified its covenants to repudiate any
    responsibility to pay for the street’s maintenance costs.
    The other subdivision sued, claiming, among other things,
    $18,732.74 in damages. The district court found for the plain-
    tiff subdivision. We affirm.
    II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    Equestrian Ridge L.L.C. (ER) was a limited liability com-
    pany established in 1995 by Ted Grace, individually, and
    Duane Dowd, individually and on behalf of his business,
    Dowd Grain Company, Inc. (Dowd Grain). Grace and Dowd
    owned adjoining 80-acre tracts of land near Gretna, Nebraska.
    Together the men agreed to contribute their tracts to ER and
    to cooperate in developing the tracts into residential sub­
    divisions. Grace’s tract, known as Equestrian Ridge Estates
    (ERE), would be developed first. ERE was a rectangular tract
    and bisected by a 1-mile stretch of 232d Street, a privately
    maintained street running north to south from Lincoln Road to
    Angus Road.
    On November 20, 2004, Grace and Dowd executed a sec-
    ond agreement (2004 Agreement). In it, each acknowledged
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    EQUESTRIAN RIDGE v. EQUESTRIAN RIDGE ESTATES II
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    308 Neb. 128
    that ER had already contracted to sell 5 of the 15 lots that
    had been developed in ERE. Eventually all 15 lots would
    be sold, each subject to the authority of an Equestrian Ridge
    Estates Homeowners’ Association (ERE HOA). But the next
    step, according to the 2004 Agreement, would be to develop
    Dowd’s tract, known as Dowd Grain Subdivision (DGS).
    DGS was a trapezoidal tract, located east of ERE along
    Shiloh Drive, which ran 2,000 feet south from Lincoln Road
    before turning west and ending in a dead end near the border
    with ERE.
    Because DGS lots were only accessible by Shiloh Road,
    which terminated in a dead end, Grace and Dowd also deter-
    mined that accessibility to DGS’ lots should be improved by
    extending Shiloh Road past its dead end to the west, across
    the border with ERE. Accordingly, the 2004 Agreement stated
    that “in the platting and subdivision of [DGS,] there will be a
    connecting street [from the Shiloh Road dead end across ERE
    land] to 232nd Street.”
    To fulfill this purpose, Grace and Dowd agreed, inter
    alia, that:
    2. Dowd Grain will, through Subdivision Agreements,
    Covenants, and provisions applicable to homeowner[s’]
    associations or any combination of the foregoing, subject
    [DGS] to a sharing of one third of the costs and expenses
    of [ER] and [ERE HOA] in the repair and maintenance
    of 232nd Street within [ERE]. The obligation for such
    sharing of costs will begin when all public improvements
    consisting of necessary utilities and interior streets in
    [DGS] have been completed. When and if Lincoln Road
    is paved the cost sharing shall be reduced from one third
    to one fourth. These costs and maintenance expenses will
    include road maintenance and resurfacing, maintenance
    and repair of the bridge at the south end of 232nd Street
    near Angus Road, snow removal, mowing of right-of-
    way and maintenance of entrances at Angus Road and
    Lincoln Road. . . .
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    ....
    4. The parties agree to execute any and all documents
    necessary or appropriate to carry into effect the forego-
    ing agreements.
    ....
    8. . . . Grace and his related entities agree not to object
    to [DGS].
    9. The [ERE HOA] and each lot owner in [ERE] shall
    be a third-party beneficiary of this Agreement.
    The 2004 Agreement was signed by Grace, individually and in
    his capacity as manager of ER, and by Dowd, individually and
    in his capacity as president of Dowd Grain.
    Also in the 2004 Agreement, Grace and Dowd agreed that
    their cooperation in developing the tracts was complete. They
    liquidated ER’s assets by allocating to each man ownership
    over several of the remaining ERE lots and granting all of DGS
    to Dowd. ER then dissolved in 2005.
    From 2005 to 2010, Dowd developed 23 residential lots
    within DGS, and he renamed the subdivision Equestrian Ridge
    Estates II (ERE II). Shiloh Road, also known as 231st Street,
    was also extended west to connect with 232d Street.
    On January 12, 2010, before any individual lots were sold
    in ERE II, Dowd, in his capacity as president of Dowd Grain,
    signed and recorded a “Declaration of Covenants, Conditions,
    Restrictions and Easements of [ERE II]” (Declaration). The
    Declaration purported to govern an “[ERE II] Homeowners’
    Association” (ERE II HOA) that had been formed by articles
    of incorporation filed in 2007, and it required that all future
    owners of the 23 lots in ERE II automatically became members
    of ERE II HOA upon purchase of an ERE II lot.
    As relevant here, the Declaration also provided:
    The powers and duties to be exercised by [Dowd
    Grain], and subsequently by the Board of Directors of
    [ERE II HOA], shall include, but shall not be limited to,
    the following:
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    (a) The . . . assessment for and payment of any tax
    liability attributable to the Common Areas and facilities,
    and the enforcement of the rules and regulations relating
    to the Common Facilities.
    The costs and maintenance expenses for 232nd Street
    shall relate only to that portion of 232nd Street located
    within [ERE], including the entrances at Angus Road and
    Lincoln Road, and shall be in the amount of one-fourth
    of the costs and expenses expended by [Dowd Grain]
    and/or [ERE HOA] related to such matters. The costs
    and maintenance expenses will include road maintenance
    and resurfacing, maintenance and repair of the bridge
    at the south end of 232nd Street near Angus Road, snow
    removal, mowing of right-of-way and maintenance of
    entrances at Angus Road and Lincoln Road.
    (b) The fixing, levying, collecting, abatement, and
    enforcement of all charges, dues, or assessments made
    pursuant to the terms of this Declaration or [ERE II
    HOA].
    From 2010 to 2015, Dowd sold many of the lots within
    ERE II and gradually relinquished control over the subdivision.
    Dowd was initially a board member and was the first president
    of ERE II HOA, but on July 7, 2015, in his personal capacity,
    Dowd signed a letter titled “RESIGNATION,” resigning as “an
    Officer and Director” of ERE II HOA. On the same day, in his
    capacity as president of Dowd Grain, Dowd signed a document
    entitled “Declarant’s Release, Relinquishment and Assignment
    of Powers and Duties Under the Declaration of [ERE II].” The
    document purported to “hereby release, relinquish and assign
    to [ERE II HOA] any and all powers and duties of [Dowd
    Grain] as provided in the Declaration.” The board members of
    ERE II HOA formally accepted Dowd’s relinquishment docu-
    ment during the board’s annual meeting on July 7. From that
    date forward, the ERE II HOA board managed the subdivi-
    sion and, until May 24, 2016, contributed its share under the
    2004 Agreement of one fourth of all maintenance costs for
    232d Street.
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    EQUESTRIAN RIDGE v. EQUESTRIAN RIDGE ESTATES II
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    308 Neb. 128
    Around 2014, however, a dispute formed between ERE
    HOA and ERE II HOA. In late 2014 or early 2015, the
    board of directors for ERE II HOA met to discuss major road-
    work that was expected along 232d Street. ERE HOA had hired
    an engineering firm to provide cost estimates for repair of the
    street’s bridge. At the meeting, ERE II HOA board members
    complained that when ERE HOA made repairs to 232d Street,
    it did so without the input of ERE II HOA. Board members for
    ERE II HOA objected that they only ever learned about 232d
    Street maintenance projects upon receiving invoices from ERE
    HOA, typically without any explanation about the maintenance
    for which they were being asked to contribute. ERE II HOA
    board members also expressed concern that ERE HOA did not
    contribute anything to the maintenance and upkeep costs of
    ERE II HOA’s own private road, which connected Shiloh Drive
    to 232d Street.
    Based on these complaints, in early 2015, ERE II HOA
    decided to amend its Declaration (Amended Declaration) to
    remove any requirement of ERE II lot owners to contribute
    to maintenance costs of 232d Street. ERE II HOA drafted
    the Amended Declaration, which 77 percent of lot owners in
    ERE II signed. Since May 24, 2016, ERE II HOA has refused
    to contribute to 232d Street maintenance costs. ERE HOA has
    paid the entire amount.
    ERE HOA initiated this action on July 21, 2017. ERE HOA
    filed a complaint in the district court for Sarpy County seek-
    ing to declare the Amended Declaration null and void and to
    require ERE II HOA to pay one-fourth of maintenance costs
    for 232d Street pursuant to the 2004 Agreement. Specifically,
    ERE HOA alleged seven theories for recovery: breach of con-
    tract, breach of express covenant, breach of implied restrictive
    covenant, unjust enrichment, equitable estoppel, specific per-
    formance, and declaratory judgment. The parties agreed to try
    the case to the court and stipulated to certain facts.
    On February 20, 2020, after a bench trial, the district court
    entered judgment for ERE HOA. It found that ERE II HOA
    was a successor in interest to Dowd and DGS and that as
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    such, ERE II HOA was bound by the 2004 Agreement. The dis-
    trict court also found that the 2004 Agreement’s requirement
    that Dowd and DGS contribute to the costs of maintain-
    ing 232d Street was given effect by Dowd’s adoption of the
    Declaration. The district court also found that members of
    ERE II HOA had purchased their lots subject to the Declaration,
    with constructive notice of its covenant requiring contribution
    for maintenance costs of 232d Street. Thus, the district court
    held that ERE HOA “prevail[ed] on most, if not all[,] of the
    theories set forth in the Complaint.”
    ERE HOA was awarded $18,732.74 in damages for its past
    due share of 232d Street maintenance costs. Additionally, the
    district court ordered ERE II HOA to continue contributing its
    share of costs for 232d Street maintenance and to not again
    repudiate its obligation to contribute.
    ERE II HOA filed a timely notice of appeal. 1
    III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    ERE II HOA assigns, consolidated and restated, that the
    district court erred in (1) finding that the 2004 Agreement was
    enforceable against ERE II HOA, a nonparty to that agreement;
    (2) finding that ERE II HOA breached its duty under the 2004
    Agreement to contribute to 232d Street maintenance costs; and
    (3) awarding damages, specific performance, and declaratory
    relief to ERE HOA.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1] An appellate court’s review of whether the district court
    had subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law and, when it
    does not involve a factual dispute, is reviewed de novo. 2
    [2,3] In a bench trial of a law action, the trial court’s fac-
    tual findings have the effect of a jury verdict, and an appellate
    court will not disturb those findings unless they are clearly
    1
    See 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1912
     (Cum. Supp. 2018).
    2
    See State ex rel. Malone v. Baldonado-Bellamy, 
    307 Neb. 549
    , 
    950 N.W.2d 51
     (2020).
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    erroneous. 3 In contrast, when reviewing determinations of law,
    an appellate court resolves the questions independently of the
    lower court’s conclusions. 4
    V. ANALYSIS
    At its heart, this is a contract dispute that also involves real
    covenants. ERE HOA claims that ERE II HOA was bound
    by, and breached, a provision in the 2004 Agreement requir-
    ing it to contribute to 232d Street maintenance costs; ERE II
    HOA disagrees.
    1. Standing
    As an initial matter, before considering the merits of
    ERE II HOA’s assignments of error, we must determine
    whether ERE HOA had standing to bring an action to enforce
    the 2004 Agreement. 5
    [4-6] Standing refers to whether a party had, at the com-
    mencement of the litigation, a personal stake in the outcome
    of the litigation that would warrant a court’s exercise of its
    subject matter jurisdiction and remedial powers on that party’s
    behalf. 6 To have standing, the plaintiff must have some legal
    or equitable right, title, or interest in the subject matter of the
    controversy. 7 A plaintiff does not generally have standing to
    bring a case on behalf of a third party. 8
    ERE HOA’s suit here is based on the 2004 Agreement,
    a contract to which it was not a named party. Indeed, the
    2004 Agreement was signed by only two persons: Grace,
    3
    See State ex rel. BH Media Group v. Frakes, 
    305 Neb. 780
    , 
    943 N.W.2d 231
     (2020).
    4
    See Nolasco v. Malcom, 
    307 Neb. 309
    , 
    949 N.W.2d 201
     (2020).
    5
    First State Bank Neb. v. MP Nexlevel, 
    307 Neb. 198
    , 
    948 N.W.2d 708
     (2020).
    6
    
    Id.
    7
    
    Id.
     See, also, 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-301
     (Reissue 2016).
    8
    First State Bank Neb., 
    supra note 5
    .
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    individually and in his capacity as manager of ER, and Dowd,
    individually and in his capacity as president of Dowd Grain.
    Still, ERE HOA contends it has standing to bring this action as
    a third-party beneficiary under the 2004 Agreement.
    [7-9] Third-party-beneficiary theory is a common-law doc-
    trine that allows a nonparty to a contract to enforce an interest
    owed by a promisor under the contract. 9 We have strictly con-
    strued who may enforce a contract as a third-party benefici­
    ary. 10 The fact that a third party would be better off if a contract
    were enforced does not give him or her standing to enforce the
    contract. 11 Rather, to enforce a contract, the third party bears
    the burden of proving that he or she was an intended, not inci-
    dental, beneficiary of rights under the contract. 12
    [10,11] An intended beneficiary is one whose rights and
    interest were apparently contemplated by the contract’s lan-
    guage itself. 13 This generally means that the third party’s rights
    must appear by express stipulation or it must appear by reason-
    able intendment that the rights and interest of such unnamed
    parties were contemplated and that provision was being made
    for them. 14
    Here, it appears that ERE HOA’s third-party rights as an
    intended beneficiary were expressly recognized within the text
    of the 2004 Agreement. Despite its execution between Grace
    and Dowd, the 2004 Agreement stipulated that ERE HOA
    “shall be a third-party beneficiary of this Agreement.”
    9
    See, generally, E. Allan Farnsworth, Contracts §§ 10.1 to 10.6 (4th ed.
    2004); 13 Richard A. Lord, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts by Samuel
    Williston § 37:1 et seq. (4th ed. 2013).
    10
    Podraza v. New Century Physicians of Neb., 
    280 Neb. 678
    , 
    789 N.W.2d 260
     (2010).
    11
    Marcuzzo v. Bank of the West, 
    290 Neb. 809
    , 
    862 N.W.2d 281
     (2015).
    12
    Western Ethanol Co. v. Midwest Renewable Energy, 
    305 Neb. 1
    , 
    938 N.W.2d 329
     (2020).
    13
    
    Id.
    14
    Podraza, supra note 10.
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    We view this as an express stipulation of ERE HOA’s rights
    as an intended third-party beneficiary. Accordingly, we find
    that ERE HOA met its burden of showing standing to bring
    this action.
    2. Enforcement of 2004 Agreement
    Next, we consider the merits of ERE II HOA’s first assign-
    ment of error. ERE II HOA assigns that the district court erred
    in finding that the 2004 Agreement could be enforced against
    ERE II HOA, a nonparty to the agreement. Alternatively, even
    if the 2004 Agreement could be enforced against it, ERE II
    HOA assigns that the district court erred in finding that ERE II
    HOA had breached that agreement.
    [12-14] The rules for enforcement of any contract are famil-
    iar: The person seeking enforcement of the contract has the
    burden of establishing the existence of a valid, legally enforce-
    able agreement, consisting of an offer, acceptance, and some
    meeting of the minds. 15 To be binding, the agreement must be
    definite and certain as to the terms and requirements upon its
    parties. 16 It must identify the subject matter and detail the par-
    ties’ essential commitments to each other. 17
    The parties here do not dispute that under these familiar
    rules of contract law, the 2004 Agreement was binding—at
    least as between Grace and Dowd, the parties named in the
    agreement. But ERE II HOA was not named as a party to the
    2004 Agreement. Thus, ERE II HOA contends that the 2004
    Agreement, including its requirement to contribute to 232d
    Street maintenance costs, could not bind ERE II HOA. At ERE
    HOA’s urging, however, the district court held that ERE II
    HOA was bound to contribute to 232d Street maintenance costs
    under the 2004 Agreement. We agree.
    15
    See Acklie v. Greater Omaha Packing Co., 
    306 Neb. 108
    , 
    944 N.W.2d 297
     (2020).
    16
    See 
    id.
    17
    See 
    id.
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    (a) Successor in Interest
    to Real Property
    While the district court held that ERE HOA prevailed “on
    most, if not all of the [seven] theories [of recovery] set forth in
    the Complaint,” the district court’s analysis implicitly focused
    on the real property law of real covenants. It emphasized that
    ERE II HOA “[was] a successor in interest of [DGS] and,
    as such, [was] bound by [the covenant at issue in the 2004
    Agreement,] which runs with the land in perpetuity.” A “suc-
    cessor in interest” is defined as one “who follows another in
    ownership or control of property . . . retain[ing] the same rights
    as the original owner, with no change in substance.” 18
    [15,16] The difference between an analysis based in real
    covenant law and one based in contract law is that contracts
    concern primarily personal rights and duties, while real cove-
    nants concern rights that run with property. 19 Whereas personal
    contract rights are not binding on successors in interest, real
    covenants can be. 20
    The general rules governing the running of covenants with
    land are rooted in English common law. 21 Therein, it was first
    stated that for a covenant to run with the land, it must touch
    and concern the land and expressly bind assignees. 22
    [17] Under the modern rule, there are generally three
    requirements for a covenant, whether affirmative or nega-
    tive, to run with the land: (1) The grantor and the grantee
    must have intended that the covenant run with the land, as
    determined from the instruments of record; (2) the covenant
    must touch and concern the land with which it runs; and (3)
    the party claiming the benefit of the covenant and the party
    18
    Black’s Law Dictionary 1732 (11th ed. 2019). Accord 73 C.J.S. Property
    § 59 (2014).
    19
    Regency Homes Assn. v. Egermayer, 
    243 Neb. 286
    , 
    498 N.W.2d 783
     (1993).
    20
    See 
    id.
     See, also, 21 C.J.S. Covenants § 6 (2016).
    21
    Regency Homes Assn., supra note 19.
    22
    Id. (citing Spencer’s Case, 5 Co. Rep. 16 a, 77 Eng. Rep. 72 (1583)).
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    who bears the burden of the covenant must be in privity of
    estate. 23 We review whether each requirement, in turn, has
    been met here.
    (i) Intent to Bind
    [18-20] The first requirement for a real covenant to run
    with the land is that its original grantor and grantee must have
    intended for it to bind successors in interest. 24 We determine
    whether the grantor and grantee had this intent by referring to
    the instruments of record. 25 Interpretation of such documents
    should be performed in a manner that will give effect to the
    true intention of the parties as expressed in the writings. 26 As
    with any other contract, canons of construction are used only
    insofar as they are necessary to resolve an ambiguity in the
    text itself. 27
    Under the plain terms of the 2004 Agreement, we find it
    apparent that Grace and Dowd intended to sell their subdivi-
    sion lots soon, while still subjecting those lots to various cov-
    enants, including the requirement to contribute to 232d Street
    maintenance costs. It was contemplated that these covenants
    would bind lot owners in the future. For example, the covenant
    at issue was expressed in the future tense: “Dowd Grain will,
    though Subdivision Agreements, Covenants, and provisions
    applicable to homeowner[s’] associations or any combination
    of the foregoing, subject [DGS] to a [232d Street cost] sharing”
    requirement. At the time the document was executed, no cov-
    enants, declarations, or homeowners’ associations had yet been
    established on either ERE or ERE II, yet the above-quoted
    provision plainly anticipated them.
    In addition, the next three sentences in the 2004 Agreement
    likewise showed that Grace and Dowd intended to bind
    23
    See Brick Development v. CNBT II, 
    301 Neb. 279
    , 
    918 N.W.2d 824
     (2018).
    24
    See 
    id.
    25
    See 
    id.
    26
    Standard Meat Co. v. Feerhusen, 
    204 Neb. 325
    , 
    282 N.W.2d 34
     (1979).
    27
    
    Id.
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    persons owning subdivision lots in the future to the require-
    ment to contribute to 232d Street maintenance costs. First, the
    obligation of Dowd’s subdivision to pay “will begin” when
    the subdivision’s public utilities and streets were completed;
    second, if Lincoln Road was paved, “the cost sharing shall
    be reduced from one third to one fourth”; and third, the costs
    Dowd’s subdivision would be required to pay “will include”
    road maintenance, resurfacing, maintenance and repair of a
    bridge, snow removal, and mowing. Each of these events
    plainly had not yet occurred when the 2004 Agreement was
    executed, but was anticipated to begin or continue as the sub-
    divisions’ lots were sold.
    Reading the instruments of record in total, we view them
    as stating plainly the intention of Grace and Dowd to subject
    future homeowners’ associations and lot owners in their subdi-
    visions to the covenants of the 2004 Agreement, including the
    requirement to contribute to 232d Street maintenance costs.
    Thus, we find that the first element for a covenant to run with
    the land is met.
    (ii) Touch and Concern
    The second element for a covenant to run with the land is
    that it touches and concerns the land. 28 As the law of real cov-
    enants has developed, the standard for a covenant to touch and
    concern the land has grown muddled. We have acknowledged,
    as have other jurisdictions, that “‘“[i]t has been found impos-
    sible to state any absolute tests to determine what covenants
    touch and concern land and what do not. The question is one
    for the court to determine in the exercise of its best judgment
    upon the facts of each case.”’” 29
    [21] However, we generally consider a series of com-
    mon factors that guide our touch and concern analysis. For
    28
    Brick Development, supra note 23.
    29
    Regency Homes Assn., supra note 19, 
    243 Neb. at 299
    , 
    498 N.W.2d at 791
    (quoting Neponsit P. O. Ass’n v. Emigrant I. Sav. Bank, 
    278 N.Y. 248
    , 
    15 N.E.2d 793
     (1938)).
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    example, “‘[t]o touch and concern the land the object of the
    covenant must be annexed to, inherent in, or connected with,
    the land.’” 30
    [22] Perhaps our clearest enunciation of what it means for
    a covenant to touch and concern the land was a rule that we
    adopted from the New York Court of Appeals:
    [T]he touch and concern requirement of a real covenant
    is met when the covenant affects the legal relations—the
    advantages and the burdens—of the parties to the cov-
    enant, as owners of particular parcels of land and not
    merely as members of the community in general, such
    as taxpayers or owners of other land. The covenant must
    impose, on the one hand, a burden upon an interest in
    land, which on the other hand increases the value of a dif-
    ferent interest in the same or related land. 31
    We consider briefly the facts of that New York Court of
    Appeals case insofar as they are analogous here. 32 In that case,
    purchasers of individual lots in a residential community had
    objected to being required by covenants between their prede-
    cessors in interest and the homeowners’ association to con-
    tribute to the costs of maintaining roads, streets, and beaches
    within the development. The court rejected the lot owners’
    argument, holding that since the obligation to pay was tied
    directly to the lot owners’ right to enjoyment of those roads,
    streets, and beaches, it touched and concerned the land. 33 As
    successors in interest to parties under the covenant, the lot
    owners were obligated to contribute. 34
    30
    
    Id.,
     
    243 Neb. at 298
    , 
    498 N.W.2d at 790
     (quoting Homeowners Assoc. v.
    Sellers and Homeowners Assoc. v. Simpson, 
    62 N.C. App. 205
    , 
    302 S.E.2d 848
     (1983)).
    31
    Id. at 299, 
    498 N.W.2d at
    791 (citing Neponsit P. O. Ass’n, supra note 29).
    32
    See Neponsit P. O. Ass’n, supra note 29.
    33
    Id.
    34
    Id.
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    [23] Likewise, the Maryland Court of Special Appeals held,
    in a case 35 relied upon by this court, 36 that a covenant to pay
    an annual road charge was one that touched and concerned the
    land while a fee to pay dues to a recreational and social club
    was not. The Maryland court stated that the test of whether a
    covenant touches and concerns the land is
    “‘whether it tends directly or necessarily to enhance its
    value or render it more beneficial or convenient to those
    by whom it is owned or occupied. Those covenants that
    are generally held to run with the land and to insure to
    the benefit of the assignee are such as ordinarily affect the
    land itself and confer a benefit on the grantor.’” 37
    The court then found that because the fee for the recre-
    ational and social club benefited the community as a whole
    and did not increase the value of any individual lots, it did
    not touch and concern those lots. “Property owners do not
    need to use ‘social facilities.’” 38 In contrast, the annual road
    charge did touch and concern the land because “the lot owners
    must utilize the roads as a means of ingress and egress from
    their respective homes and thus should be required to pay for
    their maintenance.” 39
    As in the above cases, the covenant at issue here burdens the
    ERE II lot owners in a manner that is plainly related to the lot
    owners’ use of their land. The 2004 Agreement states specifi-
    cally that Dowd’s agreement to subject his subdivision to the
    requirement to contribute to 232d Street maintenance costs was
    in exchange for his lot owners’ ability to use 232d Street for
    paved access to public roads.
    35
    Chesapeake Ranch Club v. CRC Members, 
    60 Md. App. 609
    , 
    483 A.2d 1334
     (1984).
    36
    Regency Homes Assn., 
    supra note 19
    .
    37
    Chesapeake Ranch Club, 
    supra note 35
    , 
    60 Md. App. at 616
    , 
    483 A.2d at 1337
     (quoting 20 Am. Jur. 2d Covenants § 35 (1965 & Supp. 1983)).
    38
    Chesapeake Ranch Club, 
    supra note 35
    , 
    60 Md. App. at 616
    , 
    483 A.2d at 1338
    .
    39
    
    Id.
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    When the 2004 Agreement was executed, the lot owners in
    ERE II were unable to leave their lots via paved public roads.
    Their only egress was Lincoln Road, which was unpaved. Yet
    Grace and Dowd acknowledged that paved access to public
    roads would increase the value of ERE II lots. Thus, paved
    road access was inherent in and connected to ERE II lot own-
    ers’ use and enjoyment of their land. In exchange for the bur-
    den of being required to contribute to 232d Street maintenance
    costs, Dowd afforded ERE II and its future lot owners the ben-
    efit of paved access across 232d Street to public roads.
    We find that the covenant in the 2004 Agreement to contrib-
    ute to 232d Street maintenance costs touched and concerned
    the land. The second element for a real covenant is met.
    (iii) Privity of Estate
    [24,25] The third element for a real covenant to run with
    the land is that the party claiming the covenant’s benefit and
    the party bearing its burden must be in privity of estate. 40 In a
    similar context, when analyzing privity for purposes of claim
    preclusion, we defined privity as requiring, “at a minimum,
    a substantial identity between the issues in controversy and
    a showing that the parties in the two actions are really and
    substantially in interest the same.” 41 That is, “[p]rivity depends
    upon the relation of the parties to the subject matter and not
    their activity in a suit relating to it after the event.” 42
    [26] Although not the deciding issue in our opinion, we
    have also defined privity of estate in the context of express
    covenants. 43 We stated:
    40
    Brick Development, supra note 23.
    41
    Kiplinger v. Nebraska Dept. of Nat. Resources, 
    282 Neb. 237
    , 248, 
    803 N.W.2d 28
    , 39 (2011), disapproved on other grounds, Banks v. Heineman,
    
    286 Neb. 390
    , 
    837 N.W.2d 70
     (2013).
    42
    Baer v. Southroads Mall Ltd., 
    252 Neb. 518
    , 524, 
    566 N.W.2d 734
    ,
    738 (1997).
    43
    See Gottsch v. Bank of Stapleton, 
    235 Neb. 816
    , 
    458 N.W.2d 443
     (1990).
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    Privity has also been defined as “[m]utual or successive
    relationship to the same rights of property. In its broad-
    est sense, ‘privity’ is defined as mutual or successive
    relationships to the same right of property, or such an
    identification of interest of one person with another as
    to represent the same legal right [or] [d]erivative inter-
    est . . . between parties . . . .” 44
    Here, under these definitions, there is strong evidence that
    Dowd and ERE II HOA are in privity of estate. At the time
    Grace and Dowd executed the 2004 Agreement, they agreed to
    grant all of ERE II to Dowd. As ERE II’s owner, Dowd agreed
    that before he sold the ERE II lots, he would subject them to
    covenants requiring the lot owners to contribute to 232d Street
    maintenance costs. Dowd did this via the Declaration.
    ERE II HOA was formed in 2007 and assumed control
    of ERE II, subject to Dowd’s covenants in the Declaration.
    ERE II HOA’s board members were ERE II’s lot owners, all
    of them having purchased their lots either from Dowd or from
    his grantees.
    Under these facts, we find that ERE II HOA is in privity
    of estate with Dowd. ERE II, the same property that Dowd
    once owned, is now controlled by ERE II HOA and owned
    by ERE II HOA and ERE II’s lot owners. Dowd and these lot
    owners are successive owners of the same land pursuant to
    their deeds of purchase for the lots. This satisfies the third ele-
    ment for a real covenant to run with the land.
    ERE II HOA responds to this analysis by pointing to lan-
    guage in the covenant stating that Dowd agreed to subject
    DGS to the cost-sharing agreement. According to ERE II HOA,
    it cannot be a successor in interest to DGS under the 2004
    Agreement because DGS was never a legal entity.
    But ERE II HOA’s argument here misunderstands the nature
    of a real covenant. A real covenant binds successive owners
    44
    Id. at 838, 
    458 N.W.2d at 457
     (quoting Black’s Law Dictionary 1079 (5th
    ed. 1979)).
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    of land. 45 As analyzed above, ERE II HOA is in privity of
    estate with Dowd. ERE II HOA does not dispute that Dowd
    was a legal entity or that he signed the 2004 Agreement on
    behalf of two legal entities: himself and Dowd Grain. As
    ERE II HOA’s predecessor in interest, Dowd subjected his
    land, DGS, to the covenant at issue here.
    In this scenario, it matters not whether DGS was ever a legal
    entity. Instead, DGS is merely the description Grace and Dowd
    used for the land that would be subject to their covenants.
    ERE II HOA’s argument here is without merit.
    On our de novo review, we find that the three elements for
    a real covenant here were met. Dowd’s promise in the 2004
    Agreement to subject his subdivision to a requirement to con-
    tribute to 232d Street maintenance costs was a covenant that
    ran with the land. As such, we affirm the district court’s rea-
    soning that ERE II HOA, as the successor in interest to Dowd,
    was bound to contribute to 232d Street maintenance costs.
    (b) Delegate of Contractual Duty
    As analyzed above, the district court’s judgment rested
    chiefly on an analysis based in the law of real covenants. Yet
    another theory of recovery alleged in the complaint was that
    the 2004 Agreement was enforceable against ERE II HOA
    as a matter of simple contract law. According to ERE HOA,
    although ERE II HOA was not named in the 2004 Agreement,
    it was delegated Dowd’s duties under that agreement. The
    district court implicitly found for ERE HOA on this theory of
    recovery. We agree.
    [27] Although we note that, under the law of real cov-
    enants, our analysis above is itself adequate to find in favor of
    ERE HOA, we find it important to nevertheless address ERE
    HOA’s contract theory as well because we wish to clarify the
    district court’s opinion. At issue here is whether Dowd del-
    egated to ERE II HOA his duty under the 2004 Agreement to
    45
    See Regency Homes Assn., 
    supra note 19
    .
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    contribute to 232d Street maintenance costs. Whereas a party
    assigns rights under a contract, a party delegates duties. 46
    [28,29] We have long recognized that parties should gener-
    ally be free to assign rights and delegate duties as they see fit,
    subject to certain limitations. 47 At common law, “[c]ontract
    duties are generally delegable, unless prohibited by statute,
    public policy or the terms of the contract. Contractual duties
    are also not delegable if they involve the personal quali-
    ties or skills of the obligor, in the absence of consent by
    the obligee.” 48
    [30] Delegation to a third party of the duty to perform under
    a contract requires an agreement between the obligor under the
    first contract and a delegate. 49 That is, the delegate must agree
    to be delegated the obligor’s duty. 50 For example, in a 1988
    case, Ames v. George Victor Corp., 51 we found a provision in a
    contract sufficient to delegate an obligor’s duties under a first
    contract to a delegate. The provision read: “‘[The corporation]
    agrees to assume all the obligations of [the landlord] in said
    subleases and shall be entitled to all rentals under said sub-
    leases due and payable on July 1, 1984 and thereafter.’” 52
    Here, ERE HOA argues that Dowd delegated to ERE II
    HOA his duty to pay for 232d Street maintenance costs when
    he executed a document entitled “Release, Relinquishment
    46
    Burnison v. Johnston, 
    277 Neb. 622
    , 
    764 N.W.2d 96
     (2009). See, also, 29
    Richard A. Lord, A Treatise on the Law of Contract by Samuel Williston
    § 74:10 (4th ed. 2003); 3 E. Allan Farnsworth, Farnsworth on Contracts
    § 11.1 (3d ed. 2004).
    47
    See, e.g., Union P. R. Co. v. Douglas County Bank, 
    42 Neb. 469
    , 
    60 N.W. 886
     (1894).
    48
    29 Lord, supra note 46, § 74:27 at 404. Accord Earth Science Labs. v.
    Adkins & Wondra, P.C., 
    246 Neb. 798
    , 
    523 N.W.2d 254
     (1994).
    49
    See 29 Lord, supra note 46, § 74:27.
    50
    See id.
    51
    Ames v. George Victor Corp., 
    228 Neb. 675
    , 
    424 N.W.2d 106
     (1988).
    52
    
    Id. at 681-82
    , 
    424 N.W.2d at 111
    .
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    and Assignment of Powers and Duties Under the Declaration
    of [ERE II].” Under the terms of that document, Dowd, on
    behalf of Dowd Grain, stated that he “does hereby release,
    relinquish and assign to [ERE II HOA] any and all powers
    and duties of [Dowd Grain] as provided in the Declaration.”
    As ERE HOA argues, this appears to state that it was Dowd’s
    intention to delegate all duties under the Declaration to
    ERE II HOA.
    One of the duties named in the Declaration was the duty to
    contribute to 232d Street maintenance costs. Specifically, in the
    Declaration, Dowd stated:
    The costs and maintenance expenses for 232nd Street
    shall relate only to that portion of 232nd Street located
    within [ERE], including the entrances at Angus Road and
    Lincoln Road, and shall be in the amount of one-fourth of
    the costs and expenses expended by [Dowd Grain] and/or
    [ERE HOA] related to such matters.
    To the extent that ERE II HOA argues that such delegation
    was unclear or that it did not specifically mention Dowd’s
    duties under the 2004 Agreement, the Declaration further pro-
    vides that “[a]t such time as [Dowd Grain] no longer holds title
    to any subdivision lot, any powers and duties not previously
    released or relinquished shall be deemed to have been released
    and relinquished.” This satisfied the requirement for an obligor
    under one contract to delegate his or her duties to a delegate.
    Thus, ERE HOA argued, and we agree, that Dowd lawfully
    delegated to ERE II HOA the duty to contribute to 232d Street
    maintenance costs.
    [31,32] A delegation of duties is not itself sufficient to
    bind its delegate to perform the duties delegated, however. To
    the contrary:
    The mere delegation of a performance imposes no duty
    on the delegate to perform. If the delegate performs the
    duty, the duty is discharged. If the delegate does not per-
    form the duty, the duty is not discharged, but any claim
    of the obligee for breach is against the delegating party
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    and not against the delegate. The delegate is under no
    duty to perform unless it has undertaken to do so. 53
    Similar to other areas of contract law, it is foundational that an
    agreement to delegate duties is not formed until it is accepted
    by the delegate. 54
    Here, we find strong evidence that the delegate, ERE II
    HOA, accepted Dowd’s delegation. After Dowd executed the
    relinquishment letter quoted above, the board members of
    ERE II HOA formally accepted it during the board’s annual
    meeting on July 7, 2015. The minutes of the meeting state
    as follows:
    This annual meeting of the Members of [ERE II HOA]
    was held pursuant to the notice attached to these minutes
    on July 7, 2015 at 6:00 p.m. at 508 W. Angus Road,
    Gretna, Nebraska.
    The first order of business was the acceptance of
    Declarant’s Release, Relinquishment and Assignment of
    Powers and Duties under the Declaration of [ERE II].
    Upon motion duly made, seconded and carried, this
    Release, Relinquishment and Assignment was accepted.”
    [33] Moreover, even if the minutes were not themselves
    sufficient evidence of ERE II HOA’s undertaking Dowd’s
    delegated duties, ERE II HOA’s conduct thereafter provides
    further evidence of this undertaking. As one commentator
    noted:
    Even if a delegate does not promise in so many words
    to perform the duty of the delegating party, a court may
    infer such a promise from the delegate’s conduct. Thus,
    if a party transfers the entire contract, assigning rights
    as well as delegating performance, an assumption of
    those duties by the transferee will be inferred from the
    53
    Farnsworth, supra note 9, § 11.11 at 723.
    54
    See Acklie, 
    supra note 15
    .
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    acceptance of the transfer, unless the language or the sit­
    uation indicates the contrary. 55
    Here, ERE II HOA’s conduct provides persuasive evidence
    that it accepted Dowd’s delegation of the duty to contribute
    to 232d Street maintenance costs. After Dowd executed the
    relinquishment letter, ERE II HOA took the action commanded
    by the duty, writing at least three checks between March 4
    and May 1, 2016, to ERE HOA for the costs of maintaining
    232d Street. The checks were for the amounts of $5,500.82,
    $3,385.12, and $423.14. Their subject lines stated “partial pay-
    ment Road Repair,” “payment 2 to ERE I HOA,” and “Final
    Road repair Payment.”
    On our de novo review, we find that Dowd delegated to
    ERE II HOA his duty under the 2004 Agreement to contribute
    to 232d Street maintenance costs. And ERE II HOA accepted
    that duty, both during its 2015 annual meeting and by its con-
    duct thereafter. Thus, ERE II HOA, as delegate, owed Dowd’s
    duty under the 2004 Agreement to contribute to 232d Street
    maintenance costs. The district court’s judgment should be
    affirmed as a matter of contract law.
    (c) Enforcement in Equity
    As an alternative to the above theories of breach based on
    the 2004 Agreement itself, ERE HOA also alleged three other
    theories of recovery based entirely in equity. Those theories
    were implied reciprocal servitude, unjust enrichment, and equi-
    table estoppel. Under these theories, ERE HOA argued that
    even if the 2004 Agreement was not enforceable as a matter
    of real covenant or contract law, its covenant to contribute to
    232d Street maintenance costs should still be enforced as a
    matter of equity.
    55
    Farnsworth, supra note 9, § 11.11 at 724-25. See, also, 1 Restatement
    (Second) of Contracts, § 164 (1981); 3 Restatement (Second) of Contracts
    § 328 (1981).
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    The district court implicitly found for ERE HOA on each
    of these theories, and ERE II HOA assigns this was in error.
    We agree.
    [34-36] Implied reciprocal servitude, unjust enrichment,
    and equitable estoppel are theories of recovery based not on
    the terms of a contract, but, instead, on circumstances that
    demand judicial action to remedy an injustice or inequity. 56
    They are generally conceived as alternatives to enforceable
    covenants or provisions in a contract. 57 An implied recipro-
    cal servitude is created by implication when no express real
    covenant applies. 58 Likewise, unjust enrichment and equitable
    estoppel claims are contract substitutes that courts apply to
    prevent injustice. 59
    [37,38] However, we have long held that where a contract
    or real covenant itself is enforceable, its terms will not be dis-
    placed in equity. 60 Although a party is permitted to allege both
    a claim based in contract and in equity, once the terms of the
    contract are found to be enforceable, those terms will generally
    control and supersede other equitable actions. 61
    As we have already held, the terms in the 2004 Agreement
    at issue here are enforceable against ERE II HOA as a matter
    of real covenant and contract law. Thus, there is no need for
    a contract substitute theory to apply, rendering a judgment in
    equity. Accordingly, we deem ERE HOA’s equitable claims
    displaced and superseded. To the extent the district court
    rested its judgment on these three equitable theories, it was
    in error.
    However, as analyzed above, the 2004 Agreement was
    enforceable against ERE II HOA under both the law of real
    56
    See DH-1, LLC v. City of Falls City, 
    305 Neb. 23
    , 
    938 N.W.2d 319
     (2020).
    57
    See 
    id.
    58
    Walters v. Colford, 
    297 Neb. 302
    , 
    900 N.W.2d 183
     (2017).
    59
    See, DH-1, LLC, 
    supra note 56
    ; Brick Development, 
    supra note 23
    .
    60
    See DH-1, LLC, 
    supra note 56
    .
    61
    See 
    id.
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    covenants and the law of contracts. ERE II HOA’s first assign-
    ment of error is without merit.
    3. Breach of 2004 Agreement
    ERE II HOA’s second assignment of error is that no breach
    occurred. It argues that even if it was bound by the provision
    in the 2004 Agreement requiring it to contribute to 232d Street
    maintenance costs, ERE II HOA did not breach that provi-
    sion when it modified the Declaration in 2016. Rather, ERE II
    HOA contends, the 2004 Agreement required only that Dowd
    “through Subdivision Agreements, Covenants, and provisions
    applicable to homeowner[s’] associations or any combination
    of the foregoing, subject [DGS] to a sharing of one third of the
    costs and expenses of [ER] and [ERE HOA] in the repair and
    maintenance of 232nd Street within [ERE].”
    According to ERE II HOA, a plain reading of this provision
    reveals that it imposed only a one-time duty on Dowd Grain to
    take action in the future to “subject” ERE II to a requirement
    to contribute to the maintenance costs of 232d Street. That one-
    time duty was activated, ERE II HOA acknowledges, “when
    all public improvements consisting of necessary utilities and
    interior streets in [DGS] have been completed.”
    But ERE II argues the 2004 Agreement’s language neither
    specified for how long Dowd’s duty would last nor required
    that it be more than a one-time duty. Thus, according to
    ERE II HOA, it was within its rights to amend the Declaration
    in accord­ance with its amendment procedure to repudiate
    its obligation for 232d Street maintenance costs. After the
    Declaration initially subjected ERE II to maintenance costs
    and thus met Dowd Grain’s duty under the 2004 Agreement,
    Dowd’s duty under the 2004 Agreement was discharged.
    [39-42] When the terms of a contract are clear, we interpret
    the contract according to its terms’ plain meaning. 62 Terms of a
    contract that are clear are given their plain and ordinary
    62
    See Kaiser v. Allstate Indemnity Co., 
    307 Neb. 562
    , 
    949 N.W.2d 787
     (2020).
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    meaning as a reasonable person would understand them. 63 A
    contract must receive a reasonable construction and must be
    construed as a whole. 64 And, if possible, effect must be given
    to every part of a contract. 65
    [43,44] A court is not free to rewrite a contract or to specu-
    late as to terms of the contract which the parties have not seen
    fit to include. 66 A court should avoid interpreting contract pro-
    visions in a manner that leads to unreasonable or absurd results
    that are obviously inconsistent with the parties’ intent. 67
    By the plain meaning of the 2004 Agreement, we disagree
    that the covenant at issue is susceptible to the interpretation
    that ERE II HOA urges. Contrary to ERE II HOA’s stilted
    interpretation of the 2004 Agreement, a natural reading of the
    agreement’s plain language indicates that Dowd and his suc-
    cessors in interest would be subject to a requirement to share
    costs with ERE HOA for the maintenance of 232d Street. There
    is nothing about the verb “to subject” that makes it necessarily
    pertain to a one-time action, as ERE II HOA alleges. Rather,
    “to subject” means “[t]o make subject or bring into subjec-
    tion to the rule, government, power, or service of a superior”
    or “[t]o make submissive or dependent; to bring into a state
    of subordination.” 68
    Just as ERE II HOA alleges that the 2004 Agreement did
    not specify that Dowd’s subjecting his subdivision to the cost-
    sharing requirement would not end, it also did not specify that
    it would end. A reasonable interpretation of the provision is
    that Dowd and his successors in interest would be, and would
    remain, subject to the cost-sharing requirement. We do not
    63
    See 
    id.
    64
    Lassalle v. State, 
    307 Neb. 221
    , 
    948 N.W.2d 725
     (2020).
    65
    
    Id.
    66
    
    Id.
    67
    
    Id.
    68
    “Subject,” Oxford English Dictionary Online, http://www.oed.com/view/
    Entry/192688 (last visited Dec. 31, 2020).
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    read into the provision a stipulation that Dowd and his succes-
    sors will be subject to the requirement only until they unilater-
    ally change it, as ERE II HOA now alleges. 69
    Moreover, construing the provision at issue within the 2004
    Agreement as a whole, there is strong evidence that it was
    intended to operate on an ongoing basis. After the sentence
    stating that Dowd will “subject” his subdivision to the cost-
    sharing requirement, it makes provisions for how that cost
    sharing will change as future events occur. For example, it
    states that if Lincoln Road is paved, Dowd’s cost-sharing obli-
    gation will reduce from one third to one fourth. And it implies
    that cost sharing is expected to occur year after year, because
    it stipulates that cost sharing includes a number of future,
    anticipated needs annually: “road maintenance and resurfac-
    ing, maintenance and repair of the bridge at the south end
    of 232nd Street near Angus Road, snow removal, mowing of
    right-of-way and maintenance of entrances at Angus Road and
    Lincoln Road.”
    This language indicates strongly that the parties’ intent was
    that ERE II lot owners would continue to share the costs of
    maintenance for 232d Street with lot owners in ERE. After
    all, the 2004 Agreement suggests that in exchange for this
    promise to contribute, Dowd received something significant: a
    right to connect Shiloh Drive across ERE lots to 232d Street.
    That right of connection did not terminate after one use, so
    ERE II HOA’s obligation to contribute to 232d Street main-
    tenance costs should also not be read to terminate after one
    use. Instead, it was breached when ERE II HOA amended its
    Declaration to eliminate the requirement to contribute to 232d
    Street maintenance costs.
    This case is distinguishable from Boyles v. Hausmann, 70
    which ERE II HOA cites for support in its brief. In Boyles, the
    issue before this court was solely whether certain restrictive
    69
    See Lassalle, 
    supra note 64
    .
    70
    Boyles v. Hausmann, 
    246 Neb. 181
    , 
    517 N.W.2d 610
     (1994).
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    covenants that a subdivision had modified by a majority vote
    of lot owners in the subdivision were valid. A landowner had
    challenged the covenants on the basis that they added new
    requirements to his lot. 71 We generally agreed with the lot
    owner, finding that the subdivision had not followed its own
    procedure for amending covenants. 72
    But that rule from Boyles is inapposite here. Whereas Boyles
    dealt solely with the validity of certain covenants executed by
    the homeowners’ association, this case deals with both Dowd’s
    Declaration regarding the homeowners’ association ERE II
    HOA and the 2004 Agreement executed between Grace and
    Dowd. Even if we were to analyze this case under Boyles and
    conclude that ERE II HOA had properly followed its pro-
    cedures for amending the Declaration, that would not affect
    ERE II HOA’s obligation to contribute to 232d Street mainte-
    nance costs under the 2004 Agreement. ERE II HOA’s argu-
    ment is without merit.
    As a result, we hold that not only was ERE II HOA bound
    by the 2004 Agreement, but that ERE II HOA breached that
    agreement when it amended its Declaration and refused to con-
    tribute to 232d Street maintenance costs. ERE II HOA’s second
    assignment of error is without merit.
    4. Remedy
    Based on the above-discussed theories of legal and equitable
    recovery, the district court granted ERE HOA three remedies,
    to wit: The district court ordered $18,732.74 in damages, a
    declaratory judgment that “any attempt to repudiate the obliga-
    tion to contribute to the costs of upkeep and maintenance of
    232nd Street without the specific notice and consent of those
    who are benefitted by the Covenant in [ERE] subdivision is
    prohibited,” and specific performance to “continue to contrib-
    ute to the costs of upkeep and maintenance of 232nd Street as
    provided for in the Covenant granted by the Declaration.”
    71
    See 
    id.
    72
    See 
    id.
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    On our de novo review, we find no error in the district
    court’s award. First, damages were awarded for ERE II HOA’s
    past breach of contract, and ERE II HOA does not dispute
    that the amount awarded was reasonably certain and such as
    might be expected to follow the breach. 73 Second, a declara-
    tory judgment was awarded to declare ERE HOA’s rights under
    the 2004 Agreement. 74 And third, specific performance was
    awarded to require ERE II HOA to comply with its duty under
    the 2004 Agreement. 75
    ERE II HOA’s assignment of error here is the same as
    before—that the 2004 Agreement was not enforceable against
    it and that no breach of the 2004 Agreement occurred—but
    we have found to the contrary. As analyzed above, the 2004
    Agreement was enforceable against ERE II HOA, and ERE II
    HOA breached that agreement when it repudiated its duty to
    contribute to 232d Street maintenance costs.
    Thus, we affirm the district court’s award of the three rem-
    edies. ERE II HOA’s third assignment of error is without merit.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    The district court’s order granting judgment to ERE HOA
    is affirmed.
    Affirmed.
    73
    See TNT Cattle Co. v. Fife, 
    304 Neb. 890
    , 
    937 N.W.2d 811
     (2020).
    74
    See State ex rel. Wagner v. Evnen, 
    307 Neb. 142
    , 
    948 N.W.2d 244
     (2020).
    See, also, 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-21
    ,150 (Reissue 2016).
    75
    See Johnson v. Nelson, 
    290 Neb. 703
    , 
    861 N.W.2d 705
     (2015).