Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 2011 )


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  •                                 ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS
    GREG        ABBOTT
    July 28,2011
    The Honorable Glenn Hegar                                    Opinion No. GA-0864
    Chair, Sunset Advisory Commission
    Texas State Senate                                           Re: Validity and enforceability of certain types
    Post Office Box 12068                                        of restrictive covenants (RQ-09I 8-GA)
    Austin, Texas 78711
    Dear Senator Hegar:
    You ask seven questions concerning the validity and enforceability of certain restrictive
    covenants.' We note at the outset that some of your questions cannot be answered without first
    construing a specific deed restriction or conducting a factual inquiry, functions that are beyond the
    scope of an attorney general opinion. Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No. GA-0780 (2010) at I n.2. We can,
    however, provide advice as to the general legal principles applicable to your questions.
    You first ask whether a restrictive covenant "fail[sl to run with the land" so as to bind future
    generations of land owners if it requires the owner to "pay membership fees to a for-profit club,
    without requiring that such fees be used for the benefit of the burdened property and without limiting
    club membership to owners of restricted property." Request Letter at l,z Under Texas law, a
    covenant runs with the land when it: (1) touches and concerns the land; (2) relates to a thing in
    existence or specifically binds the parties and their assigns; (3) is intended by the original parties to
    run with the land; and (4) when the successor to the burden has notice. Inwood N. Homeowners'
    Assoc., Inc. v. Harris, 
    736 S.W.2d 632
    , 635 (Tex. 1987). Although you ask generally about whether
    the covenant "runs with the land," determining whether the covenant meets the last three of these
    requirements will likely involve questions of fact and construction of the restrictive covenant. See
    Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. Nos. JC-0480 (2002) at 5 (explaining that intent involves fact questions that this
    office cannot decide), JC-0282 (2000) at 4 (explaining that whether specific notice requirements
    lLetter from Honorable Glenn Hegar, Chair, Sunset Advisory Commission, to Honorable Greg Abbott, Attorney
    General of Texas at 1-2 (rec'd Sept. 21, 2010), https:llwww.oag.state.tx.us/opinlindex_rq.shtml ("Request Letter").
    2Although described otherwise, the covenant at issue is more appropriately labeled an "affirmative covenant"
    as it "requires the covenantor to do something," as opposed to a restrictive covenant, which "is a negative covenant that
    limits permissible uses ofland." REsTATEMENT (THIRD) OF PROP.: SERVITUDES § 1.3 (2010). Some authority suggests
    that the requirements which must be satisfied for a covenant to run with the land are more strictly applied to affirmative
    covenants than to negative covenants. 20 AM. JUR. 2D Covenants § 29 (2010).
    The Honorable Glenn Hegar - Page 2                        (GA-0864)
    have been met is a fact question that cannot be resolved by this office); see also Raman Chandler
    Props., L.c. v. Caldwell's CreekHomeownersAss'n, 178 S.W.3d384, 391 (Tex. App.-FortWorth
    2005, pet. denied) (construing the deed to determine whether the restrictions specifically bound the
    parties). The background information you provide suggests that your primary concern is whether
    the covenant meets the first element. Request Letter at 4-6. We therefore limit our discussion to
    when covenants touch and concern the land as a general proposition of Texas corrimon law.
    A covenant touches and concerns the land "[i]f the promisor's legal relations in respect to
    the land in question are lessened-his legal interest as owner rendered less valuable by the promise."
    Westland Oil Dev. Corp. v. Gulf Oil Corp., 637 S.W.2d 903,911 (Tex. 1982); Lyle v. Jane Guinn
    Revocable Trust, No. 01-09-00081-CV, 2010WL 1053060, at *9 (Tex. App.-Houston [1st Dist.]
    2010, pet. filed). We question whether a covenant requiring the landowner to pay membership fees
    to a recreational club in which it has no ownership interest affects the owner's legal interest in the
    land. However, we note that one intermediate court addressed facts like those you describe, where
    a covenant "required tbe owner of a lot in [the subdivision] to pay dues and assessments to the
    University Gardens Racquet Club." Homsey v. Univ. Gardens Racquet Club, 730 S.W.2d 763,764
    (Tex. App.-El Paso 1987, writ ref'd n.r.e.). That court ultimately concluded that the covenant
    touched and concerned the land. 
    Id. However, without
    more information about the covenants in
    each circumstance, we cannot confirm that the deed in Homsey is sufficiently similar to that at issue
    here to provide support for the conclusion that this covenant would touch and concern the land, nor
    can we predict with any certainty that other Texas courts would come to the same conclusion.
    You also ask whether a covenant that requires a fee be paid to a for-profit club by a new
    buyer each time the restricted property is sold, without requiring that such fee be used for the benefit
    of the burdened property, touches and concerns the land. 3 Request Letter at 2. A covenant does not
    have to benefit the burdened property in order to touch and concern the land. See, e.g., Lyle, 
    2010 WL 1053060
    , at *9. However, we have been unable to find any Texas case that addresses whether
    a fee like that you describe touches and concerns the land, and we question whether a covenant
    requiring a new buyer to pay a transfer fee affects the owner's legal interest in the land such that it
    would touch and concern the land.
    Although we are able to provide some general advice on your first two questions, we note
    that it "has been found impossible 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 based upon the facts of each case." Howard R. Williams, Restrictions on the Use of
    Land: Covenants Running with the Land at Law, 27 TEX. L. REv.419, 429 (1949). Because we are
    unable to fully analyze the facts surrounding each covenant, we are unable to provide a definitive
    answer to your questions about whether hypothetical covenants touch and concern the land.
    'Property Code section 5.017 prohibits and declares void deed restrictions and other covenants running with
    the land that require certain transfer fees. TEx. PROP. CODE ANN. § 5.017(b) (West Supp. 2010). Exceptions are made
    for fees paid to a property owners' association or nonprofit associations, and this office has previously concluded that
    the statute does not apply to restrictive covenants that were in existence and recorded prior to the statute's effective date.
    
    Id. § 5.017(c);
    Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No. GA-0780 (2010) at 3.
    The Honorable Glenn Hegar - Page 3             (GA-0864)
    You ask in your third question whether Texas Constitution article XVI, section 50 prevents
    foreclosure of a homestead property based on a violation of a personal covenant that does not touch
    and concern the land. Request Letter at 1. Article XVI, section 50 provides that "[nlo mortgage,
    trust deed, or other lien on the homestead shall ever be valid unless it secures a debt described by
    . this section." TEX. CONST. art XVI, § 50(c). It also enumerates eight exceptions to the homestead
    protection from forced sale: (I) purchase money security; (2) taxes due on the homestead; (3) certain
    owelty on partition; (4) refinancing of certain liens; (5) security for improvements; (6) certain
    circumscribed extensions of credit in the nature of an equity loan; (7) reverse mortgages; and (8)
    special financing concerning manufactured homes. 
    Id. § 50(a)(l)-(8).
    Analyzing this section in
    Inwood, the Texas Supreme Court addressed whether homestead laws preclude foreclosure of a
    developer's lien for homeowners' association fees and assessments. See generally Inwood, 
    736 S.W.2d 632
    . While recognizing that a contractual lien for homeowners' association fees was not
    among the express constitutional exceptions to the homestead exceptions, the court observed that
    "[hlomestead rights ... may not be construed so as to avoid or destroy pre-existing rights," and that
    "[ilt has long been held that an encumbrance existing against property cannot be affected by the
    subsequent impression of the homestead exception on the land." 
    Id. at 635.
    Because the developer
    had placed the restrictions on the land before it became the homestead of the homeowners, the court
    concluded that the subsequent "homeowners were subject to the liens in question and an order of
    foreclosure would have been proper." 
    Id. at 635-36.
    Significant to the court's decision, however,
    was that the "covenant in question satisifie[dl the requirements of a covenant running with the land."
    
    Id. at 635.
    A personal covenant that does not touch and concern the land does not bind the heirs and
    assigns of the covenanting parties. 718Assoc., Ltd. v. SunwestN.O.P., Inc., I S.W.3d355, 364 (Tex.
    App.-Waco 1999, pet. denied). Instead, it would bind only the original covenanting parties,
    prohibiting any subsequent owners from having their land foreclosed on based on the personal
    covenant.
    You next ask if Texas Constitution article XVI, section 50 prevents "foreclosure of a
    homestead property based on a failure to pay a fee not identified or described in any instrument as
    a lien obligation before the property became a homestead." Request Letter at I. As discussed above,
    article XVI, section 50 allows the developer of a subdivision to create liens on land to secure the
    payment of assessments, and foreclosure of a homestead property is a permissible remedy for failure
    to pay those assessments. Inwood, 736 S'.W.2d at 634, 634-36. However, in order to foreclose on
    the property, the contractual lien must be valid, and creation of a contractual lien requires "evidence
    apparent from the language of the agreement that the parties intended to create a lien." 
    Id. at 634.
    Whether such language exists in a specific instance will require a review of the agreement in full and
    construction of that agreement, which this office cannot undertake. See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
    GA-0594 (2008) at 4 n.5 (observing that because "[ilnstruments such as ... restrictive covenants are
    subject to the general rules of contract construction ... it may not be possible to construe them in
    an attorney general opinion").
    In your fifth question, you ask whether "the enforcement and penalty provisions in Chapter
    202 of the Texas Property Code apply to violations of the bylaws or rules of a private for-profit
    club." Request Letter at 2; see TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §§ 202.001 et. seq. (West 2007) (titled
    "Construction and Enforcement of Restrictive Covenants"). You specifically note subsection
    The Honorable Glenn Hegar - Page 4             (GA-0864)
    202.004(c), which allows a court to "assess civil damages for the violation of a restrictive covenant
    in an amount not to exceed $200 for each day ofthe violation." TEX. PRoP. CODE ANN. § 202.004(c)
    (West 2007). The term "restrictive covenant" is defined for purposes of chapter 202 as "any
    covenant, condition, or restriction contained in a dedicatory instrument, whether mandatory,
    prohibitive, permissive, or administrative." 
    Id. § 202.001(4).
    The term "dedicatory instrument" is
    defined as "each governing instrument covering the establishment, maintenance, and operation of
    a residential subdivision ... , includ[ing] a declaration or similar instrument subjecting real property
    to restrictive covenants, bylaws, or similar instruments governing the administration or operation of
    a property owners' association." 
    Id. § 202.001(1).
    The answer to your question will require
    construction of the original declaration of covenants, conditions, and restrictions along with the
    bylaws and rules that you describe, and it will require a factual inquiry to determine whether they
    qualify as restrictions contained in a dedicatory instrument.
    You next ask whether a "restrictive covenant that imposes an uncapped fee on each new
    buyer due upon each subsequent transfer of the burdened property" is an unreasonable restraint on
    alienation. Request Letter at 2. We have been unable to find any Texas case law addressing whether
    the transfer fees that you describe are in violation of this doctrine. However, we can advise that in
    other contexts "Texas courts have looked to the Restatement [of Property] to determine issues
    regarding alleged restraints on alienation." Navasota Res., L.P. v. First Source Tex., Inc., 
    249 S.W.3d 526
    , 537 (Tex. App.-Waco 2008, pet. denied); see Sonny Amold, Inc. v. Sentry Say. Ass'n,
    
    633 S.W.2d 811
    , 813-15 (Tex. 1982). As explained in the Restatement, "[a]n otherwise valid
    servitude is valid even if it indirectly restrains alienation ... by reducing the amount realizable by
    the owner on sale or other transfer of the property, or by otherwise r.educing the value of the
    property." RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF PROP.: SERVITUDES § 3.5 (2010). Thecomments further
    explain:
    Fees imposed on the transfer of units in a development are generally
    valid under the rule stated in this section. Fees to cover the
    administrative costs entailed by a transfer of ownership, or
    occupancy, and education of new members are justified, as are fees
    designed to discourage speculation in units and encourage owner
    . occupancy. . .. So long as there is some rational justification for the
    imposition of such fees, they are not invalid as indirect restraints on
    alienation ....
    
    Id. cmt. c.
    We do note, however, that under some circumstances, such transfer fees may be deemed
    unconscionable by a court even where they do not amount to an impermissible restraint on
    alienation. 
    Id. Whether a
    court would determine the transfer fee at issue unconscionable would
    depend on the amount of the fee imposed, the purpose of the fee and whether it has a rational
    justification. Such a determination would require a factual inquiry that this office cannot undertake.
    Your final question asks whether restrictive covenants are invalid if they "require a
    membership fee paid to a private third-party for which there is no mechanism for the owner of the
    burdened property to get notice of, have control over use of, or limit increases in that membership .
    The Honorable Glenn Hegar - Page 5             (GA-0864)
    fee invalid." Request Letter at 2. Texas courts have upheld the right of property associations to
    change fee assessments after a restriction is originally recorded when the method for changing the
    fee is clearly outlined in the deed restriction or documents therein referenced. See, e.g., Samms v.
    Autumn Run Cmty. Improvement Ass'n, 
    23 S.W.3d 398
    , 402-03 (Tex. App.-Houston [1st Dist.]
    2000, pet. denied) (finding deed restrictions gave a property association the right to change
    assessments every year). However, whether a specific owner received notice of the existence of a
    restrictive covenant will involve questions of fact that this office cannot decide. Simms v. Lakewood
    Village Prop. Owners' Ass'n, Inc., 895 S.W.2d 779,788 (Tex. App.-Corpus Christi 1995, no writ)
    (explaining that notice of a restrictive covenant is a fact question). We can advise that in order for
    a restrictive covenant to be enforceable, the grantee must have had notice, either actual or
    constructive, ofthe restriction when the property was purchased. Davis v. Huey, 
    620 S.W.2d 561
    ,
    567 (Tex. 1981).
    The Honorable Glenn Hegar - Page 6           (GA-0864)
    SUMMARY
    A covenant that does not touch and concern the land will not
    run with the land, and foreclosure on a subsequent purchaser's land
    based on a lien that resulted from a personal covenant would be
    prohibited.
    Creation of a valid contractual lien, upon which foreclosure
    is proper, requires evidence apparent from the language of the
    agreement that the parties intended to create a lien.
    In order for a restrictive covenant to be enforceable, the
    grantee must have had notice, either actual or constructive, of the
    restriction when the property was purchased.
    Very truly yours,
    Attorney General of Texas
    DANIEL T. HODGE
    First Assistant Attorney General
    DAVID J. SCHENCK
    Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
    JASON BOATRIGHT
    Chair, Opinion Committee
    Virginia K. Hoelscher
    Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee