Judges: Barnhill
Filed Date: 1/31/1946
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Civil action for equitable relief against the burden of restrictive covenants contained in deeds to property in a residential development, heard on demurrer.
Eliminating all elaboration the complaint alleges:
Skyland, a residential section of Winston-Salem, was divided and sold under a uniform scheme or plan of development which included a restrictive covenant inserted in all the deeds, expressly prohibiting sale or lease to Negroes for a period of 50 years. Plaintiffs and defendants now own all the property within Skyland. There has been no breach of the covenant by any property owner. When the property was developed and the lots therein were sold, all the property immediately surrounding and adjacent to Skyland was owned, occupied, and used by white people only. At that time purchasers had no cause to believe that the surrounding conditions would ever adversely affect the desirability of the property as an exclusive white residential section. However, in recent years the whole surrounding area for a depth of a quarter mile has been acquired by, and is now owned, used, and occupied by Negroes. This radical change in conditions outside but immediately adjacent to *Page 60 Skyland has made further sales of property within the development to whites impossible except at greatly reduced prices, renders the restriction burdensome, and causes plaintiffs irreparable damage. Even so, defendants, or some of them, still assert the validity of the covenant and insist upon its observance. By reason of the facts alleged the restrictive covenant should be canceled and annulled as a cloud on the title of plaintiffs.
When the case came on for hearing in the court below certain defendants appeared and demurred ore tenus for that the complaint fails to state a cause of action. The demurrer was sustained and plaintiffs appealed.
That covenants reasonably restricting the ownership, use, or occupancy of land, inserted in deeds as a part of a general scheme or plan of development, for the benefit of all owners of property within the development, are valid is conceded. 14 Am. Jur., 616. And plaintiffs do not challenge the validity of a covenant against the sale or lease of property to persons of a certain race or color or restricting its ownership or occupancy to persons of the Caucasian race. Eason v. Buffaloe,
So then the case comes to this: When the covenant was inserted in the deeds to all the property in Skyland as a part of a uniform plan of development, it was thought to be an advantageous restriction materially enhancing the value of the property for residential purposes. The covenant has not been breached. It has served and is serving its purpose. Even so, there has been a radical change in the complexion of the use and occupancy of all the property immediately surrounding Skyland so that now the restriction is more burdensome than beneficial.
Hence this appeal poses for decision one question only: Does a radical change in the ownership, use, and occupancy of the property immediately surrounding and adjacent to the restricted development afford grounds for equitable relief against the pleaded covenant when there has been no breach thereof within the covenanted area?
While there are decisions contra, the great weight of authority in this country answers in the negative. 14 Am. Jur., 615; 26 C.J.S., 549; Annos. 46 A.L.R., 372, 54 A.L.R., 812; 85 A.L.R., 986. (See also cases cited in Brenizer v. Stephens,
Decisions in this jurisdiction are in accord with the majority view.Brenizer v. Stephens, supra; Turner v. Glenn,
The covenant is contractual in nature and creates a species of incorporeal property right. Sheets v. Dillon, supra. Its purpose is to preserve the covenanted area as a residential section for Caucasians only. It does not purport to regulate or control the use and occupancy of adjacent property or to prevent the invasion thereof by members of other races.
Ordinarily the acquiescence of owners in the breach of the covenant in respect to some lots constitutes a waiver of the right to insist upon it as to others. (Cf. McLeskey v. Heinlein, supra.) This law of waiver is the fundamental principle that underlies the decisions in such cases and gives equity a toe hold to interfere and relieve against covenants which have become burdensome. Anno. 46 A.L.R., 372. But it is not the way of equity to override the law or to invalidate contracts or to destroy property rights.
Contractual relations do not disappear as circumstances change. So equity cannot balance the relative advantages and disadvantages of a covenant and grant relief against its restrictions merely because it has become burdensome. It is bound to give effect to the contract unless changed conditions within the covenanted area, acquiesced in by the owners to such an extent as to constitute a waiver or abandonment, is made to appear. McLeskey v. Heinlein, supra; Franklin v. Realty Co., supra.
The changed conditions outside the development afford no grounds for relief. Those who purchase property subject to restrictive covenants must assume the burdens as well as enjoy the benefits, for equity does not grant relief against a bad bargain voluntarily made and unbreached.
Plaintiffs insist that Elrod v. Phillips,
". . . in both cases, we find conspicuously absent from the facts agreed the essential conditions on which restrictions of this kind are enforced in favor of owners who are not parties or privies to the deed — the requirement that the deeds and restrictions therein are made in pursuance of a general plan of development and improvement — so as to give rise to a *Page 62 mutuality of covenant and consideration, or to create mutual negative equitable easements, or at least to give other owners in the covenanted area a legal or equitable right to the enforcement of the restrictions in the deeds of other owners. In fact, in neither of the cases does it appear that restrictions of the kind were general throughout the territory, or, indeed, that they were found elsewhere than in the deeds from which they were sought to be removed or those of the immediate parties to the suit."
This distinction has since been recognized and approved in two other cases, Turner v. Glenn, supra, and Sheets v. Dillon, supra.
For the reasons stated the judgment below is
Affirmed.
McLeskey v. . Heinlein ( 1931 )
Franklin v. Elizabeth Realty Co. ( 1932 )
Johnston v. . Garrett ( 1925 )