Plaintiffs, owners of a parcel of real property, sued to have the court declare a restriction prohibiting the dispensing of petroleum products thereon to be invalid and unenforceable. It having been stipulated under defendant’s motion for summary judgment to dismiss the complaint under section 437c, Code of Civil Procedure, judgment was entered for defendant adjudging the restriction to be valid and enforceable against plaintiffs; they appeal therefrom.
On June 22, 1959, General Petroleum Corporation, by corporation grant deed, conveyed to Kelley and Clark as tenants in common a parcel of real property “Subject to:.. . . 2. A restriction against the use of the hereinabove described property for the dispensing of petroleum products to November 1, 1979. Should the property be used for service station purposes prior to November 1, 1979, the title should be revested and revert to General Petroleum Corporation.” Thereafter, General Petroleum Corporation was merged into Socony Mobile Oil Company, Inc., defendant herein, who became the successor in interest to General Petroleum Corporation, the owner and holder of the reversionary interests. In March 1962, Kelley and Clark conveyed the property to plaintiffs subject to “covenants, conditions, reservations, restrictions, rights, rights of way and easements of record.”
Assuming that the restriction in the deed constitutes “a restrictive covenant for the sole purpose of restraining trade,” appellants contend it violates section 16600, Business and Professions Code, and is void and unenforceable.
Section 16600 provides that, subject to certain exceptions (not here pertinent) “every contract by which anyone is restrained from engaging in a lawful profession, trade, or business of any kind is to that extent void.” We conclude that the restriction in the deed does not fall within the purview of the statute. The single restriction is imposed, not personally on plaintiffs restraining them from engaging or carrying on any profession, trade or business but, on the use of the land upon which they as grantees are barred merely from selling petroleum products, and then only for a limited period of time. Moreover, under this restriction the grantees are not prevented from dispensing petroleum products and *191 operating a service station at any time at any other place and there directly competing with defendant.
Dispositive of the main issue are
Los Angeles Land & Water Co.
v.
Kane
(1929)
The courts have upheld similar use restrictions in conveyances
(Papst
v.
Hamilton
(1901)
Moreover, while the cases are uniform in refusing to enforce a contract wherein one is restrained from pursuing an entire business, trade or profession, as falling within the ambit of section 16600
(Callahan
v.
Donnolly
(1872)
Of a conditional sales contract providing that a pump and gas station equipment shall be used only at a specified address, the court in
Fidelity Credit Assur. Co.
v.
Cosby
(1928)
The restriction in the deed is neither a covenant running with the land nor a personal covenant, as urged by appellants. The intention of the parties to provide a forfeiture and termination of the estate in the event the property is used for service station purposes prior to November 1, 1979, is readily apparent from the language employed in the restriction; it reflects a condition subsequent.
(Los Angeles Land & Water Co.
v.
Kane
(1929)
The nature of a restriction in a deed is determined
by
the language used.
(Rosecrans
v.
Pacific Elec. Ry. Co.
(1943)
The restriction in the deed is effective against the plaintiffs, transferees of the grantee.
(Firth
v.
Marovich
(1911)
Por the foregoing reasons the judgment is affirmed.
Wood, P. J., and Pourt, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied January 8, 1965, and appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied February 10,1965.
