Thе plaintiffs have raised some fundamental questions as to the rights of certain defendants to enforce the restrictions in -the deeds, whether the covenants are personal, or run with the lands, and as to the separate considerаtion of the several subdivisions in Myers Park. The exigencies of decision do not require their discussion since there are defendants in the action whose legal and property interests are involved in the controversy and will be affectеd by the judgment rendered.
Applicable to the situation disclosed by the evidence, the general law is succinctly stated in 26 C. J. S., 548, 549, sec. 167: “Where the owner of a tract of land subdivides it and sells distinct parcels thereof to separate grantees, imposing restrictions on its use pursuant to a general plan of development or improvement, such restrictions may be enforced by any grantee against any other grantee, either on the theory that there is a mutuality of covenant and consideration, or on the ground that mutual negative equitable easements are created. The doctrine does not depend on whether the covenant is to be construed as running with the land.” Similar statements are found in Tiffаny, Eeal Property, 3rd Ed., Yol. 3, p. 501, sec. 867, and Thompson, Eeal Property, Perm. Ed., Yol. 7, pp. 49, 88, secs. 3567, 3605.
The law so stated is recognized in practically all of the United States, and is the law of this State.
Johnston v. Garrett,
The plaintiff bases her cause of action entirely on changes of condition along Providence Road outside of the Myers Park subdivision in which she, and others who have been made parties, own lots affected with the restriction, universal in that area, that these lots shall be used only for residential purposes. The exception to thе exclusion of evidence of these business developments, of various kinds, on Providence Road outside of the covenanted area being under review, the right of plaintiff to rely on the facts so shown in her demand for equitable relief should be considered. If she could not do so, the evidence is irrelevant, and its exclusion proper.
The unmistakable weight of authority in this country answers this question in the negative, 26 C.
J.
S., 576, sec. 171, and cases cited, and that had been the interpretаtion of opinion in this State, see
McLeskey v. Heinlein,
Indeed, on analysis of the facts presented to the lower court, and to this Court on appeal, in both eases, 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 mutuality of covenant and consideration, or to create mutual negative equitable easements, or аt least to give other *399 owners in tbe covenanted area a legal or equitable right to tbe enforcement of tbe restrictions in tbe deeds of other owners. In fact, in neither of tbe cases does it appear that restrictions of tbe kind were general throughout tbe territory, or, indeed, that they were found elsewhere than in tbe deeds from which they were sought to be removed or those of tbe immediate parties to the suit. The Court is presumed to have rendered its opinion upon these facts, and the cases are distinguishable from the case at bar in essential factual situation. Taking into consideration tbe finding of fact to which in each case the Court was bound, we do not think they were intended tо commit the Court to the view presented by plaintiffs in a case of this kind. However that may be, the Court does not feel constrained to depart from its previous holdings in this respect, and ignore tbe great weight of authority, which, upon well considered reasoning, establishes the contrary rule, and adopt one which would be the beginning of the end of tbe security afforded home-builders in similar residential developments, becoming so necessary to modern living, and almost universally protected by law.
It is generally held that tbe encroachment of business and changes due theretp, in order to undo the force and vitality of the restrictions, must take place within the covenanted area.
McLeskey v. Heinlein, supra,
at 293, S. E., at 491;
Franklin v. Realty Co., supra; Continental Oil Co. v. Fennemore,
Dealing with the same situation, the Supreme Court of Michigan, in Moreton v. Palmer Co., supra, at 413, N. W., at 117:
“But aside from and beyond that issue, those owning property in a restricted residential district or neighborhood, and especially those who have their homes there, and been led to buy or build in such locality by reason of restrictive covenants running with the land imposed upon the street, block or subdivision in which they have purсhased, are entitled to protection against prohibited invasion regardless of how close business may crowd around them on unrestricted property, provided tbe original plan for a residential district has not been departеd from in the re *400 stricted district, street or block, and the restrictive requirements bave been generally enforced, or accepted and complied with by purchasers. . . . The case falls well within that class where it is the policy of the courts of this State to protect property owners who have not themselves violated restrictions in the enjoyment of their homes and holdings, free from inroads by those who attempt to invade restricted residential districts and exploit thеm under some specious claim that others have violated the restrictions, or business necessities nullified them.”
And in Wineman Realty Co. v. Pelavin, supra, at 599, N. "W., at 395:
“The contention of defendants that the property could be used more profitably for business purposes does not impress us. "While it is claimed that it would be far better were property on some main thoroughfares no longer restricted for residential purposes, nevertheless those who have purchased property and otherwise acted in reliаnce upon the restrictions have property rights that cannot be overlooked. Plaintiffs show that the value of their property would be unfavorably affected by such a violation of their rights. Eestrictions generally observed will not be liftеd because of business inroads around the subdivision.”
In
Greer v. Bernstein,
And in Rombauer v. Compton Heights Christian Church, supra, the same view is taken: “If no radical change in the condition and use of the restricted property occurs, the circumstances that there have been changes in the territory surrounding the covenanted area will not of itself be sufficient to destroy the restrictions. Pierce v. St. Louis Union Trust Co., supra, 311 Mo. loc. cit., 295, et seq., 278 S. W. loc. cit. 408.”
In rejecting as ineffective similar evidence of business developments in adjacent territory, the New Jersey Court, in Humphreys v. Ibach, supra, said: “Complainant relies on evidence of the increase in traffic on Cedar Lane and the growth in the numbеr of stores and similar business establishments on this street east and west of the tract in question and even directly opposite it. Business on Palisades Avenue has also been proved. No business establishments, however, upon the tract which is the subject of this controversy have been shown, but it appears that 19 dwelling houses have been erected on the tract on Francis Street within the last few years on the faith of these restrictive covenants and in the belief of their owners that thеir property would not be depreciated for dwelling purposes by the encroachment of business within the restricted area.”
*401
To the same effect is
Heitkemper v. Schmeer,
The plaintiffs, in their brief, point out that the lot from which they seek to remove the restrictions may be sold for $25,000 as business property, but as residential property it is worth much less. ¥e think thе observation of the Court in Cuneo v. Chicago Title & Trust Co., supra, rejecting such,argument, is pertinent:
“While changes have taken place on Sheridan Road, and appellants’ property abutting on that street would doubtless be more valuable as commercial property than as residence property, yet equity cannot, on that ground alone, abrogate and set aside restrictions on the use of that property which have been made for the benefit of other property which has not been so changed. While it mаy be a financial hardship upon appellants to enforce the single-dwelling restrictions on their lots, yet it must be borne in mind that these restrictions were in the deeds which they took to the property, and are made for the benefit of аll of the lots on Oastlewood Terrace.”
See, also, Drexel State Bank of Chicago v. O’Donnell, supra.
The whole matter is well summed up in Rombauer v. Compton Heights Christian Church, supra, from which we quote further:
“Neither is it true that because a small part of a restricted district, lying along the edge or at the threshold thereof, is forced to bear the brunt of attack from outside commercial expansion, and as a result is impaired in value for the use prescribed by the restrictions — in these circumstances we say it is not true that the restrictions will be abated as to the part so affected because of the hardship visited upon thаt particular land as compared with the sheltered portions of the district.
Thompson v. Langan,
We are of opinion that the proposed evidence of business changes along Providence Road outside the сovenanted area is not legally sufficient to support plaintiffs’ demand for removal of the restrictions protecting the residential development, and since plaintiffs’ case is based entirely on such evidence, nonsuit was proper.
Affirmed.
