William P. CHARPING, Appellant v. J. P. SCURRY & COMPANY, INC., and The Citizens and Southern National Bank of South Carolina, Respondents.
1216
Court of Appeals
Decided Aug. 29, 1988.
Heard May 25, 1988
372 S. E. (2d) 120
312
James R. Barber, III, and Aphrodite Karvelas, both of Todd & Barber, Columbia, for respondent.
This is an appeal from an order granting summary judgment to J. P. Scurry and Company, Inc., and dismissing the complaint of William P. Charping with prejudice. The dispute involves real property. The issue is whether a restrictive covenant contained in a deed is a real or a personal covenant.
Mary Lemon Owens Townsend acquired title to two contiguous parcels of land in Columbia, South Carolina, during 1976. One parcel contained five unimproved lots and faced Forest Drive. The other parcel contained three lots with a residence and faced Stratford Road. The properties abutted along a part of their rear common boundary.
In 1980, Townsend sold the Forest Drive property containing the five lots to a partnership. The deed contained a restriction stating “[t]he above property is to be developed into a maximum of four (4) residential lots, each of which is to be used solely for the construction of a single family residence.” In 1983, Townsend sold the Stratford Road property to William Charping. At the time of closing she told Charping about the residential restriction on the Forest Drive property, but the deed to Charping made no reference to the restriction. Thereafter, in August 1985, Townsend executed a “Modification of Restriction” which purportedly modified the restriction on the Forest Drive property to increase the number of residential lots from four to six. At that time, she had no ownership interest in either parcel. The partnership conveyed the Forest Drive property to J. P. Scurry & Company, Inc., in late 1985. Charping filed a complaint seeking a declaratory ruling holding the Forest Drive property was subject to the four-lot restriction and requesting an injunction to prevent development by Scurry beyond that number. The record contains no indication Scurry plans to develop the property for non-residential uses. As we view the record, the issue is limited to the question of the maximum number of residences that may be built on the lots.
Scurry filed a motion for summary judgment on the ground Charping had no standing or right permitting him to enforce the four-lot restriction. The court considered the pleadings, certain stipulated facts, five requests for admission, and the “Modification of Restriction” in making its
Charping states in his brief and both parties contended at oral argument that the facts are undisputed. Both parties specifically argue there is no genuine issue of material fact regarding Townsend‘s intent. Basically, Charping argues the stipulated facts support his contention Townsend‘s intent was to create a covenant running with the land as opposed to the opposite argument of Scurry that Townsend‘s intent was to create a personal covenant.
South Carolina recognizes a historical disfavor for restrictive covenants based upon the view that the best interests of society are advanced by the free and unrestricted use of land. Sea Pines Plantation Co. v. Wells, 294, S. C. 266, 363 S. E. (2d) 891 (1987). Courts tend to strictly interpret restrictive covenants and a party seeking to enforce a covenant must show the covenant applies to the property either by its express language or by a plain and unmistakable implication. Sea Pines, 294 S. C. 266, 363 S. E. (2d) 891; Edwards v. Surratt, 228 S. C. 512, 90 S. E. (2d) 906 (1956).
Charping was not a party to the 1980 deed between Townsend and the partnership. He seeks to enforce the covenant by claiming it is a covenant running with the land, and as a subsequent purchaser of Townsend‘s property, he may enforce it. Given the rule in South Carolina of strictly construing restrictive covenants and favoring unrestricted use of land, the burden was on Charping to prove Townsend‘s clear intention to create a covenant that would run with the land. Edwards, 228, S. C. 512, 90 S. E. (2d) 906; see Stegall v. Housing Authority of Charlotte, 278 N. C. 95, 178 S. E. (2d) 824 (1971) (burden of showing restrictions in a deed are covenants running with the land is upon the party claiming the benefit of the restriction); see also Traylor v. Holloway, 206 Va. 257, 142 S. E. (2d) 521 (1965) (the party who seeks to enforce a covenant restricting free use of land has the burden of proving it prohibits the acts of which he complains) and Anno., 51 A. L. R. (3d) 556 Section 4[b] (1973) and the many cases cited therein.
A restriction limiting the use of property to residen
In the absence of express language of intention, Charping claims the benefit of a presumption at law. This presumption, he argues, implies that absent facts showing a contrary intent, when the owner of realty sells a portion of his land and imposes use restrictions upon the portion conveyed, such restrictions are presumed to be imposed for the benefit of the retained land. See Wardlaw v. Southern Ry. Co., 199 Ga. 97, 33 S. E. (2d) 304 (1945).
Although not expressed in exactly the same language, a similar argument was made in Edwards v. Surratt, 228 S. C. at 516, 90 S. E. (2d) at 908. The plaintiffs argued a restriction for residential use placed in a deed conveying approximately three acres was intended to be for the benefit of the remaining property of the grantor and thereby enforceable by subsequent grantees of the remaining property. Id. The Supreme Court held the burden of proof was on the subsequent grantees to show the grantor‘s intention and they failed to meet the burden of demonstrating intention by plain and unmistakable implication. Edwards, 228 S. C. at 521, 90 S. E. (2d) at 911. The court did not discuss the presumption of intent as argued by Charping, but looked for evidence of the grantor‘s intent from the surrounding circumstances. We therefore reject the presumption urged by Charping.
When a motion for summary judgment is made, an ad-verse party may not rest upon the mere allegations or de
Charping has failed to produce any evidence of Townsend‘s intent as would constitute a genuine issue of fact. The stipulated facts indicate Charping entered into the contract to purchase in ignorance of the restriction and did not learn of the restriction until Townsend mentioned it at closing. Charping‘s argument that Townsend‘s remarks to him at the closing regarding her having restricted the Forest Drive property to residential use constitutes sufficient evidence of Townsend‘s intention is without merit. An unappealed finding by the trial court states, “Townsend did nothing [at the closing] to affirm or reaffirm that the restriction was to run with [Charping‘s] land and was for [his] benefit.” The record is devoid of further evidence which might assist in determining Townsend‘s intent at the time of the creation of the covenant.
Under the evidence in this record, the decision of the trial court is
Affirmed.
GOOLSBY, J., concurs.
GARDNER, J., dissents in separate opinion.
GARDNER, Judge (dissenting):
I dissent. This case presents a novel question to the courts of South Carolina.
The restriction of this case is simple; the import of the language used is clear and easily understood. It simply limits the use of the Forest Drive property to a maximum of four single-family residences. All parties to this action agree
The majority emphasizes that (1) restrictive covenants are historically disfavored, (2) courts favor the free use of land and (3) a restriction is considered a real restrictive covenant only if it is clear that it was the intent of the grantor as evidenced by the language used in the instrument creating the covenant. Despite all of these platitudes, restrictions meeting the test of Epting, supra, are uniformly enforced. See Sea Pines Plantation Co. v. Wells, 294 S. C. 266, 363 S. E. (2d) 891 (1987) (stating principle that the rule of strict construction against restrictive covenants will not be used to defeat the clear, express language of the covenant) and West‘s South Eastern Digest (2d) Covenants Key No. 49 (1981).
Epting is the only South Carolina authority which deals with how to determine if a restrictive covenant is real or personal. Epting is quick to emphasize that the language creating the restriction must clearly reflect as intent by plain language to create a restrictive covenant. If this be so, as it is in the instant case, according to Epting, the restriction is a restrictive real covenant if it relates to the realty demised, having for its object something annexed to, or inherent in, or connected with the land; its performance or nonperformance must affect the nature, quality or value or mode of enjoyment of the demised premises; it must have relation to the interest or estate conveyed and the act to be done must concern the interest created or conveyed.
Other authorities have reduced the rule to simply whether
And I observe that in determining whether restrictions “touch or concern” the subject land, courts must decide in each case whether the purpose of the restriction is to alter the legal rights that otherwise would flow from the ownership of the land. 21 C.J.S. Covenants Section 54 (1940).
Applying the above principles to the case before us, I would hold that the subject restriction does alter the legal rights which flow from the ownership of the Forest Drive property. Simply stated this land was restricted in its use to a maximum of four single-family dwellings. The language is clear; only dwelling houses can be erected on the property and the language is equally clear that the Forest Drive property is limited to a maximum of four lots. The language is susceptible of only one reasonable meaning and that is to alter the use of the land in the two concepts mentioned. The two concepts have as their object the inherent use of the land and are connected with the land and otherwise meet the test of Epting. I would therefore hold that the subject restriction is a real restrictive covenant. And, accordingly, I would hold that the appealed order was erroneous in holding the restriction to be personal. Epting clearly holds that a personal covenant is one which has no relation to the land conveyed, a concept patently antithetic to the situation before us. And I would so hold, although my brothers of the majority would hold that the restriction has no relationship to the land conveyed and is therefore a personal covenant.
I would also hold that Charping, as Townsend‘s grantee and successor in interest, is entitled to enforce the covenant. Whether the home tract now owned by Charping has as an incident of its ownership the benefit of enforcing the covenant Townsend imposed on the Forest Drive property would be determined by nearly all courts by whether Townsend, as the original grantor, intended to benefit her home tract. And this intention, it is generally held, must be drawn from the language of the instrument itself and the circumstances surrounding the original execution of said instrument. Annotation, Who May Enforce Restrictive Covenant or Agree-
Does not the very fact that at the time of closing Mrs. Townsend told Charping about the restrictive covenants imposed upon the Forest Drive property constitute evidence that at the time she imposed the restriction she intended it to be a benefit to her home tract located on Stratford Drive? Of course it does. There would have been no other reason for her to tell Charping about the restriction at the very time she was conveying her home tract to Charping, who ostensibly was to use the property as his home.
And I would observe, parenthetically, that some courts recognize a presumption in cases such as the ones before us of an intent to benefit the land retained;2 this makes sense because something as serious as the imposition and acceptance of a real restrictive covenant is not the result of caprice or whim but a manifestation of an intent, design and purpose. No such presumption exists in this state but the logic supporting such a presumption in and of itself bolsters the other evidence supporting the proposition that Townsend intended to benefit the Stratford Road property at the time she conveyed the Forest Drive property, which was at the time her backyard.
In closing, I would observe that the common law principle of tenure is existent in South Carolina. See
Footnoted is a bibliography of pertinent authorities other than those contained in the West reporter systems and Digests.3
In all due deference to my dear colleagues of this court, I respectfully dissent.
