87 W. Va. 19 | W. Va. | 1920
By deed bearing date July .7, 1888, John R. Browning granted unto Stuart Wood all'the minerals contained within a tract of 2240 acres of land located on Main Island Creek, Logan County, and conferred on the grantee full, liberal and comprehensive mining rights and privileges upon and under the surface of the tract; all of which Wood conveyed to J. 0. Cole and Clinton
On January 22, 1916, Reece Browning and wife, for a valuable consideration, conveyed one-sixth of an acre of the two-acre tract to the petitioner, Dixie Browning (now Seamonds), their daughter, without reservation, exception or limitation of any sort except that she should not sell and convey the parcel without their consent. Petitioner says she did not at that time have actual knowledge of the restrictions contained in the Reece Browning deed to Cole and Crane, though it constituted part of her chain of title, having therctofore been duly recorded.
By virtue of these conveyances Cole and iCrane became vested with the title to the surface of the 154 acres and of the minerals underlying the tract of 2240 acres purchased from Stuart Wood, and they also owned a larger tract or tracts in one contiguous body likewise situated on Main Island Creek and containing approximately 28,000 acres. As a result of coal mining operations on this acreage, the town of Omar, situated on the 154-acre tract, grew and prospered. On December 6, 1916, Cole
Thereafter and in violation of the restrictive covenants contained in the deed from Reece Browning to Cole and Crane, petitioner rented a building situate on the one-sixth acre conveyed to her to M. A. Hindy, a codefendant, who is conducting therein a general mercantile store, and let another building on said parcel to codefendant Rick Gemerous who is using the same as a irhot dog” and soft drink establishment, both presumably being conducted in competition with the five commissaries owned and operated by the coal company at various points in the town of Omar. Por the purpose of enjoining such action on the part of defendants in violation of the covenants restricting the use of the two acres retained by Browning, out of which the one-sixth acre owned by petitioner was carved, plaintiffs as successors in title of Cole and Crane, the covenan-tees, instituted this suit and obtained the injunction which petitioner in this proceeding seeks to dissolve.
It is unnecessary to enter into a discussion of the vexing and technical rules relating to covenants running with land, for we are of opinion that a court of equity should not exert its coercive powers under the situation presented in this case, irrespective of whether the provisions of the deed from Reece Browning to Cole and Crane be considered technical covenants running with the land, or as instances of that general class of restrictive covenants or equitable servitudes, limiting the use of real estate, which bind purchasers -who take with notice thereof, whether they fall within the class of such technical covenants or not. The latter question more properly arises in an action at law to recover damages for the violation of such agreements.
Covenants restricting the use of land are frequently incorporated in deeds for the pm'pose of benefiting land retained by the grantor, or, as in this case, land conveyed to the grantee. Such restrictions are recognized and enforced in courts of equity, even as against subsequent purchasers with notice, when it
In the leading and pioneer case of Tulk v. Moxhay, 2 Phillips 774, 776, this question is discussed at length: “It is said that, the covenant being one which does not run with the land, this court cannot enforce it; but the question is not whether the covenant runs with the land, but whether a party shall be permitted to use the land in a manner inconsistent with the contract entered into by his vendor and with notice of which he purchased. * * * For if an equity is attached to the property by the owner, no one purchasing with notice of that equity can stand in a different situation from the party from whom he purchased.”
The existence and applicability of this rule, without regard to the question whether or not the covenant runs with the land, has heretofore been recognized by this court in the case of Robinson v. Edgell, 57 W. Va. 157, and the general proposition is so well settled that only a few additional 'authorities need be cited. 2 Tiffany, Real Property (2d Ed.), § 394, and cases cited at page 1425, note 1a; 4 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (4th Ed.) § 1693, and cases cited at page 3956, note 10; Weigman v. Kusel, 270 Ill. 520; Wootton v. Seltzer, 83 N. J. Eq. 163, affirmed in 84 N. J. Eq. 207; Brown v. Huber, 80 Oh. St. 183; Parker v. Nightingale, 6 Allen (Mass.) 341; Evans v. Foss, 194 Mass. 513; Trustees v. Lynch, 70 N. Y. 440. In the last case cited the court said: “It is strenuously urged, in behalf of the defendants and respondents, that there was no privity of estate between the mutual covenantors and covenantees in respect of the premises owned by them respectively, and which were the subjects of the covenants and agreements, and that the covenants did not therefore run with the lands, binding the grantees, and subjecting them to a personal liability thereon. This may be conceded for all the purposes of this action. It is of no importance whether an action at law could be maintained against the grantees of Beers, as upon a covenant running with
It is unnecessary to discuss fully the exact nature of the right created in equity by these restrictive covenants. By some courts they are termed equitable easements; by others, servitudes. Tn some the right created is treated as contractual in its nature; in others, they are expressly recognized and protected as property rights. This court in the recent case of Withers v. Ward, not yet reported, has intimated that the latter is perhaps the real nature and characteristic of such restrictions. An extreme application of the property theory is found in the recent case of Riverbank Improvement Co. v. Chadwick, 228 Mass. 242, which holds unconstitutional a statute providing the procedure whereby a property owner, whose land is subject to the burden of equitable restrictions ■ limiting the use or manner of using his land, may, upon paying the ascertained amount of damages which will result to the person or property entitled to the benefit of such restrictions by reason of the non-enforcement of the same, have the title to his property registered free from restrictions; the court’s decision being based upon the ground that, even though pajonent of full compensation is guaranteed, this is a taking of property for private purposes withr ■out the consent of the owner, and therefore in violation of the Declaration of Rights.
Tn 2 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (4th Ed.), § 6'88, the author says: “The full meaning of this most just rule (that one who takes with notice of an equity takes subject to that equity) is, that the purchaser of an estate or interest, legal or equitable, even for a .valuable consideration, with notice of any existing equitable estate, interest, claim, or right, in or to the same subject-matter, held by a third person, is liable in equity to the same extent and in the same manner as the person from whom he made the purchase; his conscience is equally bound with that of his vendor, and he acquires only what his vendor can honestly transfer.”
And again from section 689 we quote: “On the same principle, if the owner of land enters into a covenant concerning the land, concerning its use, subjecting it to easements or personal servitudes, and the like, and the land is afterwards conveyed or sold to some one who has notice of the covenant, the grantee or purchaser will take the premises bound by the covenant, and will be compelled in equity either to specifically execute it, or will be restrained from violating it; and it makes no difference whatever, with respect to this liability in equity, whether the covenant is or is not one which in law ‘runs with the land.’ ” See also Weigman v. Kusel, 270 Ill. 520; Wootton v. Seltzer, 83 N. J.
Ill an early Massachusetts case, Parker v. Nightingale, 6 Allen 341, 345, the court said: “A purchaser of land with notice of a right or interest in it existing only by agreement with his vendor, is bound to do that which his grantor had agreed to perform, because it would be unconseientious and inequitable for him to violate or disregard the valid agreements of the vendor in regard to the estate, of which he had notice when he became the purchaser. In such cases it is true that the aggrieved party can often have no remedy at law. There may be neither privity of estate nor privity of contract between himself and those who attempt to appropriate property in contravention of the use or mode of enjoyment impressed upon it by the agreement of their grantor, and with notice of which they took the estate from him. But it is none the less contrary to equity that those to whom the estate comes, with notice of the rights of another respecting it, should wilfully desregard them, and in the absence of any remedy at law the stronger is the necessity of affording in such cases equitable relief, if it can be given consistently with public policy, and without violating any absolute rule of law.”
And the authorities are uniform in holding that actual notice of the restriction is not essential, but that constructive notice is sufficient. 4 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (4th Ed.) § 1704; 2 Tiffany, Real Property (2d Ed.) § 398; Howland v. Andrus, 80 N. J. Eq. 276; Weigman v. Kusel, 270 Ill. 520; Peck v. Conway, 119 Mass. 546; Smith v. Graham, 161 App. Div. 803, affirmed in 217 N. Y. 655.
But it may be urged that in this case there was no transfer from covenantor to covenantee of the land sought to be burdened with this equity. That is true; but as said in Weigman v. Kusel, supra, it is not material “that such stipulations should be binding at law, or that there should be privity of estate between the parties in order to warrant equitable relief. Such building restrictions will be enforced in equity upon equitable principles, each case being considered with reference to its own circumstances.” Moreover, it is also true that we most frequently meet these equitable restrictions in deeds where the
In Wootton v. Seltzer, 83 N. J. Eq. 163, the grantor of land covenanted with his grantee to maintain an open space of 20 feet on land retained by him, and the court in enforcing the restriction for and against their respective alienees, said: “There can be little, if any, difference in principle between a restrictive covenant made by a vendee for the benefit of remaining land of his vendor, and one made by a vendor touching his remaining land for the benefit of his vendee. Both are held to be enforceable by a purchaser of the land for the benefit of which the covenant has been made against a purchaser of the restricted land who is chargeable with notice of the covenant, (citing cases). It is unnecessary to regard such covenants as creative of easements; the equitable right to enforce the covenant is transferable as a part of the land to which it is attached, and may be enforced upon the equitable principle of preventing one having knowledge of the just rights of another from defeating such rights.” Similar statements are found in Brown v. Huber, 80 Oh. St. 183, and Halle v. Newbold, 69 Md. 265. For other cases where the grantor imposed restrictions upon the use of land retained by him, for the benefit of land conveyed to his grantee, see Howland v. Andrus, 80 N. J. Eq. 276; Trustees v.
What has been said heretofore in this opinion has been predicated upon an assumption that the nature and purpose of the restrictive covenant, limiting the use of the grantor’s property, was in accordance with the policy of the law relating to these matters, and of such a nature as to warrant the creation of an equity binding upon all purchasers except those who bought and paid full value without notice of the encumbrance, and to justify a court of chancery in enforcing it by coercive mandate. Such restrictions generally tend to the physical advantage of the cov-enantee’s property, and as instances thereof there may be cited agreements not to use designated land for building purposes (Hennen v. Deveny, 71 W. Va. 629), or for other than residence purposes, in a district devoted primarily to such use (Withers v. Ward, 86 W. Va. 558, 104 S. E. 96); agreements not to build within a certain distance of the street; not ;to erect a building of less than a certain cost, or of a style of construction other than that named in the deed; not to devote land to a particular business obnoxious to that community for other than moral reasons. And closely allied to the class of covenants intended for the physical advantage of the property, is the class intended to maintain or improve the moral tone of the neighborhood, by the exclusion of businesses tending to immorality or disorder (Robinson v. Edgell, 57 W. Va. 157). Finally, there are agreements whose purpose is to increase the value of tlie covenantee’s land indirectly by preventing the use of the covenantor’s land for a competing business. For instances of these various restrictive agreements, see 2 Tiffany, Real Property (2d Ed.) § 395.
The restrictive covenant contained in the deed from Reece Browning to Cole and 'Crane limited the covenantor and his successors in title to the use of the two acres of surface land “for residence and agricultural purposes only,” and bound them “not to conduct or suffer to be conducted on said two acres of surface any mercantile business, and that no’intoxicating drinks of any character are to be sold or kept thereon.” We are concerned here only with such of the restrictions as seem to prohibit the maintenance and operation of the general mercantile
From an examination of the restrictive covenant, read and considered in the light of the record in this case, it appears that the purpose of Cole and Crane in insisting upon such a provision was to safeguard mining operations for coal purposes on the 154-acre tract against any unlawful obstruction or impediment to the exercise of rights conferred upon them by grant, from any hostile agency that might resort to the two acres or any part thereof; for if such use be permitted, it would afford a convenient loafing place for dissemination of radical and dangerous doctrines. And there may have been the further purpose, though that does not clearly appear, of limiting and restricting the operation of stores selling supplies similar to those sold in the company’s five commissaries located at various points in the town of Omar and on the 154 acres.
It is difficult to see how the enforcement of these agreements will accomplish the first purpose intended. If mercantile establishments are forbidden to exist on the two-acre parcel, yet residences and rooming houses are not, and these will be equally open for propagandists to “ply their trade.” In addition, there are nine or ten independently owned stores in or near the community, to which access is likewise available, only in a less degree, for the attainment of the same end. There is no allegation or proof tending to show that the establishments maintained by defendants are disorderly or otherwise obnoxious.
On the other hand, there is but little, if any, doubt that a decree restraining defendants would operate to the financial gain of the company’s commissaries, for defendant Hindy states in his affidavit that during the six months he has been conducting his store, his business has amounted to $18,000. And assuming an intention, though it does not clearly appear, on the part of Cole and Crane to eliminate, by means of the restrictive covenant, possible future competition of this character, some courts have declined to recognize-and enforce, as equitable servitudes, binding upon all not bona fide purchasers for value, restrictions of unlimited duration which do not tend to the physical advantage of the covenantee’s land except by the possible indirect in
On the other hand, in a case involving substantially similar facts, the New York Court of Appeals has reached an opposite conclusion. N was the owner of certain land containing deposits of building sand, and the sale of the sand constituted his only business. Yielding to the importunities of S who desired to buy part of his land, N sold to him a portion thereof upon S’s express covenant not to sell any sand from the parcel conveyed. Subsequently conveyed the parcel to defendant, who had notice of the restriction, but in violation thereof the latter opened a pit and sold sand therefrom. The court held that a suit was maintainable to enjoin such use by the vendee. Hodge v. Sloan, 107 N. Y. 244. And in 2 Tiffany, Real Property (2d Ed.) § 395, the author expresses the view that if the agreement is valid between the original parties thereto, the fact that its chief effect is to restrain competition is hardly a sufficient reason for
Which of these two views we would be disposed to adopt it is unnecessary to say, for, as will appear more clearly later from the averments of the bill itself, the intention of the covenantee apparently was to achieve the first purpose mentioned above, and not to eliminate potential competitors of the company’s commissaries.
As personal covenants between the original grantor and grantee, the restrictions thus imposed may have been valid and enforceable ; but to give them the force of equities binding and restricting the use of land indefinitely, no matter into whose hands the properties pass, provided the alienees take with actual or constructive notice, is a matter of material difference. Great latitude has been accorded by courts to property owners with respect to the restrictions which they are permitted to impose upon the use of adjoining or neighborhood property. But, as noted above, the limitations ordinarily tend toward the physical or moral advantage of the property itself, either by way of improving the appearance of the neighborhood or district in which the property is situated, or by way of preventing the entry of noisy, disorderly or otherwise obnoxious businesses or establishments into a quiet and orderly section. And it must always be borne in mind that any doubts as to the purpose, propriety or validity of restrictions limiting the use of property are resolved in favor of its free and unrestricted use by the vendee.
The restrictions imposed in this case go a step farther than those mentioned above. Unlike those involved in Withers v. Ward, they do not concern a distinct residential section of the town of Omar — in fact that town has largely developed since the creation of these restrictions — nor does it appear that the primary purpose was to improve residential conditions in the immediate vicinity. But, as indicated above, the restrictions tended only indirectly to the physical or moral advantage of the covenantee’s property. They were placed in the deed, the bill informs us, for the reason “that in all mining operations it is essential and more conducive to the welfare of the miners and other employees, and to the effective maintenance of an
The purpose thus disclosed is to prevent the presence of mercantile establishments, not because other forms of business are per se obnoxious, but because of the class of people who perchance may congregate there. The motive is unquestionably proper, though sometimes subject to abuse, and as a personal covenant may have been binding upon the original parties thereto. But resolving all doubts in favor of the continued free use of property, unencumbered by restrictions, as by legal and equitable principles we must, we are of opinion that a court of chancery should not lend its coercive power to enforce such restrictions as equitable property rights against subsequent alienees.
For these reasons, our order will reverse the decree of the court below, dissolve the injunction, and dismiss the bill.
Reversed, injunction dissolved, and bill dismissed.