Dеfendants appeal from a decree permanently enjoining them from operating a beauty salon in their home in violation of a restrictive covenant. Defendants challenge the appropriateness of the injunction on the facts of this cаse.
In 1962, the then owners of Plat C in the Upland Terrace Subdivision of Tooele City executed a Restrictive Covenants Agreement which wаs duly recorded with the Tooele County Recorder. The agreement stated in part:
NO TRADE OR BUSINESS PERMITTED: No trade or business of any kind or nature shall be рermitted to be carried on upon any lot in said Plat C of the subdivision, nor shall anything be done thereon which may be or become an annoyance or nuisance to the neighborhood.
The term of that restriction (and others) was 25 years, followed by automatic 10-year renewal unless modified by a majority of the owners.
Plaintiffs and defendants subsequently purchased adjacent lots within Plat C. In the summer of 1979, defendants commenced preparations to establish a beauty salon in their home, including purchase of supplies, remodeling of their basement, securing a business license, and checking of the applicable zoning restriction. On about September 30, 1979, defendants bеgan operation of their beauty salon. Defendants state that they were unaware of the restrictive covenant until after thеy had made a substantial investment in their salon. 1 On the basis of its finding that Upland Terrace had not changed in character from a residentiаl neighborhood, the trial court enjoined defendants from using their premises as a beauty parlor in violation of the restrictive covenants. We affirm.
This is an equity case in which this Court may weigh the facts as well as review the law. Utah Const., Art. VIII, § 9; U.R.C.P., Rule 72(a);
Nelson v. Nelson,
Defendants’ first argument is that the trial court erred in refusing to void the restrictive covenant because a change in circumstances in the surrounding neighborhood had rendеred the covenant no longer enforceable.
Uvanni v. CMB Builders, Inc.,
*480
Defendant presented the testimony of 12 people residing in the Uрland Terrace Subdivision who stated that they engaged in or had engaged in various activities in their homes, including real estate sales, tropical fish sales and service, diet services, ceramic classes and sales, child care, piano lessons and beauty salons. There was no reliable evidence on which of these 12 witnesses owned homes in Plat C rather than in other plats in the subdivision, nor was there evidence on whether or not the other plats in the subdivision were subject to the same restrictive covenants as Plat C. In any еvent, the fact that others are engaging in hobbies and business activities in their homes does not change the predominant character of the neighborhood from residential to commercial. In addition, the existence of several breaches of a restrictive covenant does not justify refusal of enforcement unless the character of the neighborhood has changed.
Morgan v. Matheson,
Defendants’ second argument is that the court erred in enforcing the restrictive covenants because defendants should prevail under a “balance of injury” test. Under that test, an equity court may exercise its discretion not to grant injunctive relief when the plaintiff is not irreparably harmed by the violation, the violation was innocent, defendants’ cost of removal would be disproрortionate and oppressive compared to the benefits plaintiffs would derive from it, and plaintiffs can be compensated by damages.
Papanikolas Bros. Ent. v. Sugarhouse Shopping Ctr. Ass’n,
Utah,
The balance of injury test does not require the withholding of injunctive relief in this case. The damage suffered by defendants under the injunction would be relocation of their business or liquidation of an investment of about $7,000. In contrast, courts have not found injunctions requiring thе removal of a river moorage or the disas-sembly of a building encroachment to be so oppressive that an injunction would bе denied.
Taucher v. Andruss,
Defendants further argue that the restrictive covenant is no longer generally useful because a majority of the landowners in the area joined in the execution of an agreement to modify the covenant. Prior to the opening of their beauty salon, defendants circulated an agreement, ultimately signed by 34 оr 35 of the 45 owners in the plat (including themselves), which recited the desire of the signers to change the Plat C covenant to allow a business to be conducted within the confines of an existing single-family residence. Though a unanimous modification may effectively alter a restrictive covenants agreement,
Rogers v. Zwolak,
Affirmed. Costs to respondent.
Notes
. The conflict in testimony about the timing of the plaintiffs’ phone call informing defendants of the restrictive covenant is not significant since laches is not at issue, and in any event defendants had constructive notice of the restrictive covenant through its recording. U.C.A., 1953, § 17-21-11.
. Even if this Court could say that defendants should have been favored under the balance of injury test, the appropriate remedy would be an award of damages in favor of plaintiffs, not the reversal requested by defendants.
