146 Mo. App. 342 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
Plaintiffs and defendant own lots in what is known as “Reber’s Subdivision in the city of St. Louis,” and in city block No. 4068. The lot of plaintiffs fronts fifty feet on the south line of Odell avenue, running east and west, lies immediately west of an alley running north and south, and extends southward 190 fee,t to an east and west alley. The description of the property is the east fifty feet of lot 31, in city block 4068. Defendant owns a parcel of ground lying immediately east of the north and south alley, which therefore separates it from plaintiff’s lot. Defendant’s tract extends 190 feet east and west along the south side of Odell avenue, has a depth of 110 feet and 2 inches along the "west line of Kingshighway, running north and south, and is described as lots 1 and 2 of block 4068, in Reber’s subdivision. In September, 1908, defendant began to excavate on his lot for the purpose of putting up a building about fifteen feet south of the south line of Odell avenne, whereupon plaintiffs instituted the present action to restrain him from doing so, basing the cause on restrictive covenants in deeds to the two lots forbidding the erection of a house less than forty feet from the south line of Odell avenue. Deeds to the properties are meagerly shown in the abstracts of the record on which the case was submitted, and the dates of several of them are not given. The only conveyances affecting the title to plaintiff’s lot which are exhibited are these: First, deed “from Margaret M. Reber, widow and executrix, to Flora R. Haydock, conveying lots 1 to 31 inclusive, in city block 4068, of Reber’s subdivision,” without restrictive covenants of any kind. The date of this deed is not given, but, as it included the parcel now owned by plaintiffs as well as that owned by defendant, the grantee in it, Flora R. Haydock, must be the common source of title. Second, the deed recorded in book 856, p. 314, which was the one from Flora R, Haydock, widow, to James F. Holden, conveying lot 31, block 4068, dated April 10, 1888, and contain
The court below entered a decree perpetually enjoining defendant, his agents, servants, or employees, or any person claiming under him, from constructing on his ground any building less that forty feet “from north
The infirmity in the case for plaintiffs is that there is nothing to connect them with the covenant in the deeds under which defendant claims title, so as to enable them to maintain this suit for the enforcement of the covenant. Title to the parcel of ground owned by plaintiffs passed from Flora Haydock, the common source of title under whom plaintiffs and defendant claim, April 10, 1888, or more that two years prior to May 5, 1890, when the title to the lots owned by defendant passed from said source. Unless it appears either from the covenant inserted by Flora Haydock in the deed by which she parted with the title to defendant’s lots, or from extraneous facts, that the restriction was imposed on the use of the lots owned by defendant, for the benefit of persons holding lots under prior conveyances by Flora Haydock, the covenant will be treated as inuring to her sole benefit and as enforceable only by her and her heirs or devisees; or, at most, as enforceable also by persons who acquired title to other lots in the subdivision, under transfers from her of a date later than her transfer of the lot of plaintiffs. The principle of this doctrine is, that as Flora Haydock conveyed plaintiff’s tract before she conveyed the lots defendant owns, she could not have assigned, along with the lot of plaintiffs, any interest in the restrictive covenant inserted in her subsequent conveyance of defendant’s lots. The courts are in accord as regards the rule just stated, but there is disagreement as to the right of one holding land under a subsequent conveyance from a common vendor to enforce a restrictive covenant in an earlier conveyance,
The essential questions in cases like the present are whether the common grantor meant the restrictive covenant to inure only to his own benefit, or to the benefit-of all persons to whom he had already conveyed or thereafter should convey property in the vicinity; and, if the latter was his purpose, whether it had been manifested in a way that purchasers would be treated as having bought with notice of it. The primary inquiry is as to the intention of the common grantor in imposing the restriction; but, as suggested, supra, a bare intention to make the covenant inure to the benefit of all persons claiming under him by either prior or subsequent deeds, cherished, but not made known so as to affect purchasers with notice, would not impair the right of purchasers to hold their tracts exempt from the restriction. [Coughlin v. Barker, 46 Mo. App. l. c. 63.] Competent and sufficient proof must be furnished of the intention and that the defendant bought with actual or constructive notice of it. As was said by Justice Wills in Nottingham, etc., Co. v. Butler, L. R. 15 Q. B. Div. 261, 268, it is a question of fact whether restrictive covenants exacted by a common vendor of parcels of land carved out of a tract constitute an agreement between him and his several vendees, imposed for his own "protection, or were meant by him and were understood by the buyers, to be for the common advantage of all the buyers and enforceable inter se. The intention of the common vendor that the covenant should inure to the benefit of neighboring lots, whether held by the owners under deeds
As Justice Wills said in the Nottingham Co.’s case: “It is in all cases a question of intention to be gathered, as every other question of fact, from every circumstance which can throw light upon what the intention was.”' In Meriwether v. Joy, 85 Mo. App. 634, this court dealt with a suit wherein a prior grantee asked enforcement of a negative covenant in defendant’s deed. It was said, if the purchase by the plaintiffs had been
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.