This bill in equity is brought to enforce a Land Assembly and Redevelopment Plan (plan) dealing with land in the city of Fall River (city). The plaintiff Gulf Oil Corporation (Gulf) is the owner of a parcel of land in the area affected by the plan, and alleges that the defendants Fall River Housing Authority (authority) and Mt. Hope Development Corporation (Mt. Hope) are violating a use restriction provided for in the plan.
The matter is here on a statement of agreed facts, a transcript of the evidence and a report of material facts. Thus all questions of law, fact and discretion are open to our decision on review.
Gordon
v.
O’Brien,
The facts are these. In October, 1957, the authority, and the city acting through its city council, approved the plan for “The Pearl Street Redevelopment Projéct.” The plan divided the relevant area of the city into two zones, General Commercial A and General Commercial B, separated by Milliken Boulevard. A 1964 amendment to the plan specifying permitted uses in the two sections included inter alla the following provision: “Hotel or motel use or restaurant, or gasoline service station use shall not be permitted in parcels designated General Commercial (B) if previously approved for a General Commercial (A) parcel. However, a small restaurant, snack bar or service station may be permitted as
Gulf is the owner of property in General Commercial A. Its chain of title relates back to a conveyance from the authority in September, 1963. The original deed and all subsequent deeds of the property provided that the conveyance in each instance was subject to all restrictions and covenants in the “Contract for Disposition of Land for Private Redevelopment” between the authority and Gulf’s predecessor. That contract contained covenants restricting land uses to those permitted by the plan and provided that such covenants were enforceable by the grantor, grantee, their successors in title and the owners of land or any interest in land anywhere in the “Project Area” which was subject to the restrictions of the plan. The plaintiff Edward Souza is the lessee of Gulf on a portion of the “Project Area.” The plaintiff Fall River Municipal Employees’ Credit Union (credit union) is the owner of land in General Commercial B. It was the direct grantee of the authority, and its contract of purchase and deed contained substantially the same restrictions as those noted with respect to the property of Gulf. Mt. Hope is the owner of a large part of the land in General Commercial B. The contract for sale of land to Mt. Hope provided for restrictions similar to those mentioned, and these restrictions were incorporated by reference into the deed by a correcting deed properly executed, delivered and filed. It is these last restrictive covenants which the plaintiffs seek to enforce.
In May, 1966, the authority issued a certificate of completion and approval to Gulf’s predecessor in title approving the use of its land in General Commercial A as a hotel, motel, gasoline service station and/or restaurant. Gulf obtained the necessary licenses and approvals, and a service station operated by the plaintiff Souza opened on that site on or about June 1, 1968. In January, 1970, Mt. Hope was granted a permit by the Fall River -city council to store gasoline on a parcel of its property in General Commercial B adjacent to the property of the credit union and across
1. The initial question presented is one of interpretation of the plan restrictions, for if the use by the defendants is in conformity with the plan no resolution of further issues is necessary for decision. The defendants contend that the facility constructed fits into the proviso for “a small restaurant, snack bar or service station . . . as an incidental or accessory use serving a primary use such as a retail store” in General Commercial B even if a “gasoline service station” had already been approved for General Commercial A. The use of the property projected by the defendants appears to be that of an ordinary gasoline service station. The defendants argue that, notwithstanding the qualifying adjective “small,” the kind of service station permitted in the last sentence of the provision should be interpreted as identical to the use referred to in the prior sentence. They further contend that the gasoline station in question is “an incidental or accessory use serving a primary use such as a retail store” and that the primary use to which the service station is incidental is the planned complex of apartment buildings, office buildings and retail stores in the “Project Area.” This interpretation makes every service station use an incidental one. If we adopted the reading urged by the defendants, we could paraphrase the provision as follows: “Service station use may not be permitted in General Commercial B if previously approved for General Commercial A. However, a service station may be permitted.” We will not construe an instrument to imply such nonsense when the provisions may
2. The defendants next argue, that in any event the covenants are against competition and therefore unenforceable under our holdings in
Norcross
v.
James,
We think such a scheme does exist. The plan was formulated and approved in 1957 before any of the conveyances described. Every purchaser was aware of the existence of that plan and every purchaser was required to covenant to use the property acquired in accordance with that plan. Indeed, such covenants from every purchaser were required by statute. G. L. c. 121, § 26LL, repealed by St. 1969, c. 751, § 2. G. L. c. 121B, § 49, added by St. 1969, c. 751, § 1. The restrictions are identical in that each grantee was required to adhere to the plan. See
Snow
v.
Van Dam, supra,
at 481-483. It was not of course uniform with respect to the particular building or use restrictions which are imposed on individual lots. While the language of some opinions might be construed as mandating such physical uniformity before a common scheme is found, see, e.g.,
Sterling Realty Co.
v.
Tredennick,
While it is true that the legal theory behind the rule related to a common scheme “is not easy to find,”
Snow
v.
Van Dam, supra,
485; Am. Law of Property, § 9.30 (1952), we think the policy justifications are evident. Every property owner entering on such a planned development has voluntarily joined a system dependent on respect for mutual benefits and obligations which maintain the quality and character of the area in a manner thoroughly understood by prospective and active purchasers. See
Gilbert
v.
Repertory, Inc.
3. Other considerations remain for disposition. The restriction is enforceable only if it meets the other requirements of covenants running with the land. The real property of the plaintiffs must be land which the parties to the agreement intended to benefit by the restriction, and the restriction itself must “touch and concern” the plaintiffs’ land. Am. Law of Property, § 9.30 (1952). With respect to the first requirement, the intention of the parties as to land benefitted may be inferred “from the terms of the grants, or from the situation and surrounding circumstances.”
Lovell
v.
Columbian Natl. Life Ins. Co.
This brings us to the requirement that the covenant “touch and concern” the land, and the defendants’ argument that this requirement is not met here because the covenant is against competition and thus only personal under our holdings in
Nor cross
v.
James,
4. It is finally necessary to consider the restriction in light of the provisions of G. L. c. 184, § 30,
3
in order to determine
The use of the land of Mt. Hope within the “Project Area” is therefore declared in violation of the plan and a breach of its covenant to comply with that plan. The defendant Mt. Hope must be enjoined from using that property for a gasoline service station while the restriction remains in force. With respect to the authority, no relief is proper. The authority did not covenant with the plaintiffs and no covenant can be implied from its conveyances to them or from the existence of a common scheme of development in the absence of an express written agreement.
Houghton
v.
Rizzo,
So ordered.
Notes
There is some confusion in the briefs and arguments of the parties as to precisely what covenant is being relied on here. Were the case to turn on a covenant by the authority to Gulf’s predecessor in title there would be a simple question whether the burden and benefit ran with the properties of the original covenantor and covenantee to the instant parties. We can discern nowhere in the record, however, any such covenant by the authority. We are thus forced to resolve the question of the right of the plaintiffs to enforce the covenant between the defendants.
It may be that an intermediate purpose of the restriction was to grant businessmen in the area a limited freedom from competition in order to assist the prosperity of the development. Since, however, there appears to have been no limit on further service stations within General Commercial A, this seems highly unlikely. Furthermore, it is obvious that the overriding intention of the restriction was the promotion of the public welfare rather than the business success of individual landowners.
“No restriction shall in any proceeding be enforced or declared to be enforceable, whether or not the time for recording a notice or extension under section twenty-seven or twenty-eight has occurred, or such a notice or extension has been recorded, unless it is determined that the restriction is at the time of the proceeding of actual and substantial benefit to a person claiming rights of enforcement. No restriction determined to be of such benefit shall be enforced or declared to be enforceable, except in appropriate cases by award of money damages, if (1) changes in the character of the properties affected or their neighborhood, in available construction materials or techniques, in access, services or facilities, in applicable public controls of land use or construction, or in any other conditions or cir
“Nothing herein shall prevent a court from issuing a temporary injunction or restraining order pending determination of enforceability of a restriction.”
