J. C. Hooper and the Hyde Park Water Company, a corporation, brought this suit ¿gainst H. W. Lottman and Norbert Lottman, owners of the east half of lot 3 in block 19 in Hyde Park addition to the city of Houston, and against R. J. Rochow, a contractor and builder, to restrain and enjoin them from erecting, completing, or using a barn upon said premises within a distance of 60 feet from Fairview avenue.
Hooper resided and owned property in the Hyde Park addition, and the Hyde Park Wa- ' ter Company owned the west half of said lot 3 and other property therein. The Hyde Park Improvement Company, a corporation, was the common grantor of the plaintiffs and Lottmans. Said company was the owner of the Hyde Park addition to the city of Houston, and subdivided and laid same out in lots, blocks, and streets. The company, having disposed of all its holdings, was dissolved and is no longer in existence. The addition was designed and intended by the company to be an exclusively residential district, and in furtherance of this design a resolution was adopted by its board of directors, providing certain building restrictive clauses should be contained in the deeds to property sold by the company. One of the restrictive clauses reads: “No barn or building of similar nature shall be erected closer than-feet to any street.” Not more than two deeds to purchasers were executed without this restrictive clause. The blank space was filled in differently in the various deeds, so that there was not absolute uniformity in the distances from streets within which the prohibited class of buildings might be erected. The deed the Lottmans claimed under stipulated that the prohibited buildings should not be erected closer than 60 feet to the street.
There has been much judicial writing upon - the subject of restrictive covenants of the land here considered, and as may be anticipated, from the very nature of the topic, the cases abound in fine and subtle distinctions. Many of the decisions upon this branch of the law appear to be in hopeless conflict, but are usually reconcilable when the facts peculiar to each are understood. ■ In fact, the courts seem to have had no special difficulty in ascertaining and declaring the controlling general principles of the law, but, in their application to concrete facts, it may well be said that the decisions are in hopeless conflict and confusion, and individual cases are without value as precedents, except as general principles are recognized and declared. No attempt will therefore be made to analyze the decisions, as applied to the various state of facts upon which they are based.
The facts in the case at bar bring it with-
in the scope of the general rules stated, and we will but briefly advert to the contentions made by appellees in support of the judgment rendered in their favor.
Uniformity in the restrictions imposed on the lots is one of the strongest proofs of the existence of a building scheme. It is an evidentiary matter only, however, and any deviation from uniformity, as to restrictions imposed on any of the grantees, is often seized upon, as a defense to an action to enforce the covenant, on the theory that a general plan of improvement is not shown. There may, however, be departures from the usuál restrictions in individual cases without destroying the integrity of the scheme of development as a whole. A want of absolute uniformity for reasons readily apparent does not militate against the view that the restrictions in the deed were in pursuance of a general scheme for improvement of the property. Coates v. Cullingford,
So it would seem that absolute uniformity in the establishment of the building line, as well as the fact that in two instances lots were sold without any restrictions, does not necessarily destroy the general plan or scheme of improvement. In this connection stress is laid upon the fact that the west half of lot 3 was also conveyed by the Ilyde Park Improvement Company to the Hyde Park Water Company, plaintiff, without any restrictions. It seems that the latter company was wholly subsidiary to the former, having the same officers and stockholders, and was formed for the purpose of supplying water to the addition. The property of the water company was conveyed to it by the improvement company in consideration of stock issues by the water company and prorated among the stockholders of the improvement company in proportion to the stock owned by them. The business of the water company was to furnish an absolute' necessity to the inhabitants of the addition, and the necessary use of its real estate was inconsistent with restrictions thereon of the nature imposed upon that sold to private individuals, and the fact that this land was *273 conveyed to the water company without restriction does not at all militate against the consistency of a general plan of improvement by the imposition of building restrictions upon other lots sold and conveyed.
Reversed and remanded.
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