86 Cal. App. 2d 680 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1948
This is an action for declaratory judgment which affects the rights of all of the owners of lots in Tract 9038, in the county of Los Angeles, a residential subdivision comprising some 93 lots. The action was instituted by C. C. Horton, one of the lot owners. He has since deceased and Prances D. Horton has been appointed as executrix. An order of substitution has been applied for and made, but our references will be to Mr. Horton as plaintiff. The court is advised by counsel who represented the plaintiff at the trial, that they have been instructed that the executrix has employed other counsel and does not wish to defend the appeal. Consequently, no brief has been filed on behalf of the respondent.
The tract is restricted under a declaration recorded by the owners many years ago pursuant to which all of the lots have been sold and titles conveyed subject to the restrictions. The paragraph of the declaration here involved provides for the appointment of a Board of Architecture composed of three members, which board is vested with the authority to approve or disapprove plans, specifications and color scheme for any building constructed in the tract, and further authority to approve or disapprove any changes in the exterior of residences, the destruction of trees, and the installation or alteration of fences, walls, poles and other structures in the tract. No building or other structure may be erected on any of the lots until plans therefor have received the written approval of the Board of Architecture. The matter in controversy here is whether the members of this board are to be selected by the present lot owners with the consent and approval of the Citizens National Trust and Savings Bank of Los Angeles, or whether the bank alone is authorized to appoint the members. Plaintiff contends for the former construction of the declaration of restrictions and he alleges in his complaint that the issue raised is one of common and general interest to all of the lot owners and that he therefore brings this action on their behalf and for their benefit, alleging that they are more than 100 in number and that it is impracticable to bring them all before the court.
The essential facts giving rise to the controversy are the following: In 1924, one W. S. Sparr, who then owned the acreage now comprising Tract 9038, conveyed the same to Citizens Trust and Savings Bank, a state bank, which later, through merger and consolidation, became Citizens National Trust & Savings Bank. The bank issued a declaration of sub
The controlling provision in the declaration of restrictions with relation to the appointment of the Board of .Architecture requires that plans, etc., be submitted to “a Board of Architecture composed of three members to be appointed by W. S. Sparr or his successors in interest, with the consent and approval of the Citizens National Trust' and Savings Bank of Los Angeles.” At the time the declaration was executed, Sparr, as we have said, was the owner of the entire beneficial interest in the trust which eventually passed to the bank, and the question is whether the several lot owners are his successors in interest, or whether the bank is his successor in interest, within the meaning of the declaration. The judgment of the trial court declares that the lot owners are the successors in interest of Sparr, sets up a scheme for an election by the lot owners of members of the Board of Architecture and restrains the present members from acting as the board after an election has taken place.
Defendant bank and the individual members of the architectural board now serving, who are named as defendants, appeal from the judgment. They contend that upon the undisputed facts the action was not one that could be prosecuted by plaintiff on behalf of all lot owners and that the judgment, based upon findings that it is a representative action, is wholly erroneous and in excess of the court's jurisdiction. There are other defenses, but the conclusion we have reached with reference to the first one is that the action should not have been tried without bringing in, as parties plaintiff or defendant, all of the other lot owners.
It will appear from a statement of the admitted facts that the contest here is in reality not one between the owners and the bank, but between different groups of owners, and that numerous owners whom plaintiff assumes to represent are his real adversaries as to the matters in issue.
It was alleged in the answer and developed in the evidence that there is a controversy among the lot owners themselves as to how the tract may be improved, which underlies the dispute as to the power, whether of the lot owners or the bank, to name the members of the board. Twenty-three two-story houses had been built in the tract, five one-story houses
It is clearly apparent that there are two classes of lot owners in the tract, one consisting of the owners and advocates of only two-story residences, and the other, those who have built or wish to build one-story residences. Plaintiff obviously is not in a position to, and does not represent all owners of lots in the tract, but only those who would bar the erection of one-story houses, This group may, but does not necessarily include all of the' owners of two-story houses, and in the absence of all evidence on the subject it is questionable whether it includes .many of the owners of unimproved lots. Anyone who has given the slightest heed to the trend of residential construction in' these times knows that restriction of im
Hansberry v. Lee, 311 U.S. 32 [61 S.Ct. 115, 85 L.Ed. 22, 132 A.L.R. 741], is in point. The court had under consideration the effect of a judgment which declared that some 500 parcels of land had been brought under a racial restriction agreement by the signatures of the owners of 95 per cent of the frontage. The restriction would have barred the ownership of any of the land by Negroes. The judgment had been rendered in what was claimed to be a representative action, on behalf of all of the landowners and it was contended that the petitioner Hansberry, a Negro, was bound by the adjudication, although he was not a party to the action. The court rejected the plea of res judicata for the reason that to give it effect would be to deny due process to those landowners who were not before the court and whose interests would be adversely affected by enforcement of the agreement. There could be no common class where enforcement of the agreement in favor of some would adversely affect the substantial interests of others. “It is one thing to say that some members of a class may represent other members in a litigation where the sole and common interest of the class in the litigation is either to assert a common right or to challenge an asserted obligation. [Citing cases.] It is quite another to hold that all those who are free alternatively either to assert rights or to challenge them are of a single class, so that any group merely because it is of the class so constituted, may be deemed adequately to represent any others of the class in litigating their interests in either alternative. Such a selection of representatives for purposes of litigation, whose substantial interests are not necessarily or even probably the same as those whom they are deemed to represent, does not afford that protection to absent parties which due process requires. The doctrine of representation of absent parties in a class suit has not hitherto been thought to go so far.” (Hansberry v. Lee, supra.) The holding of the court and the expressions we have quoted, furnish a complete answer to the contention that the plaintiff herein is prosecuting a representative action. He cannot be heard to say that he represents or sues on behalf of all the lot owners in the tract, when the interests of his group are in direct conflict with those of the remaining owners.
The third question stated above relates to the effect which the judgment has upon the rights of the other lot own
The judgment is reversed.
Wood, J., and McComb, J. assigned, concurred.