The appellants assign as error (1) that the findings of fact by the court below are contrary to the agreed statement of facts filed in this case and the evidence presented at the trial thereof; (2) that the conclusions of law by the court below are contrary to the facts and the law applicable to same; (3) that the judgment declaring the restrictive covenants contained in Deed Book 694, page 62, inoperative, ineffective, null and void, is contrary to the facts of the case and the law applicable to same; and (4) that the judgment invalidates restrictive covenants and destroys property rights contrary to law and equity.
However, these assignments of error are not supported by exceptions to the findings of fact or to the conclusions of law. Not a single exception appears in the record. The appellants merely made their appeal entry in the following language: “To the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and the signing and entry of the judgment the defendants, in open court, except, and give notice of appeal to the Supreme Court.”
A single exception to the findings of fact and the conclusions of law presents nothing for review except whether or not the court’s conclusions of law are supported by the findings of fact.
Kovacs v. Brewer,
Consequently, on this appeal, we are limited to a determination as to whether or not the facts found are sufficient to support the conclusions of law and the judgment entered pursuant thereto.
The appellants contend that the court’s failure to find as a fact that the restrictive covenants were in each of the deeds in the chain of title from the original defendants to the plaintiff, was a material omission of competent and necessary evidence. This contention is without merit. The agreed statement of facts contained statements to the ef-
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feet that all the deeds in plaintiff’s chain of title contained the same restrictive covenants that the deed from the original defendants to Nell M. Freeman contained. Even so, in the absence of a request that the court find a particular fact, appellants may not object to the failure of the court to find such fact.
St. George v. Hanson,
However, if the original defendants intended to develop the land surveyed and laid out as designated on the map or plat of Beacon Hill, Section 1, according to a general plan, restricting the lots shown therein to residential use only, they abandoned such intention when they conveyed six of the eight lots in the development to be used for the construction and operation of a motel, which is a commercial or business enterprise.
The use of a residence as a tourist home is violative of a covenant restricting the use of property to residential purposes.
Deitrick v. Leadbetter,
Where a residential subdivision is laid out according to a general scheme or plan and all the lots sold or retained therein are subject to restrictive covenants, and the value of such development to a large extent rests upon the assurance given purchasers that they may rely upon the fact that the privacy of their homes will not be invaded by the encroachment of business, and that the essential residential nature of the property will not be destroyed, the courts will enforce the restrictions and will not permit them to be destroyed by slight departures from the original plan.
Starkey v. Gardner,
On the other hand, when there is a general scheme for the benefit of the purchasers in a development, and then, either by permission or acquiescence, or by a long chain of violations, the property becomes so substantially changed that the whole character of the subdivision has been altered so that the whole objective for which the restrictive covenants were originally entered into must be considered at an end, then the courts will not enforce such restrictive covenants. Restrictive covenants will not be enforced merely to harass and annoy some par
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ticular person, when it is clear to the court that the objective for which the restrictive covenants were originally entered into have already failed.
Starkey v. Gardner, supra; Elrod v. Phillips,
The subdivision of Beacon Hill, Section 1, was not developed according to a uniform scheme or plan for residential purposes. Therefore, cases like
Vernon v. Realty Co., supra,
and
Tull v. Doctors Building, Inc., 255
N.C. 23,
Since the subdivision under consideration was not developed according to a general plan or scheme, the grantees of property in the subdivision have no right to enforce the restrictions in any deed to any lot therein
inter se. Maples v. Horton,
Apparently, the additional defendants concluded in the trial below that they had no right to enforce the restrictive covenants in plaintiff’s deed to Lot No. 7, in this subdivision, hence they did not except to the findings of fact or the conclusions of law, neither did they appeal from the judgment entered pursuant thereto.
In our opinion, the appellants waived their right to enforce the restrictive covenants in plaintiff’s deed by modifying the restrictions in the deed to the additional defendants, thereby authorizing the construction and operation of a motel, which is a business enterprise. Shuford v. Oil Co., supra.
We hold that the facts found by the court below are sufficient to support the conclusions of law and the judgment entered.
Affirmed.
