2 P.2d 852 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1931
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *405 This is an action to secure a decree quieting title to real property and to cancel restrictions. In April, 1922, defendant C.W. Boden, the owner and entitled to possession of a tract of land situated in the city of Oakland, county of Alameda, subdivided the tract into lots numbered one to twenty-four, inclusive, and thirty-seven to sixty-five, inclusive, as appear upon a map designated as "Lake Knoll". Lots twenty-five to thirty-five, inclusive, are designated upon a second map as "Resubdivision of Lot No. 25, Lake Knoll". Subsequently by deed dated January 8, 1925, C.W. Boden retained two lots and conveyed all of the remaining lots to Agnes Boden. In some of the deeds of conveyance there was no provision or statement that the lot thereby conveyed was restricted as to the use of said lot, as to the character or value of improvements to be placed thereon or the position on the lot in which such improvements could be located, or as to the use or uses to which such lots could be put. In some of said deeds there were provisions inserted providing for the character and value and location of improvements which could be placed thereon and the uses to which said lots could be put. In some of the conveyances it was specified that a structure might be erected within four feet of the side line. In one deed five feet was specified. Other deeds did not contain side-line restriction. Certain of the deeds contain restrictions relative to the height of fences and hedges prior to January, 1940. Some of the deeds provide that "it is expressly agreed that said parties of the second part take said real property subject to and upon said conditions and restrictions, that the same run with the land, and that in case of the violation of any of said conditions or restrictions by said parties of the second part, their heirs, executors, *406 administrators, successors or assigns, all the right, title and interest of said parties of the second part, their heirs, executors, administrators, successors and assigns, in and to said real property, shall immediately cease and determine, and revert to and vest in said parties of the first part, their heirs, and assigns; it being further expressly agreed that forbearance by the parties of the first part, their heirs, or assigns to take advantage of any breach of said conditions or restrictions shall not constitute or be construed as a waiver of the rights of the parties of the first part, their heirs and assigns, by reason of such or any subsequent breach or default. And the said parties of the second part by the acceptance of this conveyance covenant and agree faithfully to observe and abide by all said conditions and restrictions. That the right to enforce the covenants and restrictions set forth in this deed shall run to each owner of any lot described on the aforesaid map." Many of the deeds are silent relative to restrictions and except for the provision above set forth as to certain lots, it is not stated that the land conveyed by the deed is a part or portion of a larger tract, or that the restrictions contained in the deeds are for the benefit of other lands, nor was there in any of the deeds any description or designation of the land which was the dominant tenement, nor was there in any of the deeds, any statement that the restrictions imposed upon each or any of the parcels of land were part of a general plan of restriction common to all the parcels in the tract or designed for the mutual benefit of all the parcels contained in the tract, nor was there in any of the deeds any statement that the parcel thereby conveyed should be subject to restrictions in accordance with any plan for the benefit of all other parcels in the tract, or that all other parcels in the tract should be subject to such restrictions for its benefit. Neither the defendant Boden nor his successor ever made public a formulated and uniform plan for restricting the use of the lots except that a pamphlet was presented to the defendants Thomas M. and Grace Gardiner. There have been erected twenty-one apartment houses, twelve single family residences and at the time of the trial there were thirty-one vacant lots in this tract. Some of the apartment houses are built right up to the property line and others are back from the property line from two to eight feet. *407
Plaintiffs and respondents are the owners of a certain lot and seek to have the restrictions canceled. All defendants served permitted a default to be entered except the defendants and appellants Gardiner, who assert the right to enforce the restriction against the lots of respondents. Appellants are grantees of Boden prior to his deeding away the balance of the tract without restrictions. Appellants contend that plaintiffs were not entitled to a decree quieting title as against these restrictions; that the language in the deeds created equitable servitudes; that the language in the deeds constituted covenants running with the land; that the restrictions are enforceable though not running with the land; and that the court erred in admitting the judgment-roll of the case of Oakland Title Ins. Guar. Co. v. Boden. The decision in Strong v. Shatto,
[3] The language in the deeds involved herein did not create equitable servitudes. To create an equitable servitude in the grant of lands in a large area it is essential that there must be a general scheme of restrictions sufficiently uniform in character to indicate unmistakably a designated and adopted plan throughout common to all purchasers of lots. The restrictions must not only appear in one deed, but in all the deeds and must expressly declare that such restrictions are for the benefit of and run with all other lots in the designated area. In other words, the restrictions must be for the mutual benefit of all parcel owners and each lot imposed with a servitude for the benefit of each and every other lot. [4] It is necessary to state in the deed what is the servient and what is the dominant tenement. (See Bergman v. Hotel Savoy,
The deeds provide that the restrictions run with the land and also provide that the right to enforce the covenants and restrictions set forth in a particular deed run to each owner of any lot. To enforce what? To enforce one parcel holder to keep his building five feet away from the side line; to enforce the next holder to keep away four feet *410 from the side line while many others need not, according to their deeds, pay any attention to side lines? Can it be said that one holder could be forced to erect a ten thousand dollar home while a near neighbor may, unrestricted as to value, erect a shack? The deeds do not contain a sufficiently uniform scheme or plan. Some deeds are silent relative to restrictions; others contain restrictions, but differ in many respects from restrictions in other deeds. No statement appears that the restrictions are for the benefit of other lands in the tract and the dominant tenement is not designated. The intent to create mutual and reciprocal rights of restrictions between the grantees does not appear when all the deeds are considered which is a requisite to the creation of equitable servitudes.
[5] In the deed in question here and in all the deeds except the deed of Boden to his wife the word "condition" and "covenant" are used referring to the same subject matter, namely, the restrictions set forth in the deed. "There is a decided distinction between the creation and effect of a condition and a covenant. A condition is a qualification annexed to an estate by the grantor, upon the happening of which the estate granted is enlarged or defeated, and it differs from a covenant in this, that it is created by the mutual agreement of the parties and is binding upon both; whereas a covenant is an agreement of the covenantor only." (Knight v. Black,
[6] In this case the judgment-roll in Oakland TitleInsurance and Guarantee Company v. C.W. Boden and Agnes Boden was introduced. Therein the court decreed that the Bodens did not have any right, title, claim or interest or right of reversion or right of forfeiture in or to said lots owned by plaintiff in that action, the predecessors of plaintiffs in this action. Its introduction against these defendants was inadmissible, but we think that the findings herein make it plain that the court did not find that the Gardiners had waived and relinguished their rights to enforce the purported restrictions, but that such order in that case was against the Boden defendants.
Judgment affirmed.
Tyler, P.J., and Cashin, J., concurred. *412