OPINION
This is an original petition for a writ of mandamus. Relators ask us to require the Honorable Hugo H. Touchy to cancel a lis pendens. After a thorough review of the circumstances of this case, we conditionally grant the mandamus.
Relators Douglas F. Olbrich, Eleanor Olbrich, and Gladys Flynn (relators) are defendants in the suit out of which this petition for writ of mandamus arises. Re-lators owned property in the city of Piney Point Village. On December 17,1984, rela-tors submitted two subdivision plats of their property to the Planning and Zoning Commission of Piney Point Village for approval. The Commission voted to approve the plats subject to review by thе City Council at its next meeting. Before the council meeting, however, the Chairman of the Planning and Zoning Commission signed the two plаts and certified that the Commission had approved them. The plats were filed in the Harris County Map Records.
Property owners and residents adjacent to the subdivided plats (real parties in interest or Piney Point residents) initiated a court actiоn to invalidate the subdivision and filing of the plats which they claimed violated ordinances of the City of Piney Point Village and statutes of the State of Texas. On February 13, 1985, the real parties in interest filed a lis pendens in Harris County. The respondent denied re-lаtors’ motion for an order cancelling the lis pendens on July 11, 1989.
After the plaintiffs statement in an eminent domain proceеding is filed or during the pendency of an action involving title to real property, the establishment of an interest in real property, or the enforcement of an encumbrance against real property, a party to the action who is seeking affirmative relief may file for record with the county clerk of each county where a part of the prоperty is located a notice that the action is pending.
Tex.Prop.Code Ann. § 12.007(a) (Vernon 1984). Considering this statute, the Piney Point rеsidents can justify the application of lis pendens only if 1) they had an interest in the property, or 2) the violation of the оrdinances and statutes prohibiting the subdivision constitute an encumbrance on the property. We conclude that these parties have not established either point, and as a result, the lis pendens is improper.
This court has addressed the аpplication of the lis pendens statute on at least two prior occasions, and on both occasions the court has held the lis pendens notice to be improper.
See Moss v. Tennant,
Without citing any case authority to support their contention, the Piney Point residents assert that as adjacent landowners their property interest arisеs from an interest in assuring that the relators’ property is not subdivided in violation of law. They claim that their right to enforce compliance with the Subdivision and Zoning Ordinances of Piney Point Village is established by statute as well as by the court decision in
Crump v. Perryman,
Defining the term “encumber” broadly, the real parties in interest also claim that the statute violations would impair the use or transfer of the property at issue and therefore wоuld constitute an encumbrance.
See City of Beaumont v. Moore,
The real parties in interest cite several cases decided in other states to support their proposition. Although relevant to the issues at hand, these cases do not persuade us to accept their position. The out-of-state suits are based on differently worded statutes subject to diverse legislative histоries and controlling state case law.
Paulson v. Lee,
As in Moss and Helmsley-Spear, the Piney Point residents’ stake in the targeted property is only collateral. Although concеrned about the property, the real parties in interest have no title, interest, nor any right to encumber the acreage. Consequently, they have no standing to employ the restrictions of property code section 12.007(a) and have no right to bind the relators’ property with a lis pendens notice. If the Piney Point residents were concerned that relators’ actions could immediately and permanently disrupt their neighborhood, they could have sought relief through a temporary rеstraining order or injunction. See Tex.R.Civ.P. 680.
The respondent erred in denying the rela-tors’ motion for an order cancelling the lis pendens. We assume respondent will comply with the opinion of this court. In the event that he fails to do so within thirty (30) days of the distribution of this opinion, a writ of mandamus will issue.
