delivered the opinion of the Court.
In a decree dated July 29, 1998, the circuit court upheld the validity of a “Declaration of Restriction” and ordered Sonoma Development, Inc. (Sonoma), to remove all improvements that were within three feet of the north wall of a residence owned by Girard C. Miller and Lynn E. Miller (the Millers). In granting the Millers’ motion for summary judgment, the circuit court stated that “there was a valid declaration of restriction on the property recorded, that there was privity between the original parties, that it was the intent and, in fact, actually said in the restriction itself that it was to run with the land. And certainly, it does touch and concern the land.”
This appeal concerns the circuit court’s finding that horizontal privity existed between the original covenanting parties. Because the “Declaration of Restriction” was part of a transaction that included a transfer of an interest in the land to be benefited by the restrictive covenant, we will affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
Prior to the incident that prompted the present litigation, Alfred E. Schaer and Mary Schaer (the Schaers) owned two adjacent lots, numbered Lot 38 and Lot 39, in the area commonly known as “Old Town” in the City of Alexandria. Facing the lots from the street on which they are situated, Lot 38 lies to the left of Lot 39. The lots are long and narrow, and share a common sideline that runs from the front to the back of the lots.
When the Schaers owned both lots, a three-story, brick house was situated on Lot 38, but Lot 39 was vacant. The north wall of the house on Lot 38 physically encroaches upon the southern boundary *166 line of Lot 39 by 0.1 foot at the northeast comer of the dwelling and by 0.2 foot at the northwest comer of the dwelling.
In 1995, the Millers entered into a real estate contract with the Schaers for the purchase of Lot 38. Because the Millers were concerned about future development on Lot 39, the contract included a provision requiring the Schaers to provide a deed restriction on Lot 39 prohibiting the use of a common wall with Lot 38 and requiring a sufficient easement to facilitate maintenance of the portion of the dwelling that encroaches on Lot 39. On June 30, 1995, in furtherance of their obligations under the contract, the Schaers executed a “Declaration of Restriction” requiring “[t]hat no improvement of any kind be constructed upon Lot 39 within three (3) feet of the north wall of the existing dwelling on Lot 38.” Although the Schaers were designated as the “Grantor” in the declaration, the document did not name any entity or individual as the “Grantee.”
On the same day, the Schaers executed a “Declaration of Easement” in which they granted an easement on Lot 39 “for the benefit of lot 38 to permit the house to remain in its present position . . . and to permit ingress and egress unto lot 39 as reasonably necessary to repair and maintain the northern wall of the house.” Like the “Declaration of Restriction,” the “Declaration of Easement” named the Schaers as the “Grantors” but did not specify anyone as the “Grantee.” The “Declaration of Easement” did, however, state that the Schaers had agreed to sell Lot 38 to the Millers. In addition, both documents were recorded in the clerk’s office of the circuit court.
Also on June 30, 1995, the Schaers executed a deed conveying Lot 38 to the Millers. The deed states that the “conveyance is made subject to recorded conditions, restrictions and easements affecting the property hereby conveyed.”
In February 1997, Sonoma purchased Lot 39 from the Schaers. The deed from the Schaers to Sonoma, dated February 21, 1997, specifies that the conveyance is “subject to easements, restrictive covenants, restrictions and rights-of-way of record.” 1
In the spring of 1997, Sonoma contracted with Mitchell, Horn & Associates, Inc., for the construction of a house on Lot 39. The Millers commenced this action because the house that was constructed on Lot 39 violates the three-foot setback requirement contained in the “Declaration of Restriction.” According to a plat of Lot 39, the *167 dwelling on that lot is situated between 2.5 and 2.6 feet away from the north wall of the house on Lot 38.
In Virginia, we recognize two types of restrictive covenants: “the common law doctrine of covenants running with the land and restrictive covenants in equity known as equitable easements and equitable servitudes.”
Sloan
v.
Johnson,
To enforce a real covenant in Virginia, a party must prove the following elements: (1) privity between the original parties to the covenant (horizontal privity);
3
(2) privity between the original parties and their successors in interest (vertical privity); (3) an intent by the original covenanting parties that the benefits and burdens of the covenant will run with the land; (4) that the covenant “touches and concerns” the land; and (5) the covenant must be in writing.
Sloan,
In two of this Court’s recent cases upon which Sonoma relies, we did, indeed, include horizontal privity as one of the elements of a covenant running with the land.
Waynesboro Village, L.L.C.
v.
BMC Properties,
With regard to the precise issue presented in this appeal, we conclude that horizontal privity did exist between the Schaers and the Millers. We are not willing to say that, in every situation, only one document can be examined in order to determine if horizontal privity existed between the original covenanting parties.
See Cook v. Tide Water Associated Oil Co.,
In order to establish horizontal privity, the party seeking to enforce the real covenant must prove that “the original covenanting parties [made] their covenant in connection with the conveyance of an estate in land from one of the parties to the other.”
Runyon
v.
Paley,
The term “transaction” is defined as “an act or agreement, or several acts or agreements having some connection with each other, in which more than one person is concerned, and by which the legal relations of such persons between themselves are altered.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1496 (6th ed. 1990);
cf. Virginia Housing Dev. Auth. v. Fox Run Ltd. Partnership,
Sonoma also assigns error to the circuit court’s award of injunctive relief without receiving evidence with regard to an appropriate remedy in equity. Sonoma contends that the facts necessary to determine the remedy remained in dispute and that summary judgment was, therefore, not warranted. We find no merit in this argument.
Sonoma does not dispute that it had notice of the “Declaration of Restriction.” Indeed, it was in Sonoma’s chain of title and was specifically excluded from coverage in its title insurance policy.
If parties, for valuable consideration, with their eyes open, contract that a particular thing shall not be done, all that a court of equity has to do is to say by way of injunction that which the parties have already said by way of covenant — that the thing shall not be done; and in such case the injunction does nothing more than give the sanction of the process of the court to that which already is the contract between the parties.
It is not, then, a question of convenience or inconvenience, or of the amount of damage or injury. It is the specific performance, by the court, of that negative bargain which the parties have made, with their eyes open, between themselves.
Spilling
v.
Hutcheson,
Thus, we find no reason why the circuit court needed to hear additional evidence on this issue. An injunction was the appropriate remedy to enforce the terms of the “Declaration of Restriction.”
For the reasons stated, we will affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
Affirmed.
Notes
First American Title Insurance Company issued a title insurance policy to Sonoma on February 26, 1997. The policy lists the “Restrictive Covenants” and “Declaration of Easement” as items that are excluded from coverage under the policy.
Covenants affecting the use of land that run to the benefit or burden of remote successors in interest to the land came to be called “real covenants.” 9 Richard R. Powell and Patrick J. Rohan, Powell on Real Property § 60.01[2] (1999).
A number of jurisdictions have abolished the requirement of horizontal privity. 7
Thompson on Real Property
§ 61.04(a)(3) (David A. Thomas ed., 1994); 9
Powell on Real Property
§ 60.11[3],
The Restatement (Third) of Property: Servitudes
§ 2.4 (Tentative Draft No. 1, 1989), states that horizontal privity between the parties is not required to create a servitude. See
Moseley v. Bishop,
The Restatement’s comment on clause (a) states that “[a] transfer of an interest in land as a part of a transaction in which a promise respecting the use of land is made is sufficient to create the relationship essential to the running of the burden of the promise.”
Sonoma does not dispute the validity of the “Declaration of Easement” even though the Schaers were the only parties named in that document. Yet, it is part of the same transaction as the “Declaration of Restriction.”
