Case Information
*1 Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas
OPINION
No. 04-12-00623-CV TEAL TRADING AND DEVELOPMENT, LP ,
Appellant
v. CHAMPEE SPRINGS RANCHES PROPERTY OWNERS ASSOCIATION , Appellee
From the 216th Judicial District Court, Kendall County, Texas
Trial Court No. 06-500A Honorable Michael Peden, Judge Presiding [1] Opinion by: Luz Elena D. Chapa, Justice
Sitting: Sandee Bryan Marion, Justice
Rebeca C. Martinez, Justice
Luz Elena D. Chapa, Justice
Delivered and Filed: March 19, 2014
REVERSED AND REMANDED
Teal Trading and Development, LP appeals from the trial court’s declaratory judgment in favor of Champee Springs Ranches Property Owners Association. The trial court’s judgment declared that Teal Trading was estopped by deed to challenge the validity and enforceability of a property restriction within its chain of title. On appeal, Teal Trading contends the trial court erred by granting Champee Springs’s motion for summary judgment, by denying its motions for
summary judgment, and by awarding attorney’s fees to Champee Springs. We hold that neither Champee Springs nor Teal Trading carried their burdens on summary judgment. Because Teal Trading is not estopped by deed from challenging the validity and enforceability of the restriction, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the cause for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
B ACKGROUND
Teal Trading owns around 1,832 contiguous acres of land in the Texas Hill Country. The majority of its property lies in Kerr County, Texas, although some portion of its land spills into neighboring Kendall County, Texas.
Champee Springs represents residents of the Champee Springs Ranches subdivision and The Quarry at Champee Springs Ranches subdivision, which are located in Kendall County. See T EX . P ROP . C ODE A NN . § 204.004 (West 2007).
660 acres of Teal Trading’s property and some or all of the land now comprising the subdivisions represented by Champee Springs were previously owned by E.J. Cop, who purchased 9,245.95 acres of land in Kendall and Kerr Counties on June 3, 1998. Cop platted and developed his property as Champee Springs Ranches. On June 4, 1998, Cop signed a “Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions,” which was recorded in the deed records of Kendall and Kerr Counties. See T EX . P ROP . C ODE A NN . § 202.001(1) (West Supp. 2013). The Declaration contаins the property restriction at issue in this case. In relevant part, the Declaration states:
DECLARATION OF COVENANTS, CONDITIONS AND
RESTRICTIONS
* * * THAT WHEREAS, E.J. Cop, hereinafter called the Declarant, is the owner of all that certain 9245.95 acres, more or less, tract of land (“PROPERTY”) located in Kendall and Kerr Counties, Texas as more particularly described on Exhibit “A” attached hereto and incorporated herein for all purposes.
WHEREAS, the Declarant will convey the PROPERTY, subject to certain protective covenants, conditions, restrictions and easements as hereinafter set forth;
NOW, THEREFORE, it is hereby declared that all of the PROPERTY shall be held, sold, and conveyed subject to the following easements, restrictions, covenants, and conditions, which are established for the purposes of creating and carrying out a uniform plan for the improvement, development and sale of the PROPERTY and for the further purpose of prоtecting the value attractiveness and desirability of the PROPERTY for the mutual benefit of the owners of same and accordingly shall run with the title to the PROPERTY or any part thereof and bind the Declarant, his heirs, successors and assigns and all owners and purchasers of the PROPERTY, or any part thereof, their, [sic] heirs, successors, executors, administrators and assigns.
* * *
2. There is hereby reserved unto Declarant a one (1) foot easement for precluding and prohibiting access to the PROPERTY or Ranger Creek Road or Turkey Knob Road by adjoining property owners other than Declarant and Declarant’s express assigns. This easement is inside of and contiguous to the perimeter of the PROPERTY as described in exhibit “A” hereto, provided that no easement is reserved over, across or upon any public road right-of-way which is dedicated by and shown on that certain Plat of Champee Springs Ranches, a subdivisiоn in Kendall and Kerr Counties, Texas, of record in Volume 3, Page 69, of the Plat Records of Kendall County, Texas, and further provided Tract 4 of said Champee Springs Ranches subdivision shall be entitled to one access entrance across the restrictive easement along the southwestern boundary line of said Tract 4, but none other access without Declarant’s express written consent thereto.
We refer to the restriction in paragraph two as the “non-access restriction.” The parties appear to agree that the non-access restriction prohibits any person, aside from Cop or his assignees, owning land along the original edge of the Cop tract from permitting other persons to have access across the edge of their property. [2]
Cop then began to sell lots from his property. Because Champee Springs’s estopрel by deed argument relies on the deeds within the chain of title from Cop to Teal Trading, we will summarize the conveyances in a timeline:
• June 3, 1998—E.J. Cop purchased 9,245.95 acres of land in Kendall and Kerr Counties.
• June 4, 1998—Cop signed the Declaration containing the non-access restriction. • July 9, 1998—Cop sold 1,328 acres to C.R. Luigs.
• July 10, 1999—Luigs sold approximately 660 acres in Kerr County to Marrs and Marianne Bowman. The Bowmans platted the 660 acres as Privilege Creek Ranches, but did not sell any lots.
• July 11, 2006—Mallard Royalty Partners [3] purchased the Bowmans’ tract. The Bowmans executed separate deeds conveying their respective interests.
• July 12, 2006—Mallard sold the 660 acres, and an additional 1,173 acres that had not been owned by Cop, to BTEX Ranch, LP.
• July 17, 2006—BTEX executed a deed of trust covering all of its property. BTEX attempted to develop its property as “Boerne Falls.” • November 12, 2009—Teal Trading acquired the deed of trust and foreclosed on BTEX’s interest.
We will refer to the 660 acre tract sold by Luigs and now owned by Teal Trading as the “Privilege Creek tract.” All of the deeds in the chain of title from Cop to Teal Trading state, in some form or another, that the property conveyed is “subject to” the restrictions in the Declaration filed by Cop.
When Cop acquired 9,245 acres, the portion of his property that would later be sold as the Privilege Creek tract was at the northwestern end of his tract. Therefore, the non-access restriction runs along the edge of the Privilege Creek tract to the extent that the edge of Privilege Creek tract was also the edge of the original Cop tract.
The additional 1,173 acres owned by Teal Trading adjacent to the Privilege Creek tract were not part of Cop’s original 9,245 acres. Therefore, Teal Trading’s additional acreage is, in some sense, “divided” from thе Privilege Creek tract by the non-access restriction. By contrast, the Champee Springs Ranches subdivision also lies directly adjacent to the Privilege Creek tract. However, it is not “divided” from the tract by the non-access restriction because the property comprising the subdivision was also part of Cop’s original tract.
The Present Dispute
After BTEX acquired its property from Mallard, BTEX began to develop the entire property as a single, contiguous residential subdivision. BTEX then built a construction road that connected Turkey Knob Road to Lane Valley Road. Turkey Knob Road is located within the Privilege Creek tract and the Champee Springs subdivisions and gives those tracts access to Interstate 10, but it does not otherwise cross the “dividing line” created by the non-access restriction. Lane Valley Road is on the other side of the “dividing line” created by the non-access restriction. To enforce the restriction, Champee Springs intervened in a lawsuit filed by Kendall County against BTEX relating to BTEX’s development. The trial court denied Champee Springs’s intervention, but the court severed its claims into this cause. During this litigation, Teal Trading foreclosed on BTEX’s interest and intervened in this lawsuit.
Champee Springs’s petition sought a declaratory judgment that BTEX (and later Teal Trading) was bound by the non-access restriction and estopped to deny its force, validity, and effect, and because they were so bound, the restriction was enforceable against them. Teal Trading’s petition-in-intervention denied that it was bound by the restriction, and it sought a declaratory judgment that the non-access restriction was void as an unreasonable restraint against alienation and that Champee Springs had waived the right to enforce the non-access restriction and was thus estopped from enfоrcing the restriction.
The parties each filed motions for summary judgment. The sole ground raised by Champee Spring’s motion for summary judgment was the “threshold” issue of whether Teal Trading was estopped by deed from challenging the validity and enforceability of the non-access restriction. Teal Trading’s motion for summary judgment and supplemental motion for summary judgment, on the other hand, raised six grounds for summary judgment, arguing that the non-access restriction was an invalid easement, that members of Champee Springs had waived the restriction’s enforcement, and that the restriction was void as against public policy. Champee Springs filed a response contesting each ground raised by Teal Trading. The trial court granted Champee Springs’s motion and denied Teal Trading’s motions. After holding a hearing, the court then awarded attorney’s fees to Champee Springs.
S TANDARD OF R EVIEW
We review the trial court’s summary judgment rulings de nоvo.
Provident Life & Acc. Ins.
Co. v. Knott
,
C HAMPEE S PRINGS ’ S M OTION FOR S UMMARY J UDGMENT
Champee Springs’s motion for summary judgment asked the court to declare that Teal Trading was estopped by deed from challenging the validity and enforceability of the non-access restriction contained in the Declaration. Tо support its estoppel argument, Champee Springs offered into evidence every deed in Teal Trading’s chain of title to show the deeds were made “subject to” the restrictions in the Declaration. Because Teal Trading accepted its deed “subject to” the restrictions and every deed in Teal Trading’s chain of title was made “subject to” the restrictions, Champee Springs argued that Teal Trading was estopped by deed from contesting the validity and enforceability of the restrictions.
Estoppel by Deed
The doctrine of estoppel by deed precludes parties to a deed from denying the truth of any
material fact asserted in the deed.
XTO Energy Inc. v. Nikolai
,
Estoppel by deed is founded upon the theory that the parties have contracted upon the basis
of the recited facts.
XTO Energy
,
The Texas Supreme Court’s decision in Greene v. White illustrates how estoppel by deed may apply to grantees and their successors-in-interest. In that case, the successors-in-interest of the grantee to a 1910 warranty deed sued the grantors’ successors-in-interest for title and possession of the minerals underlying a tract of land. Greene , 153 S.W.2d at 577. Under the warranty deed, the grantor conveyed 133 acres to the grantee, but reserved “all minerals on and under said land.” Id. at 583. The grantee’s successors attacked the validity of the 1910 deed, claiming that the grantee had already owned the surface of the 133 acre tract and that the grantor had lacked title to either the surface or the minerals of the tract. Id. at 584. The court observed that “the question presented is not whether [the grantor] had good title and conveyed good title to the surface to [the grantee] and reserved or excepted to himself good title to the minerals,” but was instead “[a]re the parties to the deed and those claiming under them bound, as between themselves, by the recitals and provisions of the deed?” Id. The Court answered in the affirmative and held the parties to the deed were so bound. Id. at 585. Therefore, any question as to whether the grantor held good title at the time of the conveyance was not relevant to the dispute between the parties to the deed (and their successors) about the effect of the deed’s terms. Id.
In a similar way, the reservations or exceptions contained within a grantee’s chain of title
may estop the grantees to a deed from claiming those interests under their deeds, even if the
reservations or exceptions recited in the deeds do not actually exist.
See XTO Energy
, 357 S.W.3d
at 58–59 (holding appellees were estopped by deed from claiming mineral interest in their land
because deeds within their chain of title incorporated a description of the land saying it was
reserved);
Angell
,
Champee Springs characterizes Teal Trading’s argument against applying estoppel by deed as one that estoppel by deed does not apply to exceptions. [4] Champee Springs then argues that the non-access restriction was an “exception” because several of the deeds in the chain of title refer to the property as subject to “permitted exceptions.” It also argues that the restriction “was in one sense a reservation of rights by [the original grantor]” because the restriction “was an interest that benefitted and was retained by the original grantor.” Neither characterization of the non-access restriction in the Declaration is accurate.
The Declaration filed by Cop and containing the restrictions referenced by all the deeds in
Teal Trading’s chain of title, is “neither a lease nor an instrument of conveyance, and thus, cannot
reserve an interest.”
Farm & Ranch Invs., Ltd., v. Titan Operating, L.L.C.
,
The Meaning of “subject to” in a Deed
Champee Springs takes the position that, when a grantee takes property “subject to” certain
deed restrictions of record, the grantee has acknowledged the validity and enforceability of the
restrictions, and thus is estopped by deed from denying their validity and enforceability. Its
argument runs directly contrary to this court’s decision in
Stout v. Rhodes
,
On aрpeal, this court rejected Stout’s argument that Rhodes, because he took his property “subject to” the restriction, could not challenge the validity of the restriction based on violations of the restriction that occurred before he accepted the deed. Id. at 95. The court held:
The “subject to” provision does not prevent Rhodes from claiming an abandonment of the restrictions prior to the 1957 deed to Rhodes.
Kokernot v. Caldwell , Tex. Civ. App.,231 S.W.2d 528 , states that those words mean “subordinate to,” “subservient to,” or “limited by.” They are words of qualification and not of contract. 84 A.L.R.2d 780. They are, in our opinion, notice to and an acknowledgment by Rhodes that such restrictions are of record, but they are not in fact an acknowledgment of the 1957 validity of the restrictions.
Id. Although the Stout court does not mention “estoppel by deed,” its holding squarely contradicts Champee Springs’s argument that the grantees in Teal Trading’s chain of title, when they accepted their deeds “subject to” the restrictions, acknowledged the validity and enforceability of the restrictions at the time of their deeds. If the “subject to” clauses do not acknowledge the validity and enforceability of the restrictions, then the grantees cannot be estopped from claiming the restrictions are not valid and enforceable. See id.
Champee Springs attacks Stout in numerous ways, arguing that Stout was wrong at the time it was decided; that, even if it were correctly decided at that time, this court has since implicitly repudiated it; and that we should now explicitly repudiate it because it has not been followed by other Texas courts. We disagree.
Stout
’s holding that the “subject to” clause referring to property restrictions were only
words of notice fits neatly within the larger framework of the enforcement of restrictive covenants.
A grantee is only bound by those restrictive covenants running with the property of which he has
actual or constructive notice.
Davis v. Huey
,
Champee Springs points out that only one other Texas court has followed the holding in
Stout
,
see Joe T. Garcia’s Enters., Inc. v. Snadon
,
Nevertheless, Champee Springs attempts to analogize this case to the Texas Supreme
Court’s decision in
Cockrell v. Texas Gulf Co.
,
This clause was in the chain of title received by [the grantee] from [the grantor], and [the grantee] and its successors in title cannot disregard these provisions. The parties to the deed are bound by the terms of their contract and cannot repudiate them.
Id. (internal citations omitted). This language suggests that the Court concluded the grantees were estopped by deed from challenging the validity of the lease provision incorporated into the deed by the “subject to an existing lease” clause, although it never mentions estoppel by deed. See id.
However, the deed in
Cockrell
contained three different “subject to” clauses, and the Court
recognized that each “subject to” clause might have a different purpose.
Id.
The Court recognized
that one of the “subject to” clauses, because of its placement between the habendum and warranty
clauses of the deed, could well be argued to have been intended only to protect the grantor on her
warranty.
Id.
Therefore, the
Stout
’s holding that the “subject to” clause before it was notice and
acknowledgement that property restrictions were of record, but not an acknowledgement of their
validity, was consistent with the Texas Supreme Court’s recognition that a “subject to” clause may
simply protect a grantor on her warranty.
Compare Cockrell
,
The warranty-limiting purpose of a “subject to” clause that refers to property restrictions
was well-explicated by the Arizona Supreme Court in
Smith v. Second Church of Christ, Scientist,
Phoenix
,
When property is conveyed by warranty deeds . . . it is in the interest of the grantors that the conveyance be made subject to every restriction or encumbrance which not only does apply to such property but also may apply. The inclusion of restrictions in the “subject to” clause may thus express a wise precaution on the part of the grantor. It would indeed be foolhardy for a grantor who is delivering a warranty deed to fail to refer to a restriction which may at some time in the future be held to apply to his property, merely to avoid the criticism of excess wordiness. Thus, it is not unusual for conveyances to be made subject to all recorded covenants, easements and restrictions, without specific enumeration, and it would be inappropriate, to say the least, to infer restrictions because it may subsequently turn out that none then applied to the property.
Id.
(internal citation omitted).
Smith
’s reasoning has been directly and indirectly relied on by
several Texas courts of appeаl.
See Sills v. Excel Servs., Inc.
,
Champee Springs also argues
Stout
conflicts with two later decisions of this court.
In
Ski Masters of Tex., LLC v. Heinemeyer
, 269 S.W.3d 662 (Tex. App.—San Antonio
2008, no pet.), this court stated “[a] restrictive covenant is a contractual agreement between the
seller and the purchaser of real property,”
id.
at 668, which Champee Springs claims conflicts with
Stout
’s statement that the words “subject to” are “words of qualification and not of contract.”
Stout
,
Champee Springs also emphasizes the fact that the
Ski Masters
court stated the appellant’s
tract was “unquestionably” subject to the restrictions in a deed in its chain of title.
Ski Masters
,
In
Davis v. Canyon Creek Estates Homeowners Ass’n
, this court held “a landowner cannot
rely on ‘changed conditions’ that have already occurred by the time he acquires the property” as a
ground to void or modify a deed restriction.
Stout v. Rhodes
is still good law, and thus in the ordinary case, a “subject to” clause
referencing recorded deed restrictions is not an acknowledgment that the restrictions are valid and
enforceable.
Stout
,
Having recognized that the meaning of a “subject to” clause is somewhat contextual, we will examine the “subject to” clauses contained in Teal Trading’s chain of title.
The Cop–Luigs deed and Luigs–Bowman deed contain essentially identical “subject to” clauses:
This Special Warranty Deed and the conveyance hereinabove set forth is executed by Grantor and accepted by Grantee SUBJECT TO the following to the extent that same are valid and existing and affect the PROPERTY, to-wit: All matters set forth in [exhibit identifying the location of, inter alia , the Declаration in county records] attached hereto and incorporated herein for all purposes.
Clearly, no estoppel by deed as to the validity of the non-access restriction arises from these deeds because the grantees only accepted the identified restrictions to the extent that they were “valid and existing.”
The “subject to” clauses in the twin Bowman–Mallard warranty deeds appeared following the granting clause:
SUBJECT, HOWEVER, TO the matter set forth in [exhibits identifying the location of, inter alia , the Declaration in county records] attached hereto and incorporated herein by reference (hereinafter collectively referred to as “Permitted Exceptions”).
TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the Property, subject to the aforesaid Permitted Exceptions, unto Grantee, Grantee’s successors and assigns, forever; and Grantor does hereby bind Grantor and Grantor’s successors to WARRANT AND FOREVER DEFEND the Property, subject to the aforesaid Permitted Exceptions, unto Grantee, Grantee’s successors and assigns, against every person whomsoever lawfully claiming or to claim the same or any part thereof, by, through or under Grantor, but not otherwise.
The language and placement of the “subject to” clause in the Mallard–BTEX warranty deed
executed on the same day is identical in substance to those deeds. These “subject to” clauses do
not show that the grantees acknowledged the validity of the restrictions.
Stout
,
The exhibit attached to the deed of trust securing BTEX’s note identified the Cop Declаration and stated: “[t]he following items are Permitted Exceptions to the extent they are valid and existing and affect the mortgaged property.” No estoppel by deed as to the validity and enforceability of the restrictions could arise from the deed of trust, just as in the Cop–Luigs and Luigs–Bowman deeds.
None of the instruments by which Teal Trading acquired BTEX’s interest appear to reference the restrictions in the Declaration, much less acknowledge the validity and enforceability of the restriction.
Conclusion
Because none of the deeds within the chain of title from Cop to Teal Trading acknowledge the validity and enforceability of the non-access restriction, Champee Springs did not show as a matter of law that Teal Trading is estopped by deed from challenging the non-access restriction’s validity and enforceability. The trial court erred by granting Champee Springs’s motion for summary judgment. [5]
T EAL T RADING ’ S M OTIONS FOR S UMMARY J UDGMENT
Teal Trading’s motion and supplemental motion for summary judgment sought a declaration that the non-access restriction was an invalid easement, that members of Champee Springs had waived the restriction’s enforcement, and that the restriction was void as against public policy.
Is the Restriction an Invalid Easement?
Teal Trading argues the non-access restriction is not a valid easement in fact or law because
an easement is the right to
use
a servient estate by a dominant estate, and because Cop only
purported to retain the right to
prohibit use
, there is no valid easement. That argument overlooks
the well-established nature of negative reciprocal easements, restrictive covenants, or equitable
servitudes restricting the use of property.
See, e.g., Evans v. Pollock
,
Teal Trading did not meet its summary judgment burden to show the restriction was not a valid easement.
If the Restriction Was a Valid Easement, Was It Terminated by Merger?
Teal Trading argues that, because “Cop already owned the entire tract when he purported
to create an easement . . . any purported easement would therefore merge into the fee simple
estate.” If any valid and enforceable negative reciprocal easement or restrictive covenant arose
from the non-access restriction, it happened when Cop sold the first tract of the burdened property,
not when he filed the Declaration.
See Ski Masters
,
Teal Trading did not meet its summary judgment burden to show the restriction, if it was a valid easement, was terminated by merger.
Did Members of Champee Springs Waive the Restriction in a Replat and Become Estopped from Enforcing It?
Teal Trading argues that the signatories on the 1999 replat, some of whose interests are represented by Champee Springs, waived enforcement of the non-access restriction and are estopped from enforcing it. The 1999 replat removed the Privilege Creek tract from Champee Springs Ranches. Teal Trading’s argument is based on the following language within the 1999 replat: “RESERVE STRIPS/NONACCESS EASEMENTS ARE NOT ALLOWED UNLESS THEY ARE DEDICATED TO THE COUNTY.”
Viewed in the light most favorable to nonmovant Champee Springs, we hold that the alleged “waiver” language does not show that the signees of the replat intended to waive the already existing non-access restriction burdening their properties as a matter of law. That language appears in a section titled “General Notes,” setting forth various utility easements. It does not refer to the Cop Declaration containing the non-access restriction, and the alleged “waiver” language does not purport to renounce, release, or cancel the already recorded non-access restriction.
We hold Teal Trading did not conclusively establish that the signatories to the 1999 replat intended to waive enforcement of the non-access restriction.
Is the Restriction Void as Against Public Policy?
Teal Trading argues the non-access restriction is void because it is against public policy.
Texas law recognizes the right of parties to contract with relation to property as they see fit,
provided they do not contravene public policy and their contracts are not otherwise illegal.
Curlee
,
The Kendall County regulation relied on by Teal Trading states: “[t]here shall be no reserve (or spite) strips controlling the only access to land adjacent to roads dedicated or intended to be dedicated for public use.” Kendall County, Tex., Development Rules and Regulations § 300.1000.3 (Nov. 8, 2010). Teal Trading does not explain how the non-аccess restriction falls within this prohibition.
The Kendall County regulation appears to prohibit the situation confronted by this court in
De Castillo v. Borgo
,
The Kerr County subdivision regulation relied on by Teal Trading states: “[t]here shall be no reserve strips controlling the access to land dedicated or intended to be dedicated for public use or controlling access to any portion of the subdivision.” Kerr County, Tex., Subdivision Rules & Regulations § 5.01B (Nov. 26, 2007). Although the latter part of the regulation may prohibit the non-access restriction, Teal Trading did not show in its motion or briefing whether the non-access restriction actually falls within the prohibition.
Moreover, the Kerr County regulation Teal Trading relies on was different at the time that
Cop signed and filed the Declaration and began to sell lots. The non-access restriction, if it is a
valid and enforceable covenant, is a property interest, and Teal Trading’s reliance on county
regulations effective after the creation of the restriction in order to invalidate it raises issues of
eminent domain.
City of Heath v. Duncan
,
The regulation prior to the Declaration stated: “[t]here shall be no reserve strips controlling
the only access to land dedicated or intended to be dedicated to public use.” Kerr County, Tex.,
Subdivision Rules & Regulations § 5.01B (May 11, 1998). This version of the prohibition appears
to apply to the situation in
De Castillo
and not to the situation created by the non-access restriction
in this case.
See
Teal Trading did not meet its summary judgment burden to show the restriction violates public policy. [6]
Is the Restriction Void as an Unreasonable Restraint Against Alienation?
Teal Trading argues the non-access restriction is void as an unreasonable restraint against
alienation. The Texas Supreme Court has used the definitions from the First Restatement of
Property to identify whether an instrument contains a restraint on alienation.
Sonny Arnold, Inc. v.
Sentry Sav. Ass’n
,
1. to be void (disabling restraint);
2. to impose contractual liability on the one who makes the later conveyance when such liability results from a breach of an agreement not to convey (promissory restraint); or
3. to terminate or subject to termination all or a part of the property interest conveyed (forfeiture restraint).
Id.
at 813 & n.2; R ESTATEMENT (F IRST ) OF P ROPERTY § 404. Although Teal Trading identifies the
three categories of restraints against alienation accepted by the Texas Supreme Court, it does not
argue that the restriction falls within any of the categories. It simply states that the restriction
“entirely prohibits Teal [Trаding] from selling a parcel of its property that straddles the imaginary
line.” The restriction does not purport to prohibit Teal from selling any part of the Privilege Creek
Tract, and we hold the restriction does not, on its face, fall within any of the recognized categories
of restraints on alienation.
See Sonny Arnold
,
Teal Trading also argues that the restriction “mandates that should Teal wish to sell a part of its land, that it must divide its entire tract along the imaginary line” and it “would have a negative effect on property values in general.” Teal Trading provided no evidence that market values would be negatively affected by the restriction.
We note that, to the extent that the non-access restriction may operate as a restraint on
alienation, it does so as an indirect restraint.
See Mattern v. Herzog
,
Teal Trading did not meet its summary judgment burden to show thе restriction was an unreasonable restraint on alienation.
Is the Restriction Void as an Unreasonable Restraint on Use?
Teal Trading argues that the non-access restriction is an unreasonable restraint on its use
of the Privilege Creek tract. Restrictions that amount to a prohibition of the use of property are
void.
Baker v. Henderson
, 153 S.W.2d 465, 471 (Tex. 1941). Of course, public policy also
recognizes that parties may contract with regard to their property as they see fit.
Davis v. Huey
,
Teal Trading attempts to analogize its situation to that in Baker v. Henderson , 153 S.W.2d 465 (Tex. 1941). In Baker , the Texas Supreme Court reviewed the trial court’s construction of an ambiguous restrictive covenant governing set-back lines in a residential subdivision. Id. at 470– 71. Depending on the covenant’s construction, the appellees would have been prohibited from building a home on their lot, rendering their land utterly valueless. Id. at 471. The Court concluded the only reasonable construction was one that did not result in the covenant being void as a prohibition of use. Id.
Teal Trading’s situation is far removed from the one in
Henderson
. The restriction, if valid
and enforceable, does not prohibit Teal Trading’s use of the Privilege Creek tract, but only limits
how it may use it.
See Gunnels v. N. Woodland Hills Cmty. Ass’n
,
Teal Trading did not meet its summary judgment burden to show the restriction was an unreasonable restraint on use.
Conclusion
Teal Trading failed to show its entitlement to summary judgment thаt the non-access restriction was an invalid easement, that members of Champee Springs had waived the restriction’s enforcement, or that the restriction was void as against public policy. The trial court did not err by denying its motions for summary judgment.
C HAMPEE S PRINGS ’ S A WARD OF A TTORNEY ’ S F EES
The trial court awarded Champee Springs its attorney’s fees.
See
T EX . P ROP . C ODE A NN .
§ 5.006(a) (West 2007) (“In an action based on breach of a restrictive covenant pertaining to real
property, the court shall allow to a prevailing party who asserted the action reasonable attorney’s
fees in addition to the party’s costs and claim.”). Because we reverse the judgment rendered in
favor of Champee Springs, we also reverse the award of attorney’s fees to enable the trial court to
reconsider the fees after the cause is resolved on remand.
See AAA Free Move Ministorage, LLC
v. OIS Invs., Inc.
, No. 04-11-00849-CV,
C ONCLUSION
We conclude neither party showed they were entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law. Because Teal Trading is not estopped by deed from challenging the validity of the non-access restriction, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the cause for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Luz Elena D. Chapa, Justice
Notes
[1] Sitting by assignment. See T EX . G OV ’ T C ODE . A NN . § 74.056 (West 2013).
[2] Champee Springs has analogized the non-access restriction to a wall surrounding a subdivision.
[3] Mallard Royalty Partners appears to be a Teal Trading related entity.
[4] Nothing in Teal Trading’s motions for summary judgment or its briefs suggests this argument.
[5] We have assumed arguendo that, if a deed within Teal Trading’s chain of title had actually contained a recital acknowledging the restrictions in the Declaration were valid and enforceable, Teal Trading could be estopped from challenging the validity of the restrictions prior to the date of that deed. We have found no authority applying estoppel by deed to еstop a challenge to deed restrictions or restrictive covenants, and this opinion should not be read as implicit support for that proposition.
[6] In its brief, Teal Trading presents an additional public policy argument: the Non-Access [Restriction] creates a 660 acre island in the eastern corner of Kerr County. Kerr County cannot provide any governmental services to the island without driving almost to Boerne, and then down Ranger Creek Road and Turkey Knob Road. Accordingly, the Non-Access [Restriction] effectively prevents Kerr County from providing fire, emergency, or police services to the isolated tract. Moreover it prevents Kerr County from exercising its own transportation planning. However, Teal Trading did not argue this point in its motions for summary judgment, nor did it present evidence about the impact of non-access restriction on Kerr County’s provision of public services or Kerr County’s transportation planning. Thus, we do not consider this argument.
