The Honorable Glenn Hegar Chair, Sunset Advisory Commission Texas State Senate Post Office Box 12068 Austin, Texas 78711
Re: Validity and enforceability of certain types of restrictive covenants (RQ-0918-GA)
Dear Senator Hegar:
You ask seven questions concerning the validity and enforceability of certain restrictive covenants.1 We note at the outset that some of your questions cannot be answered without first construing a specific deed restriction or conducting a factual inquiry, functions that are beyond the scope of an attorney general opinion. Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
You first ask whether a restrictive covenant "failfs] to run with the land" so as to bind future generations of land owners if it requires the owner to "pay membership fees to a for-profit club, without requiring that such fees be used for the benefit of the burdened property and without limiting club membership to owners of restricted property." Request Letter at l.2 Under Texas law, a covenant runs with the land when it: (1) touches and concerns the land; (2) relates to a thing in existence or specifically binds the parties and their assigns; (3) is intended by the original parties to run with the land; and (4) when the successor to the burden has notice. Inwood N. Homeowners' Assoc, Inc. v. Harris, 736 S.W.2d 632,635 (Tex. 1987). Although you ask generally about whether the covenant "runs with the land," determining whether the covenant meets the last three of these requirements will likely involve questions of fact and construction of the restrictive covenant. See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. Nos.
A covenant touches and concerns the land "[i]f the promisor's legal relations in respect to the land in question are lessened — his legal interest as owner rendered less valuable by the promise." Westland Oil Dev. Corp. v. Gulf Oil Corp.,
You also ask whether a covenant that requires a fee be paid to a for-profit club by a new buyer each time the restricted property is sold, without requiring that such fee be used for the benefit of the burdened property, touches and concerns the land.3 Request Letter at 2. A covenant does not have to benefit the burdened property in order to touch and concern the land. See, e.g.,Lyle,
Although we are able to provide some general advice on your first two questions, we note that it "has been found impossible to state any absolute tests to determine what covenants touch and concern land and what do not. The question is one for the court to determine in the exercise of its best judgment based upon the facts of each case." Howard R. Williams, Restrictions on the Use of Land:Covenants Running with the Land at Law, 27 TEX. L. REV. 419,429 (1949). Because we are unable to fully analyze the facts surrounding each covenant, we are unable to provide a definitive answer to your questions about whether hypothetical covenants touch and concern the land. *Page 3
You ask in your third question whether Texas Constitution article
You next ask if Texas Constitution article
In your fifth question, you ask whether "the enforcement and penalty provisions in Chapter 202 of the Texas Property Code apply to violations of the bylaws or rules of a private for-profit club." Request Letter at 2; see
TEX. PROP. CODE ANN. §§
You next ask whether a "restrictive covenant that imposes an uncapped fee on each new buyer due upon each subsequent transfer of the burdened property" is an unreasonable restraint on alienation. Request Letter at 2. We have been unable to find any Texas case law addressing whether the transfer fees that you describe are in violation of this doctrine. However, we can advise that in other contexts "Texas courts have looked to the Restatement [of Property] to determine issues regarding alleged restraints on alienation."Navasota Res., L.P. v. First Source Tex., Inc., 249 S.W.3d 526,537 (Tex. App.-Waco 2008, pet. denied); see SonnyArnold, Inc. v. Sentry Sav. Ass'n,
Fees imposed on the transfer of units in a development are generally valid under the rule stated in this section. Fees to cover the administrative costs entailed by a transfer of ownership, or occupancy, and education of new members are justified, as are fees designed to discourage speculation in units and encourage owner occupancy. . . . So long as there is some rational justification for the imposition of such fees, they are not invalid as indirect restraints on alienation. . . .
Id. cmt. c. We do note, however, that under some circumstances, such transfer fees may be deemed unconscionable by a court even where they do not amount to an impermissible restraint on alienation. Id. Whether a court would determine the transfer fee at issue unconscionable would depend on the amount of the fee imposed, the purpose of the fee and whether it has a rational justification. Such a determination would require a factual inquiry that this office cannot undertake.
Your final question asks whether restrictive covenants are invalid if they "require a membership fee paid to a private third-party for which there is no mechanism for the owner of the burdened property to get notice of, have control over use of, or limit increases in that membership *Page 5
fee invalid." Request Letter at 2. Texas courts have upheld the right of property associations to change fee assessments after a restriction is originally recorded when the method for changing the fee is clearly outlined in the deed restriction or documents therein referenced. See, e.g., Samms v. Autumn Run Cmty. Improvement Ass`n,
Creation of a valid contractual lien, upon which foreclosure is proper, requires evidence apparent from the language of the agreement that the parties intended to create a lien.
In order for a restrictive covenant to be enforceable, the grantee must have had notice, either actual or constructive, of the restriction when the property was purchased.
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
DANIEL T. HODGE First Assistant Attorney General
DAVID J. SCHENCK Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
JASON BOATRIGHT Chair, Opinion Committee
Virginia K. Hoelscher Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
