MY NOTES: Civil Procedure | Contracts | Criminal Law | Property | Torts | LAWAR | MN Home

PROPERTY APRIL NOTES

 

April 1, 1999

 

Negative easements

 

Difference between equitable servitude and injunction - have to look at actual document to tell difference

 

Horizontal privity is not really tested very often in CA - only comes about when you want damages - in most cases, people go after injunction, and in which case horizontal privity does not come into play

 

Whoever is restricted by the easement, has the burden.

 

No privity at all with adverse possessors in common law

In order for burden to run, must be an estate of the same duration

 

Lawsuit defines burden or benefit - depends on lawsuit

 

Requirements for privity

 

do not need horizontal privity for equitable servitude

 

--------------------------------

 

April 6, 1999

 

Servitudes

 

In California, use restriction language must be in each and every lot for it to be bound by the restriction.

 

Master/common plan - shows a specific intent to bind the whole subdivision

  1. common grantor
  2. restriction on part of the subdivision at the time sub division was created
  3. notice - inquiry à character of use; record

 

master plan at the time?

If so, is the rest of the subdivision bound, if first lots bound, are subsequent purchaser on notice?

Is subsequent purchaser on notice?

 

Outline of how to answer these questions:

Is there a system of IRS (Implied reciprocal servitudes)?

Common grantor

Common scheme

Notice à at time lot divided from subdivision

If IRS, is subsequent purchaser bound?

Notice

 

-----------------------------------------

 

April 8, 1999

 

Can the burden run when the benefit is in gross? - yes if it is a utility company; NO

 

Third party beneficiary rule - if at time restriction is created, if both parties intended it to e for benefit of other's land, then the intended beneficiaries can sue to get it enforced

 

  1. look at vagueness of terms (try to get out of covenant because the terms are vague)
  2. touch and concern - opposite of a bright line rule
  3. can the burden run when the benefit is in gross? NO

 

touch and concern - mutual, reciprocal obligations about use of land

 

  1. is it residential or commercial?
  2. Look to interpret terms - intent of drafters

 

Uses on exams sometimes: "single family purposes only"

 

Void as against public policy

 

---------------------------------------

 

April 12, 1999

 

How do you get rid of servitudes / covenants?

 

Shelley v. Kraemer - private agreement to make a neighborhood racially segregated

 

State action v private action - question here was since it was a private agreement, and therefore did not violate the state laws

 

State action referred to as judicial enforcement

 

Five ways to attack covenants (and servitudes) and get rid of them:

  1. void as against public policy
  2. illegal because of statutory prohibition (example is Fair Housing Act of 1968)
  3. changed circumstances (private - circumstances of community has changed; classic situation is where servitude as fallen into disuse)
  4. abandonment / Waiver
  5. touch and concern - at time restrictions was put in place

 

-------------------------------

 

April 20, 1999

 

Takings (usually by government)

 

Nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation - this is from the Fifth Amendment in the Constitution

If for private use, cannot be taken at all for use by public - benefit of public

 

Limitation on power of imminent domain:

 

 

 

If taken for public use compensation must be paid

 

Substantive due process - Locknyer v. New York

 

Must balance public benefit v. extent of infringement on property rights

 

Public benefit extent of infringement on property rights

-----------------------------------

/\

/ \

-----

 

-------------------------

 

April 22, 1999

 

More on takings

 

Strict scrutiny

Narrowly tailored to meet compelling state interest

 

Minimal scrutiny

Rational relationship between regulation and legitimate state interest

 

Substantial relationship

 

Permit condition ß à legitimate state interest

 

Rough proportionality

 

Legitimate state interest - falls within police powers; power to regulate public health, safety, welfare

Compelling state interest - ???

 

Must be an essential nexus between permit condition and legitimate state interest (also called a substantial relationship)

 

Must check to see if there is a "rough proportionality" between condition and interest.

 

----------------------------------

 

April 23, 1999

 

Exam review

 

Most likely there will be subparts and one big question

 

Single family

Townhouses - houses that are right next to each other. Individual fee simples

Condos - each owner owns own apartment - have interest in shared areas as tenants in common; individual ownership of unit

Co-ops - common in New York city. Have ownership interest in whole. Risks are greater than a condo. Greater screening of coop membership.

Apartments - landlord has fee simple interest; tenants have non-freehold interest

 

Neponsedt case:

e

 

Nahrstedt

 

 

can CCRs be express or implied? Are usually express

question of privity of neighborhood association and homeowners; board has right to enforce, court views board as in privity; don’t have to worry about in gross or in appurtenant.

 

READ Nahrstedt and Neponsedt

 

benefit in gross - burden won't run - still GOOD law in most jurisdictions

 

Duty to pay money - this should trigger a touch and concern issue; also duty to clean, maintain, etc…

 

To challenge this stuff ask if condition is reasonable

 

Public policy arguments - more important in Neponsedt situation

 

Touch and concern arguments

Nepons

Reasonableness

Nahrs

Public policy

Nepon.

   

 

If you are trying to challenge validity of CCR it is reasonableness

Reasonableness does not apply when you are dealing with CCRs

 

Equitable services deal more with touch and concer

 

If condo - analyze under Narhstadt

If neighborhood association - analyze under Neponsitd

 

Abandonment of covenant - must show that the covenant is no longer of value

 

Policing board

 

Touch and concern - if it and deals with the land (not personal)

  1. at time of creation v. time of enforcement
  2. personal v. land (expressed in negative terms - usually touches and concerns)
  3. public policy - one of the things to judge whether it touches and concerns
  4. it enhanced market value at the benefit of the estates then touches and concerns (Nepon)

 

creation of easements and timing issues

creation of servitudes and privity issues

 

three ways of creating restrictions:

  1. master plan
  2. lot one is bound and all lots retained by grantor are simultaneously bound (two way arrow)
  3. lot 1 is bound (one way arrow - lot 1 bound for benefit of subdivision and nothing else is bound)

 

In CA if grantor creates master plan AND records it, then all subsequent purchasers are held to have accepted the master plan when they buy in

 

All 15 lots previously sold, then grantor sells lot 16 with additional restriction. Question here is who can enforce that additional restriction?

 

 

different question: lot fifteen is sold with additional covenant. Lot 16 is the only one who can enforce it because 16 is the only one in privity. Imposing benefit on 15 for benefit of 16.

 

When lot 16 is sold, no one is in privity so the question is how to enforce covenant on lot 16?

 

Also READ Sandborn case. - all of above deals with non Sandborn jurisdictions

 

Three more solutions:

  1. Sanborn - looks at this in terms of existence of a common scheme and says at what point does a common scheme come into creation - if there was a master plan, and the lots were part of it, then everyone can sue everyone else

> can have implied scheme

Master plan elements:

  1. common grantor
  2. common scheme (this can vary - written and recorded, brochure, not recorded)
  3. when is there a common scheme - at the time benefited lot is sold
  1. Third party beneficiary - if restrictions are for benefit of entire subdivision

> must be express

  1. common grantor
  2. is there a common scheme (express written restriction) purpose is to say who can enforce
  3. when is there a common scheme - at time burdened lot is sold
  1. CA - simply, if you have a recorded master plan before lots are sold, then the lots are bound (master plan is expressed in writing, and recorded - if this is not the case, then not binding)

 

Sanborn - don't need an express written restriction - is there a restriction at all, and if so, who can enforce?

 

Review of past exam:

 

For implied easements very important as to TIMING of sale. In this exam she just said they were all sold on the same day. We don't know when exactly on that day the lots were sold.

 

Prior use - quasi easement -

 

Strict necessity or reasonable necessity for an easement created for benefit of grantor. This is what differs by jurisdiction

 

Jurisdictions are split on whether prior use can be benefit of grantor

Majority is that prior use CAN be for benefit of grantor

 

-----------------------

 

April 27, 1999

 

Loretto

Physical taking

LL must allow (cannot exclude)

Cable company to place box

 

Regulation

No taking

LL must allow heat

LL must provide cable access

Hadacheck

Nuisance control

Measure à

Brick kilns banned from city

Never? A taking

 

Change in zoning

Newly constructed shopping center area

Rezoned residential

taking

Nollan

Landowner must cede easement along beach

Physical taking

 

LL cannot build house more than one story

Substantial relationship essential nexus regarding condition

Dolan/Erhlich

Culver city can say à new office/townhouse complex will increase population density/demand for athletic facilities

Therefore must pay fee proportional to burden imposed

Regulation à ok

 

CANNOT say

Athletic club must stay open despite losing money or must pay fee = to city's loss from closing

 

Know rough proportionality test

 

Lucas case:

Deprivation of all economically viable use.

 

Balance extent of diminution v. nature/importance of public interest