FREEHOLD COVENANTS Flashcards
1
Q
DEFINITION
A
- a promise made in a deed that is enforceable irrespective of consideration
- can be in a stand alone transaction from one neighbour to another
- more like likely when one sells part of their land to another and gives covenants a sort of the bargain
- can last for future owners of the land
- regarded as proprietary interest in land though equitable in nature
- it is both a contract and proprietary obligation
2
Q
POSITIVE COVENANTS
A
- require owner of burdened land to take action on their own or adjoining property (usual requires monetary expenditures)
3
Q
NEGATIVE COVENANTS
A
- also known as restrictive
- require owner of land to refrain from activity on the land
4
Q
COVENANTS AS CONTRACTS
A
- promises made by deed from one to another
- made by Covenanter and Covenantee
5
Q
COVENANTERS LAND: BURDEN OF COVENANT
A
- original Covenanter is under burden of covenant
- must uphold positive and negative covenants
- the burden can run with the land rather than the Covenanter
- so whoever holds the land is is bound to the covenant
- usually only negative covenants that run with the land
6
Q
COVENANTEES LAND: BENEFIT OF THE COVENANT
A
- original Covenantee has the benefit of the covenant
- can enforce it as a matter of contract
- can sue for performance of covenant and claim damages for past breaches, injunction or adherence to specific performance
- covenant can run with the land subsequent owners may obtain the benefit of the covenant and sue anyone for breach
7
Q
SUING AT LAW
A
- a person suing on a covenant at law will be claiming D is subject to burden and should pay damages
- C can choose damages which the court cannot refuse
- circumstances for remedies in law are narrower than in equity
8
Q
SUING IN EQUITY
A
- equity mitigates the harshness of common law
- easier to enforce covenants in equity
- equity can run with the land in a way it can’t in law meaning the burden is wider
- only equitable remedies are available and are at the discretion of the court and can be withheld
- remedies are: injunction and specific performance
- if C sues in equity either by choice or against non-original Covenanter principles of registered and unregistered are conveyed
- restrictive covenants may need to be registered to be enforceable