Restrictive Covenants Flashcards
Definition of the Covenant
A promise to do or not do something related to land.
How a covenant is different from an easement
- They both involve benefitted and burdened tracts of land
- It is not the grant of a property interest.
- Instead, it is a con-tractual limitation or promise regarding land.
In terms of
Definition of real covenant
- The covenant starts out as a mere contractual limitation regarding land.
- The covenant becomes known as a real covenat when it is capable of running with the land.
Definition of Running with the Land
The covenant’s ability to bind the successors to the originally contracting or covenanting parties
Two types of covenants based on their subject matter
Negative (restrictive) and affirmative covenants
Definition of Negative (restrictive) Covenant
- A promise to refrain from doing something related to land.
- Most covenants are restrictive.
- Born b/c negative easements are difficult to obtain but ppl still wanted ways to regulate land use.
Examples of Restrictive Covenants
- “I promise not to build for commercial purposes,”
- “I promise not to paint my shutters brown,” or
- “I promise not to place a petting zoo on my land.”
Definition of affirmative covenant
- A promise to do something related to land.
- e.g. “I promise to maintain in good repair our common fence”
- “I promise to tend to our common garden”
- “I promise to pay annual dues to our Homeowners’ Association”
The difference between real covenants and equitable servitudes
RC is a promise enforceable in law, ES is a promise enforceable in equity
- Lots of factual overlap between the two
- One set of facts could fit both
How to know choose between RCs and ESs.
Look to the relief the plaintiff is seeking.
- If P seeks money damages because of a violation of a promise regarding land, it’s a covenant.
- This is bc a covenant is a legal device and damages is a legal remedy.
- If P seeks injunctive relief, it’s an equitable servitude
- e.g. P seeks to enjoin D from violating the promise.
The two tests to determine when a covenant runs with the land
- Must determine separately:
- whether the burden runs with the land, and
- whether the bargain runs with the land.
- Always analyze burden first
- Covenant runs with the land when capable of binding successors
- Benefits are easier to run with the land than burdens are
How to determine whether the burden runs with the land
WITHN
- Writing
- Intent
- Touch and Concern
- Horizontal and Vertical Privity
- Notice
Burden Run-Writing Requirement
The original promise must have been in writing
Burden Run- Intent Requirement
- The original parties must have intended that the promise would bind successors.
- Courts are generous in imputing to the parties the requisite intent.