Restrictive covenant
A restrictive covenant is a type of real covenant, a legal obligation imposed in a deed by the seller upon the buyer of real estate to do or not to do something. Such restrictions frequently "run with the land" and are enforceable on subsequent buyers of the property. In jurisdictions that use the Torrens system of land registration, restrictive covenants are generally registered against title.
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[edit] Scope of covenants
Restrictive covenants may arise from many sources, and may be registered against titles or included in leases. Some covenants exist for safety purposes, such as a covenant forbidding the construction of tall buildings in the vicinity of an airport or one restricting the height of fences on corner lots (so as not to interfere with drivers' sight lines). Covenants may restrict everything from the height and size of buildings to the materials used in construction to superficial matters such as paint colour and holiday decorations.
[edit] Commercial covenants
Restrictive covenants are commonly registered against commercial properties. General covenants such as those restricting the heights of structures or forbidding certain "dirty" businesses (such as feedlots or chemical production facilities) are common in industrial areas located near residential communities. Developers may seek to restrict the type of business allowed to operate in a certain area so that a purchaser of land in a research park, for example, could not turn the building into a bingo parlour or a tool and die factory. A commercial lease may include a restrictive covenant forbidding the sale of certain items, such as pornography or liquor. A powerful mall tenant (such as a major supermarket chain or other anchor store) may require its landlord to include in its leases to other tenants a restrictive covenant forbidding the sale of certain items (such as fresh meat and produce). The latter situation is more common outside the United States, and is especially seen in Canada.
[edit] Residential covenants
Residential covenants are relatively common in the United States. Some residential covenants may be considered generally benign, such as those preventing owners or tenants from removing healthy trees, fundamentally altering historically important structures, or directly harming property values. Others, however, are more detailed. Some restrictive covenants may govern what color a home's exterior is painted, what and how many exterior decorations are allowed, where cars are allowed to be parked, or even who lives in the house (outside of the owner's nuclear family).
Many communities also attempt to forbid amateur radio or outdoor television antennas. Various states in the United States have enacted or are enacting laws forbidding such restrictive covenants and rendering void existing covenants, as amateur radio operators are often seen as essential emergency services.[1]
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[edit] Housing segregation
In many cases before the 1960s, these covenants were used for segregationist purposes.[2] A covenant might promise that only members of a certain race would occupy the property. However, many African Americans openly defied these covenants and attempted to "pioneer" restricted areas.[3] In the case of Shelley v. Kraemer, the United States Supreme Court ruled that it would be unconstitutional for the courts to enforce racially restrictive covenants, and such covenants no longer have any force.
The Fair Housing Act of 1968 made housing discrimination on the basis of race or color, including racially restrictive covenants, illegal. The Fair Housing Act also created the Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity which is charged with administering and enforcing the act.
[edit] See also
- Covenant (law)
- Shelley v. Kraemer
- Timeline of racial tension in Omaha, Nebraska
- Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity
[edit] Notes
- ^ State Statutes Incorporating 'PRB-1 like' Legislation, American Radio Relay League (Accessed 9 January 2008)
- ^ The Origins and Diffusion of Racial Restrictive Covenants Michael Jones-Correa Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 115, No. 4 (Winter, 2000–2001), pp. 541–568
- ^ “Moving On Out: Black Pioneering in Chicago, 1915-1950,” Journal of Urban History 36:4 (July 2010), 485-506.
[edit] References
- J Howell, ‘The Annexation of the Benefit of Covenants to Land’ [2004] Conveyancer 507
- J Martin, ‘Remedies for Breach of Restrictive Covenants’ [1996] Conveyancer 329
- HRW Wade, ‘Covenants – “A Broad and a Reasonable View”’ [1972] Cambridge L J 157.