Restrictive Covenants Are Enforceable, Even if They Could Not Be in a Zoning Ordinance

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February 8, 2012

The Indiana Court of Appeals was presented with an interesting issue in Benjamin Crossing Homeowners' Assoc., Inc. v. Heide, ___ N.E.2d ___ (Ind. Ct. App. 2012), Cause No. 79A04-1103-PL-185. The question was whether a homeowner's association could enforce a restrictive covenant that the plan commission could not. The answer in a word? Yes.
Lessons:
  1. A court will not find that a statute abrogates the common law unless the statute unmistakably does so.
  2. Restrictive covenants can prohibit conduct that zoning ordinances are not allowed to prohibit.
Brad A. Catlin
Price Waicukauski & Riley, LLC
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Watch Those Trees!

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August 18, 2011

As we mentioned recently, Ron and I were involved in a trial that kept us busy and away from blogging. I'm reading all of the cases we missed and a small claims case from the Indiana Court of Appeals jumped out at me. The Court's holding in Scheckel v. NLI, Inc., ___ N.E.2d ___ (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), Cause No. 02A04-1010-SC-645, puts many of Indiana's landowners on notice that they should check their trees, from time to time.
Lesson:
    An urban or residential landowner has a duty to exercise reasonable care to protect neighbors from the risk of personal injury or property damage caused by a tree growing upon the landowner's property
Brad A. Catlin
Price Waicukauski & Riley, LLC
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An Easement for "Ingress and Egress" Does Not Include the Right to Park

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March 31, 2011

On March 30, 2011, the Indiana Court of Appeals held that an easement granted to a landlocked property for ingress and egress did not give that property owner the right to park on the easement. In Kwolek v. Swickard, ___ N.E.2d ___ (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), Case No. 64A05-1006-PL-372, the Court held that the fact that the property owners had parked on the easement for fifteen years did not change the outcome of the case.
Lessons:
  1. The right to ingress and egress does not include the right to park.
  2. A subservient landowner can place improvement on an easement if those improvement do not actually interfere with the dominant landowner's right in the easement.
  3. A subservient landowner's acquiescence to an improper use of an easement does not give the dominant landowner the right to continue that improper use.
Brad A. Catlin
Price Waicukauski & Riley, LLC
Learn more about Brad and contact us
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