Watson v. Pick , 31 Neb. Ct. App. 952 ( 2023 )


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    05/30/2023 08:06 AM CDT
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    31 Nebraska Appellate Reports
    WATSON V. PICK
    Cite as 
    31 Neb. App. 952
    Doug Watson et al., appellees, v.
    Michael R. Pick, appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed May 30, 2023.     No. A-22-203.
    1. Restrictive Covenants: Equity. An action to enforce restrictive cov-
    enants is equitable in nature.
    2. Equity: Appeal and Error. On appeal from an equity action, an appel-
    late court decides factual questions de novo on the record and, as to
    questions of both fact and law, is obligated to reach a conclusion inde-
    pendent of the trial court’s determination. However, where the credible
    evidence is in conflict on a material issue of fact, the appellate court
    considers and may give weight to the circumstances that the trial judge
    heard and observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts
    rather than another.
    3. Actions: Parties: Standing: Jurisdiction. Before a party is entitled to
    invoke a court’s jurisdiction, that party must have standing to sue, which
    involves having some real interest in the cause of action.
    4. Actions: Parties: Standing. Whether a party who commences an action
    has standing and is therefore a real party in interest is jurisdictional.
    Because the requirement of standing is fundamental to a court’s exercise
    of jurisdiction, either a litigant or a court can raise the question of stand-
    ing at any time.
    5. Jurisdiction. While parties cannot confer subject matter jurisdiction
    upon a judicial tribunal by either acquiescence or consent, nor may
    subject matter jurisdiction be created by waiver, estoppel, consent, or
    conduct of the parties, such does not prevent a party from conclusively
    admitting the truth of an underlying fact required to establish subject
    matter jurisdiction by judicial admission.
    6. Pleadings: Evidence: Words and Phrases. A judicial admission is a
    formal act done in the course of judicial proceedings which is a sub-
    stitute for evidence, thereby waiving or dispensing with the production
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    of evidence by conceding for the purpose of litigation that the proposi-
    tion of fact alleged by the opponent is true.
    7.   Trial: Attorney and Client. Statements made by a party or the party’s
    attorney during the course of a trial may be judicial admissions.
    8.   Actions: Stipulations. Parties are bound by stipulations that are volun-
    tarily made, and relief from such stipulations is warranted only under
    exceptional circumstances.
    9.   Actions: Pleadings: Notice. Nebraska is a notice pleading jurisdiction.
    Civil actions are controlled by a liberal pleading regime; a party is only
    required to set forth a short and plain statement of the claim showing
    that the pleader is entitled to relief and is not required to plead legal
    theories or cite appropriate statutes so long as the pleading gives fair
    notice of the claims asserted.
    10.   Motions to Dismiss: Pleadings. To prevail against a motion to dis-
    miss for failure to state a claim, a plaintiff must allege sufficient facts,
    accepted as true, to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.
    11.   Restrictive Covenants: Waiver. The right to enforce restrictive cov-
    enants may be lost by waiver or acquiescence or violation of the same.
    Whether there has been such a waiver or acquiescence depends upon the
    circumstances of each case.
    12.   ____: ____. Generally, mere acquiescence in the violation of a restric-
    tive covenant does not constitute an abandonment thereof, so long as
    the restriction remains of any value, and a waiver does not result unless
    there have been general and multiple violations without protest.
    13.   Restrictive Covenants: Intent. The enforcement of valid restrictive
    covenants may be denied only when noncompliance is so general as to
    indicate an intention or purpose to abandon the condition.
    14.   Restrictive Covenants: Waiver. The criteria for determining whether
    a waiver of a restrictive covenant has occurred include, but are not
    limited to, whether those seeking to enforce the covenants had notice
    of the violation and the period of time in which no action was taken,
    the extent and kind of violation, the proximity of the violations to those
    who complain of them, any affirmative approval of the same, whether
    such violations are temporary or permanent in nature, and the amount of
    investment involved.
    15.   Restrictive Covenants: Intent. Restrictive covenants are to be con-
    strued so as to give effect to the intentions of the parties at the time they
    agreed to the covenants.
    16.   Restrictive Covenants. If the language of a restrictive covenant is
    unambiguous, the covenant shall be enforced according to its plain lan-
    guage, and the covenant shall not be subject to rules of interpretation
    or construction.
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    17. ____. Restrictive covenants are not favored in the law and, if ambigu-
    ous, should be construed in a manner which allows the maximum unre-
    stricted use of the property.
    18. Contracts: Words and Phrases. Ambiguity exists in a document when
    a word, phrase, or provision in the document has, or is susceptible of, at
    least two reasonable but conflicting interpretations or meanings.
    19. Restrictive Covenants: Intent. Restrictive covenants are to be con-
    strued in connection with the surrounding circumstances, which the
    parties are supposed to have had in mind at the time they made it;
    the location and character of the entire tract of land; the purpose of
    the restriction; whether it was for the sole benefit of the grantor or
    for the benefit of the grantee and subsequent purchasers; and whether
    it was in pursuance of a general building plan for the development of
    the property.
    20. Injunction. Injunctions should never be broader than necessary to
    afford complete relief to the plaintiffs.
    Appeal from the District Court for Washington County:
    John E. Samson, Judge. Affirmed.
    Rex J. Moats, of Moats Law Firm, P.C., L.L.O., for appellant.
    Brad Entwistle and David P. Wilson, of Walentine O’Toole,
    L.L.P., for appellees.
    Pirtle, Chief Judge, and Riedmann and Arterburn,
    Judges.
    Pirtle, Chief Judge.
    INTRODUCTION
    Michael R. Pick, a property owner and resident of the Spring
    Valley subdivision in Fort Calhoun, Nebraska, appeals from
    an order of the district court for Washington County granting
    a petition for permanent injunction filed on behalf of 11 other
    residents of the Spring Valley subdivision (collectively appel-
    lees). For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    On March 11, 2020, appellees filed a petition for perma-
    nent injunction in the district court, alleging that Pick was
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    violating a number of restrictive covenants applicable to resi-
    dents of the Spring Valley subdivision and requesting a per-
    manent injunction restraining Pick from continued violations
    of the “Spring Valley Protective Covenants” (protective cov-
    enants). Appellees’ position was that Pick was violating para-
    graphs III and VI of the protective covenants. Paragraph III
    of the protective covenants contains two clauses, the first
    of which provides that “[n]o business, trade, or commercial
    activity shall be carried on upon any residential lot.” The
    second clause of paragraph III provides that “[n]o noxious or
    offensive activity shall be carried on upon any lot, nor shall
    anything be done thereon which may be or may become an
    annoyance or nuisance to the neighborhood.” Paragraph VI
    also contains two clauses, the first of which provides that “[n]o
    trash, junk cars or other refuse may be thrown or dumped on
    any lot.” The second clause of paragraph VI provides that
    “[e]ach owner of a vacant lot is required to keep said lot in
    presentable condition and any non-burnable refuse must be
    hauled away for disposal.”
    With regard to the enforceability of the protective cov-
    enants, paragraph IX provides that the covenants “are to run
    with the land and shall be binding on all parties and all per-
    sons claiming under them . . . unless an instrument signed by
    a majority of the then owners of said lots has been recorded,
    agreeing to change said covenants in whole or in part.”
    Paragraph X further provides:
    If the parties hereto, or any of them, or their heirs or
    assigns shall violate any of the covenants herein, it shall
    be lawful for any person or persons owning any of the
    above described property to prosecute any proceedings
    at law or in equity against the person or persons violat-
    ing or attempting to violate any such covenant to either
    prevent him or them from so doing or recover damages
    for such violation.
    Acting pro se, Pick filed an answer to appellees’ peti-
    tion, denying the pertinent allegations and counterclaiming
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    for damages resulting from harassment and “[v]iolation of
    [Pick’s] civil rights, liberties and freedoms.” On May 4, 2020,
    appellees filed a motion to dismiss Pick’s counterclaim for
    failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
    Appellees argued that Pick failed to allege “when these
    alleged violations and harassment occurred or which of the
    eleven [appellees] committed them.”
    The court granted appellees’ motion to dismiss Pick’s coun-
    terclaim on June 17, 2020, but allowed Pick until July 2 to
    file an amended counterclaim. Pick filed an amended coun-
    terclaim on July 2, alleging that “a small group of surround-
    ing residents of the Spring Valley subdivision have stalked,
    harassed, and in general have been nuisances, towards . . .
    Pick [in] violation of . . . Picks’ [sic] basic covenants and
    rights” to quiet enjoyment of his property. Pick further alleged
    various incidents in which “surrounding residents” trespassed
    upon his property and took pictures of Pick and the prop-
    erty, as well as one specific incident in June 2020 in which a
    named individual was caught on Pick’s property and cited for
    criminal trespass. However, that named individual was not a
    party to appellees’ petition. Pick ultimately sought an order
    requiring each appellee to pay “punitive damages” in the
    amount of $10,000.
    On August 13, 2020, appellees filed a motion to dismiss
    Pick’s amended counterclaim for failure to state a claim upon
    which relief can be granted and filed a motion for summary
    judgment against Pick on the original petition. With regard to
    the motion to dismiss, appellees alleged that Pick failed to cure
    the defects in his original counterclaim, because Pick still had
    not identified when the alleged conduct occurred or which of
    the 11 appellees were alleged to have engaged in such conduct.
    On February 24, 2021, the court entered orders granting appel-
    lees’ motion to dismiss Pick’s amended counterclaim and deny-
    ing appellees’ motion for summary judgment.
    With regard to the motion to dismiss, the court charac-
    terized Pick’s amended counterclaim as containing claims
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    of trespass, stalking, and harassment against “surrounding
    residents.” The court noted that the only individual named
    in Pick’s amended counterclaim was an individual that was
    not a party to the present action. The court ultimately con-
    cluded that Pick failed to “specifically allege any harass-
    ment, stalking, or trespass violation by any [appellees] to this
    lawsuit,” and thus granted appellees’ motion to dismiss the
    amended counterclaim.
    With regard to the motion for summary judgment, the court
    found genuine issues of material fact as to whether (1) Pick
    was carrying on a business, trade, or commercial activity on
    the property; (2) Pick’s activities created an annoyance or nui-
    sance to the neighborhood; and (3) Pick had thrown or dumped
    trash, junk cars, or other refuse on the lot. Notably, whether
    the protective covenants were applicable to the parties and
    whether appellees had standing to bring the suit were not dis-
    puted facts for trial.
    On August 13, 2020, appellees filed a statement of undis-
    puted facts in support of summary judgment, which asserted,
    inter alia, that the protective covenants were in full force
    and effect and that appellees “have the right and standing to
    enforce” them. Thereafter, on October 22, Pick filed a case
    brief opposing summary judgment in which he specifically
    asserted that “all transferees, grantees, and successors in title”
    in the Spring Valley subdivision are subject to the protective
    covenants, “including, among others, [appellees] and [Pick].”
    After reciting the enforcement provisions quoted above, Pick
    added that the protective covenants “continue to run with the
    land, including but not limited to the land in Spring Valley
    Subdivision owned by [appellees] and [Pick], and are at the
    date hereof and [at] all relevant times to these proceedings in
    full force and effect.”
    A telephonic hearing was held on October 22, 2020, but
    there is no record of that hearing on appeal. The day after
    that hearing, the district court entered a journal entry memo-
    rializing that appellees and Pick had stipulated on the record
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    that the protective covenants at issue were “in full force and
    effect.” In its order denying appellees’ motion for summary
    judgment, the court noted that the parties had stipulated that
    the protective covenants “are at the date hereof and at all
    relevant times to these proceedings in full force and effect”
    and that “among others, [appellees] and [Pick]” are subject to
    the protective covenants. Finally, at the start of trial, the court
    once again confirmed with all the parties that there was “no
    issue that the [protective covenants] are in full force and effect
    at this time.”
    Trial was held on December 8 and 9, 2021. The first wit-
    ness to testify at trial was appellee Christine M. Ostronic, who
    testified that she had lived in the Spring Valley subdivision for
    34 years. Ostronic recalled that Pick moved into an adjacent
    lot in 2010, and she noticed a continuous stream of what she
    described as “junk cars” being hauled onto Pick’s property
    beginning in 2011. Ostronic estimated that Pick started with
    20 to 50 vehicles in 2011, but that the number had increased
    to approximately 150 vehicles covering “[e]very inch” of
    Pick’s property at the time of trial. Ostronic testified that the
    vehicles consisted of “[v]arious sizes of trucks” and other
    heavy machinery.
    Ostronic testified that she took pictures of Pick’s property
    at various times between 2012 and 2021, for the purpose of
    documenting the accumulation of vehicles on Pick’s prop-
    erty and the activities in which Pick was engaged. Ostronic
    explained that a number of the pictures depict vehicles or
    vehicle parts located on the road outside of Pick’s property
    at times when there was apparently “no room” to put the
    items on Pick’s property. A number of Ostronic’s pictures
    were admitted as evidence and frequently referenced through-
    out trial. Additional photographic evidence admitted at trial
    included aerial images of Pick’s property from 2020 and 2021,
    both of which depict numerous vehicles scattered throughout
    the property.
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    Ostronic testified that she can hear people working on the
    vehicles at the property up to 5 days a week for roughly 8
    hours a day. Ostronic described people helping Pick “remove
    vehicles, cut them apart, load them on trailers, load them
    off trailers, [and] move scrap around.” Ostronic indicated
    that these activities produced a substantial amount of noise,
    which she could hear from both inside and outside of her
    house. Ostronic also recalled at least two reports of cata-
    lytic converter thefts on Pick’s property. Ostronic ultimately
    opined that Pick kept “[j]unk, scrap” on his property and
    that Pick’s activities were noxious and an annoyance to the
    neighborhood.
    The next witness was appellee Nancy Watson, who testi-
    fied that she had lived in the Spring Valley subdivision for
    almost 44 years. Watson recalled “[j]unk cars coming in and
    out” beginning within a couple years of Pick’s moving into
    the subdivision around 2010 or 2011. Watson testified that
    she can see Pick’s property while driving on the surrounding
    roads, and she estimated there were approximately 150 trucks
    of various sizes and conditions on his property at the time of
    trial. Watson testified that Pick’s activities on the property had
    only increased in recent years, and she described the property
    as an “eyesore” and a “junkyard.” Watson concurred with
    Ostronic that Pick’s property had become “a nuisance” to the
    neighborhood. Like Ostronic, Watson took pictures to docu-
    ment Pick’s activities and the state of his property over time.
    Watson recalled that she likewise took pictures at various times
    between 2012 and 2021, but only six of those pictures, taken
    between April and October 2021, were admitted as evidence at
    trial. Those six pictures depicted similar scenes to the pictures
    taken by Ostronic, with “trucks carrying scrap bumpers, tires,
    fenders, . . . junked vehicles, . . . [w]recked vehicles, . . . a
    Bobcat [and] a bunch of junk.”
    The next witness was appellee Linda M. Dugan, who testi-
    fied that she and her husband, appellee John P. Dugan, had
    lived in the Spring Valley subdivision for approximately 6
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    years, making her the first witness to have moved into the
    subdivision after Pick. Linda testified that they purchased the
    property in the summertime and that it was difficult to see
    Pick’s property through the trees’ leaves at the time. However,
    when they moved into the subdivision that winter, she then
    noticed the “junkyard and the junk vehicles” on Pick’s prop-
    erty. Linda and John both testified that they would not have
    purchased the property if they had known about the condition
    of Pick’s property at the time.
    When asked to describe the activity she had observed on
    Pick’s property, Linda testified that the property “appears to
    be fully engulfed in a massive amount of vehicles in differ-
    ent stages [of disrepair],” adding that Pick’s activity had only
    increased over time. As with the previous witnesses, Linda
    opined that the property was “a nuisance” to the neighborhood
    and “an eyesore.” Linda further expressed concern “for the
    long-term value of all of our properties [and] the continuation
    of potential theft being generated by [Pick’s] business.” Linda
    explained that she was personally aware of at least one report
    of a catalytic converter theft on Pick’s property.
    Pick was the next witness, and he testified that he owned
    several businesses, including “Main Street Auto Sales” (Main
    Street Auto) located in Wayne, Nebraska. Pick explained that
    he purchased Main Street Auto around 2 years prior to trial,
    and he maintained a used car dealer’s license through that
    business. According to Pick’s own testimony, his business
    activities through Main Street Auto involved the substantial
    use of his Spring Valley subdivision property. Pick testified
    that he buys vehicles from “all over the world” and stores
    them on his property while he works on them and that he
    then sells those vehicles under the dealer’s license maintained
    through Main Street Auto. Pick testified that prior to purchas-
    ing Main Street Auto, he conducted a similar operation for
    around 6 years through a pawnshop that he owned. When
    asked if he had been involved in the “used car business”
    prior to the pawnshop and Main Street Auto, Pick responded,
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    “Yes . . . I have been repairing, fixing wrecked vehicles since
    I was fifteen years old.”
    With regard to the state of his property, Pick estimated that
    he had 80 to 100 vehicles located on his property at the time
    of trial, along with “probably 20 pieces of machinery” like
    tractors, “Bobcats,” and “approximately 15 tow trucks.” Pick
    also confirmed that at the time he responded to appellees’ dis-
    covery request, he had an inventory of roughly 134 vehicles
    stored at the property. However, Pick also testified that he
    buys, sells, and trades vehicles “every day,” such that many
    of the vehicles on that inventory list had likely been relocated
    and replaced with new vehicles by the time of trial.
    Pick confirmed that in 2013, he was convicted by a jury
    on charges that he violated zoning regulations by operating a
    “wrecking yard” and a “junk yard” on his property without a
    permit. Pick further confirmed that those convictions did not
    cause any change in his activities on the property, “Because
    in my mind I was doing nothing wrong.” Pick was cited again
    for zoning violations in 2016, but the charges were eventu-
    ally dropped. A number of the other witnesses also noted
    that despite two misdemeanor convictions and a subsequent
    criminal citation, the degree of Pick’s activities seemed to only
    increase over time.
    After examining Pick, appellees rested their case in chief.
    Pick moved for a directed verdict, which motion the court
    denied, and then Pick called various witnesses in his own
    behalf. Pick first called appellee Richard A. Schmitt. Schmitt
    joined the previous witnesses in describing Pick’s property
    as “a nuisance to the neighborhood” and “an eyesore.” Upon
    examining the pictures taken by Ostronic and Watson, Schmitt
    further described the property as “cluttered,” “obnoxious,”
    “messy,” and “very unorganized.” Schmitt noted that the pic-
    tures depicted vehicle parts, partial vehicles, damaged vehi-
    cles, heavy machinery, trucks carrying vehicles, and vehicles
    parked in every direction.
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    Pick next called appellee John Dugan, who identified Pick’s
    property as a “junkyard” and described it as “an eyesore,”
    “unsightly,” and “upsetting.” As with Schmitt, Pick had John
    examine the pictures taken by Ostronic and Watson. John indi-
    cated that none of the individual pictures captured the totality
    of Pick’s property, which John described as “a big open area
    with a lot of ugly mess.” Pick then called additional appel-
    lees—Stacy DeVries, Russell J. DeVries, Kevin Swisher, and
    Pamela Swisher—all of whom generally reiterated the testi-
    mony of the previous witnesses.
    Pick also called A.J. Watson, the son of two appellees, who
    confirmed that he started a landscaping business about 22
    years prior, when he was in high school and living at his par-
    ents’ Spring Valley subdivision address. A.J. explained that at
    that time he would mow lawns for the surrounding neighbors,
    who would pay $40 for his services. A.J. further testified that
    at that time he “was just a kid that would mow the neighbors’
    lawn because I needed money,” whereas his current landscap-
    ing business was a much larger enterprise that operated out of
    an address in Omaha, Nebraska.
    Thereafter, Pick testified once again, focusing his attention
    on the argument that appellees had waived enforcement of
    paragraph III of the protective covenants on account of gen-
    eral noncompliance with the prohibition on “business, trade,
    or commercial activity” within the subdivision. Pick offered
    exhibit 73, which purported to contain a list of active and
    inactive businesses with a connection to Spring Valley subdivi-
    sion addresses. Pick testified that exhibit 73 was prepared by
    his sister and that exhibits 74 through 88 represented Pick’s
    attempts to verify the businesses on that list using primarily
    internet searches. Exhibits 75, 76, 78, 79, and 86 through 88
    were not admitted into evidence for various evidentiary rea-
    sons. The remaining exhibits generally consisted of ostensible
    connections between a number of the businesses on Pick’s
    list and Spring Valley subdivision addresses, but there was
    no evidence of actual business activities being carried on
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    at those addresses. Pick ultimately stated the following regard-
    ing the aforementioned exhibits:
    I understand that most of these exhibits came from the
    Internet and we all know the Internet tells you what it
    wants to tell you . . . . I haven’t met any of these people,
    I’ve never done business with them, I don’t know what
    business they’re in and, you know, I’m taking it at face
    value. The Internet is not always right, but it’s pretty
    accurate to a certain extent.
    Excluding the allegations regarding Pick’s property, none of
    the witnesses could identify any other businesses operating
    within the subdivision.
    In lieu of closing arguments, the court ordered the parties
    to submit written briefs. Pick reiterated in his closing brief
    that “[appellees] and [Pick]” are subject to the protective
    covenants. The court entered its final order on February 28,
    2022, which granted appellees’ petition for permanent injunc-
    tion. The court first examined the language of the protective
    covenants in light of Pick’s argument that a number of the
    terms were ambiguous. Pick took particular issue with the
    allegation that there were “junk cars” thrown or dumped on
    his property when the evidence indicated that Pick owned
    exclusively trucks. Pick argued the term “junk cars” was
    ambiguous as applied to him, suggesting that the term “junk
    vehicles” was less ambiguous and should have been used. The
    court ultimately determined that the protective covenants at
    issue were unambiguous, as the terms used were “all words an
    ordinary person understands and should be given their plain
    meaning.” Thus, the court went on to apply the protective cov-
    enants to the evidence of Pick’s activities, relying primarily
    on dictionary definitions of operative terms to ascertain their
    plain meaning.
    With respect to the first clause of paragraph III, the court
    found that Pick was clearly engaged in a business, trade, or
    commercial activity at his Spring Valley property, to wit: stor-
    ing, repairing, and “‘parting out’” used vehicles to be sold
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    at another location. The court further found that Pick failed to
    show other business activity in the subdivision of “a degree
    which would waive enforceability of the Protective Covenant
    against [Pick’s] residential lot.” The court acknowledged the
    various exhibits offered by Pick in that regard, but the court
    also noted that much of that evidence lacked credibility. The
    court emphasized that aside from the operation on Pick’s
    property, none of the numerous witnesses could identify any
    business activity occurring within the Spring Valley subdivi-
    sion. With respect to the second clause of paragraph III, the
    court wrote: “Many neighbors testified and the Court finds
    from credible testimony that the business activity carried on
    by [Pick] was reasonably offensive to the neighborhood” and
    “certainly could reasonably be described to be an annoyance or
    nuisance to the neighborhood.”
    With respect to paragraph VI of the protective covenants,
    the court found that the plain meaning of the term “junk cars”
    was “not limited to passenger cars but was intended to mean
    ‘junk vehicles.’” Accordingly, the court rejected Pick’s pro-
    posed distinction between “junk cars” and “junk trucks” and
    found that “[t]he testimony of [appellees] and the photographic
    evidence presented at trial showed all types of junk vehicles
    on the property.” Altogether, the court concluded that appel-
    lees had met their burden to prove that Pick was violating
    paragraphs III and VI of the protective covenants, and it thus
    granted appellees’ request for a permanent injunction.
    The court ordered that Pick be immediately and perma-
    nently enjoined from continuing to violate the protective cov-
    enants in the manner described above and included a detailed
    outline of the court’s expectations in that regard. The court
    crafted a mitigation timetable, according to which Pick was to
    gradually remove the “junk vehicles” from his property over
    the course of 4 months. The court further ordered that up to
    six appellees, along with counsel, be allowed to enter Pick’s
    property under specified circumstances to verify compliance
    with the injunction. Finally, the court ordered that Pick may
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    store any number of “personal non-commercial motor vehi-
    cles” inside the storage buildings located on the property but
    shall be limited to “no more than 3 personal motor vehicles”
    parked outside of those buildings. Pick appealed.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Pick assigns, restated, that the district court erred in (1)
    determining that the protective covenants applied and that
    appellees had standing to sue, (2) dismissing Pick’s amended
    counterclaim, (3) failing to find that enforcement of paragraph
    III of the protective covenants had been waived, (4) find-
    ing that the terms “noxious or offensive” and “annoyance or
    nuisance” were not ambiguous, (5) finding that Pick violated
    paragraph VI of the protective covenants, and (6) crafting a
    permanent injunction that was overbroad.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1,2] An action to enforce restrictive covenants is equitable
    in nature. Estates at Prairie Ridge Homeowners Assn. v. Korth,
    
    298 Neb. 266
    , 
    904 N.W.2d 15
     (2017). On appeal from an
    equity action, an appellate court decides factual questions de
    novo on the record and, as to questions of both fact and law, is
    obligated to reach a conclusion independent of the trial court’s
    determination. 
    Id.
     However, where the credible evidence is in
    conflict on a material issue of fact, the appellate court consid-
    ers and may give weight to the circumstances that the trial
    judge heard and observed the witnesses and accepted one ver-
    sion of the facts rather than another. State v. Melcher, 
    240 Neb. 592
    , 
    483 N.W.2d 540
     (1992).
    ANALYSIS
    Subject Matter Jurisdiction.
    Pick first assigns that the district court erred in determin-
    ing that the protective covenants applied to the parties and
    that appellees had standing to sue Pick for violation thereof.
    Pick does not dispute the parties’ stipulation that the protec-
    tive covenants were in full force and effect at all pertinent
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    times. Rather, Pick suggests that the stipulation improperly
    conferred subject matter jurisdiction upon the district court by
    consent or acquiescence of the parties. Having characterized
    the issue as jurisdictional, Pick asserts he “is permitted to
    raise the issue of [appellees’] lack of standing and consequent
    lack of subject matter jurisdiction at this stage in the proceed-
    ings.” Brief for appellant at 22.
    [3] In support of his position, Pick cites Marcuzzo v. Bank
    of the West, 
    290 Neb. 809
    , 
    862 N.W.2d 281
     (2015), for
    the proposition that “subject matter jurisdiction requires that
    the party have standing to sue, which involves a real inter-
    est in the cause of action.” Brief for appellant at 20. It is true
    that the court in Marcuzzo stated, “Before a party is entitled
    to invoke a court’s jurisdiction, that party must have standing
    to sue, which involves having some real interest in the cause
    of action.” Marcuzzo v. Bank of the West, 290 Neb. at 819, 862
    N.W.2d at 289. However, we disagree with Pick’s suggestion
    that stipulating to the facts underlying appellees’ standing to
    sue was tantamount to conferring subject matter jurisdiction
    by consent.
    [4-8] We have said that the question of whether a party
    who commences an action has standing and is therefore a real
    party in interest is jurisdictional and that because the require-
    ment of standing is fundamental to a court’s exercise of juris-
    diction, either a litigant or a court can raise the question of
    standing at any time. Jacobs Engr. Group v. ConAgra Foods,
    
    301 Neb. 38
    , 
    917 N.W.2d 435
     (2018). While parties cannot
    confer subject matter jurisdiction upon a judicial tribunal by
    either acquiescence or consent, nor may subject matter juris-
    diction be created by waiver, estoppel, consent, or conduct of
    the parties, such does not prevent a party from conclusively
    admitting the truth of an underlying fact required to estab-
    lish subject matter jurisdiction by judicial admission. 
    Id.
     A
    judicial admission is a formal act done in the course of judi-
    cial proceedings which is a substitute for evidence, thereby
    waiving or dispensing with the production of evidence by
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    conceding for the purpose of litigation that the proposition
    of fact alleged by the opponent is true. 
    Id.
     Statements made
    by a party or the party’s attorney during the course of a trial
    may be judicial admissions. Schroeder v. Barnes, 
    5 Neb. App. 811
    , 
    565 N.W.2d 749
     (1997). Parties are bound by stipulations
    that are voluntarily made, and relief from such stipulations is
    warranted only under exceptional circumstances. Shearer v.
    Shearer, 
    270 Neb. 178
    , 
    700 N.W.2d 580
     (2005).
    In this case, Pick stipulated by judicial admission that the
    protective covenants were in full force and effect at all per-
    tinent times and that appellees and Pick were subject thereto.
    Prior to trial, appellees and Pick affirmatively alleged in court
    filings that the protective covenants were in full force and
    effect and binding upon all the parties. It was thus not surpris-
    ing that shortly after those documents were filed, the parties
    stipulated on the record to that fact. Pick then emphasized
    throughout trial that the protective covenants were applicable
    and binding upon all the parties including himself, because
    a central component of his defense revolved around the pro-
    tective covenants being enforceable against appellees. While
    Pick now wishes to litigate these issues, the time to do so has
    passed. The fact that the parties stipulated to an underlying
    fact that was required to establish subject matter jurisdiction
    does not deprive the district court of the same. Thus, we reject
    Pick’s first assignment of error.
    Motion to Dismiss Amended Counterclaim.
    Pick next assigns that the district court erred in granting
    appellees’ motion to dismiss Pick’s amended counterclaim.
    Pick does not dispute his “failure to specifically name any
    of the individual [appellees] in his amended counterclaim.”
    Brief for appellant at 24. Rather, Pick argues he referred
    to “surrounding residents” and that “should have reasonably
    been interpreted to refer to [appellees] as the individuals
    who violated his private use and enjoyment of his land.” 
    Id.
    We disagree.
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    [9,10] Nebraska is a notice pleading jurisdiction. Vasquez v.
    CHI Properties, 
    302 Neb. 742
    , 
    925 N.W.2d 304
     (2019). Civil
    actions are controlled by a liberal pleading regime; a party is
    only required to set forth a short and plain statement of the
    claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief and is not
    required to plead legal theories or cite appropriate statutes so
    long as the pleading gives fair notice of the claims asserted.
    
    Id.
     To prevail against a motion to dismiss for failure to state a
    claim, a plaintiff must allege sufficient facts, accepted as true,
    to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face. 
    Id.
    In the present case, we agree with the district court that
    Pick’s amended counterclaim failed to allege facts sufficient
    to give fair notice of the claims asserted. While Pick may
    have adequately alleged the conduct he complained of, he
    failed to allege when such conduct occurred or which of the
    individual appellees had engaged in such conduct. We decline
    Pick’s invitation to simply interpret the claims against “sur-
    rounding residents” as having been leveled against appellees
    collectively. Moreover, even if we did accept that argument,
    Pick’s allegations would still lack fair notice of claims asserted
    against individual appellees. Accordingly, we reject Pick’s sec-
    ond assignment of error.
    Waiver and Acquiescence.
    Pick next assigns that the district court erred in concluding
    that paragraph III of the protective covenants was enforceable
    despite Pick’s argument that appellees waived enforcement of
    that provision. Specifically, Pick argues that appellees were
    aware of the activity on his property for many years before
    filing suit and that appellees have acquiesced to the busi-
    ness activity of other Spring Valley subdivision residents in
    the meantime.
    [11-14] It is well settled in most jurisdictions that the right
    to enforce restrictive covenants may be lost by waiver or
    acquiescence or violation of the same. Pool v. Denbeck, 
    196 Neb. 27
    , 
    241 N.W.2d 503
     (1976). Whether there has been
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    such a waiver or acquiescence depends upon the circumstances
    of each case. 
    Id.
     Generally, mere acquiescence in the viola-
    tion of a restrictive covenant does not constitute an abandon-
    ment thereof, so long as the restriction remains of any value,
    and a waiver does not result unless there have been general
    and multiple violations without protest. Farmington Woods
    Homeowners Assn. v. Wolf, 
    284 Neb. 280
    , 
    817 N.W.2d 758
    (2012). Thus, in order to prove a waiver, a defendant must
    prove that a plaintiff has waived the covenant through substan-
    tial and general noncompliance. 
    Id.
     The enforcement of valid
    restrictive covenants may be denied only when noncompliance
    is so general as to indicate an intention or purpose to aban-
    don the condition. 
    Id.
     The criteria for determining whether a
    waiver of a restrictive covenant has occurred include, but are
    not limited to,
    “whether those seeking to enforce the covenants had
    notice of the violation and the period of time in which
    no action was taken; the extent and kind of violation;
    the proximity of the violations to those who complain of
    them; any affirmative approval of the same; whether such
    violations are temporary or permanent in nature; and the
    amount of investment involved.”
    Id. at 286-87, 817 N.W.2d at 765.
    In the present case, Pick purported to introduce evidence of
    a number of businesses conducting business activities in the
    Spring Valley subdivision. However, the bulk of that evidence
    consisted of website printouts and internet searches revealing
    more or less tenuous links between Spring Valley subdivision
    addresses and either active or inactive businesses. Each of the
    witnesses who were posed with a question regarding business
    activity in the subdivision identified Pick’s activities as the
    only apparent business operation. None of the evidence offered
    by Pick came even remotely close to demonstrating business
    activity within the subdivision that was similar in nature and
    degree to the activities on Pick’s property.
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    Pick is correct to point out that multiple witnesses testi-
    fied they became aware of his objectionable activities shortly
    after he moved to the subdivision in 2010 or 2011 and failed
    to sue until roughly 10 years later. However, those witnesses
    also testified that they repeatedly complained to the county
    authorities about the activities on Pick’s property and that
    they hoped that two misdemeanor convictions and a subse-
    quent criminal citation would cause Pick to curb the activities
    on his property. However, Pick’s activities only increased,
    ultimately prompting appellees to join together and file their
    petition. Altogether, we agree with the district court that Pick
    failed to prove the sort of substantial and general noncompli-
    ance or acquiescence required to establish a waiver of the
    protective covenants. As such, we reject Pick’s third assign-
    ment of error.
    Ambiguity.
    Pick’s fourth and fifth assignments of error allege that
    the district court erred in its interpretation and application
    of paragraphs III and VI of the protective covenants. In his
    fourth assignment of error, Pick argues that the terms “noxious
    or offensive” and “annoyance or nuisance” were ambiguous
    and thus unenforceable. In his fifth assignment of error, Pick
    argues that the terms “trash, junk cars or other refuse” were
    ambiguous and thus unenforceable and that even if paragraph
    VI were enforceable, appellees failed to prove that Pick was
    violating the terms thereof.
    [15-17] Restrictive covenants are to be construed so as to
    give effect to the intentions of the parties at the time they
    agreed to the covenants. Southwind Homeowners Assn. v.
    Burden, 
    283 Neb. 522
    , 
    810 N.W.2d 714
     (2012). If the lan-
    guage is unambiguous, the covenant shall be enforced accord-
    ing to its plain language, and the covenant shall not be subject
    to rules of interpretation or construction. 
    Id.
     However, restric-
    tive covenants are not favored in the law and, if ambiguous,
    should be construed in a manner which allows the maximum
    unrestricted use of the property. 
    Id.
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    [18,19] Ambiguity exists in a document when a word,
    phrase, or provision in the document has, or is susceptible
    of, at least two reasonable but conflicting interpretations or
    meanings. Estates at Prairie Ridge Homeowners Assn. v.
    Korth, 
    298 Neb. 266
    , 
    904 N.W.2d 15
     (2017). Restrictive cov-
    enants are to be construed in connection with the surrounding
    circumstances, which the parties are supposed to have had in
    mind at the time they made it; the location and character of
    the entire tract of land; the purpose of the restriction; whether
    it was for the sole benefit of the grantor or for the benefit of
    the grantee and subsequent purchasers; and whether it was in
    pursuance of a general building plan for the development of
    the property. See Ross v. Newman, 
    206 Neb. 42
    , 
    291 N.W.2d 228
     (1980).
    The protective covenants expressly declare that the Spring
    Valley subdivision lots “shall be known and designated as
    residential building plots” and that they were enacted “[f]or
    the purpose of providing adequate restrictive covenants for the
    mutual benefit of ourselves and successors in title.” Turning
    to Pick’s fourth assignment of error, the second clause of
    paragraph III of the protective covenants prohibits “noxious
    or offensive activity” and any activity that “may be or may
    become an annoyance or nuisance to the neighborhood.”
    Notably, Pick’s ambiguity argument pertains only to terms
    contained in the second clause of paragraph III, and Pick does
    not otherwise challenge the district court’s finding that Pick
    also violated the first clause of paragraph III prohibiting busi-
    ness activity within the subdivision. Accordingly, even if we
    accepted Pick’s argument as to the second clause, Pick’s viola-
    tion of the first clause would stand. In any case, we decline to
    accept Pick’s argument that the second clause of paragraph III
    was ambiguous and thus unenforceable.
    Pick argues that the terms at issue “do not refer to any par-
    ticular kinds of activity” and “do not even describe the char-
    acteristics of activities which would come within the ambit
    of the terms.” Brief for appellant at 32. Contrary to Pick’s
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    assertions, we agree with the district court that the provision
    clearly and unambiguously encompasses activities which are
    characteristically “noxious or offensive” and particular kinds
    of activity that “may be or may become an annoyance or
    nuisance to the neighborhood.” In the context of the protec-
    tive covenants, these terms are unambiguous and should be
    accorded their plain and ordinary meaning as an ordinary or
    reasonable person would understand them. In light of that
    and the evidence adduced at trial, we agree with the district
    court that the activities on Pick’s property could reasonably
    be described as noxious or offensive and an annoyance or nui-
    sance to the neighborhood. Accordingly we reject Pick’s fourth
    assignment of error.
    With regard to Pick’s fifth assignment of error, the first
    clause of paragraph VI of the protective covenants prohibits
    the throwing or dumping of any “trash, junk cars or other
    refuse” on subdivision lots. The district court narrowed in
    on the term “junk cars” and determined that term was unam-
    biguous and “was intended to mean ‘junk vehicles,’” thereby
    rejecting Pick’s proposed distinction between the terms “junk
    cars” and “junk trucks.” Having so interpreted that language,
    the court found an abundance of evidence showing “all types
    of junk vehicles on [Pick’s] property.”
    Pick seeks to revive the proposed distinction between the
    terms “junk cars” and “junk trucks” on appeal. As appel-
    lees point out, “[i]f [Pick’s] distinction is accepted, having a
    hundred 18-wheelers in your yard would be allowed while a
    hundred Toyota Priuses would be a violation.” Brief for appel-
    lees at 34. Thus, we agree with appellees that Pick’s “proposed
    distinction goes against common understanding of the words
    and against the intent of Paragraph VI.” Brief for appellees at
    33-34. Pick also suggests that the term “junk cars” should be
    interpreted narrowly to include only vehicles that were “use-
    less” and being “discarded.” Brief for appellant at 35. Pick
    acknowledges the numerous vehicles located on his prop-
    erty, including various “truck parts . . . tires and bumpers,”
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    but he argues those were not “junk cars” because they “were on
    the property to be repaired . . . and moved to another location”
    as opposed to simply being discarded. 
    Id.
     We disagree.
    The district court observed that “‘junk’” is generally
    defined as “old iron, glass, paper, or other waste that may
    be used again in some form; secondhand, or worn and dis-
    carded articles; something of poor quality.” The court fur-
    ther observed that “‘car’” is generally defined as “a vehicle
    moving on wheels such as an automobile.” In the context of
    the protective covenants, we conclude the term “junk cars”
    generally encompasses secondhand or used vehicles in a state
    of disrepair regardless of whether they are intended to be
    repaired and sold or simply discarded. Altogether, we agree
    with the district court that the term “junk cars” in paragraph
    VI of the protective covenants is unambiguous and clearly
    applies to the numerous vehicles that Pick routinely stored on
    his property. Accordingly, we reject Pick’s fifth assignment
    of error.
    Permanent Injunction.
    [20] Finally, Pick assigns that the district court erred in
    crafting a permanent injunction which was broader than neces-
    sary to provide relief to appellees. See Nolan v. Campbell, 
    13 Neb. App. 212
    , 
    690 N.W.2d 638
     (2004) (injunctions should
    never be broader than necessary to afford complete relief to
    plaintiffs). Pick takes issue with two particular provisions
    of the injunction: the limitation on the number of personal
    vehicles Pick is allowed to store outdoors on his property and
    the circumstances under which appellees were authorized to
    enter Pick’s property to verify compliance with the injunction.
    In contrast, appellees argue that both of these provisions were
    necessary for enforcement of the injunction.
    With respect to the limitation on personal vehicles, the
    court ordered that Pick may store any number of personal
    vehicles and other equipment inside the buildings and garage
    located on the property. Pick testified, and the photographic
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    evidence confirms, that his property contained two outbuild-
    ings along with a garage attached to the house. Pick testified
    that the smaller of the two outbuildings can store approxi-
    mately 6 vehicles, and Pick estimated there were at least 13
    vehicles in the larger outbuilding at the time of trial. Assuming
    the attached garage can store 1 or 2 vehicles, Pick could rea-
    sonably store up to 20 or more personal vehicles inside those
    buildings; however, the injunction limits Pick to no more than
    3 personal vehicles parked outside of those buildings.
    Pick argues that limitation sweeps too broadly, as it encom-
    passes activity that does not necessarily violate the terms of
    the protective covenants (i.e., parking noncommercial personal
    vehicles outside on one’s own property). Appellees counter
    that a limit on personal vehicles is necessary because Pick
    does not distinguish between vehicles owned in his personal
    capacity and those owned pursuant to his used car business. As
    such, appellees argue that absent a limitation on personal vehi-
    cles, Pick could continue to store any number of vehicles on
    the property and “simply say they are his personal vehicles.”
    Brief for appellees at 36. In explanation for the limitation, the
    district court observed as follows:
    The Court acknowledges that under the [protective cov-
    enants], there is no restriction on the number of personal
    motor vehicles . . . that a person can possess on their
    Spring Valley property; provided however, the Court is
    also cognizant that [Pick], over approximately 12 years
    or so, stored well in excess of an average of 100 pieces
    of motor vehicles, equipment, junk, refuse, etc. on his
    property at any one time. . . . [P]rovided further that,
    the Court is also aware that [Pick] was prosecuted and
    found guilty of Washington County Zoning Regulations in
    regard to junk vehicles and other junk on his property, and
    thereafter, his storage of trash, junk, junk vehicles, sal-
    vage materials, refuse, unlicensed motor vehicles, an [sic]
    inoperable motor vehicles/trailers/trucks/buses, motor
    vehicle parts or tires, equipment increased after the
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    successful prosecution against him. With this in mind,
    the Court finds that in order to prevent further violations
    of the Protective Covenants by [Pick] that it is necessary
    to set forth limitations on personal motor vehicles [Pick]
    will be allowed to have on [his] property.
    (Emphasis in original.) We agree with the district court’s
    well-reasoned analysis, and we conclude that, under the cir-
    cumstances of this case, the limitation on personal vehi-
    cles allowed to be stored outdoors on Pick’s property was
    not overbroad and was necessary to afford complete relief
    to appellees.
    With respect to the verification procedure, the court ordered
    that “counsel for [appellees] and up to six (6) of [appel-
    lees] shall be allowed to enter upon [Pick’s] property, on or
    before August 15, 2022,” for the purpose of verifying Pick’s
    compliance with the injunction. The court further ordered
    that appellees must file a written notice, at least 7 days in
    advance, “setting forth the specific date, time . . . and names
    of persons” conducting the inspection. The court also specified
    that the inspection shall not include entry into Pick’s residence
    or attached garage. Under the circumstances of this case, we
    conclude that the verification procedure crafted by the district
    court was not overbroad and was necessary to afford complete
    relief to appellees. Accordingly, we reject Pick’s sixth assign-
    ment of error.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the order of the district
    court in its entirety.
    Affirmed.