This is an appeal from an order granting summary judgment to a property owner (Arnold) in a suit for declaratory and injunctive relief brought by appellant (the Foundation 1 ) to enforce a Deed of Scenic, Open Space, and Architectural Facade Easement (hereafter the Easement). Granted to the Foundation in 1980 by a previous owner of the property, the Easement was binding on Arnold as a successor-owner. The Foundation argues that Arnold violated the Easement (1) by laterally enclosing the space between two former “doghouse-style” dormer windows on the sloped rear roof of the dwelling so as to create a single “shed dormer” window, and (2) by erecting a seasonal awning structure across the rear patio of the house. We affirm.
I.
The parties’ dispute concerns primarily two provisions of the Easement. The first, section 1, prohibited Arnold in relevant part from undertaking any
construction, alteration, or remodeling or any other thing ... on the subject premises which would affect either the exterior surfaces herein described, or increase the height, or alter the exterior facade ... or the appearance of the building located thereon, insofar as it is depicted in the photograph attached hereto and incorporated herein as Exhibit A....
those depicted in the photograph attached hereto and incorporated herein as Exhibit A, being essentially those exterior surfaces of improvements on the aforesaid premises which are visible from 33rd Street, N.W. [the front of the house], in Old Georgetown, but in the event of uncertainty the exterior surfaces of improvements visible in the photograph in Exhibit A shall control.
The parties agree that the surfaces visible in the photograph (Exhibit A) are essentially those visible from the front of the house on 33rd Street. The Foundation, therefore, concedes that section 1 of the Easement does not prohibit the changes to the dwelling at issue here.
The Foundation relies, instead, on section 4 of the Easement, which provides that, with an exception not relevant here, “[n]o extension of the existing structure or erection of additional structures shall be permitted.” The Foundation contends that Arnold’s enclosure of the exterior space between the two dormer windows “extended” the house within the unambiguous meaning of this operative verb in section 4, and that even if “extension” were ambiguous as used in the section, the trial court erred in refusing to look to an appraisal document prepared contemporaneously with the grant of the Easement as proof that the parties intended to prohibit “density increases” to the interior space of the house such as the disputed enclosure modestly achieves. The Foundation makes similar arguments with respect to the patio awning.
II.
The parties each claim that they were entitled to summary judgment. We must affirm the grant of summary judgment to Arnold if we conclude that there was no genuine dispute of material fact and that she was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Holland v. Hannan,
The very most that can be said of section 4 favorably to the Foundation is that it is ambiguous,
2
as the trial judge recognized. “[EJxtension,” which is not elsewhere defined in the Easement, could mean any exterior addition to the structure that — in the Foundation’s language — adds interior space or “density” to the residence. But it could also mean an addition that (to use Arnold’s terms) extends the footprint or envelope of the residence upward or outward in height, length, or width.
3
No other language
In short, the appraisal is not competent or “sufficient evidence,”
Nader v. de Toledano,
Dispositive of this ease, in our view, is the well-recognized rule of construction that restrictions on land use should be construed in favor of the free use of land and against the party seeking enforcement.
See Moses v. Hazen,
In this case, moreover, the rule of free use coincides in the result it dictates with the additional rule of construction that ambiguities in a deed will be resolved against the drafter of the instrument, here the grantee-Foundation.
See
26 C.J.S.
Deeds
§ 82(e);
cf. Intercounty Constr. Corp. v. District of Columbia,
Applying rules of construction, then, we hold that the enclosure of the space between the two dormer windows, while it increased the “density” of the interior space modestly, did not violate the Easement because the shed dormer does not extend beyond the highest point or the length or width of the existing house. That is, it does not extend the four corners — the footprint or
Because the trial judge correctly concluded that construction of the shed dormer and the awning do not violate the prohibitions of the Easement, 7 the grant of summary judgment to Arnold was correct.
Affirmed.
Notes
. I.e., the Foundation for the Preservation of Historic Georgetown.
. We are not altogether convinced that the section is ambiguous, though on this reading the result is no more favorable to the Foundation. In the granting clause, the deed grants the Foundation an easement in the real property and also in "the exterior surfaces of improvements located thereon.” Each of the remaining provisions reflects the Foundation's interest in either the lot or the "exterior surfaces.” Section 1 is arguably concerned with the second interest — the exterior surfaces of the improvements "visible from 33rd Street.” Sections 2 through 7, by contrast, each appear to address the parties’ rights and obligations respecting the Foundation's interest in the lot itself. Read this way, section 4 is aimed principally at maintaining the lot, not the house, in its current condition and size; only outward encroachments onto the lot — which the shed dormer is not — are prohibited.
. Interestingly, this was the claim made by the Foundation in interpreting the very different easement agreement at issue in
Bagley v. Foundation for the Preservation of Historic George
. Indeed, the author of the appraisal expressly disclaimed "responsibility for legal interpretations” of words in the Easement.
. The appraisal’s reference to a prohibited increase in “size” shares the same ambiguity.
.
See also Reichert v. Weeden,
. We have no occasion in this case to construe or apply D.C.Code § 45-2602.1 (Supp.1994), effective March 17, 1993, which requires the written consent of the holder of a recorded conservation easement before the District of Columbia may issue a permit for "construction, demolition, alteration, or repair" of the property subject to the easement.
