delivered the opinion of the court.
Plаintiffs filed a claim for an injunction to restrain the defendant from constructing a gasoline service station. A Master in Chancery recommended that the complaint be dismissed. The chancellor sustainеd exceptions to the Master’s report and entered a decree permanently enjoining the defendant from constructing a gasoline service station on the premises. The defendant appeals.
The unrecorded subdivision in which the lots of the parties are located was platted by the original sub-divider in 1941 into 32 lots. Every lot was conveyed by the subdivider, subject to identical restrictive covenants. Twenty-six of the lots have been improved by single-family dwellings. The remaining six lots, including that of the defendant, are unimproved. This rectangular tract in Elk Grove Township is bounded on the east by Mount Prospect Road and on the north by Algonquin Road. In 1955 the defendant purchased a lot located at the northeast corner of the subdivision, adjoining Mount Prospect and Algonquin Roads. She then leased the lot to Sinclаir Refining Company, obtained a permit for construction of a gasoline service station and began excavation for that purpose. She had knowledge of the restrictions when she purchased the land.
The defendant urges that the purported restrictions are ambiguous and contradictory and, therefore, unenforceable. Restrictive covenants are strictly-construed in favor оf the full and unlimited legitimate use of property and, where there is any doubt, the matter must be resolved in favor of natural rights and against restrictions. Boylston v. Holmes,
Under the circumstances presented by the record it cannot be doubted that a general plan was intended by the subdivider. A reading of the restrictions makes it apparent that they were imposed in order that the subdivision might be better adapted and made more desirable by limiting improvements thereon to buildings designed and used exclusively for the residence of one family. In the construction of deeds the intention of the parties is to be determined from the instrument as a whole. Miller v. Ridgley,
The defendant insists that an examination of the covenants rеveals that the only express prohibition pertaining to business usage is that which states that “no noxious or offensive trade or activity shall be carried on.” She states that since there is no negative lаnguage purporting to preclude trades or activities that are not noxious or offensive, such trades or activities cannot be said to be prohibited, and that plaintiffs failed to introduce any evidence that filling stations are either noxious or offensive. She argues that if the original grantor had intended to prohibit the conduct of all business on the premises, it would have been a small matter to have inserted a clause providing that “no business or trade shall be conducted on the premises,” and that since he did not see fit to insert such an express prohibition, it must be concluded that he did not intend such a prohibition. We are of the opinion that this paragraph was intended to supplement the previous paragraphs requiring the erection of single-family residence by forbidding the use of said residence for any trade or activity that might be considered a nuisance or become an annoyance to the neighborhood. Paraphrasing the statement of the court in Pulitzer v. Campbеll, 262 N. Y. S. 743, the paragraph relative to noxious or offensive trades is to be considered in connection with other portions of the covenant and the purpose of the entire covenаnt was to preserve a residential atmosphere.
Defendant says that the plaintiffs are violators of restrictions or acquiesced in the violations and are thereby prohibited from insisting on compliance with the restrictions, citing Curtis v. Rubin,
Finally, the defendant asserts that where the character of a neighborhood has so changed as to render a parcel of land undesirablе or unprofitable for use if the restriction be enforced, equity will not enforce the restriction. She states that the Universal Oil Company owns the northwest and northeast corners of the intersection оf Algonquin and Mount Prospect Eoads and has improved the northeast corner with a multi-million dollar industrial laboratory; that several other industrial developments and usages are present within a one-quarter mile radius of the subject premises; that the defendant has entered into a $400 per month lease with the Sinclair Eefining Company covering the subject premises; and that there is a trend towards further industrializаtion and commercialization of the area to the extent that the premises are undesirable and unprofitable for residential development. Star Brewery Co. v. Primas,
For these reasons the decree of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
