29 A.2d 308 | Conn. | 1942
The main question at issue is whether the keeping of a rooming house violates the covenant in a deed that the grantee will not erect or maintain on the premises conveyed any building except one one-family dwelling house.
The finding, corrected in one minor particular, discloses the following facts: In 1921, W. L., J. L. and P. L. Goodwin were the owners of a tract of land on Asylum Avenue in Hartford. At that time they laid it out as an exclusive and select real estate development containing twenty lots. All of these lots were sold subject to similar restrictions running for twenty years. Practically all of the present owners of these lots have joined as plaintiffs. The deed of the first lot was dated October 2, 1922, and of the last, September 17, 1925. The restriction on the first lot sold expired October 2, 1942, and that on the second lot sold on November 2, 1942.
The lot of which the defendant has the life use and which he now occupies was originally sold April 12, 1923, by warranty deed containing the following covenant: "As part consideration for this deed the Grantee for himself, his heirs and assigns agrees to and with the Grantors, their heirs and assigns forever, that for a period of twenty (20) years from and after the date *435 hereof he will not erect or maintain, or permit to be erected or maintained, any building except one one-family dwelling-house, with necessary outbuildings, such dwelling-house to cost at least Twenty Thousand Dollars ($20,000)." The covenants as to the other lots differed only slightly in phraseology except for that on the first lot sold, which contained no provision as to cost and omitted the word "maintain." The house on the first lot was completed at the time of the first conveyance and both house and lot were sold for approximately $19,000. Since that time and before this suit was brought, the owners have expended about $15,000 in alterations, and the structure was then and since has been a one-family residence.
After the death of his wife in 1938, the defendant took in three paying guests to keep him company. Their stayed six months. Thereafter, by rearranging the interior and adding bathrooms, he increased the facilities for taking roomers, advertised for them and at the time of trial had eight or more, paying in the aggregate nearly $100 a week. One suite contains housekeeping facilities and two other tenants use the house kitchen to prepare their food. In one of his applications for a permit to alter the premises, sworn to by him, the defendant described them as being occupied as a rooming house. fee maintained his house as a rooming house and not as a one-family dwelling. This has reduced the value of other properties in the development and has impaired its reputation. The court visited the premises.
The court concluded that the use made by the defendant of his house was a violation of the covenant quoted; that the covenants in ball the deeds were substantially uniform; that the plaintiffs were entitled to enforce them, particularly the plaintiff James L. Goodwin, one of the grantors in the deed in the defendant's *436 chain of title containing the covenant sued on.
When, under a general development scheme, the owner of property divides it into building lots to be sold by deeds containing substantially uniform restrictions, any grantee may enforce the restrictions against any other grantee. Stamford v. Vuono,
The slight variations in the terms and expiration dates of the several covenants do not render them unenforceable. Hartt v. Rueter,
Finally, the defendant claims that the covenant should not be enforced because it has less than six months to run (this time was a year and a half when the suit was brought), the plaintiffs are not damaged, the restrictions have run out on two of the properties and the rights of the parties are doubtful. The question of damage is immaterial as far as the right of the plaintiffs to enforce the restrictions is concerned. Armstrong v. Leverone,
We again call attention to the fact that a memorandum of decision should not ordinarily be made a part of the finding. Practice Book, 361; Conn. App. Proc., p. 121, 90. One of the unfortunate results of doing so is well illustrated in this case. The memorandum contains statements of fact largely repeated in the finding, which the defendant sought to correct; it was necessary for him to assign error as to the statements in both, and as the paragraphs of the former were not numbered the assignments addressed to it are almost unintelligible.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.