177 A. 287 | Md. | 1935
The plaintiff, Jacob R. Legum (appellant), filed a bill of complaint to enforce a restrictive covenant in a deed to him, and, from a decree denying the relief sought, this appeal is prayed.
By deed dated February 12th, 1920, the Land Loan Association of Ellicott City conveyed to the plaintiff a lot fronting 155 1/2 feet on the southwest side of the Reisterstown Road in Baltimore City, the improvement thereon being known as 3420 to 3436. The deed contained the following covenant: "And further, that for and in consideration of the premises and the sum of $1 the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, the said Land and Loan Association of Ellicott City, a body corporate, for itself, its successors and assigns, does hereby covenant with the said Jacob R. Legum, his heirs and assigns, that it will not erect or allow to be erected any building whatsoever to be used as a public garage upon the following described land adjacent to the land and premises hereinbefore described." The restricted portion of the whole lot, part of which was conveyed to Legum, extends eastward from the lot conveyed to the intersection of Park Circle and the Reisterstown Road, and the parcels of the same, the use of which is complained of, are improved by Nos. 3400, 3402, and 3414, 3416, and 3418 Reisterstown Road. The building Nos. 3400-02 is owned by John J. Carlin, one of the defendants, Nos. 3414-3418 by Circle Bowling, Inc., defendant, conveyed to it by Carlin, and both owners have leased to the Ford Motor Sales Company, the other defendant.
The lease from Circle Bowling, Inc., to the Ford Motor Sales Company for Nos. 3414-18 provides that the premises shall not be used "for purposes other than those of the service station, sales rooms and similar purposes," and that from Carlin to the same lessee, that the premises *193 Nos. 3400-02 shall not be used "for purposes other than those of the sales room and similar purposes."
The testimony is that the building Nos. 3400-02 is used only as offices and a sales room, where new Ford cars only are on display. On this building is a large display sign reading, "Ford Motor Sales Company Service Department. We service all cars, lubricating and washing," which advertises the work done and to be done at Nos. 3414-18. There is no charge for storage unless cars taken in for repair or service are left for any length of time. As the company's manager said: "We repair our own cars and customers' cars, sell parts, lubricate cars and wash cars in this particular building."
Now these are the uses of both buildings which Legum complains are a violation of the covenant of his deed which forbids the use of the property adjacent to his on the southeast "as a public garage."
Although the deed to Legum was made by the Land Loan Association of Ellicott City, he testified, and it is not denied, that he bought from Carlin. Whether he has any connection with Circle Bowling, Inc., does not clearly appear, though Legum's brother, A.M. Legum, a partner of the plaintiff in the automobile business, testified that Carlin told the plaintiff that unless he paid him more rent for the building on the restricted area, he was going to lease to the Ford Motor Company. Carlin did not testify in his own behalf, but there is enough in the record for us to say that the principals in this case are Carlin and Legum.
The rule of construction with respect to covenants restricting the use of real estate, as stated by Judge Digges in a leading case in this court, Clem v. Valentine,
When Legum bought the property, it was already under a lease from John J. Carlin and wife to Louis E. Lambert, dated December 15th, 1917, for two years, with the right of renewal for three more years. The property leased was described as "a certain garage situated on the northwest side of Reisterstown Road just north of Pimlico Circle, in the city of Baltimore." The tenant covenanted that he would "not use or permit the use of said building for purposes other than those of a garage, automobile repair shop and for a general automobile business"; the landlord, that he would "not erect or allow to be erected any automobile garage on the property now owned by the Landlord adjacent to the property hereby demised." Legum, with the purchase of the property, took an assignment of the Lambert lease and has, ever since, there conducted a general garage and automobile business. This all shows the situation with respect to which the parties dealt. Legum paid for the property $62,500, which is a lot of money, and not only got the real estate described in his deed and took over Lambert's *195 lease, the price for which does not appear, but, in addition, as part of the consideration, required a restriction on the neighboring property of his grantor, and the question here is as to the meaning of the restrictive words, "public garage," used in his deed.
All of the cases cited contain repetitions of the definitions of the lexicographers of the meaning of the word "garage," some of which are restricted to places for the storage of automobiles and others to every phase of the business, including storage, hiring, sales, servicing, and repairs, and the chancellor here had his troubles in defining a "public garage" and relied largely upon his own observation and experience.
The appellees put their reliance chiefly on the opinions of this Court in Stubbs v. Scott,
The appellant in Montgomery County Motor Co. v. State,
It must be kept in mind, however, that legislative construction and definition is confined to the statutes involved (Marbury v.Mercantile Bldg. Co.,
The net result of the decision cited was to hold, as was expressly done in Montgomery County Motor Co. v. State, supra, that an automobile sales room is not a garage, and, applying this rule to the case of the sales room of the Ford Motor Sales Company at No. 3400 and 3402 Reisterstown Road, the injunction prayed as to it was properly refused, except that it should be forbidden to display a sign advertising a service and repair shop at Nos. 3414-18, as none of the restricted property can be used to frustrate or defeat the appellant's restrictive covenant.
The defendants have the idea that the only thing connected or associated with the automobile business which they cannot do on the restricted land is to house or stable automobiles for the general public for hire or rent, and if this is all "public garage," as used in the deed to Legum, means, they are right. It is evident from the definitions *198
already given that the words may be so restricted in meaning, or may be and have been extended to include maintenance, care, washing, servicing, and repairs. There are specialists in the automobile business as there are in other lines of merchandising, and it is easy to start with a combination of all the things that may be done to or for an automobile and whittle them away until there is nothing left for the plaintiff's protection but a storage or housing business. But we are not restricted to the dictionary definitions of the words employed in the plaintiff's deed, among which there is adequate support for both contentions, for "the question is one of fact to be determined by the intention of the vendor and of the purchasers, and that it is to be determined upon the same rules of evidence as other questions of intention" (Summers v. Beeler,
When this deed was executed, there was a lease on the property, which had nearly three years to run, in which there was a covenant by which the lessee agreed only to use the building for the purposes of a "garage automobile repair shop, and for a general automobile business," and by the lessor (Carlin) that he would "not erect or allow to be erected any automobile garage on the property now owned by the Landlord adjacent to the property" leased. Reading these covenants together, they meant, if they had any significance at all, that neither would do anything on the building leased and the contiguous property of the lessor that would interfere with the business of the other. Legum took an assignment of this lease, and, while the rule that the lesser estate was merged into the greater would apply, there was outstanding Carlin's covenant not to erect or allow to be erected on his adjacent property "any automobile garage," and Legum could keep such adjacent property out of the automobile business for the unexpired portion of the lease. It must be *199 apparent that the idea that both had in mind was that Legum was not only paying for the parcel of land and the building thereon, but that he was buying protection against competition for the business then being carried on in the building, and since continued, so far as he could get it from the adjacent or neighboring property of his grantor. According to the covenant of Lambert in his lease, it was understood that the business to be there conducted was "a garage, automobile repair shop and for a general automobile business," and that this covenant is reflected in the words "public garage" as used in the deed to Legum, and that the restrictive words in the lease and the deed, together with the character of the business then and since conducted in the property conveyed to Legum, convince us that the business carried on in Nos. 3414 to 3418 should be enjoined. This case will therefore be remanded for a decree denying an injunction as to the salesroom at 3400-02 Reisterstown Road, and granting an injunction as to Nos. 3414-18 Reisterstown Road, and forbidding display advertising of service, repairs, etc., at Nos. 3400 and 3402.
Decree reversed, with costs to the appellant, and caseremanded for a decree to conform with this opinion.