The plaintiffs seek by injunction to enforce as against the defendant the provisions of a restrictive covenant imposed by deeds from a common grantor. The Justice below denied relief and the plaintiffs have appealed.
The restrictive clause in pertinent part provides:
“The above described lot is conveyed subject to the following restrictions for the benefit of all lots in Cobbosseecontee Shores and binding on the Grantor and Grantee until July 1, 1977, each and all of which restrictions may be enforced or enjoined by the Grantee, but said Grantor shall be under no obligation to enforce any of such restrictions or to restrain or enjoin any violation thereof.
“(1) The premises shall be used for residential purposes only and no building or any part of a building shall be erected thereon unless the plans of the main camp, cottage or other dwelling have been approved in writing by the grantors, unless the cottage has a minimum of 700 square feet of first floor space, asphalt roof and clapboard siding or better. No out building shall be erected until after the completion of the main building or cottage.” (Emphasis ours.)
*759 The defendant proposes to place upon his lot a so-called “mobile home”, 46 feet by 10 feet, with a permanently attached addition of 300 square feet of living space plus a porch, all on a cement slab with a concrete block foundation. The proposed structure will be used for residential purposes, will contain more than 700 square feet of first floor space and will have aluminum roof and siding. In short, the proposed structure will meet all the specific requirements and the only issue is whether or not the covenant should be interpreted as excluding “mobile homes” entirely.
We turn first to the law governing the interpretation of covenants restricting the use of land. In Leavitt et al. v. Davis et al. (1957),
The Massachusetts court in St. Botolph Club v. Brookline Trust Co. (1935),
The restrictions before us are ineptly drawn and are most ambiguous. It is clear that the premises must be used for residential purposes only and that the structure must in one alternative conform to certain minimum requirements as to square feet of “first floor space” and quality of roof and siding. There is no express restriction against trailers or “mobile homes”. The use of the term “or other dwelling” suggests broad latitude as to the type of structure which is contemplated as being permissible. Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1961 Ed.) defines “dwelling” as “a building or construction used for residence: abode, habitation.” We are satisfied that upon application of the rules of construction above enunciated, the type of “dwelling” here proposed is not proscribed by the language of this restriction.
The Justice below accurately summarized the situation here presented in these terms: “While it may well be that the developer and other interested parties, in retrospect, wish that the restrictive covenant in the deed were more specific in its exclusion, and propose to read into such covenant a prohibition against house trailers or mobile homes, the single Justice does not find that such exclusion is established. To do so would require reading into the restriction an implication which is not found. Had the creation of the restriction in 1957 intended to *760 exclude house trailers, a simple declaration would have accomplished it.”
Plaintiffs call our particular attention to Pagel v. Gisi (1955),
Plaintiffs also rely in part on Wright v. Michaud (1964),
We conclude as did the justice below that the language of this covenant does not with sufficient clarity express any intention to prohibit the proposed use of defendant’s land and we will not “extend the construction beyond the fair meaning of the words.”
Appeal denied.
