163 P. 88 | Or. | 1917
Lead Opinion
Opinion by
“During the period of 25 years from and after the first day of January, 1909, no structure other than a single detached dwelling house, costing not less than $-each, and also, if desired, any outbuilding which may be necessary or usual, other than stables, shall be erected upon said premises; * * nor shall said premises or any buildings ‘ thereon be used or occupied otherwise than strictly for residence purposes, (or for church or school purposes, and then only with the prior consent of the party of the first part or its successors or assigns.”
It will be seen that the dispensing power in the grantor is reserved not only with respect to buildings which might at the date of the grant be erected upon the land, but in respect to the placing of other buildings upon the premises (land) granted. Plainly the intent was that the grantee should not use an already constructed residence for school or church purposes; neither was such purchaser to be permitted to erect a building for such purposes in the future without obtaining the consent of the grantor.
“The proof shows that the building complained of is to cost some forty thousand dollars, is to be of brick and stone and its front wall is to be set back the required distance. The controversy is whether this house is to be used -for residence purposes only within the meaning of the deed. The explanation of its character and in answer to the claim that there was to be in it a public or semi-public restaurant the originator of the scheme to erect this house testified that ‘there is to be no restaurant of a public nature; there is to be everything in this house to make housekeeping comfortable. Every apartment in the house is to have a parlor and dining room and one or more bed rooms and a kitchen. Every apartment is to have more than one bed room; there is only one four-room flat. Provision is made in the house for hot and cold water and all other conveniences. The basement, in which is to be a large dining room, to be used by the occupants of the house if desired, also contains three sets of laundry tubs, that each apartment may have one or more days to use in laundering their linen, or to be used in any way they-choose as a laundry is used in a private residence. A part of the basement is to be used for storing the trunks of the parties who may-*108 choose to put their trunks out of their apartments. There is to be nothing about it of a cheap or nasty kind. There is but one house in St. James Court constructed of as fine material and that is the Conrad residence.’ It is shown, indeed admitted, that these different apartments or flats are places for persons to reside in, but it is contended that the language of the restriction conveys the idea of a single residence for a single family or at any rate excludes the idea of a number of residences under the same roof or in the same house. We think, however, that to give the language used this meaning, would be to extend its scope beyond the express intention of the parties. The purposes for which the house is to be erected or the court was to be used were ‘residence purposes only.’ And as the house in controversy is to be constructed for such purpose only and is not to be used for any other purpose, we do not think that its construction is at all prohibited by this restriction clause.”
See also Roth v. Jung, 79 N. Y. Supp. 823 (79 App. Div. 1); Johnson v. Jones, 244 Pa. 386 (90 Atl. 649); Reformed Protestant Dutch Church v. Madison Avenue Bldg. Co., 163 App. Div. 359 (148 N. Y. Supp. 519); Bates v. Logeling, 137 N. Y. App. Div. 578 (122 N. Y. Supp. 251); Re Robertson, 25 Ontario Law Rep. 286.
“If the church requires the buildings for its Sabbath schools and for a lecture room, and such purposes are religious in their nature, as we have endeavored to show, of what possible matter can it be should the church utilize said building by applying it to other collateral objects, not in themselves technically religious, yet germane to the general purposes.”
Upon the whole we are of the opinion that the defendant is within its legal rights in erecting and maintaining the buildings described in the complaint; and the decree of the Circuit Court will, therefore, be affirmed. Astirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
delivered the following dissenting opinion:
In this case we are not embarrassed by any controverted questions of fact. The demurrer admits the allegations of the complaint to be true and challenges their sufficiency in point of law. Many of the legal questions arising on this record are determined by recent and well considered decisions of this court. The validity of the restrictions on which appellants rely is established by Seeck v. Jakel, 71 Or. 35 (141 Pac. 211, L. R. A. 1915A, 679). The right of appellants to claim equitable relief based on these restrictions is supported by Duester v. Alvin, 74 Or. 544 (145 Pac. 660). This latter case grew out of the marketing of Overlook Addition to the City of Portland under a general scheme whereby purchasers of lots were required to keep their buildings at least twenty feet from the street line. Restrictions to this effect were inserted in the deeds under penalty, as in this case, of forfeiture of the estate of the grantee to the grantor. In construing this provision in the deeds this court said through Mr. Chief Justice Moore :
“This covenant grants a conditional estate, in the nature of a negative easement, whereby each grantee who secured a title to any land in Overlook Addition with knowledge of the limitations prescribed became seised of a servient estate as to his own premises, and also the owner of a dominant estate in all other lots the deeds to which contained such conditions. * * These restrictions, in the case at bar, prohibit each owner of real property so conveyed from violating the limitations put upon his premises, because a breach*111 thereof would or might affect the dominant estate therein of some or all other owners of lots. Since his land is subjected to the burdens incident to a servient estate in the premises, he has the corresponding advantage of enforcing in equity his rights in and to the dominant estate as to all other real property the owners of which obtained their title with knowledge of the covenant, and he may prevent any infringement that would or might affect his land.”
The conclusion reached in Duester v. Alvin sustained the injunction passed by the lower court at the instance of purchasers of lots in Overlook Addition restraining other purchasers from constructing houses in closer proximity to the street line than that permitted by the restrictions contained in the deeds.
The case at bar is distinguishable from Duester v. Alvin in that while the restrictions in that case were absolute, in this case Laurelhurst Company reserved to itself a dispensing power by inserting in the deeds the following language:
“Nor shall said premises or any building thereon be used or occupied otherwise than strictly for residence purposes (or for church or school purposes, and then only with the prior consent of the party of the first part, or its successors or assigns).”
Respondent bases its contentions wholly on the reservation above quoted and admits in effect that in the absence of this reservation and appropriate action by Laurelhurst Company pursuant thereto, appellants would be entitled to the relief prayed for. Respondent contends that this dispensing power extends to the modification of the restrictions in so far as they control the erection of buildings on the property in question. Appellants controvert this construction of the language and contend that Laurelhurst Company has reserved to itself only the power to permit build
The restrictions first forbid the erection on the premises, for a period of twenty-five years, of any building other than a detached dwelling-house to each lot, and forbid the erection of such dwelling-house within twenty feet of the street line on which the house fronts. These restrictions have to do with the construction of buildings on the property. The next two provisions have to do with the use and occupation of the property. They are as follows:
“Nor shall said premises or any building thereon be used or occupied otherwise than strictly for residence purposes (or for church or school purposes, and then only with the prior consent of the party of the first part, or its successors or assigns); nor shall the same or any part thereof be in any manner used or occupied by Chinese, Japanese or negroes, except that persons of said races may be employed as servants by residents.”
The next provision forbids the placing of any old buildings on the premises. Then follows a prohibition against the erection, maintenance or use of any building on the premises “for flats, apartments, stables, stores or business or manufacturing purposes.” The final restriction forbids the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors. The restrictions close with penal and- explanatory clauses not necessary to be noticed in this connection.
It will be remembered that these restrictions are found in the deeds by which respondent acquired title to all its property except Lot 5 in Block 1, and that title to this lot was taken with full knowledge of the
“Said premises or any building thereon may be used or occupied for church or school purposes, but only with the prior consent of the party of the first part, or its successors or assigns.”
We cannot apply the language used as a modification of the restriction on the erection of buildings without taking the words out of the connection in which the parties have placed them and putting a forced construction on the language used. As it seems to me, the parties have provided that the premises and buildings situate thereon are to be used for strictly residence purposes and then have qualified this restriction by permitting them to be used for church or school purposes, provided the prior consent of the Laurelhurst Company is secured, and this is the extent to which the restrictions have been modified.
None of the cases cited by the Chief Justice on the subject of construction involved the interpretation of a clause in a deed reserving to the grantor a dispensing power. The sole question involved in this case is the interpretation of such a clause. The restrictions themselves are clear and the parties are in substantial accord as to their meaning.
If it had been the intention of Laurelhurst Company to reserve to itself the power to dispense with all restrictions, it would have been easy to insert in the deeds a proviso to that effect. I apprehend that such
“The equity would seem to spring from the presumption that each purchaser has paid an enhanced price for his property, relying on the general plan, by which all the property is to be subjected to the restricted use, being carried out, and that while he is bound by and observes the covenant, it would be inequitable to allow any other owner of lands subject to the same restrictions to violate it.
“Lord Macnaghton, in Spicer v. Martin, 14 App. Cas. 12 (at p. 25), says: ‘It seems to me that when Mr. Spicer put his houses in Cromwell G-ardens on the market, he invited the public to come in and take a portion of an estate which was bound by one general law, a law perfectly well understood, and one calculated and intended to add to the security of the lessees, and consequently to increase the price of the houses. The benefit of that increase, whatever it was, Mr. Spicer got. Can he or his representative be permitted to destroy the value of the thing he sold, by authorizing the use of part of the estate, for a purpose inconsistent with the law by which he professed to bind the whole.’ ”
It is true that the construction adopted by me restricts within narrow limits the dispensing power reserved to itself by Laurelhurst Company; but I am led to this construction both by the import of the language used in the connection in which it is placed and also by the intention of the parties, to be gathered from the surrounding circumstances. The clause inserted in deeds executed by Laurelhurst Company was framed in 1909, when the tract was first put on the market. Its manifest purpose was to promote the
“When the terms of an agreement have been intended in a different sense by the different parties to it, that sense is to prevail, against either party, in which he supposed the other understood it ’ ’
The material question is, therefore, what Laurelhurst Company intended its purchasers to understand by the language used: Barr v. American Copying Co., 142 Ill. App. 92, 101, 102; Maney Co. v. Baker Co., 186 Ill. App. 390, 394; Stevens v. Amsinck, 133 N. Y. Supp. 815, 821 (149 App. Div. 220); People’s Building Assn. v. Klauber, 1 Neb. (Unof.) 676, 678, 679 (95 N. W. 1072); Campbell v. Hobbs, 97 Neb. 833, 836 (151 N. W. 929). I cannot think that it was intended by Laurelhurst Company that each purchaser was to
In the event of the reversal of the decree, issue might be joined on these allegations and the proofs might not sustain them, but in the present condition of the record we are bound to accept these allegations as true. Where these results would follow we should be the more careful not to enlarge by construction the rights reserved by Laurelhurst Company to waive the restrictions under which its property has been marketed.
On the facts alleged in the complaint, in my opinion, appellants are entitled to an injunction restraining respondent from erecting on the property described in the complaint any building which does not conform to the restrictions above quoted. Respondent should be free to use the premises for church and' school purposes in so far as such use is consistent with the building restrictions. A dwelling-house erected on the property could be used as a convent within the dispensing power reserved and exercised.
I think that the decree should be reversed.