The purpose of the bill in this cause was, by injunction, to prevent the breach of a covenant by which appellant’s predecessor in title, upon taking a conveyance of a certain lot in the town of Enterprise, agreed with his vendors, the ancestor of appellees among them, as follows:
“It is understood and agreed that no frame building be placed on this lot. It is understood and agreed that this lot shall be used for church purposes only.”
The prayer of the bill was:
“That a temporary injunction be issued * * * restraining or enjoining the respondent * * * from doing anything whatsoever *624 in future carrying out his plans for the erection of a frame building or other building upon said triangular shaped lot for hospital or sanitarium purposes.”
The proof was that defendant had entered upon the execution of a plan to erect a building to be used as a hospital or sanitarium, which was to be constructed with a wooden frame and an exterior of stucco and pebble-dash and covered with asbestos roofing. It may be conceded that the dominant idea in the mind of the pleader, as gathered from the bill, was to insist upon the covenant against a frame building. We are inclined to hold that defendant’s building was to be a frame building within the purview of the covenant; but defendant has quoted an authority (2 Words and Phrases, Second Series, 626), where we read:
“Frame, as applied to a building, means wooden. A ‘frame building’ is one constructed with a timber frame covered with boards or shingles, and does not include a wooden building covered with corrugated iron. Olmstead v. People, for Use of Town of Littleton,91 Pac. 1113 ,41 Colo. 32 ”
—and the decree in this cause enjoins the use of the lot for any “other purposes than church purposes only.” Assuming for the moment that the decree was proper in other respects, we -are not of the opinion that it should be condemned as having afforded relief on a ground other than that upon which it was sought by the pleader.
“Restrictive covenants in deeds, leases, and agreements, limiting the use of land in a specified manner, or prescribing a particular use, which create. equitable servitudes on the land, will be specifically enforced in equity by means of an injunction, not only between the immediate parties, but also against subsequent purchasers with notice, even when the covenants are not of the kind which technically run with the land.” Morris v. Tuskaloosa Mfg. Co., supra.
The decree must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
