Alliegro v. Home Owners of Edgewood Hills

122 A.2d 910
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 23, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 122 A.2d 910 (Alliegro v. Home Owners of Edgewood Hills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alliegro v. Home Owners of Edgewood Hills, 122 A.2d 910 (Del. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

122 A.2d 910 (1956)

Joseph ALLIEGRO and Esa Alliegro, his wife, Plaintiffs,
v.
HOME OWNERS OF EDGEWOOD HILLS, Incorporated, a corporation of the State of Delaware, Defendant.

Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.

May 23, 1956.

H. Albert Young, Wilmington, for plaintiffs.

Bayard W. Allmond and Thomas W. Knowles, Wilmington, for defendant.

MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.

Plaintiffs are the owners of lots 13 through 19 on White Oak Road in Block J of Edgewood Hills, a residential development in Brandywine Hundred. The section of this development in which plaintiffs' lots are located was conveyed in 1937 to one Samuel Thomison and wife by Brandywine Realty Company subject to certain restrictive covenants governing the use of the land conveyed. Although these restrictions were not set forth in the deed through which plaintiffs took title to their lots in June 1954, plaintiffs' deed states that the conveyance *911 to them was subject to recorded restrictions, and plaintiffs' subsequent actions preparatory to building as well as their complaint leave no doubt but that they were aware of these restrictions at the time they became landowners in Edgewood Hills.

Starting in 1937, Mr. Thomison proceeded to sell lots in the restricted area which he had purchased and under the ninth paragraph of the restrictions (the interpretation of which is the crux of this litigation) the grantor proceeded to exercise its reserved right to pass upon the plans and specifications of the houses proposed to be built by lot purchasers. Some time later the remaining undeveloped lots in the restricted area were sold by Mr. Thomison to Wilmington Construction Company and in 1942 the right of the original grantor to pass on building plans was assigned[1] to the present defendant. Defendant is a nonprofit corporation organized by landowners living in Edgewood Hills, the corporate purpose of which is to protect property rights and values in that community. Through a board of managers of twelve members and a restrictions committee defendant continues to exercise the original grantor's right to pass on the building plans of those purchasing lots in the area restricted in the 1937 grant.

Paragraph nine of the restrictive covenants reads as follows:

"No building, fence, wall or other structure shall be commenced, erected or maintained, nor shall any addition to or change or alteration therein be made, until the plans and specifications, showing the nature, kind, shape, height, materials, floor plans, color scheme, location and approximate cost of such structure and the grading plan of the lot to be built upon shall have been submitted to and approved in writing by the party of the first part and a copy thereof, as finally approved, lodged permanently with the party of the first part. The party of the first part shall have the right to refuse to approve any such plans or specifications or grading plan, which are not suitable or desirable, in its opinion, for aesthetic or other reasons; and in so passing upon such plans, specifications and grading plan, it shall have the right to take into consideration the suitability of the proposed building or other structure and of the materials of which it is to be built, to the site upon which it is proposed to erect the same, the harmony thereof with the surroundings and the effect of the building or other structure, as planned, on the outlook from the adjacent or neighboring property."

Plaintiffs upon becoming landowners arranged for the drafting of plans for a proposed home which in their opinion satisfied existing restrictions and submitted them to defendant for approval. There is no doubt but that these plans and specifications fully met specific covenants pertaining to minimum frontage, side spaces, minimum cost, distance from the street of the proposed dwelling and other specific restrictions governing the use of the purchased land. Defendant, however, in a letter of June 24, 1955, declined to approve plaintiffs' plans and specifications stating that they did not "* * * meet the standard required for a house in the location proposed." This letter was sent after an informal poll of board members had upheld the action of the restrictions committee in disapproving the Alliegro plans. On July 27, 1955, after this suit was instituted, at a meeting of the board at which nine members were present, these plans, which had been slightly modified in the meantime, were unanimously rejected after being characterized by C. E. Daniels, vice president of the defendant, as being "* * * marginal in every respect, below standards of other recently rejected houses."

*912 Plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment as to their rights as landowners in Edgewood Hills and specifically pray for an order enjoining defendant from interfering with the construction of their proposed home, the plans and specification for which, plaintiffs contend, more than meet applicable specific restrictions. Plaintiffs argue that they have complied with all specific requirements laid down in the restrictions and that accordingly defendant has no choice but to approve the submitted building plans inasmuch as authority to disapprove is meaningless if it is unbridled and not made to depend on findings of failure to meet precise restrictive covenants. Plaintiffs contend that were this not so paragraph 9 could be exercised in a purely arbitrary and capricious manner and would be invalid. Defendant's motion for summary judgment treated as a motion to dismiss was denied on the ground that plaintiffs were entitled to a hearing on the issue as to whether or not defendant had acted fairly and reasonably and this is the opinion of the Court after final hearing.

It is well established that restrictions in deeds will be construed strictly against a person who seeks to place such impediments in the way of the normal purchase and sale of land, Gibson v. Main, 14 Del.Ch. 449, 129 A. 259, Daniels Gardens, Inc., v. Hilyard, 29 Del.Ch. 336, 49 A.2d 721. Because it is commercially desirable that land users be able to deal freely with what they own, restrictions are also not indefinitely enforceable and lose their force when they fail to serve any useful purpose. The evidence in the case at bar discloses that starting in 1937, comfortable and attractive homes of varying costs and sizes were put up in Edgewood Hills, and while there is no indication that any particular type of architecture was adopted as a standard there does seem to have been a reasonable and proper purpose on the part of the original grantor and its successor, the present defendant, to control and nurture the growth of a pleasant residential community. Buyers with knowledge or the means of gaining knowledge of covenants restricting use of the land they propose to purchase cannot effectively object to the enforcement of such covenants when they are reasonable, realistic and are fairly administered. Not only are specific restrictions as to minimum cost, setback, side spaces and the like normally enforceable, but a provision empowering a committee to pass on plans and specifications for the purpose of determining whether or not a proposed building conforms with a general plan of development and with applicable restrictive covenants, when clear and reasonable and for the general benefit of the entire development will be upheld, Hollingsworth v. Szczesiak, 32 Del.Ch. 274, 84 A.2d 816.

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Bluebook (online)
122 A.2d 910, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alliegro-v-home-owners-of-edgewood-hills-delch-1956.