Benham v. Rude, No. 28 08 46 (Jul. 19, 1990)

1990 Conn. Super. Ct. 207
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1990
DocketNo. 28 08 46
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1990 Conn. Super. Ct. 207 (Benham v. Rude, No. 28 08 46 (Jul. 19, 1990)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benham v. Rude, No. 28 08 46 (Jul. 19, 1990), 1990 Conn. Super. Ct. 207 (Colo. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The plaintiffs, Henry Benham and Mary Ann Benham, bring this action seeking a declaratory judgment as to the meaning of a restrictive covenant in certain deeds to property conveyed by Roy Rude. They also seek a reformation of the deeds to reflect what they claim to have been the intent of the parties at the time the deeds were prepared. The second count of the complaint was withdrawn in open court during the trial. In their third count, CT Page 208 the plaintiffs allege fraud and misrepresentation.

The defendant filed eight special defenses to the plaintiffs' claims. Of these, the first, third, fifth, sixth and seventh special defenses were stricken by the court (Schimelman, J.). In the remaining special defenses the defendant claims the plaintiffs are barred from recovery by laches, estoppel, waiver, and their own negligence.

The defendant has filed a counterclaim seeking rescission of the conveyances memorialized in the deeds put in issue by the plaintiffs and a refund of the purchase price on the ground that the plaintiffs induced the conveyances by a misrepresentation of fact.

The court finds the facts to be as follows. In the early 1960's Roy Rude, who was employed as Technical Director at Armstrong Rubber Corporation, was the owner of approximately eleven parcels of undeveloped land in Hamden. In the multi-acre tract that he owned in the area of his present home on Tom Swamp Road, he built some houses, and in 1962 he sold a lot and house to John and Beverly Davie. He then created a subdivision of the portion of the rest of his holdings in the area that fronted on Tom Swamp Road, creating four lots to the east of the Davies' lot, each with 150 feet of frontage on Tom Swamp Road, the same frontage as the Davies' lot. To the north (rear) of the lots included in the subdivision was other land owned by Rude. In 1964, Rude sold a house and lot to the plaintiffs. This lot was two lots to the east of the Davies' property, and the vacant lot between the Davie property and the Benham property continued to be owned by Rude.

On a Sunday morning in April 1965, John Davie and Henry Benham heard chain saws on the lot between their properties and went out to investigate. They found Rude and two of his sons clearing the lot in preparation to build a house on it. Benham and Davie told Rude that they did not want a house to be built on the lot, which their children used for play, and they offered to buy the lot from him. He set a purchase price of $5,000 and they agreed to buy it at that price, with each of them paying $2,500 for half of the lot. Rude, Davie and Benham all testified about their recollection of the brief negotiations which preceded the oral agreement to buy and sell the lot. All agree that Benham and Davie mentioned their desire that the lot not be built upon. Though the witnesses' recollections differed as to the exact content of further remarks by Rude, the court finds that he expressed that if he divided and sold the halves of the middle lot, he wanted each of the purchasers to combine his half with his existing lot, not re-combine the halves for sale. CT Page 209

The parties did not reduce their agreement to a written contract but proceeded directly to an exchange of payment and deeds. The court finds that the buyers each gave Rude a check in the amount of $2,500 within a day or two of the Sunday morning discussion and that on April 20, 1965, Rude signed deeds granting half of the middle lot to the Benhams and half to the Davies, such that each half added seventy-five feet of frontage on Tom Swamp Road to the purchasers' existing lot. The deeds were prepared by an Attorney DeMatteis (who is now deceased), and the text of the deeds was based on Rude's statement of what his understanding was with Benham and Davie concerning the terms of the transfer. Rude had received payment before he caused the deeds to be prepared, and he did not consult further with the Davies or the Benhams but caused the deeds to be recorded in the land records of the Town of Hamden at approximately 9:30 a.m. on June 25, 1965 and mailed the deeds to the purchasers. The purchasers recall receiving the deeds by mail but do not recall the date they received them.

The quitclaim deeds by which Rude conveyed the half lots each contain the following statement after the description of the property conveyed:

Said premises are subject to the following covenants and restrictions, to wit, viz: That neither the Releases, their heirs, administrators, or assigns, will from this day forward sub-divide the parcel created by the joining of the premises herein conveyed and the adjoining premises presently owned by the Releases herein; any matter of record.

Upon receiving the deeds, the plaintiffs made no objection to Rude concerning the restriction set forth above. At present, Rude lives next door to the property he conveyed to the Davies, that is, two lots to the west of the lot which he divided and sold to the Davies and the Benhams in 1965.

Sometime after 1965, Rude sold the land that abutted the middle lot to the rear.

In 1982 or 1983, wanting to sell or develop the middle lot, Messrs. Benham and Davie approached Rude and proposed the removal of the restriction from the deeds. Rude refused even after Benham offered to pay for the release of the restriction. At no time from his receipt of the deed for the half-lot until he filed this action did Benham tell Rude that the restrictive language in the deed was an error, or that it was invalid, or that it was not in accordance with the terms of the oral agreement they had reached in 1965. The first notice Rude received concerning such claims was his receipt of the complaint in this action sometime before CT Page 210 the return date of February 28, 1989, approximately six years after Benham had first indicated any desire that the deed restriction be removed.

In 1988, Benham purchased the Davies' property, consisting of their house lot and their half of what had been the middle lot. The Benhams seek to subdivide their property to recreate its original configuration, that is, three lots with 150 feet of frontage each, so that the middle lot can be sold as a house lot. They claim, inter alia, that the deed restriction set forth above prohibits only a subdivision of the parcel consisting of their original lot and the half lot, and that it has no application to a subdivision of the now existing larger parcel consisting of their original lot, the Davies' original lot, and the two halves of the middle lot.

The plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment as to the following:

"1. Whether or not the restrictions and covenants in the quitclaim deeds executed by the defendant purporting to prevent the `rejoining' of the In Between Piece [what the court has called the `middle lot'] into its original size and shape are valid and legal and whether or not the same precludes the use, utilization and engagement of the In Between Piece as a building lot.

2. Whether or not the attempted `joining' of the First Piece with the Easterly half of the In Between Piece (as contemplated by the quitclaim deed [transferring the Davies' half lot] and/or the attempted joining of the Second Piece [the Benham's original lot] with the other portion of the Restricted Piece. . . .constitutes an illegal resubdivision of an existing subdivision."

The plaintiffs further seek reformation of the deeds for the two half-lots to reflect what the plaintiffs claim is the true intent of the parties.

Discussion

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1990 Conn. Super. Ct. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benham-v-rude-no-28-08-46-jul-19-1990-connsuperct-1990.