Frederick v. Rutherford

7 Pa. D. & C. 78, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 62
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lehigh County
DecidedMarch 9, 1925
DocketNo. 3
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Pa. D. & C. 78 (Frederick v. Rutherford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lehigh County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frederick v. Rutherford, 7 Pa. D. & C. 78, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 62 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Reno, P. J.,

While defendants were engaged in the construction of an automobile garage upon the premises hereinafter described, complainants applied for and secured a temporary injunction restraining further proceeding. The complainants’ evidence was heard within the period of five days, when the temporary injunction was continued until final hearing. At the final hearing it was agreed that the testimony theretofore taken should be regarded as though adduced at the final hearing, and the defendants produced considerable additional testimony. From the testimony so taken the following findings of fact have been compiled.

I.Findings of fact.

1. The complainants and defendants are residents of the City of Allentown, County of Lehigh and State of Pennsylvania.

2. The complainants are the owners and occupiers of premises Nos. 102 to 110 North Thirteenth Street, Allentown, Pennsylvania.

3. The defendants are the owners and occupiers of premises No. 112 North Thirteenth Street, Allentown, Pennsylvania.

4. All the properties above referred to were originally the property of Daniel Z. Walker, Richard Walker and Anna E. Marden, and when they conveyed the premises now owned by complainants and defendants, each deed contained the following covenant and restriction, to wit: “Subject, however, to the condition and restriction that no building or buildings other than a dwelling-house or dwelling-houses shall ever be erected on the hereinbefore described premises by the grantee, his heirs and assigns; provided, further, that the same, with the exception of the porches and bay-windows thereof, shall not be erected nearer than fifteen feet to the building-line on Thirteenth Street, as at present established by city ordinance.”

5. The defendants had notice of the condition and restriction above recited, the same being fully set forth in the deed of conveyance from Daniel Z. Walker et al. to Tilghman A. Yeager, dated May 11, 1906, and recorded in the Recorder’s Office, in Deed Book volume 205, page 166, which deed conveys the same property now owned by the defendants, and is in the direct line of title under and through which the defendants now hold title.

6. The defendants are engaged in the erection of a one-story brick automobile garage, eighteen feet wide by twenty-three feet seven inches in depth, and ranging in height from nine to eleven feet, upon the rear of their premises, known as No. 112 North Thirteenth Street, Allentown, Pennsylvania, upon the front portion of which a dwelling-house has already been built, which garage, if completed, will cover the entire width of the rear area of said [79]*79premises with the exception of a passageway about seven feet wide between the dwelling-house and the proposed garage.

7. At the time the condition and restriction hereinbefore recited was placed upon the land, the surrounding neighborhood was strictly residential in character, and conditions in the vicinity of these properties have not materially changed since that time, which neighborhood is urban, being situate one and one-half city blocks from the main street of the City of Allentown and five or six city blocks from the business district of said city, and the locality is residential in character, except as hereinafter stated.

8. None of the owners of the properties covered by the condition and restriction have at any time violated the provisions of the said condition and restriction, and no garage or outbuilding of any kind has been built upon the tract of ground, although some of complainants are themselves owners of automobiles.

9. The erection of the garage by defendants as proposed will obstruct the view of the complainants over and across the rear of defendants’ property, but will not interfere with their enjoyment of light or air and will not depreciate the value of their properties.

10. The six houses belonging to the complainants and the defendants, except that owned by Granville H. Rabenold, occupy a quarter of a city block and are located on the west side of North Thirteenth Street, in the City, of Allentown, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, between Linden and Webster Streets, which is the first quarter-block street north of Linden Street; the said houses are from eighteen to twenty feet in width, and though they were built separately, they now constitute two solid blocks of three houses each with a narrow passageway between the two rows or blocks of three each; the length or depth of these lots is one hundred and ten feet; the houses are all built fifteen feet back of the building-line on Thirteenth Street, or about sixty feet in depth, with a ten feet wide private alley in the rear, leaving a clear or free space between the rear of the houses and the private alley of approximately thirty-five feet; the house of the defendants is the northernmost house in the block, with a side entrance on Webster Street; and the garage now being erected extends westwardly to the ten feet wide private alley, with the entrance on Webster Street.

11. The dwelling-house of Granville H. Rabenold, who lives at No. 106 North Thirteenth Street, and who is one of the complainants, extends five feet farther to the rear than do the dwellings of the other complainants, and the distance from the rear of complainants’ houses to the private alley is thirty-five feet, with the exception of Granville H. Rabenold’s dwelling, which is but thirty feet.

12. Dr. Joseph D. Rutherford, one of defendants, is a practicing physician, practicing his profession in the City of Allentown, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, with professional offices at his residence, No. 112 North Thirteenth Street, the same being the property in question, and he has need for the use of an automobile in the practice of his profession.

13. The garage in the course of erection is a private garage, intended for the sole use, enjoyment and convenience of defendants.

14. The defendants find it necessary to erect a private garage upon the rear of their property, at No. 112 North Thirteenth Street, Allentown, Pennsylvania, for the purpose of housing their automobile, and regard the erection of the proposed private garage as a necessary and essential appurtenance to the full enjoyment of their dwelling.

[80]*8015. A ten-foot two-inch private alley runs from Linden to Webster Streets, extending- parallel along the entire rear of complainants’ and defendants’ lots, and a two-story public garage extends from Linden to Webster Streets, along the entire length of the west side of the ten-foot two-inch private alley, which garage completely obstructs the view of the complainants and defendants to the west.

16. Another public garage is located at the corner of Thirteenth and Turner Streets, within one half-block of the defendants’ and complainants’ properties.

17. Approximately one-half of the residences within the immediate neighborhood of the complainants’ and defendants’ properties have private garages erected upon the rear of their properties, and practically every residence facing Thirteenth Street, between Linden and Hamilton Streets, which are located to the east of the complainants’ and defendants’ properties, in the same vicinity, have private garages erected upon the rear of their properties.

18. Three private garages are erected adjoining one another on the rear of properties located at Nos.

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124 A. 420 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1924)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Pa. D. & C. 78, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frederick-v-rutherford-pactcompllehigh-1925.