Gage v. Schavoir

124 A. 535, 100 Conn. 652, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 8, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 124 A. 535 (Gage v. Schavoir) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gage v. Schavoir, 124 A. 535, 100 Conn. 652, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 64 (Colo. 1924).

Opinion

Keeler, J.

On June 11th, 1912, the executor of the will of Isaac Wardwell, deceased, conveyed to Frank B. Gurley, a tract of land of considerable size theretofore divided and mapped out into lots for purposes of sale and development, named Bradford Park. It is intersected by a number of then existing public highways, and in addition to these highways a number of new streets were cut through various parts of the property, among them Frederick Street, hereafter mentioned. This deed from the executor to Gurley contained a restrictive covenant as printed in the footnote.

*655 Fifty of the lots contained in the development tract lie north of Elm Street of which thirteen were permitted to be used for business purposes, and the remainder were restricted as to erections thereon to single front dwelling-houses exclusively residential, without outside stairways to a second or higher story, the same to be set not nearer than twenty feet from the street line. Upon the rest of the whole tract the lots are not restricted to residential use.

In June, 1912, defendant purchased lots numbered from one to six inclusive upon the part of the tract lying north of Elm Street. His purchase deed expressly referred to the restrictions above named without giving them in full. He never saw the deed and had only a general knowledge of the purport of the restrictions. At about the time of his purchase he spoke to his grantor, Gurley, regarding the restrictions, whom he told of his intention to construct a garage and automobile repair shop, and was told he would not be bothered about them. This was the only assurance that he received regarding the enforcement of restrictions. He has never received any release or waiver of the same from any of the plaintiffs or from the estate of Isaac Wardwell. Defendant was without experience of the nature and obligation of such restrictions and attached no particular significance to them as contained in his deeds. He relied upon Gurley’s assurance, and had no conscious intention to violate the rights of anyone. The plaintiffs who at the trial were still prosecuting this action took title to their several lots in 1912, 1913, 1915, 1919 and 1920. Each of their purchase deeds contained the restrictions above referred to.

In October, 1912, the defendant erected on one of *656 the lots bought from Gurley, a one-story brick garage and auto shop, measuring twenty-eight by forty-six feet. This building was used as a garage, repair shop and service station till July, 1914. In March, 1914, he added a second story to this garage. From 1914 to 1916 defendant used the ground floor of this building as a private galrage, and for a few months used the second story in attempting the manufacture of valves. In connection with other machinery he installed certain machines including a ten horse power upright boiler, with a smokestack twenty-five feet high. During that time he employed four workmen and two draughtsmen. This work continued during 1915, and was then abandoned, and some j prior to 1918 the machinery and equipment was sold. In the latter part of 1916 and early in 1917 the defendant began making rubber toys in the building, and from that time until 1922, defendant at brief intervals added buildings and machinery, and during the letter part of this period much light equipment was substituted for some of the heavier type; from twenty to twenty-five per cent of defendant’s investment was made since the institution of the action against him. The present value of his total machinery and Equipment is about $57,000. The present value of the lots owned by the defendant is about $6,000, and of the buildings about $17,500.

The volume of work done on the premises has steadily increased; in the years 1912 to 1916 inclusive, before the defendant began tie manufacture of toys, and including in the first year some automobile sales, its value was estimated by the defendant to be about $20,000 to $29,000 each year. In 1917 the volume of business transacted amounted to $19,000; in 1918 it amounted to $27,000; in 1919 it amounted to $33,000; in 1920 the amount of business done on the premises in the manufacture of toys and also including a government *657 contract in connection with gas masks, amounted to $74,726; in 1921, including the same manufactures, it amounted to $138,066.37; in 1922 the business done was in the manufacture of toys alone, and it amounted to $91,457.97. At the time of the trial the defendant had on hand orders for deliveries up to November, 1923, in the amount of $125,000. Prior to 1919 the defendant employed in his business between three and five hands as an average. In 1919 he employed thirteen; in 1920, twenty-seven; in 1921, twenty-two; in 1922, thirty-four, and at the time of the trial in 1923, forty-three men were employed.

From the time when the defendant erected the brick garage in 1912 until the time when the action was started, he has almost continuously used his property for business purposes in violation of the restrictions upon it, and from 1917 he has, except for two months when he closed the factory to take his men elsewhere to do war work, continuously used it for manufacturing purposes; and since that year he has been engaged in manufacturing rubber toys. The property became, obviously permanently dedicated to manufacturing purposes in 1914 and 1915. The use by the defendant of the lots in question for business purposes contrary to the restrictions of the deed has been open, notorious and obvious ever since the latter part of 1912, and its use by the defendant for factory purposes, namely, the manufacture of rubber toys and other articles, has been open, notorious and obvious since 1917. During the time that the defendant was engaged in making the additions to the buildings and the additions and improvements to the property, and during the time that he was using the property for business purposes, no protests or objections were ever made by anyone to the defendant concerning the use of the premises by him in the manner in which he was using them, and it was *658 not until two weeks before the action was started, which was July 8th, 1921, and about two months after all the buildings had been completed, that the defendant first learned there was any objection by anyone to his use j of the property in the manner in which it was then and formerly used. No secrecy was used by the defendant in this use of his property, and a casual obseirvation of the premises or of the work which was being done there would have disclosed the nature of the business which was being transacted.

The conduct of the plaintiffs and the other owners of lots on this tract was such as would naturally lull the defendant into a belief that they did not intend to enforce the restrictions against him and to encourage the defendant to build up his plant and business in that location. The greater portion of the machinery and equipment in the defendant’s factory could be transported to another! location without great trouble or expense; it would njot be impossible to move the heavier machinery, the mixing mills and calendar, to another location, but it would be expensive and difficult.

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Bluebook (online)
124 A. 535, 100 Conn. 652, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gage-v-schavoir-conn-1924.