Goodyear Heights Realty Co. v. Furry

170 N.E. 23, 33 Ohio App. 432, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 70, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 354
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 170 N.E. 23 (Goodyear Heights Realty Co. v. Furry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodyear Heights Realty Co. v. Furry, 170 N.E. 23, 33 Ohio App. 432, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 70, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 354 (Ohio Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Pardee, J.

This case is here upon appeal, and has been submitted upon the evidence offered in the trial court, as shown by a typewritten report of the same *433 and some additional evidence introduced in this court.

The plaintiff company is a subsidiary of the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, and, as shown by the evidence, has laid out, subdivided, and developed large tracts of land in Akron in close proximity to the local plants of said company for the purpose of sale to its employees for residential purposes.

One of such developments is the First Addition to Goodyear Heights allotment, with its streets, avenues, and walks, and approximately 1,500 lots, as shown by the plat filed in 1917 in the recorder’s office of Summit county, of which approximately 1,050 have been sold, one of which, to wit, lot 1231, was sold by said company to Andrew W. Wilt on December 21, 1925, and by him sold to the defendants, Irwin W. Furry et al., on February 3, 1928. Said lot is on the corner of the Brooklands and Tonawanda avenue, and is irregular in shape.

After the purchase of said lot by defendants, they erected upon the south end thereof a dwelling house, which complied as to position, design, materials, cost, location, etc., with the requirements of the restrictions contained upon said original plat, and in the deed which was used by said company when it conveyed said lot to Wilt, which deed contained the same restrictions as the others given by said company when it conveyed other lots in said addition to the purchasers thereof; and it is conceded by the defendants that all of said restrictions were part of a common scheme imposed for the benefit of said allotment, and that they apply with equal force and vigor to all of the lots in said allotment, including the one purchased by them,

*434 After the defendants bnilt said house, they sold the same by a conveyance which included only a part of said original lot, and they have started, and expect, unless restrained from so doing, to complete and sell, another residence on the part of said lot so retained by them, which part contains approximately 5,245 square feet of land.

The restrictions imposed, and, which the plaintiff claims are being violated by the defendants by the construction of said second house, are the following, to wit:

“1. The property shall be used for private residence purposes only * * *.
“2. No residence shall be built on any lot or lots costing less than the minimum amount herein specified # * *.
“3. No building shall be erected on any lot with its main front wall nearer the street than is shown by the following schedule * * *.
“4(a). No porch or other minor part of any house shall project more than eight feet nearer the street than the building line, nor shall any house be erected on any of said lots with the main side wall nearer than six feet from the side line of such lot or lots.
“(b) In the event that the contour of the land is such that the building cannot be located as specified in paragraph 4(a), the location is to be according to the ruling of the Architectural Committee of the Goodyear Heights Realty Company.
“5. A double house may be constructed on any lot; provided, however, that the building is of such design that the outside appearance is that of a single house * * *.
“7. The barn or garage, if any, shall be built of *435 the same material as the house to which it belongs, and shall be placed on the rear of the lot, and in no case nearer to the front thereof than the rear line of said house.”

Plaintiff claims that the foregoing restrictions, taken together, show that only one residence may be built upon said lot. Plaintiff also claims that defendants’ lot was sold from a recorded plat, in accordance with a general plan or scheme, with an implied condition against subdivision, and it is claimed by it and admitted by defendants that never before has a lot in said allotment been subdivided, nor more than one house built on any lot.

The defendants deny that the restrictions prevent the erection of more than one residence upon said lot, if it can be done without violating the other restrictions as to set back lines, etc., which other restrictions they say will be observed by them, and they deny that there are any covenants, express or otherwise, against their subdividing said lot.

They also allege that the plaintiff is estopped from claiming the benefit of the restrictions, if they should be found as it claims them to be, by the acts and conduct of its agents at the time the original house was planned, located, and built by the defendants.

It is quite apparent that this allotment was designed for private residence purposes only, and that only a few of its especially designated lots could be used for other purposes, and defendants’ lot is not one of those. Having this purpose in mind, the allotter used apt words to express that intention when the following language was used in said deed: “Private residence purposes only. ’’ He did not say “only one private residence” or “not more than one *436 private residence” might be erected upon one of said lots, but that said lots might be used for “private residence purposes only.” This intention is as fully carried out when more than one private residence is built as when one only is built, so long as they are used for the purposes permitted by said restrictions. From the language used, it cannot be determined how many residences may be built, as the number is not mentioned, and it may just as reasonably be said that the allotter had in mind two or more as well as one only, so long as the other restrictions were not violated.

The other parts of the common restrictions hereinbefore quoted do not help in any way in arriving at a proper decision, as the words designating the purposes for which the lots may be used are plain and unambiguous, and admit of but one conclusion, and that is that the words, “private residence purposes only,” do not either expressly or impliedly have any reference to the number, but only to the kind, of buildings to be erected upon the lots in said allotment, and the purpose for which they are to be used.

The primary restriction, as set out under No. 1, hereinbefore quoted, describes the purpose for which the lots may be used; and, keeping that purpose in mind, the allotter stated that the building commonly known as a residence erected upon any one of said lots should cost not less than a minimum amount, in accordance with the schedule set forth in said deeds, depending upon its particular location upon certain streets in said allotment.

The allotter further stated, in paragraph 4(b), supra, of said restrictions, that in particular cases, *437 where the contour of the land is such that the building (house) cannot be built in accordance with the general scheme as to the front and side lines, as specified in 4(a), supra,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 N.E. 23, 33 Ohio App. 432, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 70, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodyear-heights-realty-co-v-furry-ohioctapp-1929.