Hamilton v. McKinley Fire Co. No. 1

54 Pa. D. & C. 184, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 120
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County
DecidedJanuary 15, 1945
Docketno. 7
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Pa. D. & C. 184 (Hamilton v. McKinley Fire Co. No. 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamilton v. McKinley Fire Co. No. 1, 54 Pa. D. & C. 184, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 120 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1945).

Opinion

Dannehower, J.,

Plaintiffs, property owners, by this bill in equity, seek to enjoin defendants from completing the erection of a war memorial on the premises of the McKinley Fire Company No. 1, Cadwalader Avenue, McKinley, Abington Township, Montgomery County, Pa., and to compel the removal of that portion of the memorial already erected, for the reasons that it constitutes a violation of restrictive covenants contained in their deed, a violation of the Abington Township zoning ordinance, and also constitutes a nuisance. A final hearing was held on bill and answer and testimony was heard.

The bill and answer raise the following issues: (1) Is said war memorial as partially erected and planned a building within the meaning of the restrictive covenant and a violation thereof ? (2) Does said war memorial violate the township zoning ordinance, and does equity have jurisdiction to restrain its erection if it does? (3) Are plaintiffs guilty of laches or subject to equitable estoppel? (4) Are plaintiffs entitled to equitable relief?

[186]*186From the pleadings, testimony, and exhibits there are made the following

Findings of fact

1. Plaintiffs, Howard B. Hamilton and Anna G. Hamilton, his wife, are the owners of a lot of land improved by a single detached residence located at and designated as 8525 Cadwalader Avenue (formerly Ogontz Avenue) in Abington Township, Montgomery County, Pa. The land of plaintiffs is bounded by the southerly side of Cadwalader Avenue, contains in front or breadth thereon 60 feet and extends of that width 150 feet.

2. Defendant, McKinley Fire Company No. 1, is a corporation of the first class, a volunteer fire company, and owns a lot of land consisting of 60 feet in frontage, bounded on the north by the southerly side of Cadwalader Avenue (formerly Ogontz Avenue) and on the east by the property hereinbefore mentioned owned.by plaintiffs. The property of defendant is improved by the erection thereon of a building for the housing of its fire apparatus and the holding of meetings of its members and such other activities as are engaged in by defendants.

3. Both of said adjoining properties, the property ‘owned by plaintiffs and the property owned by defendant, McKinley Fire Company No. 1, are subject to building restrictions and conditions which read as follows :

“Under and subject to the restriction that all buildings upon the said lots shall be erected not less than fifteen feet back from the fence line and that the said grantee his heirs or assigns shall not at any time hereafter erect or cause to be erected or built upon the premises above described or any part thereof any building or buildings to be used as a hotel, tavern, drinking saloon, tannery, slaughterhouse, skin dressing or bone boiling establishment, glue, soap, candle, [187]*187starch, varnish or lampblack manufactory or building for other offensive use or occupation, and that if at any time hereafter any building shall be put, placed, erected, built, used or occupied upon the premises above described or any part thereof contrary to the true intent and meaning of these presents and if the said grantee his heirs or assigns shall fail to remove the same on receiving thirty days’ notice in writing so to do from the said The Ogontz Land and Improvement Company or its successors or from any other owner of any other lot upon said plan then and in such case it shall and may be lawful for the said The Ogontz Land and Improvement Company or its successors or for any of the said owners of any of the said lots on said plan with their workmen, .tools and implements to enter into and upon the hereby granted premises and into the buildings thereon erected and at the cost of the said grantee his heirs or assigns, owners or occupiers of the hereby granted premises to tear down remove and abate all such buildings or manufactories as may be erected or constructed or used contrary to the true intent and meaning of these presents and without being subject to any writ, action or proceeding, civil or criminal, for anything reasonably done by them or any of them by reason thereof or for any entry therein for the purpose aforesaid anything hereinbefore contained to the contrary thereof notwithstanding.”

4. The building restrictions mentioned in the foregoing finding were uniformly imposed upon all of the lots constituting a portion of the “tract” out of which the land of both plaintiffs and defendants came by reason of the fact that Ogontz Land & Improvement Company, a corporation, on February 27, 1890, acquired a large tract of land which it proceeded to develop and lay out in streets and building lots, and to sell and convey to prospective home builders. Each and every one of the deeds of conveyance by which Ogontz Land & Improvement Company conveyed the building [188]*188lots on said tract as sold contained the restrictions quoted.

5. The location of the “fence line” mentioned in the restrictions is not definitely fixed, but the property owners have uniformly treated the side of the street on which their lots front as the line from which the 15-foot set-back should be measured.

6. The corporate defendant occupies its said premises for the storage of fire-fighting equipment, for company meetings, for public dances, social functions, and the like. On the rear sideline dividing the premises of the corporate defendant from the premises of plaintiffs are érected seven one-car garages which the corporate defendant rents for a consideration for private use.

7. The buildings on the properties of plaintiffs and of defendant fire company, as well as the buildings on both sides of the street in the same block, are set back a nearly uniform distance of 15 feet from the fence line.

8. The properties of plaintiffs and of defendant are located near the middle of the block, which block extends approximately nine hundred feet in length.

9. The nature of the community in which the land of plaintiffs and defendant is located is preponderantly residential.

10. Defendant fire company has had erected for a number of years in its front yard and within 15 feet of the fence line a lofty flagpole.

11. Throughout the entire area which is subject to the restriction there are a considerable number of buildings which do not observe the specified “set-back”.

12. As early as July 1943 the members of defendant corporation began to discuss and explore the project of soliciting public subscriptions for a public memorial in honor of the residents of McKinley who served in World War I and World War II.

13. Under the leadership of Edwin H. Geissler, second defendant, who is also secretary of the fire company and township commissioner representing McKin[189]*189ley Ward 4, and sometime prior to July 1944, a committee of the members of the corporate defendant was appointed to collect funds by public subscription for the proposed war memorial.

14. Sometime prior to July 31, 1944, the said committee circulated a written appeal for funds for the proposed war memorial, a copy of which was received by plaintiffs.

15. Plaintiffs contributed money toward the expense and cost of the proposed war memorial on July 31,1944.

16. The public subscription for funds to meet the ■cost and expense of the proposed war memorial began in July 1944, and up to the institution of this proceeding 417 residents of the McKinley Ward donated the sum of $881.08.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Pa. D. & C. 184, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-mckinley-fire-co-no-1-pactcomplmontgo-1945.