Mannweiler v. Laflamme, No. Cv 90-0097432s (Dec. 3, 1993)

1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 10430-H
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1993
DocketNo. CV 90-0097432S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 10430-H (Mannweiler v. Laflamme, No. Cv 90-0097432s (Dec. 3, 1993)) 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
Mannweiler v. Laflamme, No. Cv 90-0097432s (Dec. 3, 1993), 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 10430-H (Colo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The plaintiff Gordon B. Mannweiler is a homeowner in an area of Naugatuck, Connecticut, known as Hop Brook Development. He and other owners of real property in this development bring this action to prevent the subdivision of certain property in the development owned by the defendant Robert S. LaFlamme. The plaintiffs allege that all of the lots in the development including those of the plaintiff and the defendant were the subject of mutual and substantially uniform restrictive covenants which prevent any owner from subdividing existing lots and which permit any owner to enforce the restriction against any other. The plaintiffs further contend that to the extent the deeds to defendants purport to allow the subdivision of the property into lots of a certain minimum size, those provisions in the defendant's deeds violate the general plan of the common grantor and are thus void and subject to injunction by the court.

The defendant admits intending to subdivide a large parcel of real property he owns in the development so that, instead of one building lot, three will exist upon which he intends to construct on each a single-family dwelling that comports with certain size, frontage, and first cost restrictions contained in the deed to his property. The defendant denies that the restrictions in any of the deeds to lots at Hop Brook Development either apply to his lot(s) or are enforceable against him, and he further asserts that even were the contrary true, the Marketable Record Title Act, Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec. 47-33 et seq., bars he plaintiffs' claims.

The parties each presented a number of witnesses, including experts in the subject of land titles and conveyancing; and each side presented dozens of documents in support of the argument each advances. The evidence took five days, and both sides submitted, at the court's request, proposed findings of fact and memoranda of law. From the evidence, the court finds the following:

The original owner of the entire area, "the common grantor", was the J. H. Whittemore Company. In the days before modern zoning regulation, it was customary for those who desired to create an area of land restricted to a single or exclusive use to CT Page 10431 do so by utilizing mutual restrictive covenants in the deeds to the area developed. The Hop Brook Development in Naugatuck was developed as an exclusively residential neighborhood of large, costly, single-family homes, and it remains so today.

In August of 1927, the Whittemore Company recorded a map of the proposed development, outlining streets and plots of land, on the Naugatuck Land Records. The map bore no other writing or legends relevant to this matter. The first sale of real property thereafter was in September of 1927 by a deed to H. H. Bristol, a predecessor in title to the plaintiff Gordon Mannweiler, conveying title to two lots upon which the deed imposes the restriction of constructing "one private residence for the use of one family only which . . . shall cost . . . not less than $15,000. . .". The language in this deed upon which the plaintiff relies in seeking to prevent the defendant from subdividing is this:

3. Each and all of the foregoing covenants and restrictions are for the mutual benefit of all persons who have derived or who shall derive title, directly or indirectly, from the Grantor to any lot or lots shown on the map hereinbefore referred to, and shall run with the land in favor of all lots shown on said Map, and any breach or threatened breach of any one or more of all of the covenants and restrictions aforesaid may be enjoined upon application of the Grantor, its successors and assigns, or any person or persons who have derived or shall derive title, directly or indirectly, from the Grantor to any lot or lots shown on said Map.

From 1927, beginning with the first sale to the plaintiff's predecessor in title, until the conveyance of the first of the lots to the defendant's predecessor in title in 1937, the Grantor J. H. Whittemore Company deeded approximately thirty of the fifty-two lots, and each of these deeds contained virtually identical language as that above.1 Then, in 1937, the Whittemore Company conveyed a lot to Lewis A. Dibble, a predecessor in title to the defendant, which, in addition to the above language, contained the following provision: CT Page 10432

It is particularly agreed and understood that should the Grantee, his heirs or assigns, purchase further lands from the Grantor, or its successors, within block "E" as shown on said Map, the foregoing covenants and restrictions may be revoked, in whole or in part and others substituted therefor, by an agreement entered into by and between the Grantor, or its successors, and the Grantee, or his heirs or assigns, alone and without the consent of any other person or persons.

Thereafter the defendant's predecessors in title did purchase "further lands from the Grantor . . . in block `E'" adjoining the lot already conveyed. In these deeds to the adjoining property, the Whittemore Company inserted this language:

In accordance with and to the extent that power to do [so] has heretofore been reserved by the Grantor, all covenants and restrictions applicable to the lands within said Section E heretofore purchased by the Grantee are hereby revoked.

The deeds then substantially restate the restriction regarding residential use of each dwelling by one family only, and adds the following:

2. Said premises may be re-subdivided into building lots of dimensions other than those shown on said Map, provided, however, that no lot shall have a street frontage of less than 100 feet nor a total area of less than 15,000 square feet.

Of the fifty-two lots in the subdivision, the language expressly permitting subdivision is contained in the original deed of conveyance in twenty-two lots, all subsequent to those first conveyances which contain no such language.

The first question for the court, and because of the court's conclusion, the only question for the court is what was the general plan or scheme of the common grantor in developing the property. Guidance is found in our Supreme Court's analysis CT Page 10433 of the case of Whitton v. Clark, 112 Conn. 28 (1930). The developer Joseph Whitton originally acquired land in Stamford in 1866, and over the next five years he conveyed out eight building lots that contained a stipulation requiring the construction of a dwelling unit in a certain price range. Thereafter, in 1871, he recorded a map which delineated fifty-four building lots, among them the eight already conveyed, and a layout of streets and rights of way. The map itself contained no statement of any conditions or restrictions.

Over the next fifty-seven years, the developer and his heir conveyed out approximately twenty-two more lots some of which contained a similar restriction governing dwellings, some of which were without any restrictions, and four of which were conveyed to a church, with language which allowed a church to build on and use the property as it saw fit.

The plaintiff Harold Whitton owned a number of contiguous lots, some of which contained the stipulation regarding the building of a certain price of dwelling and some of which were silent of any restriction. Further the lots surrounded one of the small streets outlined on the map. The plaintiff sought an adjudication against other lot owners that the restrictions contained in some of the deeds did not burden his lots.

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Related

Town of Stamford v. Vuono
143 A. 245 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1928)
Whitton v. Clark
151 A. 305 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1930)
De Gray v. Monmouth Beach Club House Co.
50 N.J. Eq. 329 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1892)
Contegni v. Payne
557 A.2d 122 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1989)

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Bluebook (online)
1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 10430-H, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mannweiler-v-laflamme-no-cv-90-0097432s-dec-3-1993-connsuperct-1993.