Mt. Baker Park Club, Inc. v. Colcock

275 P.2d 733, 45 Wash. 2d 467, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 434
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1954
Docket32815
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 275 P.2d 733 (Mt. Baker Park Club, Inc. v. Colcock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mt. Baker Park Club, Inc. v. Colcock, 275 P.2d 733, 45 Wash. 2d 467, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 434 (Wash. 1954).

Opinion

*468 Weaver, J.

This is an action to enforce a restrictive covenant in a deed.

Defendants appeal from a decree which (a) permanently enjoins them from maintaining on their residential property any garage or other building within twenty-five feet of the street line of the lot on which the building faces; (b) orders them to remove all or any portion of a certain garage which lies within twenty-five feet of the street line of said lot, but allows them to retain their existing concrete bulkheads up to the height of ground contours; and (c) permanently enjoins them from using the resulting structure as a garage, carport, or for any purpose other than a bulkhead or ground support.

In 1906, the Hunter Tract Improvement Company platted a large tract of land into lots, blocks, roadways, and parkways along the shore of Lake Washington. It was designated “Mt. Baker Park, an addition to the city of Seattle.” At all times the improvement company gave wide publicity by printed advertisements and oral statements of its intention to make the addition a high-class residential section of the city.

(A more detailed history of this development may be found in Hunter Tract Imp. Co. v. Corporation of Catholic Bishop, 98 Wash. 112, 167 Pac. 100 (1917) and in Johnson v. Mt. Baker Park Presbyterian Church, 113 Wash. 458, 194 Pac. 536 (1920)).

In general, the declared intention was achieved by inserting a restrictive covenant in the deed of conveyance to the purchasers of lots. This restriction reads as follows:

“This sale is made subject to the following restrictions: nothing but a single, detached residence, costing not less than $........................shall be built on any one lot, and shall be used for residence purposes only. No old buildings shall be moved thereupon. No buildings shall be nearer than 25 feet from the street line of said lot, upon which said building faces.” (Italics ours.)

The addition contains eight hundred and forty-seven lots which were sold by the improvement company between *469 1906 and 1922. In most of the deeds, the improvement company inserted a twenty-five-foot building setback. Because of topography or building necessities, some of the deeds contained less than the usual twenty-five-foot setback and a few were issued without any building setback. The trial court found that these variations “were a part of and not inconsistent with the whole plan of restrictions.”

Residents of the district organized the Mt. Baker Park Improvement Club in 1910. Since that time, it has worked for the betterment of the community and has always had an active restrictions committee.

Appellants have owned property in the district for about thirty years, and they have owned the lot in question since 1935. They knew that their property was subject to a twenty-five-foot setback building restriction. Originally, their lot extended from Mt. Claire Drive, on the south, to Shoreland Drive, on the north. Shortly after purchasing it, appellants sold the south sixty feet of the lot (except a three-foot strip) to the adjoining landowner. Appellants could have built a garage upon the land so conveyed.

May 25, 1951, appellants commenced construction of a garage, the front of which is three feet from the property line of Shoreland Drive, upon which their residence faces. Members of the restriction committee of the Mt. Baker Park Improvement Club advised appellants that the garage was in violation of the building restriction and requested that work be discontinued. The request was ignored and this action resulted.

Appellants’ first contention is summarized in their brief as follows:

“The short answer is that the restriction permits residence buildings only and prohibits garages by its terms. It is, as a practical matter, unenforcible as to garages. But this does not mean that a requirement as to residences must therefore be imposed upon garages. The restriction is no more logical in its application to garages in the setback requirements than it is in cost requirements. The answer is it doesn’t fit. It wasn’t designed for or directed at garages. It would be idle to conjecture what the framers of the re *470 striction would have provided for garages if they had contemplated the subject. There simply is no enforcible restriction in the district as to garages.” (Italics ours.)

In support of their conclusion, appellants cite Jones v. Williams, 56 Wash. 588, 106 Pac. 166 (1910).

We cannot agree with appellants’ initial premise, that the restriction prohibits garages, nor can we agree with the logic by which they reach their conclusion.

“It would seem that today it could hardly be questioned that a garage, whether attached or unattached to a dwelling house, for the private use of the occupants of the premises, is no more than an incidental use of the property for a residence, and that its use for such purposes is not prohibited by a restriction of the property to residential purposes.” Annotation: Construction and application of covenant restricting use of property to “residence” or “residential purposes.” 175 A. L. R. 1191 at 1206. (1948)

A private garage is a proper appurtenance necessary to the enjoyment of a dwelling house and does not violate a covenant restricting the use of property “for residence purposes only.” Appellants’ argument, that all doubt must be resolved against the restriction and in favor of the free and unrestricted use of property, leads inevitably to this conclusion.

Such a garage, appurtenant to a residence, is a building, and, if erected within three feet of the street line, is in violation of a covenant that

“No buildings shall be nearer than 25 feet from the street line of said lot, upon which said building faces.” (Italics ours.)
Jones v. Williams, supra, is distinguishable. A demurrer was sustained to a complaint praying that defendants be restrained from constructing “a public garage plant” or “storeroom” beyond a designated building line. This court held, as a matter of law, that such a structure did not violate a covenant prohibiting the erection of
“ ‘. . . any flat building or tenement house on said premises, nor shall there be any residence or other dwelling house erected on said premises nearer to the street line than *471 on a line with the two residences now on either side of said lot.’ ”

The covenant being considered in the instant case prohibited the erection of any building within the prohibited area.

Appellants also contend that the setback restriction, as to garages, has been abandoned and waived and that respondents are estopped to enforce it.

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Bluebook (online)
275 P.2d 733, 45 Wash. 2d 467, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mt-baker-park-club-inc-v-colcock-wash-1954.