Murdock v. Babcock

45 N.W.2d 1, 329 Mich. 127, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 291
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1950
DocketDocket 42, Calendar 44,908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 N.W.2d 1 (Murdock v. Babcock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murdock v. Babcock, 45 N.W.2d 1, 329 Mich. 127, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 291 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

North, J.

By their suit plaintiffs seek to enjoin defendants from constructing 2 houses, one on lot *129 59,,-the other on lot 60 of Chas. W. Babcock’s subdivision in the village of Grosse Pointe Farms, Wayne county, Michigan. Plaintiffs’ claim to relief is on the theory that the proposed construction of these houses is in violation of an applicable building restriction covering this subdivision. After hearing on the merits a decree was entered dismissing plaintiffs’ bill of complaint, and plaintiffs have appealed.

Plaintiffs are the owners of and occupy their residence located on lot 15 and part of lot 14 of the subdivision. The individual defendants, Charles W. Babcock and his wife, Maylou M. Babcock, are the practical owners and in full control of the defendant Plome Engineering Company, a Michigan corporation, from which plaintiffs purchased their property. Likewise the' C. W. Babcock Organization, Inc., a Michigan corporation, is controlled by defendants Babcock. For convenience we shall herein consider the case as one in which relief is sought against the Babcocks as individual defendants, they being the promoters of the Chas. W. Babcock subdivision. Owing to the fact that the streets and-lots of this subdivision are not laid out in exact north and south directions or east and west directions, which has led to some confusion in the record and briefs herein, we shall denominate Moross road and Hillcrest avenue as east and west streets, and Chalfonte avenue and Piche avenue as north and south thoroughfares.

Prior to December 12, 1945, defendants, having purchased it as acreage, were the owners of the land in this Babcock subdivision. On December 12, 1945, defendants caused to be recorded a plat which had been approved by the proper authorities of the village of Grosse Pointe Farms; but such approval was granted upon condition that defendants should place on record certain restrictive covenants affecting-the lots in the accepted plat, all of which at the time were owned by defendants. Accordingly the *130 Home Engineering Company did record such restrictions on the 13th day of December, 1945, the same being dated December 12, 1945. Among other provisions the restrictions contained the following:

“All residential buildings erected, on lots east of Chalfonte avenue shall be of the same character and general construction as the houses immediately east of said lots and located in zone 'A’ of the village of Grosse Pointe Farms zoning district (which is not in but lies next east of the Chas. W. Babcock subdivision). The above restrictions shall be known as the general restrictions covering said subdivision and may be incorporated in more specific restrictions at the time said land is ready for final development.”

We shall hereinafter refer to the foregoing as the “A” restrictions. Nearly 3 years after the above restrictions were hied and in November, 1948, the Home Engineering Company, by its president Charles W. Babcock, executed and caused to be recorded in the Wayne county records certain so-called “Supplemental Restrictive Covenant of Charles W. Babcock Subdivision,” from which we quote:

“Whereas, the undersigned is desirous of imposing a more specific set of restrictive covenants than the general restrictions covering the subdivision [referring to the 1945 so-called restrictive covenant], * * *
“And whereas, said undersigned is desirous of supplementing said recorded restrictions with certain objective clauses hereinafter set forth, * * *
“Witnesseth: * * *
“5. No building shall be erected, placed, or altered on any building plot in this subdivision until the building plans, specifications and plot plan showing the location of such building have been approved in writing as to conformity and harmony of external design with existing structures in the subdivision, and as to the location of the building with respect to toimgraphy and finished ground elevation, by a committee composed of Charles W. Babcock, James L. Babcock, and Maylou M. Babcock.”

We shall hereinafter refer to the above noted 1948 restrictions as the “B” restrictions.

It was after the “A” and “B” restrictions were made matters of record and in January or February, 1949, that plaintiffs purchased their property from defendants for $25,000. The grounds upon which plaintiffs seek injunctive relief in this case are their claim that neither of the houses which defendants *131 propose to construct complies -with the restrictive covenant above quoted that: “All residential buildings erected on lots east of Chalfonte avenue shall be of the same character and general construction as the houses immediately east of said lots;” and also that defendants propose to erect within the restricted area a row of what may be designated as “stock type houses” in violation of the restrictive' provision which “contemplated the development of said subdivision as a high-class residential area and in particular contemplated that the area east of Chalfonte avenue shall he developed with larger and better homes than that west of Chalfonte avenue.”,

We are not in accord with defendants’ untenable contention that the “B” restrictions are the only restrictions applicable to the property, the same having supplanted the “A” restrictions; and that the record discloses no violation of the provisions of the “B” restrictions. In this connection it is to be noted that the provision in the “A” restrictions that residential buildings to be erected east of Chalfonte' avenue shall be of the same character and general construction as the houses located immediately east thereof is not contained in the “B” restrictions. It is defendants’ claim that since they were at the time the owners of all the lots in the restricted area they, could modify the restrictions at will. Such conten-' tion is not tenable for the reason that the condition of defendants’ recording the plat of this subdivision' Avas that they should make of record the restrictions under consideration. And further, at the very outset in restrictions “B” defendants referred to such restrictions as “supplementing said recorded restrictions,” referring to the “A” restrictions-. And still further, the original “A” restrictions were at the time of plaintiff’s’ purchase a matter of record, never having been vacated.

*132 Although the issue is in nowise presented by the pleadings, defendants make the further contention that the restrictive covenants upon which plaintiffs rely “are meaningless because of their vagueness and uncertainty.” In our opinion such a defense cannot be urged by these defendants who sold to plaintiffs the property they occupy. Defendants, of 'their own volition, drafted and caused to be recorded both restrictions “A” and “B.” Certainly the quoted provision from restrictions “A” was intended to mean something. It should not be construed to be of less effect than had it been embodied in a restrictive covenant in defendants’ deed to plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.W.2d 1, 329 Mich. 127, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murdock-v-babcock-mich-1950.