Ruprecht v. Nicholson

264 P. 332, 88 Cal. App. 762, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 279
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 2, 1928
DocketDocket No. 5952.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 264 P. 332 (Ruprecht v. Nicholson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruprecht v. Nicholson, 264 P. 332, 88 Cal. App. 762, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 279 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

NOURSE, J.

Plaintiffs sued to restrain defendant from erecting or maintaining upon defendant's premtses buildings other than residences and outhouses permitted by the deeds of conveyance under which both parties held. Plaintiffs had judgment as prayed and defendant has appealed upon a bill of exceptions.

The covenant under which plaintiffs sued was included in all the deeds of conveyance to all the lots of a tract of land owned and subdivided by the common grantor. The provision which plaintiffs claimed was breached reads: “Buildings restricted to dwelling houses and the buyer shall not construct any dwelling house upon said tracts to cost less than $3,000.00 . . . provided that the buyer may erect a garage or other outbuildings, the same to be built and located at the proper point on said tract for such building.” The complaint alleged that the defendant, disregarding this restriction, had erected on one of the lots purchased by him “unsightly chicken houses and barns for use in conducting a chicken ranch and ever since has maintained and operated said chicken houses and bams on said property in conducting a chicken ranch. ’ ’ The trial court found that this allegation was true; that the buildings were used only in the business of raising chickens for commercial purposes ; that they were not appurtenant or subservient to a dwelling-house; and that they were not “outbuildings” within the meaning of the term as used in the deeds.

The crux of the case is the intention of the parties as expressed in the proviso in the deeds permitting the erection of outbuildings upon the premises. In approaching this question we should have in mind the admonition found in McBride v. Freeman, 191 Cal. 152, 156 [215 Pac. 678, 680], where it is said: “The intention of the parties should be 1 determined by a fair interpretation of the grant or *764 reserve creating the easement’ (citing cases). cIt seems to us that in all these cases it is better to get at the intention of the grantor from the language of the deed, interpreted in the light of the attending circumstances, than to conjecture the intent from the circumstances and then to make the language of the deed bend to that. ’ ” The real contention of the respondents in the present ease is not thát these chicken-houses are not outbuildings in the ordinary sense of the term, but that all the deeds should be construed as prohibiting the use of any portion of the premises for commercial purposes. The language of the deeds differs in this respect from the customary language of deeds or contracts containing stipulations reserving premises for residential purposes only and prohibiting the use of the premises for business purposes. The customary language is that the premises are to be “used for residential purposes only”; that no part of the premises may be “used for business purposes”; that the land “is to be used for residential purposes only and that no apartment house, store or other place of business may be erected,” or that “the-premises shall be used for residential purposes only; that no apartment house, flat, hotel or any building other than a first class private residence with the customary outbuildings shall be erected.” Because of the uniformity of the use in similar deeds and contracts of these specific limitations of the premises to residential purposes, the failure of the deeds in suit to contain any limitation of that character adds to the uncertainty of the language used in these deeds. This being so it was incumbent upon the trial court to determine the meaning of the restriction in the light of the intention of the parties at the time the contract was made and for this purpose it was proper to receive evidence of the attending circumstances. This, however, was not done. When the appellant endeavored to show the surrounding circumstances as evidenced by the conditions of the locality in which the tract was situated the offer of proof was, upon objection of the' respondents, rejected. Without any evidence of any character touching upon the circumstances surrounding the execution of the deeds the trial court determined, upon the face of the instruments alone, that it was intended to prohibit the erection of any building of any character upon the premises which might be used for com *765 mercial purposes. The question which comes before us at this time is, therefore, one of law only—whether the trial court drew the proper conclusion of law from the face of the instrument itself.

The word outbuilding or outhouse has a well-known and defined meaning. The definition of an outbuilding as given by Century Dictionary is “A building near or subordinate to a main building”; of an outhouse is “A small house or building separate from the main house; an outbuilding; in law under the definition of arson a building to habitation, separate from the main structure, and so by the common law rules a parcel of the dwelling house or not, according as it is within or without the Bouvier defines outhouses as “buildings adjoining or belonging to dwelling houses.” The term comes to us from the common law where the outhouses located within the walls or fences of the curtilage received the same as the main building in criminal proceedings covering burglary and arson. It is said in Hultin v. Klein, 301 Ill. 94 [20 A. L. R. 230, 133 N. E. 660]: “The question of curtilage is of no importance in this case. It was at common law because the protection and privilege of the mansion house extended to all its branches and within the curtilage, and if a barn, stable, or warehouse were parcel of the mansion house, and within the same common fence, though not under the same roof or contiguous, a burglary might be committed therein; not. 4 Bl. Com. 225. An outbuilding must be and appertain to the main building. Though from the main building, it must be subservient to it, and contributory to the habitation. It must belong to or be intended to be used with the dwelling house.” In those cases where the premises were inclosed within a manor wall or fence a barn, shod, stable, garage, greenhouse, pigsty, storehouse, smokehouse, ice or meat house were all outhouses or outbuildings within the meaning of the term as applied to criminal proceedings for arson or burglary. In this country, where the wall or fence is generally not used the determination of the question whether a certain building is an outbuilding or an outhouse usually depends upon its location upon the lot or tract of land upon which the residence house is situated and upon *766 the uses for which such building is to be put. Thus what might be an outbuilding or an outhouse upon a farm might not be an outbuilding upon a small city lot. Manifestly, upon a farm a stable for the care of horses, cows, and other stock, buildings for the housing of chickens, smokehouses for the curing of meat and storehouses for food or farm implements would all be outbuildings or outhouses in the ordinary use of the term, and their character as such would not be changed if the farmer should sell some of the produce of his farm.

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Bluebook (online)
264 P. 332, 88 Cal. App. 762, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruprecht-v-nicholson-calctapp-1928.