SCHOOLCRAFT CIVIC ASSN. v. Diloreto

62 N.W.2d 657, 339 Mich. 121, 1954 Mich. LEXIS 417
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1954
DocketDocket 37, Calendar 46,029
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 62 N.W.2d 657 (SCHOOLCRAFT CIVIC ASSN. v. Diloreto) 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
SCHOOLCRAFT CIVIC ASSN. v. Diloreto, 62 N.W.2d 657, 339 Mich. 121, 1954 Mich. LEXIS 417 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

Dethmers, J.

Plaintiffs seek to enjoin alleged violations of recorded building restrictions applicable to Sunrest Garden Homes Subdivision in Wayne county. Prom decree for plaintiffs defendants appeal.

Pertinent provisions of tbe restrictions are:

“2. No building shall he erected upon any lot or plot in this subdivision other than a single-family residence and accessory building customarily incident to the use of such single-family residences appurtenant thereto.

“3. All residences erected in the subdivision shall be set back not less than 25 feet from the front street line.

“4. Residences erected on lots 22 through 40, 71 through 89 and 120 through 138 shall be built not less than 10 feet from the south lot or plot line and not less than 6 feet from the north lot or plot line of said lots or of any plots including said lots.

“5. Residences built on lots 3 through 21, 52 through 70 and 101 through 119 shall be built not less than 6 feet from the south lot or plot line and not less than 10 feet from the north lot or plot line of said lots or of any plots including said lots.

“6. Residences built on lots 1, 2, 41 through 51, 90 through 100, 139 through 1943 (sic) shall be built not less than 10 feet from the west lot or plot line and not less than 6 feet from the east lot or plot line of said lots or of any plots including said lots.

*124 “A. Any reference to lots or plots shall include any one or more lots or plots grouped together and used for the occupancy of one family. * # *

“9. No residence shall be erected costing less than $3,000. * * *

“13. No residence shall be built except upon a plot having an area of not less than 6,000 square feet and having a frontage upon a street either now existing in the recorded plat or which may hereafter be established.

“In no event shall a residence be built upon a plot or lot having a width of less than 50 feet.”

Involved are lots 131,132, 134 and 135. They are approximately 235 feet long, east and west, 50 feet in width, and bounded at both ends by streets. One house occupies the east half of lots 131 and 132, and another the east half of lots 134 and 135. Defendants Rich have acquired and commenced building a house on the west half of lots 131 and 132, and defendants DiLoreto have done the same as relates to the west half of lot 135 and of the north half of lot 134. Plaintiffs contend that such division of the lots and building of houses on the west half thereof after houses are already located on the east half constitute violations of the above restrictions.

Defendants say that such division of lots and construction of houses would comply in every respect with the restrictions, particularizing as follows: the residences would be single family as required in par-graph 2 of the restrictions; they would be set back from the front street line not less than 25 feet as provided in paragraph 3; the applicable provisions of paragraphs 4, 5 and 6, relating to set back from sidelines, covering their specific lots, would be observed; the minimum cost provisions of paragraph 9 would be exceeded; the minimum plot area of 6,000 square feet, specified in paragraph 13, is exceeded by defendants DiLoreto with 8,790.75 square *125 feet, and by defendants Rich with 11,760 square feet, and both exceed that paragraph’s minimum requirement of 50 feet width or street frontage, DiLoretos having 75 feet and the Eichs 100 feet width or street-frontage, both with a depth of approximately 117 feet back from the street. Defendants stress the complete absence' of any express provision in the restrictions prohibiting the splitting of lots and building thereon in the manner begun by them.

Plaintiffs insist that defendants’ projected course of action would violate the restrictions of paragraph 2 limiting the building on any lot or plot to “a single-family residence and accessory building.” In that connection they urge that the word “plot” means 2 or more entire lots. Defendants counter with the contention that a plot may consist of any part of á lot or lots having the minimum area and frontage required in paragraph 13 and that, accordingly, they are the owners of plots and that their building thereon does not violate paragraph 2.

The first question discussed in the briefs is whether there is such ambiguity in thé restrictions with respect to the meaning of the word “plot” as to warrant the court’s seeking the meaning by reference to extraneous matters, such as the sales agents’ advertisements used to sell lots in the subdivision and the conduct of interested parties pursuant thereto. We think no such ambiguity exists. It is apparent from a reading of all the restrictions that there was no intention to freeze lot lines but that, rather, plots and plot lines might be created. The limitations of paragraph 13 to a minimum of 50 feet street frontage and area of 6,000 square feet fix the minimum for such plots. Inasmuch as every lot in the plat exceeds such area, most of them being twice that large, it is evident that the word “plot” was not used to mean something necessarily larger than a lot or a combination of whole lots, as plaintiffs contend. On *126 tbe contrary, it is clear from the language of the restrictions as "a whole that a plot was intended to be any portion of the subdivision, whether made up of several lots or of parts of a lot or lots, which meets the minimum requirements of paragraph 13. To conclude otherwise is to render the provisions of paragraph 13 meaningless. Recourse to dictionary definitions or decisions of other courts concerning the meaning of the term “plots”, generally, serves no useful purpose when the meaning is made abundantly clear by the terms of the restrictions themselves.

We see nothing in the words “or of any plots, including said lots” at the conclusion of paragraphs 4, 5 and 6, respectively, that discloses an intent that “plots” must be made up of whole lots and not of parts or combinations of parts thereof. The quoted words merely indicate that certain north and south sideline restrictions apply to plots made up from land contained in the specific lots to which those words refer back, and that certain east and west sideline restrictions relate to plots made up from land in certain other specific lots referred to by those words. Paragraph 6A does not necessitate adoption of plaintiffs’ definition of “plots”.

There is no merit to plaintiffs’ contention that the area requirements of paragraph 13 apply only to the short lots numbered 3 to 21, inclusive, in lieu of, or to make up for an alleged lack of, provisions for setback from sidelines as provided in the case of all the other lots. Paragraph 5 contains precisely such sideline restrictions applicable to those short lots.

Plaintiffs urge that the location of the area and frontage restrictions way back in paragraph 13, removed from the earlier restrictions contained in paragraphs 2 to 10, inclusive, suggest that they were but a part of a miscellaneous group not applicable to the entire plat and that if they had been *127 intended to apply to all the lots they would have been found somewhere before paragraph 7.

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Bluebook (online)
62 N.W.2d 657, 339 Mich. 121, 1954 Mich. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoolcraft-civic-assn-v-diloreto-mich-1954.