Sullivan v. Playfair Realty Co.

213 N.W. 973, 238 Mich. 274, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 642
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1927
DocketDocket No. 85.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 213 N.W. 973 (Sullivan v. Playfair Realty Co.) 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
Sullivan v. Playfair Realty Co., 213 N.W. 973, 238 Mich. 274, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 642 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Plaintiffs have appealed from a decree of the Wayne county circuit court, in chancery, dismissing their bill filed to restrain defendants from erecting a two-story public garage and store building on the southwest comer of Lawrence avenue and Twelfth street in the so-called “Clements & Oakman subdivision of the south 20 acres of the southeast quarter of quarter section 27, 10,000-acre tract, Greenfield township, Wayne county, Michigan,” now within the northwest confines of the city of Detroit. When platted by Robert Oakman in 1910 it was unoccupied farm land. Shortly after platting this subdivision, he put it on the market as a high-grade exclusively residential suburban district. It is bounded on the easterly end by Twelfth street, on the north and south sides by alleys, and on the west end by a tract called “Roosevelt field.” In dimensions it is a trifle over 1,300 feet long east and west with a width of about 650 feet. It was so planned and platted that Lawrence and Collingwood avenues, which then ran west from Woodward avenue to Twelfth street only, could most advantageously be continued westward through it as they were. All the 172 lots in the subdivision *276 front on those two avenues with an alley at the rear. Both avenues are 60 feet wide. Lawrence avenue lies north of Collingwood, having a row of lots fronting its north side with the north boundary alley at their rear, on the south side of Collingwood a similar condition exists with the south boundary alley at the rear of the row of lots fronting on it. Between the two avenues are two rows of lots, one row fronting on each avenue with an east and west alley at their rear extending the entire length of the subdivision. All lots in the subdivision are practically 30 feet wide except eight and the widest of these is 41.9 feet. All lots are numbered consecutively except the four which side on Twelfth street. These four are each 33 feet wide and marked respectively A, B, C, and D.

After the subdivision was platted and recorded by Oakman and wife, he put on a well-advertised sale campaign with salesmen for a time in attendance upon the ground distributing literature, etc. On the back of a then-circulated map appears, among other things, the following laudatory description of the subdivision:

“This property is admirably situated for high-class home sites. It is immediately adjoining the Boston boulevard section, North Woodward’s most exclusive residence location, and is the only moderately priced property available in this district. The subdivision comprises the extension of Collingwood and Lawrence avenues west of Twelfth street, and the high standard of these streets from Woodward avenue will be maintained throughout. * * * It is in the highest and most healthful part of Detroit, sufficiently removed from the manufacturing districts to afford freedom from smoke and noise, * * * Twelfth street is the only continuous thoroughfare, except Woodward avenue, running from the river without jog or interruption to the limits of the Ten Thousand Acre Tract.” * * *

A-form of restriction was adopted and as a rule embodied in the deeds and contracts of purchasers of *277 lots in that subdivision. As applied to Lawrence .avenue, it reads:

“Said lot shall be used solely for residence purposes. No building, the cost of construction of which is less than $6,000 shall be erected upon said lot. No building shall be erected nearer than 30 feet to the front line of said lot, nor nearer than three feet to the west line thereof, nor nearer than four feet to the east line thereof.”

On June 11, 1914, Oakman sold to a man named Gustave W. Meyer eight lots on Lawrence avenue at the east end of the subdivision, four on each side of the avenue, including lots C, 85, and 86 in controversy here, giving him a printed booklet form contract containing a subhead “Restrictions” in large-sized type, ■followed by:

“Said lots shall be used solely for residence purposes. No building the cost of construction of which is less than $3,000 shall be erected nearer than 30 feet to the front line of said lot, nor nearer than two feet to the west line of same, nor nearer than four feet to the east line thereof.”

On November 11, 1915, Meyer surrendered or released fro mi this contract his interest in lots C, 85, •'86, and 87 in exchange.for a corner lot in another subdivision. He retained under his contract and paid in full for the four lots on the opposite corner but up to the time of the trial had been unable to obtain the kind of deed he wanted from Oakman. He explained that a salesman of Oakman asked him to surrender the four lots on the southeast corner in exchange for a corner in another subdivision because he had “promised one of the Oakman family that comer,” and the only reason he could give for complying was his “kind heartedness * * * to help Mr. Allen out of a hole.” In that connection he oifered the apologetic reflection that he “was kind of green those days in real estate business. * * * I made the trade, *278 paying, I think, $60 more for it. * * * I made a holler about it, but I let it go because I didn’t want to create any trouble.”

Having thus gotten the property back, Oakman promptly proceeded to sell lots C, 85, and 86 again for an increased price under contract dated November 22, 1915, to one James H. Gregg1 free of residential restraint, his restrictions under that subhead being, as defendants’ counsel state in their brief, similar to those contained in the deed which he later! gave defendant, read into the record as follows:

“Party of the second part shall erect no building on. the above-described lot nearer than 15 feet to the north line thereof, and shall erect no building thereon except it be of brick or stone construction; provided, however, that the sides of the building fronting on Twelfth street and on Lawrence avenue shall be of pressed face brick.”

This contract passed by assignments through the-hands of three different owners, who made no attempt to build upon any of the lots, until in 1922 Dr. Samuel J. Herman, who lives “on Lawrence avenue between Second and Third,” then acquired the contract and obtained a deed of the property to his company containing the same restrictions as in the contract.

The Playfair Realty Company is a family corporation, most of the stock belonging to Dr. Herman and his wife. Of it he said: “I managed the affairs of the Playfair Realty Company and have done so since the beginning.” Asked: “How. long have you been in the real estate business under the name of Playfair Realty Company or your wife and you?’! he replied, “I think about four or five years.” His claim and. attitude in this litigation is that when he purchased the property in 1922 for his company neither he nor it knew of any restrictions upon the subdivision except that contained in its deed, and the two-story garage he proposed to build covering the whole three- *279 lots, with stores on Twelfth street, to within 15 feet of the Lawrence street line at the front of those lots, did not violate the restrictions of his deed.

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Bluebook (online)
213 N.W. 973, 238 Mich. 274, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-playfair-realty-co-mich-1927.