Voorheis v. Powell

246 N.W. 154, 261 Mich. 378, 85 A.L.R. 932, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 771
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1933
DocketDocket No. 115, Calendar No. 36,763.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 246 N.W. 154 (Voorheis v. Powell) 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
Voorheis v. Powell, 246 N.W. 154, 261 Mich. 378, 85 A.L.R. 932, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 771 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

Elmer;W. Voorheis, and the 25 other plaintiffs herein, are owners of residences fronting *379 on. Collingwood avenue in G-reenlawn subdivision, being the southerly 682 feet of quarter section 25, 10,000-acre tract, in Detroit, Michigan. The portion of Collingwood avenue lying within the subdivision runs west from Woodward avenue to Hamilton boulevard, and is also traversed by Second and Third avenues, all important thoroughfares running north and south. The property of 13 of the plaintiffs is situated in the first block of the subdivision west of Woodward avenue, a choice residential district. Restrictions in this subdivision have been previously considered and upheld in Sanborn v. McLean, 233 Mich. 227 (60 A. L. R. 1212), and Tuttle v. Ohio Boulevard Land Co., 245 Mich. 188.

The present controversy arose over those restrictions that provide that all residences on the street shall be built 20 feet back from the street line. The subdivision contains 88 lots, each approximately 50 feet in width, fronting on Collingwood avenue, and two additional corner lots, facing Woodward avenue and each having a frontage of 200 feet on Collingwood avenue. These two lots are referred to as the “Woodward avenue lots.” An alley separates them from those immediately to the west which front on Collingwood avenue. Stores facing Woodward avenue and an apartment building fronting on Collingwood avenue have been built on each of them. The apartment buildings have been built up to the street line in violation of the building restrictions. The 20-foot set-back, however, has been rigidly observed in the erection of all the other buildings on the street except the Wilshire apartment hotel at the northeast corner of Third and Collingwood avenues. Otherwise, the buildings consist of substantial residences, facing ornamental lawns at least 20 feet deep.

*380 The restrictions providing for the 20-foot setback of the building line on the Collingwood avenue side of the Woodward avenue lots were waived by acquiescence or consent on the part of the other lot owners. Some of the plaintiffs excuse their failure to make timely objections to the violations of the building-line restrictions on these lots on the ground that they did not know at the time that the building-line restrictions extended to them, since their size and shape differed from the others, which were also subjected to more rigid restrictions in some respects. The general restrictions as to the use of these lots, created by a reciprocal negative easement, did not apply to these Woodward avenue lots. See Sanborn v. McLean, supra.

Some of the plaintiffs testified that when the construction of the Wilshire apartment hotel building was begun, the lot was inclosed with a fence seven feet in height, and that, on inquiry, they were informed that the building-line restrictions would be observed; that when they subsequently discovered its violation, they deemed it too late to object because the building had progressed to a point where it would have been very costly to tear down the very elaborate and ornamental portion of the building that had been erected only slightly over 10' feet from the street line. The circuit judge held that the erection of the Wilshire apartment hotel in no way affected the attempted violations of the restrictions on a lot almost two blocks distant therefrom.

In this suit, plaintiffs seek to enforce the building-line restrictions on lot two, which is situated on the south side of Collingwood avenue immediately west of and bordering upon the same alley that abuts the west walls of the apartment house built on the rear *381 of the Woodward avenue lot. A house conforming with the restrictions was formerly located on lot two, hut was torn down.

On November 1, 1924, George W. Hurd, the owner of a lot on the north side of the street in the first block off Woodward avenue, circulated a petition among the owners of the block. It was signed by a large number of them, including several of the plaintiffs. The signers agreed to waive and release the restrictions on the block to the extent of permitting the erection of brick and stone apartment buildings, flats, etc., on any part of their lots. It was represented that the waiver was not to become effective unless signed by all of the owners. Two of the parties plaintiff owning lots in the block, as well as the owner of lot two, did not sign the waiver. Some of the plaintiffs claim they did not understand the tenor of the instrument, and that it was distinctly agreed that, if it was not signed by all of the residents, it would not become effective. The waiver was used by a real estate agent in a futile effort to sell one of the lots, but it was later returned to Mr. Hurd, who destroyed it. The document, however, had been photostated by some interested party, and a copy thereof came into the possession of the owner of lot two. The lot was sold to Eobert M. Powell, who, with the Leto Building Company, are defendants herein. An attorney, empl^yéd by Powell to examine the abstract, after reading the waiver and making a physical examination of the lot and neighborhood, advised that a multiple-apartment building might be built up to the street line on lot two.

Upon commencement of the building operations, the plaintiffs filed a bill to enjoin the violation of the building-line restriction. The trial judge held that *382 defendants were not parties to the written waiver, and had no right to rely upon it as a contract; that the parties plaintiff who had signed the so-called waiver had barred themselves from taking a position inconsistent therewith; that there was no waiver by reason of the violation of the restriction by the Wilshire apartment hotel, inasmuch as it was too far distant to give the owner of lot two any reason to believe that there would be no objection raised by his neighbor to the erection of a building up to the street line. He, however, held that, as far as lot two was concerned, there was a waiver predicated upon the building of the apartment houses on the Collingwood avenue side of the Woodward avenue lots. He found that there was no testimony establishing any peculiar damage to any plaintiff arising from this contemplated building that differed in its general nature from the injury, if any, caused by the apartments built up to the street line on the Collingwood avenue side of the Woodward avenue lots; that the failure of plaintiffs to object to these buildings gave a purchaser the right to assume that other similar breaches, attended by no more actual damage to plaintiffs, would likewise be permitted, and that this applied equally to all parties plaintiff and estopped them from offering objections to defendants’ building up to the lot line.

John J. Frantz, one of the plaintiffs, is owner of lot 10, situated 400 feet from lot 2. Jesse L. San-born, another plaintiff, is the owner of the east 15 feet of lot 86 and west 20 feet of lot 87, situated on the north side of the street and in the same block as lot 2. They did not sign the written waiver, and are in no manner estopped by it. While there is considerable doubt whether the written waiver is binding any longer on its signatories, decision on *383

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Bluebook (online)
246 N.W. 154, 261 Mich. 378, 85 A.L.R. 932, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voorheis-v-powell-mich-1933.