Williams v. Tsiarkezos

272 A.2d 722, 1970 Del. Ch. LEXIS 94
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 31, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 272 A.2d 722 (Williams v. Tsiarkezos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Tsiarkezos, 272 A.2d 722, 1970 Del. Ch. LEXIS 94 (Del. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

MARVEL, Vice Chancellor:

Plaintiffs, who are owners of homes in Delpark Manor near Stanton, seek a permanent injunction against the continued operation of a child day care center car *724 ried on for profit by defendants on a lot owned by them 1 located at 4704 Old Capitol Trail in such residential development, which is generally restricted to residential use by fifteen restrictive covenants which govern not only the use to be made of lots in the development but also the type of building to be constructed, as well as other building requirements, including the height of fences and set-backs.

The basic restrictive covenant here in issue purports to impose, with exceptions hereinafter noted but not applicable, any non-residential use of lots located in the development in question, and it is conceded by defendants that the child day care center now being operated by them in a Del-park residence (of which plaintiffs complain) is a project carried on for profit in contravention of a covenant to the contrary.

The principal restrictive covenant here in issue, namely number eight, provides that no “ * * * trade, business, commerce, industry or occupation * * * ” other than that carried on by a licensed dentist or doctor in an office in a portion of the dwelling in which he resides, shall be permitted in Delpark Manor. Defendants clearly do not fall within the stated exceptions in that they concededly operate for profit a child day care center at premises known as 4704 Old Capitol Trail. Another covenant here involved, namely number thirteen, authorizes any other person or persons owning land within the restricted area to prosecute any proceeding at law or in equity against the person or persons attempting to violate any of the restrictive covenants binding the residential area here involved, thus giving plaintiffs standing to sue, as they have here.

Defendants, in opposing plaintiffs’ application for injunctive relief, first argue that the latter have allegedly tolerated other business or commercial activities in Del-park Manor not excepted by the terms of covenant in issue, and that plaintiffs accordingly come into Court with unclean hands. It is next contended that opposition to defendants’ child day care center was not asserted until late 1968, two years after defendants commenced such project and had received leave to increase the size of their day care center. It is accordingly argued that plaintiffs are barred by laches or acquiescence from successfully objecting to the continuance of defendants’ business or commercial activities.

It is finally argued that public policy favors the carrying on of the type of child day care center being operated by defendants and that a process akin to that of balancing the equities should result in a holding that the covenant relied on by plaintiffs, under the facts and circumstances of record, which support a finding that defendants’ project is carried on efficiently and meets all the requirements of the State Division of Social Services, should not be enforced insofar as defendants’ activities are concerned.

Evidence adduced at trial is to the effect that other residents of Delpark Manor have committed technical violations of the covenant here in issue as well as other restrictions imposed on lots in such development while their neighbors have for the most part stood idly by, although, as will be noted later herein, it is clear that such violations have been minimal and sporadic. In fact, the beauty parlour operation noted below was the only business carried on in the development in issue which clearly violated the restriction here in issue, and it ceased operations when certain residents, objected about the time the lady and her husband moved from the area.

On the other hand, certain of the plaintiffs, since 1966, have no doubt had knowledge of the general nature of defendants’ *725 activities and some helped to distribute their hand bills, although at the beginning the operation was a small baby-sitting project for two or three young children. However, it is clear that since late 1968, a sizable group of day care center children, while at play outdoors, became not only clearly visible to such center’s immediate neighbors, but, more to the point, were the source of a considerable amount of noise. In fact, it was the noise, or the threatened increase of such, caused by an additional number of children enrolled in defendants’ nursery, coupled with the increase in traffic resulting from the delivery and pickup of such children in the morning and evening and the concomitant threat to land values in the development thereby induced, which ultimately led to the bringing of this suit early in February, 1969.

Thus, following a public hearing attended by a number of plaintiffs or their representatives, held in late 1968 for the purpose of considering defendants’ application for leave from the County Board of Adjustment to enlarge nursery enrollment from twelve to twenty-five children, which approval was granted, plaintiffs promptly took action to secure protection of their claimed rights by filing their complaint in this Court.

Defendants, in opposing plaintiffs’ application, stress what they characterize as the passive conduct of plaintiffs and other residents of Delpark Manor in failing to object promptly when the day care center’s operations were first undertaken, and there is no doubt but that failure to object promptly to an invasion of one’s rights is indicative of that type of acquiescence which usually estops a plaintiff from thereafter successfully complaining that his rights have been intruded upon. See Romer v. Porcelain Products, 23 Del.Ch. 52, 2 A.2d 75, and Frank v. Wilson & Co., 24 Del.Ch. 237, 9 A.2d 82.

In approaching the merits of this case, it must be noted, first of all, that the commercial activities complained of by plaintiffs are concerned with the relatively peaceful operation of a day nursery as opposed to that of an industrial type of activity which would more clearly tend to destroy the residential nature of the community here involved. And there is no doubt but that the day care center here in issue, while a claimed annoyance to . nearby residents of Delmanor Park, is in fact of general benefit to the residents of that part of the county in which defendants’ nursery is located, there being evidence of record that this type of service is a virtual necessity for working mothers and that when, (as is true in the case at bar) such centers are operated efficiently, they promote the public welfare.

However, defendants overlook the fact, that restrictive covenants in a residential area are designed to bind each and every lot therein and are not to be ignored by a court unless through desuetude they no longer serve the purpose for which they were designed, Welshire, Inc. v. Harbison, 33 Del.Ch. 199, 91 A.2d 404, and 1.77 Acres of Land v. State (Del.Supr.), 241 A.2d 513.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hill v. Lindner
2009 ND 132 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2009)
Residentes Parkville Sur v. Díaz Luciano
159 P.R. Dec. 374 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 2003)
Metzner v. Wojdyla
886 P.2d 154 (Washington Supreme Court, 1994)
Stewart v. Jackson
635 N.E.2d 186 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1994)
Woodvale Condominium Trust v. Scheff
540 N.E.2d 206 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1989)
El Di, Inc. v. Town of Bethany Beach
477 A.2d 1066 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 A.2d 722, 1970 Del. Ch. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-tsiarkezos-delch-1970.