Case Name: Lionial D. Rhinehart vs. Frank E. Leitch
Court: Connecticut Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Connecticut
Decision Date: 1928-02-28
Citations: 107 Conn. 400
Docket Number: 
Parties: Lionial D. Rhinehart vs. Frank E. Leitch.
Judges: 
Reporter: Connecticut Reports
Volume: 107
Pages: 400–405

Head Matter:
Lionial D. Rhinehart vs. Frank E. Leitch.
Third Judicial District, New Haven,
January Term, 1928.
Wheeler, C. J., Mai/tbie, Haines, Hinman and Banks, Js.
Argued January 18th
decided February 28th, 1928.
Raymond E. Hackett, for the appellant (plaintiff).
Norris E. Pierson, for the appellee (defendant).

Opinion:
Maltbie, J.
Plaintiff and defendant own adjoining lands in a portion of the city of Stamford known as "Pinehurst," a real-estate development which in all included about one hundred and seventy lots. Both acquired title from the Pinehurst Realty Corporation. That corporation had acquired the whole tract from the Morewood Realty Company under a deed containing certain restrictions. Among these is one which provides: "No part of the foundation of any building constructed on said lots shall be within twenty-five feet of the street line on which said lot fronts." The deed to the defendant was expressly made subject to all the restrictions contained in the deed from the Morewood Company to the Pinehurst Company. It included two lots, one at the comer of Bedford and Third streets, and the other adjoining it on Bedford Street. Each lot ran along Bedford Street about twenty-five feet; the one on the corner ran along Third Street one hundred and thirty feet, and the other had a depth of about one hundred and twenty-seven feet. Plaintiff's deed included four contiguous lots, the tract adjoining defendant's lots, abutting on Third Street and running along it about one hundred feet in all, with a depth of about one hundred and twenty-five feet. In March, 1927, the defendant began to construct on his lot a house which faced Third Street and the foundation walls of it were from twenty-two to twenty-four feet from the street line of that street. The plaintiff thereupon instituted this action, alleging a violation of the restriction which we have quoted and seeking an injunction against the erection of the house. Thereupon the defendant changed his plans so that his house would face Bedford Street. Under this plan the foundation wall parallel to that street would be about twenty-five feet back from the street line, but that on the Third Street side would be only sixteen feet from the street line, and a sun porch would extend within about six feet of it. With this situation before it, the trial court refused the injunction and the plaintiff has appealed.
The issue turns upon the question whether or not the foundation of the house as now planned will be within twenty-five feet "of the street line on which said lot fronts." The word "front" as applied to a city lot has little, if any, inherent application, but it takes on a borrowed significance from the building which is or may be constructed thereon. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Jacobson, 75 Minn. 429, 432, 78 N. W. 10; Adams v. Howell, 108 N. Y. Supp. 945, 947. As applied to a building, "front" in general usage refers to that side of it in which is located the main entrance. Howland v. Andrus, 81 N. J. Eq. 175, 180, 86 Atl. 391; Oxford and Standard Dictionaries, "front." When used of a lot with a house upon it, it means that portion of the lot abutting upon the street toward which the house faces. So when used of a bare lot, by transposition of significance, it is that side toward which in ordinary circumstances a house when built will most likely face; in the case of a city lot of the dimensions of the defendant's plot, about fifty by one hundred and thirty feet, though it be a corner lot, the very general usage of building houses with their main entrance toward the shorter street line results in a common understanding that that is the side intended when the "front" of the lot is referred to. Haviland v. Columbus, 50 Ohio St. 471, 473, 34 N.E. 679. But the term is very far from one of art, and an examination of the cases which have construed reservations similar to the one before us, makes it very clear that the meaning is almost invariably determined by the context in which the word is used and the surrounding circumstances. These decisions, therefore, are of little value as precedents, and we must turn to the wording of the particular reservation before us, to the context in which it is used, and the surrounding circumstances to determine its meaning. Easterbrook v. Hebrew Ladies Orphan Society, 85 Conn. 289, 295, 82 Atl. 561.
There is significance in the very phraseology of this reservation. Of necessity the claim of the plaintiff must be, not that the word "fronts" refers solely to the side of the defendant's premises which abuts upon Third Street, but to both that side and the Bedford Street side. Yet had that been the intent of the parties, it would have been naturally expressed, not by saying "of the street line on which said lot fronts," but "of the street line or lines" on which it fronts; or some other more precise phraseology would have been used, perhaps such as we find in Scull v. Eilenberg, 94 N. J. Eq. 759, 764, 121 Atl. 778.
This restriction was one of eight and two of the others refer to the front of the lots. One of these speaks of the "frontage" of certain lots into which a portion of the tract might later be subdivided and uses the word in such a way as to throw no light on the meaning of the restriction we are considering. In another of the restrictions there is a provision as to the minimum cost of houses constructed upon the lots, expressed in this way: The first cost of a residence constructed "on any lots fronting on Bedford Street" shall be not less than $12,000, "on any lots fronting on Fifth Street" shall be not less than $10,000, and "on any lots fronting on any other streets" shall be not less than $8,000. Here it is evident that reference is made by the word "fronting" not to the lines of streets upon which the lots abut in a general sense, but to one definite side of each lot; otherwise at the corners where Bedford Street and Fifth Street intersect and where those streets intersect others, the lots would be subject to conflicting provisions; and as all lots abutting on Bedford Street are laid out with the shorter side toward that street, the plan of uniformity of development shows that it was this shorter side which was referred to by the word "fronting." The meaning of the word "fronting" being thus fixed in this restriction, it is to be assumed that the same meaning was intended to attach to the word "fronts" in the restriction here in question.
Practical considerations point to the same conclusion. Almost all the lots in the whole development are about twenty-five feet across on the narrower side; eleven of these are situated at street corners, five having a width on the narrower side of about twenty-five feet, and four, of about thirty feet. The effect of construing the restriction as the plaintiff contends would be practically to destroy the availability for building purposes of these corner lots. It is true that the restrictions provide that two or more adjacent lots shall constitute a plot, and that not more than one residence shall be constructed on any plot; but even if two lots are bought at a corner, the imposition of a twenty-five foot building restriction on both of the sides abutting on streets could not but interfere with the use of the plot for the construction of substantial dwellings, requiring as it would that they be built substantially to the line of the property on one side; and the practical necessity which would result on these corners of purchasing three lots to constitute a plot would seem hardly to accord with the plan of development disclosed in the last restriction to which we have referred.
In the instant case it seems to us that anyone purchasing lots at the street corners in the tract, as the defendant has done, might reasonably have understood the restriction in question to apply solely to the narrower width abutting upon a street. In such a situation, it is particularly true that the restriction is to be construed strictly in favor of the lot owner. Easterbrook v. Hebrew Ladies Orphan Society, 85 Conn. 289, 295, 82 Atl. 561. The reasons, as stated in Howland v. Andrus, 81 N. J. Eq. 175, 181, 86 Atl. 391, are: "First, because restrictions of the lawful use of property are against common right, and second, because restrictions, in the framing of which a subsequent purchaser has had no voice, ought to be so clear that by the acceptance of the deed that declares them he may reasonably be deemed to have understood and acceded to them."
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.