McMurtry v. Phillips Inv. Co.
Decision Date | 12 March 1898 |
Citation | 45 S.W. 96,103 Ky. 308 |
Parties | McMURTRY v. PHILLIPS INV. CO. |
Court | Kentucky Court of Appeals |
Appeal from circuit court, Jefferson county.
"To be officially reported."
Action by L. S. McMurtry against the Phillips Investment Company. Judgment was rendered for defendant, and plaintiff appeals. Affirmed.
Simrall Bodley & Doolan, Bennett H. Young, and E. F. Trabue, for appellant.
C. B Seymour, Geo. B. Eastin, and W. S. Pryor, for appellee.
This action was brought to restrain the erection of what is known in the record as an "apartment house" on St James' Court, in the city of Louisville. The language of the restricting clause in the conveyance controlling the matter is as follows: "It is a condition of this deed that the property herein conveyed shall be used for residence purposes only, and that, in erecting a residence therein, it shall be built of brick or stone, and shall cost not less than seven thousand dollars, and that in erecting said residence the front wall thereof shall be not less than thirty-five feet back from the sidewalk line of St James' Court." It is also averred that there was a symmetrical plan for improving this court with single and segregated private residences, which would be disturbed, in fact destroyed, by the erection of the house complained of and notice of which plan was given the public by advertisements, posters, and handbills descriptive of the character of the buildings that were to be erected in the court. The proof shows that the building complained of is to cost some $40,000, is to be of brick and stone, and its front wall is to be set back the required distance. The controversy is whether this house is to be used for residence purposes only, within the meaning of the deed. The explanation of its character, and in answer to the claim that there was to be in it a public or semipublic restaurant, the originator of the scheme to erect this house testifies that ...
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