Albright v. Cavacos

3 Balt. C. Rep. 323
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Balt. C. Rep. 323 (Albright v. Cavacos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albright v. Cavacos, 3 Balt. C. Rep. 323 (Md. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

AMBLER, J.—

It is admitted that the defendant’* lot at the southeast corner of Boland avenue, formerly Central avenue, and 36th street, formerly Third avenue, as well as all of the lots 'belonging- to the several plaintiffs on the eas-t side of Boland avenue south of 36th street, formed part of the property of the I-Iampden Association, which was in 1859 the subject of a proceeding in equity in the case of John W. McJilton ot al. vs. Sarah A. Mankin et al., in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County. By the decree in that ease trustees were appointed to sell -and convey the land “in accordance with the constitution and by-laws of the Hampden Association,” which was as yet unincorporated, and from the proceeding it clearly appears that there was a general “building- scheme” or plan for the development of the entire property of the Association, consisting of a tract of some four hundred and fifty acres, designed to make it more attractive for residential purposes. A plat shows how the streets were laid off and the land divided up into building lots, and the constitution and -by-laws provided, among other restrictions, that every building should be set back, on Boland avenue, at least twenty feet from the street line, and on 36th street at least fifteen feet from the street line. The deeds from the trustees, under which all parties to the present controversy claim by mesne conveyances, contained no express covenants or considerations on the -part of the grantees, and none of the subsequent deeds has mentioned or referred to any “restrictions.”

In September, 1913, the defendant bought the property a-t the southeast corner of these two streets, fronting about one hundred and thirty-four feet on 36th street and running back, with even width1, one hundred and twenty-five feet on Boland avenue to a thirty-foot alley. The parties are not agreed as to the exact width of this alley, but they do agree that the nearest house of any of the plaintiffs is about a hundred and eighty feet south of the corner of the two streets. Following the street ear lines, the tide of business came up 36th street, and on that street, as in some other parts of Hampden, residences were converted into stores and were extended to the street line. Apparently, with the change of conditions, the fifteen-foot restrictions was, by common consent, disregarded and abandoned. At -the time of the defendant’s purchase, the front of his building- had already stood for several years directly on the line of 36th street, but along the Boland avenue side was a twenty-foot strip of hare ground, unenclosed, unpaved and not even covered with grass. He now ■proposes to utilize some of this vacant space by erecting at the corner a one-story structure with a front of twenty feet.on 36th street and running south thirty-five feet on the line of Boland avenue. This new building, he says, will give him, in place of the empty lot, a valuable corner store -that will be. in keeping- with the other improvements on 36th street, and, so far from injuring any of the plaintiffs, the nearest of whom will be at least a hundred' and forty feet from the rear wall, it will be a decided improvement to the whole neighborhood, especially as his plans include paving- the sidewalk. He also says that what he proposes at his corner has already been done at each of the other three corners of the two streets, without objection from any one so far as he has heard. For more than twenty years J. P. Benson & Sons, who are among the plaintiffs in this case, have had a substantial brick building at the northeast corner, flush with the street line in both directions. Six or eight years ago the defendant himself put a like brick building at the southwest comer, also, flush with the lines of both streets; and' for about fifteen years a one-story frame building, used for offices, has occupied a similar position at the northeast corner, with a’ high fence in 'the rear running about a hundred feet on the line of the east side of Boland avenue. Above 36th street buildings stand on the line in several instances on both sides of Boland avenue, and that appears to have been the rule with all houses built in the last five or ten years. Notwithstanding the defendant’s denial, I cannot doubt that he made his purchase [325]*325with notice of the restriction; but there seems to have been at least some ground for the advice that he admits having received from his counsel, to the effect that he had “99 per cent, of the right to build out to the street line because other people were doing it.’’

I cannot accept the view of the defendant’s counsel that under the decision of the Court of Appeals in Dawson vs. W. M. R. R., 107 Md. 75, none of the present owners of property in Hampden are entitled to enforce the restriction, because in the original deeds from the trustees there was no covenant or condition in favor of the grant- or’s successors and assigns and expressly binding the heirs and assigns of the grantees.

It has long been the settled law of Maryland, as of other States and also of England, that, although a covenant or agreement may not be, strictly sxjeaking, such as to “run with the land,” it will in equity be enforced against a grantee with notice (Peabody Heights Co. vs. Wilson, 82 Md. 186) : and also that “although the covenant or agreement in the deed, regarded as a contract merely is binding only on the original xiarties, yet in order to carry out the plain intent of the xxartics, it will be construed as creating a right or interest, in the nature of an easement ax)purtenant to the remaining land of the grantor at the time of the grant, and the right and burden thus created will respectively pass to, and be binding on, all subsequent grantees of the respective lots of land” (Summers vs. Beeler, 90 Md. 474; Safe Deposit Co. vs. Flaherty, 91 Md. 489). The most familiar application of this principle is in cases where there is proof of a general plan or scheme for the imx>rovement of property. (See note to Korn vs. Campbell, 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1, and particularly at p- 27) ; and that it was again distinctly recognized and approved by the Court of Appeals in Dawson vs. W. M. R. R. (107 Md. 75) is shown by the reference at the close of the opinion (see bottom of liage 95) to cases where “there were peculiar grounds for equitable jurisdiction in behalf of those not parties to the deeds or other instruments” and especially to Safe Deposit Co. vs. Flaherty (91 Md. 499-500) as exxffaining under what circumstances “those not parties to a deed or contract may have the benefit of provision in it.” If the

Messrs. Benson, who have not only built to the line at the northwest corner of Roland avenue and 36th street, but have also built to the west line of Elm avenue, immediately in the rear of their lots on the east side of Roland avenue, were the only plaintiffs in this suit, a Court of Equity might well refuse to enforce in their favor a restriction which they have not hesitated to disregard themselves whenever that served their own convenience or advantage; but there are other plaintiffs who ask only that the defendant maybe required to observe the same rule that has governed them in the imin'ovement of their property. The latter justly say that because the restriction has elsewhere been abandoned by common consent is no reason why an abandonment should be forced upon the residents of this neighborhood against their will; and with equal justice they insist that some sanctity is still due to solemn deeds and covenants even after the lapse of fifty years.

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Related

Summers v. Beeler
48 L.R.A. 54 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1899)
McDowell v. Biddison
87 A. 752 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1913)
Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Flaherty
46 A. 1009 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1900)
Maryland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Chas. Simons Sons Co.
63 A. 314 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1906)
Peabody Heights Co. v. Willson
32 A. 386 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Balt. C. Rep. 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albright-v-cavacos-mdcirctctbalt-1914.