Batchelor v. . Hinkle

104 N.E. 629, 210 N.Y. 243, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 1227
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 104 N.E. 629 (Batchelor v. . Hinkle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Batchelor v. . Hinkle, 104 N.E. 629, 210 N.Y. 243, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 1227 (N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

Cuddebaok, J.

At the time the agreement of 1849 was made, the property affected thereby was vacant, but it was the design of the parties to the contract to make the land a desirable location “ for residences and buildings of the first class.” To accomplish that purpose they provided among other things that the buildings erected on the land should be “setback uniformly on a line five feet from the sides of the said streets respectively so as to form ■court-yards of five feet wide on each side of the ” streets. The courtyards, as the finding is, were for ornamental purposes.

Thereafter the property was improved and built upon in the manner contemplated in the agreement. The dwelling houses constructed were the brownstone or brick structures common in New York, three or four stories high, with the usual high stoop leading to the parlor floor, and the usual basement with the courtyard in front thereof, inclosed by a stone coping or iron railing setting it off from the sidewalk proper.

Between the time when the contract of 1849 was made, and the time when the parties to this action acquired title, a period of more than half a century, the neighborhood underwent a change. Business encroached upon it, and the land to which the covenant related was no longer a desirable location for residences. The old dwellings in some instances were turned into hoarding houses, and in other instances were remodeled for business purposes. *248 The old courtyards were removed when the buildings were remodeled, and the five-foot courtyard space was used in connection with the business to which the premises were put. The plaintiff’s property has been so transformed. She has removed the old high stoop and courtyard, put a new front in the structure five feet back from the sidewalk, and used as space for a vault the space reserved for a courtyard.

Some few years later the property in the block became too valuable to be used as boarding houses, and the old buildings were too small to be used profitably for business purposes. At about the time of the commencement of this action there was a demand in the neighborhood for modem structures twelve or more stories high. The “setback ” covenant is a detriment to property on which such tall buildings are to be erected, for the reason that it curtails the floor space in the building by which the rental value is fixed. The defendants have erected a twelve-story building on their lots, and in order to get as much floor space as possible and better light in the rear, have carried the building out to the street line. The defendants were first in the block to build over the five-foot space.

The findings are, that the object which the parties to the covenant intended to accomplish has practically been defeated in the lapse of time, and that courtyards designed for ornament are out of place in front of buildings intended for commercial purposes; that the plaintiff has suffered no substantial damage from the erection of the defendants’ building on the street line, but, on the contrary, that both the market and rental value of her property, and of all the other property in the block have been increased thereby; that the defendants’ building is 115 feet distant from the plaintiff’s lot and cannot materially interfere with the actual use of her property; that the lots on the north side of Twenty-sixth street, where there is no “ set-back ” covenant in force, are largely *249 built up to the street line with commercial buildings; that the owners of all the property on the street affected by the covenant, except the plaintiff and the owner of the lot at the comer of Broadway, are willing to have the restriction abrogated; that the defendants, in good faith, erected their building on the street line, believing they had the right to do so, and that it would cost $66,000 to remove that part of the structure which stands on the five-foot space.

The plaintiff objects to the Encroachment made by the defendants’ building on the courtyard space as a violation of the covenant in the agreement of 1849. Has she such a right under the covenant as a court of equity will enforce, or shall she be remitted to an action at law for her damages ?

The plaintiff cites and relies on the decision in Zipp v. Barker (40 App. Div. 1; 166 N. Y. 621). In that case the covenant was not to erect on the land conveyed any building or structure other than fences or ornamental inclosures within the several distances specified in the covenant from the sides of certain streets named, the intent being to insure an open space in front of the buildings on the property affected by the covenant and the observance of uniformity in the location of building lines; and also to leave the several owners, for the time being, of the property at liberty to inclose and improve as courtyards or ornamental grounds the space between the front of their buildings and the lines of the street.

In Zipp v. Barker the defendants’ land, with a building thereon which complied with the covenant, was situate at the corner of Fulton street and Elm place in Brooklyn and the plaintiff’s property adjoined fronting on Elm place. With respect to Elm place the covenant provided that no structure should be erected within fifteen feet of the street line. Upon the plaintiff’s premises were large buildings standing back from the street line and the defendants had erected a structure one story high in *250 front of their property to approximately the line of Elm street. The court said in'granting an injunction against the defendants: “The plaintiff’s property is improved by large buildings and the structure of the defendants adjoining then- property is especially injurious to her and cuts off her view and access to Eulton street which is particularly valuable.”

The purpose of the covenant in Zipp v. Barker was entirely different from the purpose sought to be accomplished by the covenant in this case. In Zipp v. Barker the intention was to provide for open spaces between the buildings erected on the property conveyed and the lines of the street and to establish uniformity in -the location of building lines, which the court said, “ is just as valuable for a business as for a residential neighborhood.” But in the case under consideration the intention was not primarily to fix a building line but to make the block attractive and desirable as a place of residence, a purpose which has been defeated by a radical change in the character of the neighborhood.

Furthermore, in this case the defendants’ building does not adjoin the plaintiff’s lot but is 115 feet distant therefrom and the building does not cut off access to the plaintiff’s property or materially interfere with the view thereof. The plaintiff has suffered no damage, while to grant the relief which she seeks would greatly damage the defendants.

I think the case is governed by the decision of this court in McClure v. Leaycraft (183 N. Y. 36, 44).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 N.E. 629, 210 N.Y. 243, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 1227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/batchelor-v-hinkle-ny-1914.