Bridgewater v. Ocean City Railroad

49 A. 801, 62 N.J. Eq. 276, 17 Dickinson 276, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 60
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 18, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 49 A. 801 (Bridgewater v. Ocean City Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bridgewater v. Ocean City Railroad, 49 A. 801, 62 N.J. Eq. 276, 17 Dickinson 276, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 60 (N.J. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Grey, Y. C.

The defendant railroad companies contend, in the first place, that neither by action nor speech of a binding character did the Ocean City Association devote, the lands lying between Fifth and Sixth streets on its plan of lots, from the thoroughfare to the ocean, to use as an open space for camp ground and park purposes, and that no implication of a covenant by the association to that effect should be raised. The foregoing recital of the evidence on this point, parol and documentary, throws light upon the plan of the association and the reservation of the camp ground, &c.

The general scheme for the use of the lands of the Ocean City Association was part of its original organization as a corporation. Its detailed development is indicated at every step in its [285]*285progress. The association invited purchasers to buy lots because-of the supposed attractions of the general scheme. Its very first advertisement of public sales of its lots, quoted above at length, promised to purchasers that the space five hundred feet wide, from the thoroughfare to the ocean, with plenty of tenting ground, should be allotted to the encampment. In making the two public sales the officers of the association renewed the assurances and distributed maps indicating the lay of the land. Reports of sales were made to the association by its officers who had conducted them, reciting the attractions of the camp and park ground. Detailed maps were filed by the association, showing open spaces where the camp and park ground was located and a plan of streets on which were numbered 'town lots. None were indicated on the camp-ground space. The large map, containing sections A, B and C of the association’s tract, delineates the camp ground and park as open space from the bay to the ocean, with all the blocks on the adjoining side lines of Fifth and Sixth streets plotted into town lots. This map was-filed and recorded April 19th, 1883, in Cape May county clerk’s office. Four blocks of the seven which constitute this open space are specially marked. Two are designated “park,” one double block is marked “camp ground,” and in the centre of this square “auditorium,” and the next block is marked “grove.” The other three blocks are plotted as open space, without special marking.

The actual situation on the locality between Fifth and Sixth streets accords with the declarations and documentary proofs. The camp ground and park remained open blocks, while lots bordering on it were sold off for general building purposes.

After all these acts and declarations of the association touching the devotion of the space between Fifth and Sixth streets to this special purpose had been completed for a number of years, the complainant’s grantor took his deed from the association in 1891,'and the defendant company took its dqeds,- one in 1896- and the latér one in 1899.

An attempt was made to show, by some of the officers of the Ocean City Association, that there was no announcement at their first and second sales of lots in 1880 to the effect that the camp-meeting ground should remain an open space from the thorough[286]*286fare to the ocean. It cannot be ignored, in the consideration of this cause, that the Ocean City Association (whose officers now throw doubt upon the reservation of the camp ground) is weightily interested in securing the discharge of those lands from the implied covenant to leave open, from the bay to the ocean, the space between Fifth and Sixth streets. That tract must now be very much more valuable than it was when the general scheme was proclaimed to lot purchasers at the inception of the proposed improvement. It includes seven blocks of desirable land lying nearly in the centre of the city. If these could be sold off by the association in town lots, at the present increased values, given to them by the many houses built on adjoining lots by purchasers, it would be a very profitable result for the association. This explains its activity in trying to secure from fronting lotowners releases of the camp ground and park privilege, except between Fifth and Sixth streets and Wesley and Asbury avenues, which, if it were effectually accomplished, would enable the association to sell six of those blocks, reserving only the auditorium block for camp ground and park. The association is interested in minimizing, if not in wholly defeating, the reservation of the camp ground and park. Its officers’ testimony must be considered with relation to this interest. Their statements denying their oral declarations at the sales are credibly contradicted, not only by the complainant’s witnesses, but, to a considerable extent, by the defendants’ witnesses. All the documentary proofs oppose them. Some of the reports of sales, contained in the publications of the association, which recognize the reservation of the camp ground and park, were made by the very officer's who now testify that at the sales they did not announce the reservations. The many and expensive publications and maps issued, circulated and filed by the Ocean City Association all uniformly refer to the open-space camp ground. They support the statement that these advantages were proclaimed at the sales of lots, and are corroborated, as stated, by the actual fact that this central and valuable location was left open and used only as camp ground and park, and was not dealt with as town lots in any of its seven blocks from 1880 to 1897, though the adjoining lands were so rrsed. Three years ago, evidently by arrangement of the [287]*287association, the covenantor, two or tnree cottages were located on camp-ground blocks. It is straining credulity too far to ask that, in the face of all the proofs here offered, it be believed that there was, in truth, no devotion of the lands between Fifth 'and Sixth streets, from the bay to the ocean, to the purposes of camp ground and park.

In 1886 the case of Lennig v. Ocean City Association, 14 Stew. Eq. 606, was decided by the court of appeals. In that case it appeared that Lennig owned several lots, purchased from the Ocean City Association, one at the corner of Sixth street and Wesley avenue, fronting on the camp ground, and two adjoining lots fronting on Wesley avenue. The association had announced its purpose to lease the camp ground in lots for the erection of small cottages for terms of ten years. Lennig, in his bill, declared that the excution of this scheme would be in derogation of his property rights, and would materially interfere with the enjoyment of his dwelling. The court of appeals sustained his right to an injunction on both grounds. It declared that the filing of the maps and the publications of the association, considered with relation to the avowed objects of the association in its articles of incorporation, indicated the adoption of a general plan of improvement, laying out lots, streets, parks and squares, and conveying the lots with relation thereto, and thus obtaining greater prices from the purchasers of the lots. Such conduct, the court held, operated, without express covenant, to bind the grantor not to use the portions devoted to the common advantage otherwise than was indicated in the plans and publications which induced the purchase of the lots. The court declared that the character of the use to which the Ocean City Association devoted the camp ground was “a camp for the purposes of a religious camp meeting, where sojourners could remain a short time under the shelter of tents or other temporary structures.”

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Bluebook (online)
49 A. 801, 62 N.J. Eq. 276, 17 Dickinson 276, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridgewater-v-ocean-city-railroad-njch-1901.