Bulkley v. Rouken Glen, Inc.

222 A.D. 570, 226 N.Y.S. 544, 1928 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8116
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 27, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 222 A.D. 570 (Bulkley v. Rouken Glen, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bulkley v. Rouken Glen, Inc., 222 A.D. 570, 226 N.Y.S. 544, 1928 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8116 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

The following is the opinion delivered at Special Term:

Taylor, J.

The plaintiff sues to procure a judgment for the specific performance of a contract to convey real estate; or in the alternative, for damages claimed to be (a) payments on account of the purchase price and interest and necessary expenses incidental to the search, and (b) special damages for the loss of the plaintiff’s alleged bargain, and otherwise. The agreement was dated April 17, 1926. The land sold was about five acres, of which & considerable part was the so-called plot 33 on a Map of Woodacres,” etc., the property lying in part in New Rochelle and in part in the [572]*572town of Mamaroneck; the purchase price was $37,500, of which $5,000 was actually paid in two installments of $1,000 and $4,000, respectively, by the plaintiff; $7,500 was to be paid in cash on closing, and the balance by the plaintiff assuming a mortgage of $25,000 upon the property, which was to be conveyed subject to certain specified restrictions; not including, however, the one hereinafter referred to, affecting plot 33. Upon the adjourned day set for closing (July 1, 1926) each party made the requisite formal tender to the other. The plaintiff rej ected the title upon two grounds: (a) That said plot 33 was subject to a restriction that no more than a single detached dwelling house ” with possible outbuildings, should be erected upon the said plot 33, which had a frontage upon the so-called Knollwood Drive of 292.53 feet, such restriction not being mentioned in the contract; and (b) that although the contract provided: “ The present Northerly terminus of the partly finished road now running through property of J. J. Saxelby (which road is or may be considered a continuation of Rockingstone Avenue) is immediately contiguous to the southerly boundary line of the property herein to be conveyed. Said unfinished road has been dedicated to public use. Purchaser may connect a road for the use of the property to be conveyed, with said terminus,” such dedication had never been had, and that plaintiff might not connect with such terminus a road for the use of the property here involved. A discussion of said objections follows, and in the course of the same I have assumed that the contract is not to be reformed.

1. Among the restrictions imposed by the contract was the following (quoted in material part): That the said premises shall not be occupied for any purpose other than for a private residence for one family upon any single plot with a street frontage of not less than sixty feet, unless any such plot as shown on map and approved by seller and purchaser, contains less than such frontage. * * * ”

The Knollwood Drive frontage of plot 33 referred to was sufficiently long to admit four sixty-foot plots and one fifty-two plus feet in width. Plot 33 was substantially a triangle at the westerly end of the property involved. The southerly or base line of this triangle was about 156 feet in length, its westerly side on Knollwood Drive being, as aforesaid, 292.53 feet, and the easterly side thereof 316.90 feet. Said plot 33 would have contained five plots within the restriction specified in the contract, upon each of which plaintiff or his successors in title might have built a single dwelling house, if no other binding restriction prohibited. The entire Woodacres tract was owned in 1919 by Waldorf-Gill Real Estate Co., Inc., [573]*573which prepared a map of said property dated March 24, 1919, and duly filed August 12, 1919. On August 6, 1919, the said then owner conveyed to one L. Alice Arnold plot No. 30, which deed was duly recorded August 12, 1919, and recited, in effect, that the grantor had caused the said plan or map to be made, and that the grantor intended to convey the lots thereon by deed containing restrictive covenants on the part of the purchaser therein similar to those herein contained, to the end that the restrictions therein imposed shall inure to the benefit of each and all of the purchasers of such lots and their respective heirs and assigns.” One of the covenants in the Arnold deed prohibited the erection of any building other than a single detached dwelling house * * * upon the said lot of land hereby conveyed, or any part thereof.” On January 14, 1921, the same grantor conveyed said plot No. 33 to one Henry W. Sackett, which conveyance gave to him the benefits of covenants of respective grantees named in the several deeds, whether theretofore or thereafter executed, and contained the same covenant as to the single detached dwelling house and possible outbuildings to be erected upon the plot, as was contained in the Arnold deed; the Sackett conveyance also purported to give to him and his successors in title — and, as I determine, upon plain principles, ineffectually — the right to construct two dwelling houses and possible outbuildings on said plot 33, provided they were erected one each side of a drive which the deed stated it was Sackett’s purpose to construct through said plot, to certain other property owned by him. When the contract here involved was executed, the defendant had a contract with Sackett to purchase the entire premises here involved, including said plot 33. The defendant actually took title thereto by deed dated May 26, 1926 — before the attempted closing on July 1, 1926. Upon the undisputed facts above recited and others appearing in the record, plot No. 33 on the map of Woodacres, on July .1,1926, was subject, at least in equity, to the same restriction limiting construction to one dwelling house, as was contained in the Arnold deed. (Tallmadge v. East River Bank, 26 N. Y. 105, 109; Equitable Life Assurance Society v. Brennan, 148 id. 661, 672; Silberman v. Uhrlaub, 116 App. Div. 869; Thompson v. Diller, 161 id. 98; please read also Todd v. North Avenue Holding Corporation, 121 Misc. 301; affd., 208 App. Div. 854.) The attempted modification of said restriction so as to permit two dwelling houses, to which modification the owner of plot 30, who already had a negative easement in plot 33, was not a party, is absolutely unavailing. (See McDougall v. Schneider, 134 App. Div. 208.) There is no doubt that the restriction to one dwelling house on plot 33 is enforcible at [574]*574the instance of the owner of any other plot in the tract. (Cases supra.) Subsequent to the deed to Sackett other purchasers of lots upon the Woodacres map acquired an easement in said plot 33.

I determine that the objection to the title now under discussion was valid and warranted the plaintiff’s rejection of the title. I respectfully differ with the suggestion of counsel for defendant to the effect that the Arnold deed did not, in equity, restrict plot 33, so that only one dwelling house could be erected thereon.

2. The undisputed facts demonstrate that the road through the Saxelby property — continuation south of Rockingstone avenue — (the road involved in the second objection to the title above specified) was not dedicated to the public use. Plaintiff’s said objection to the title was valid and, like the previous objection, constituted a breach of the contract on defendant’s part.

It is not disputed that the defendant is unable to deliver title in accordance with the contract, and, therefore, the plaintiff, although otherwise entitled thereto, may not have judgment for specific performance. He is entitled to the amount of his legal damages flowing from the defendant’s said breaches of the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
222 A.D. 570, 226 N.Y.S. 544, 1928 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bulkley-v-rouken-glen-inc-nyappdiv-1928.