Emery v. Bliss

54 Misc. 418, 105 N.Y.S. 1057
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Misc. 418 (Emery v. Bliss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emery v. Bliss, 54 Misc. 418, 105 N.Y.S. 1057 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Leventritt, J.

This is an equity action in which the plaintiff, alleging the breach of a covenant in a deed from him to the defendant, seeks to restrain the latter from maintaining certain ornamental abutments, pedestals, columns or [419]*419projections on the front of her house and to compel their removal by mandatory injunction.

The plaintiff in the year 1894, purchased for $140,000, a lot of land fifty by one hundred feet on the northerly side of Sixty-eighth street between Madison and Fifth avenues. Shortly thereafter he erected a building thereon which he has since occupied as a private dwelling. In January, 1903, he purchased a similar lot fifty by one hundred feet adjoining his dwelling on the east side for which he paid the sum of $300,000. On January 23, 1905, he sold all but the most westerly five feet to the defendant for a consideration of $260,000. The deed of conveyance contained the following covenant: “And further the said party of the second part, for herself, her heirs, executors, administrators and assigns does now forever covenant, promise and agree to and with the said John J. Emery and Lela Emery, their heirs-, executors, administrators and assigns, that she will not at any time hereafter erect any building or buildings upon the land hereby conveyed, the front or southerly wall of which building or buildings shall extend farther to the south than does the present front or southerly wall of the residence of the said John J. Emery or the southerly wall of any building hereafter erected on the site of said residence of John J. Emery should such future building be placed farther to the south than the said existing residence.”

On the same date the parties executed a supplemental or collateral agreement by which the plaintiff agreed not' to construct any building on the easterly five feet of his premises, being the five feet retained by him out of his second purchase, and the defendant bound herself similarly not to build on the westerly five feet of her lot, so that there should remain an open space of ten feet between the two residences. This agreement contained the following clause:

“ That there shall be no projections from the easterly wall of any building erected or to be erected upon the premises now of said John J. Emery or from the westerly wall of any building to be erected upon the premises of said Jeannette Dwight Bliss other than usual doors or windows and string-courses and cornices, which shall not exceed 12" [420]*420inches and not extend northerly more than five feet along said westerly wall and no encroachments whatsoever upon the open space 10 feet wide hereby created or intended so to be.”

Thereafter the defendant began the construction of her house. This with the exception of the interior trim has now been completed. By the end of February, 1906, the building had so far progressed that the plaintiff was advised of the nature of the construction of the front portion of the building. Claiming the violation of the covenant here insisted upon, he protested to the defendant. A futile conference was had, the defendant asserting that there was no violation. Thereupon, on April 2, 1906, this action was begun. An injunction pendente lite was denied.

The construction of which the plaintiff complains is two stories high and consists of four bases and pedestals with surmounting columns supporting a cornice and ornamental balustrade. A more detailed description' is necessary to understand the nature of the construction.

The four granite bases are four feet four inches wide, approximately two 'feet eight inches deep, and about thirteen inches high; The superimposed pedestals are about eight and one-half feet high, with a width of three feet one and one-half inches and an average depth of about two feet one and one-half inches.

The columns resting on the pedestals consist of .the usual plinth, shaft and capital with a total height of about twenty-one feet. The greatest extension of the shaft southerly from the wall is about one foot eight inches.

Above the columns and connecting them is a stone balustrade a little over four feet high. The balusters stand free while the whole railing is about a foot out.

The wall behind this construction just described is of a uniform thickness of about twenty inches up to the third story, then decreasing until, it is about twelve inches thick at the top. As a whole, the construction is not imbedded in the wall, the columns are, in part-, merely laid against it and,.again, partially engaged so as to be retained in position; and the imbedding of no part of the structure exceeds four [421]*421inches. The wall itself is of brick with granite facing up to the first story.

Neither the four granite bases nor any other part of the construction have any weight bearing function with relation to the wall. The whole is purely ornamental and decorative, answering an esthetic need rather than a practical use.

It is now necessary to show the relation of the defendant's front or southerly wall to that of the plaintiff. The front portion of the defendant’s house, exclusive of the construction heretofore described, stands on a line which is about three feet eleven inches north of the city building line. The plaintiff’s front wall begins on a point in the same line ten feet westerly and extends along the line about twenty-six feet, at which point it swells out into a swell front or bay for the balance of about twenty-four feet. This curved part of the wall extends from foundation to roof and, at the point of maximum swell, extends almost ten inches beyond the city building line.

In front of the straight part of the wall of the plaintiff's dwelling there is a covered stoop or portico. This consists of two pilasters engaged in the wall and two free standing columns about five feet out, all surmounted by a stone roof or entablature, cornice and balcony, extending about to the level of the second story.

On this state of facts and on the testimony adduced before me I am of the opinion that the defendant is entitled to judgment. We are concerned simply with the strict construction of a restrictive covenant; that is to say, after ascertaining the intent of the parties from the language employed and from such reference to the subject-matter and to surrounding facts and circumstances as will throw light on what the parties meant by “ front or southerly wall,” we are to enforce the covenant strictly. Clark v. Devoe, 124 N. Y. 120; Blackman v. Striker, 142 id. 555.

The defendant argues that the plaintiff does not come into equity with clean hands because a portion of his own front wall extends beyond the city building line. But the inequity complained of, if such it is, is not related to the [422]*422issue. Plaintiff’s building was completed when the deed and the collateral agreement were made. The defendant contracted with reference to an existing condition. The plaintiff has committed or suffered no acts, since the date of the covenant, which have made his hands unclean.

Again it is .urged that, as the curved front of the plaintiff’s wall, being an integral part of it for its entire height, extends far beyond the front wall of the defendant’s building, including the construction described, there can be no question of a breach of the covenant.

While the argument has some force considered from the standpoint of the language of the covenant taken alone, it is at variance with the intent that prompted its inclusion in the deed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Clark v. . Devoe
26 N.E. 275 (New York Court of Appeals, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Misc. 418, 105 N.Y.S. 1057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emery-v-bliss-nysupct-1907.