Flint v. Charman

6 A.D. 121, 39 N.Y.S. 892
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 A.D. 121 (Flint v. Charman) 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
Flint v. Charman, 6 A.D. 121, 39 N.Y.S. 892 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Brown, P. J.:

; The parties to this action own adjoining property in the.tówn of Mamaroneck, Westchester county, which was originally a part of a large tract of land owned by the Larchmont Manor Company, and by that corporation laid out in plots and sold for residential purposes.-

* The. plaintiff huilt a cottage upon his lands in the spring and Summer óf 1894. The defendant purchased her land in February,. 1895. The conveyance to neither party was from the Manor Company, but from its grantees. Immediately after her purchase, the defendant' caused to be erected on her lots a four-story frame building 150 feet long, which she used and-occupied during the summer [123]*123of 1895 as a hotel, and which at the time .of the commencement of this action she was preparing to open and use as a hotel during the summer season of the present year.

The orders appealed from enjoin and restrain the defendant from using her property for “ any business purposes whatsoéver, and particularly for the purpose of a hotel, boarding house, bar room, liquor store, or for the sale or disposal of liquor.”

These orders have their support in a covenant inserted in all the deeds from the Manor Company whereby each grantee of said company covenanted with it and its successors or assigns that the premises conveyed should not be used or occupied for the erection or maintenance of any slaughter house, or any of a number of other specified trades, including a bar room, lager beer, saloon, restaurant, ale house, liquor saloon, “ or any erection known as nuisances, or any noxious or dangerous use, purpose, trade, business or establishment, or for any business purpose whatsoever,” and it was expressly declared in the deeds from the Manor Company to its grantees that this said covenant should run with the land, and be inserted in all future conveyances and other instruments whereby the title to the said land was transferred or affected.

" The defendant, by her answer in the action, admits she purchased her property for the purpose of maintaining and using the same and the buildings thereon' for a private hotel or boarding house, and that she used the same for such purpose during the year 1895, and intends to so use it in the future. She admits that she sold liquor to the guests at said hotel, but denies that she used the premises for a restaurant or bar room. These admissions clearly bring the case within the letter of the covenant, and establish a prima facie breach thereof. But, notwithstanding these admissions, we are of the opinion, for reasons now to be stated, that the orders, so far as they restrain the defendant from using the premises for the business of keeping a hotel or boarding house, must be reversed.

It appears that the plaintiff erected his cottage in the summer of 1894. He has resided for several years in a cottage' on another part of the manor tract,, and does not personally occupy the premises adjoining the defendant. It does not appear that the value of his property was depreciated by the defendant’s hotel during the year 1895. On the contrary, the defendant swears, and the state[124]*124ment is not contradicted, that the plaintiff knew of her intention to use her property for hotel purposes, and never made any objection to her so doing; that he was present in the building before its completion, and was there on several occasions during the summer of 1895; that he was there on the occasion of a yaclitmen’s ball in August, and talked with defendant and was apparently pleased and interested in what was going on, and that subsequently he offered to sell his cottage to the defendant to be'used as an annex to the hotel. In the early part of the present year he leased the cottage to Hr. W. B. Hanney, who swore in an affidavit read upon the motion that the proximity of the cottage to the hotel was an’inducement to him to hire it.

The Code of Civil Procedure provides (§ 603) that in an action of this character, where the right to an injunction depends on the nature of the complaint, an injunction pendente lite may be granted where it appears that the continuance of the act complained of during the pendency of the action would “ produce injury tó the plaintiff.”

It is very clear from the facts that I have stated that the plaintiff is not injured by the defendant’s hotel. So far as we can be permitted to draw inferences from the facts, he has been benefited by it. To some extent at least it has aided in procuring him a tenant for his oWn property.

Being a resident upon another part of the tract, and offering to sell to the defendant the property adjoining her hotel to be used in com nection therewith, is certainly susceptible of the inference of a consent to the use by the defendant of the property for such purpose, and if that be a violation of the covenant it does not lie with the plaintiff to complain of an act which he was thus willing to aid and participate in.

Suppose he had sold the cottage to the defendant to be used as an annex to the hotel, could he as an owner of a lot on another part of the tract after such an act successfully maintain an action to restrain such use ? It appears to us that he could not, and in face of the uncontradicted testimony to which I have referred we think that he did not make out a proper case for a temporary injunction. (Power v. Village of Athens, 19 Hun, 165 ; Bronk v. Riley, 50 id. 489.)

[125]*125But there is another serious question presented upon the papers before us.

The rule is well settled that a person who seeks to enforce a covenant of the' character invoked by the plaintiff mjist permit no such breach of the stipulation as will frustrate all the benefit that would otherwise accrue to the other parties to the agreement. (Moore v. Murphy, 89 Hun, 175.)

Long acquiescence in a state of things which he afterwards seeks to enjoin will prevent him from obtaining the desired relief. (Matter of Lord, 78 N. Y. 109; Great Western Ry. Co. v. Oxford, Worcester & Wolverhampton Railway Co., 3 DeGex, M. & G. 341; Peek v. Matthews, L. R. [3 Eq.] 515; Roper v. Williams, Turner & Russell, 18, 22, 23.)

In Great Western Ry. Co. v. Oxford, etc. (supra), Lord Turner said: Parties who have lain by and permitted a large expenditure to be made, in contravention of the rights for which they contend, cannot call upon this court for its summary interference. The jurisdiction to interfere is purely equitable and it must be governed by equitable principles. One" of the first of those principles .is that parties coming into" equity must do equity. * * * If parties cannot come into equity without submitting to do equity, a fortiori they cannot come for the summary interference of the court when their conduct before coming has been such as to prevent equity being done.”

This rule will commend itself to the judgment of all fair-minded persons. Why should a court of equity interfere to enforce a covenant in favor of a man who, with knowledge that it was being violated, had failed to utter the remonstrance that would in all probability have given him the ¡uotection he asks> and have saved the other party from the expenditure of large sums of money.

Where a man neglects to speak to protect his own rights, a court of equity is not bound to aid him to escape from the situation that his silence has aided in creating.

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34 Misc. 459 (New York Supreme Court, 1901)

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Bluebook (online)
6 A.D. 121, 39 N.Y.S. 892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flint-v-charman-nyappdiv-1896.