Freeman v. Island Heights Hotel & Improvement Co.

72 A. 974, 75 N.J. Eq. 491, 5 Buchanan 491, 1909 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 83
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 26, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 72 A. 974 (Freeman v. Island Heights Hotel & Improvement Co.) 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
Freeman v. Island Heights Hotel & Improvement Co., 72 A. 974, 75 N.J. Eq. 491, 5 Buchanan 491, 1909 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 83 (N.J. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Walker, V. C.'

The bill prays that it may be decreed that the portion of the lands at Island Heights in this state, called “Camp Ground,” the title to which is in the defendant company, shall remain open and devoted to the purposes for which it was originally dedicated, and, incidentally, that the defendant may be forever enjoined from erecting any fence or other structure upon the premises inconsistent with the user of the same as a “camp ground.”

On June 1st, 1878, sundry persons associated themselves into a corporation under the name of “Island Heights Association” under the provisions of an act entitled “An act to encourage the improvement of real property in this state,” approved March 24th, 1874. On July 1st, 1878, the association purchased about [492]*492one hundred and sixty-eight acres at Island Heights, New Jersey, and obtained conveyances therefor. Afterwards it purchased another tract, and the whole was laid out and a map made of it labeled:

“Property of the Island Heights Association, on the North Bank of Toms River, in Ocean County, New Jersey, scale 100 feet to an inch. A. P. Irons, Surveyor, Toms River, New Jersey, 1878.”

Copies of this map were spread broadcast, and sales were made of lots with reference to that map. The operation was one of at least a semi-religious character and was projected by the denomination known as Methodists and was intended as a Methodist camp meeting resort. The map appears not to have been filed.

In 1881 another map was made by the association and labeled: “Map of Island Heights, Ocean County, New Jersey.” On both these maps a portion of the land of the association was marked “Auditorium,” and an auditorium building was erected there some time during the early 80’s and was removed in 1904 or 1905. On Sunday, August 13th, 1878, the first “camp meeting” was held upon the grounds, and it was announced in the sermon that the place would always be devoted to camp meeting services. This announcement was frequently repeated at services and on other occasions.

The complainant is the owner of two lots on the tract in question and derives his title mediately from the association, one lot having been conveyed by the association to Alexander C. Graw, September 30th, 1886, who conveyed the same to Jacob Graw, October 7th, 1886, who conveyed the same to the complainant May 19th, 1890, and the other having been conveyed by the association to James L. Hayes, July 31st, 1886, who conveyed the same to the complainant September 17th, 1887. Before complainant made his first purchase in 1887 he spent the summer at Island Heights and heard announcement made from the pulpit in the auditorium that the open space there (at the auditorium) was to be a “camp ground.” The ground remained open ’and no attempt was ever made to enclose it until the summer of 1907. In 1886 a revised map was made which was filed in 1888. Its [493]*493lines were in many particulars a considerable departure from those in the map of 1881, but this last map also showed the “camp meeting” or auditorium space, though contracted somewhat from its former dimensions. The complainant saw the revised map before making his purchases, and heard statements made by members of the association to the effect that the camp ground was to be kept open.

The conveyances from the association to the complainant’s predecessors in title contained covenants by the parties of the second part for themselves and their heirs and assigns, that the grants were made and received subject to the rules, by-laws and regulations which might, from time to time, be adopted by the association for the protection, government and control of the camp meetings and other assemblies to be holden within their premises from year to year. The properties came to the complainant subject to these conditions. There was abundant testimony to show that the “camp ground” in its original, and after-wards in its more restricted area, had remained open, unenclosed and unobstructed, except by the auditorium building and a summer house and well which was made upon the premises, and it was free to the use of all persons for outing purposes when not being devoted to religious meetings. Religious services appear to have been discontinued on the “camp ground” in or about the year 1900, and on March 25th, 1901, the land comprising the “camp ground” was conveyed to Ralph B. Gowdy, and on the same day Mr. Gowdy and his wife conveyed a one-half interest in the premises to Louis F. Bodine, and on November 4th, 1903, Messrs. Gowdy and Bodine, together with their wives, conveyed the same premises to the defendant, the Island Heights Hotel and Improvement Company.

The complainant, who has built a cottage upon his lands, relies upon an implied covenant that the “camp ground” or premises, the fee of which is now in the defendant, shall be used only for “camp meeting” purposes, and that it cannot be closed to him as a lot owner upon the association’s tract, or his view through and across the same obstructed.

The nature and character of this covenant was under considera[494]*494tion by Vice-Chancellor Stevens in Forrester and others (among whom was the complainant in this cause) v. Island Heights Association and others (among whom was the defendant in this cause), 62 Atl. Rep. 775, and it was held on demurrer, that whatever private interests existed in the "camp ground” laid out, mapped and dedicated in the manner set forth in the complainant’s bill in that cause, it was unnecessarj'' to define, for whatever rights might be held adversely to the defendants as owners of the fee, the complainant would not be entitled to relief until the defendant threatened to interfere with those rights, a mere transfer of the fee not being an invasion of any of the complainant’s rights. Such interference is now alleged and is made the basis of the present suit.

The vice-chancellor took occasion to remark in the Forrester Case, at p. 777:

"The maps upon which the ‘camp ground’ is laid out have been recorded, and all the facts connected with the dedication of the ‘camp ground’ and the creation of all public and private rights therein appear to be matters of public notoriety and largely matters of record.”

In Lennig v. Ocean City Association, 41 N. J. Eq. (14 Stew.) 606, the defendant, a religious camp meeting association, laid out and mapped its seaside property into lots reserving a tier of blocks between Fifth and Sixth streets and extending from the ocean westward, as a “camp ground” for religious services and tenting purposes, and sold to the complainant lots by that map fronting on the blocks so reserved, whereon he erected a summer residence. It was observed by Mr. Justice Dixon, speaking for the court of errors and appeals, at p. 608:

“Whenever the owner of a tract of land lays it out into blocks and lots upon a map, and on that map designates certain portions of the land to be used as streets, parks, squares or in other modes of a general nature calculated to give additional value to the lots delineated thereon, and then conveys those lots by reference to the map, he becomes bound to the grantees not to use the portions so devoted to the common advantage otherwise than in the manner indicated.”

[495]*495And, again, at p. 609:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 A. 974, 75 N.J. Eq. 491, 5 Buchanan 491, 1909 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-island-heights-hotel-improvement-co-njch-1909.