Goldberg v. Nicola

178 A. 809, 319 Pa. 183, 98 A.L.R. 774, 1935 Pa. LEXIS 659
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 3, 1935
DocketAppeal, 78
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 178 A. 809 (Goldberg v. Nicola) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldberg v. Nicola, 178 A. 809, 319 Pa. 183, 98 A.L.R. 774, 1935 Pa. LEXIS 659 (Pa. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion bx

Mr. Justice Kephart,

Mary Nicola and her husband, appellants, owners of a lot of ground, conveyed a portion of it to Goldberg, appellee, subject to a restriction that “No building more than three (3) stories in height shall be erected or maintained upon the above described lot of land.” Appellants also agreed that no building more than three stories in height shall be erected on the property remaining in their ownership and from which this lot was taken. This remaining land with the restriction was sold to Grump and McQuillen, who built an apartment house thereon in violation of the building restriction. Goldberg, the first vendee, brought suit against the Nicolas, the original covenantors and grantors, for damages resulting from the violation of the covenant, recovered a verdict and a judgment was entered thereon. The Nicolas appeal.

Does the restrictive covenant run with the land, and if so, when breached by the vendee of the original covenantors, are the latter liable in damages for that breach ? The covenant not to erect a building more than three stories in height contained in the covenantors’ deed to their covenantee, the grantee, and binding the remaining part of this land owned by the covenantors, was a restrictive covenant.- Where an instrument conveying or granting an interest in land restricts the use of that land to a certain definite purpose which will be beneficial to the land affected and the remaining land in the grantor out of which *185 the grant is made or to other lands of the grantor adjacent thereto, such restriction is a covenant real and becomes a part of the estate that is granted, binding successively the owners of the land. It limits to the extent of the prohibition the unlimited use which would otherwise be incident to the fee granted. The privity of estate existing between successive owners causes such covenant to bind the assignees of the covenantor as well as the assignees of the covenantee; the beneficial right thereby created as well as the impediment to or burden on the full enjoyment of the land, follows the ownership of the land with which it is inseparably connected. The leading case on the subject is Spencer’s Case, 5 Coke 16, decided in 1583, and it was then determined that the test as to whether the contract or covenant ran with the land and would be binding upon and enforceable by successive owners was whether it “doth not touch or concern the thing demised.” 1 A restriction on thé use of land contained in a deed is appurtenant or attached to the land conveyed, and where the restriction either benefits or also applies to other land remaining in the grantor it is attached to that land also.

It has been held in some instances that the restriction is in the nature of a covenant; in others as an equitable easement. See Clark, Covenants and Interests Running with Land, page 148 et seq. The difficulty in determining whether a covenantor who has parted with his. title should be liable in the future for a breach of the covenant by a subsequent grantee comes from a failure to properly appraise the real intent and purpose of the restriction and its relation to the land involved. The difficulty has been augmented by the rule that has prevailed in leases of land where liability for breach of covenant may be imposed on the lessee regardless of the number of assign *186 ments of the lease, and the grip of personal liability on a vendor in a deed for breach of covenant or warranty of quiet enjoyment.

In leases among the usual covenants running with the land are those to repair and to pay rent; in all these contracts the personal credit and standing of the lessee to whom the contract is made is the moving consideration and continues so in preserving that liability to the original lessee or covenantee in the leases.

Whether or not a party to a deed is liable for a breach by subsequent grantees of a covenant that runs with the land must depend upon the nature and character of the particular covenant, and the intention of the parties in the creation of the covenant, construed in relation to the relative positions of the land and parties affected. Undoubtedly in the restricted use that was imposed on this land, there was a direct and positive invasion of the ordinary rights of fee simple owners; indeed it carved an interest from an ordinary fee right. It was intended, however, to benefit the property affected and its owners by making it more attractive for sale and securing to it light and air. It was to the owners a direct benefit; while on the land both covenantor and covenantee, with their respective assigns, had a substantial interest in the life of the covenant. When either parted with the title he parted with that interest. The one thus separating himself from the land could not enter the aliened premises to prevent a breach, he could enjoy no benefit from it, nor could he perform the covenant. It was so intended by the parties and was effective alike on covenantor and covenantee. The interest thus created was centered in or attached to the land itself, for the benefit of the other parcel. When the person divested himself of title, he transferred to his grantee the same right in the covenant that he possessed, with the same obligation imposed. There was never any intention to impose personal responsibility apart from privity of estate, or to enter into an engagement on personal credit. On the contrary, there was set up a con *187 tract operative and binding upon owners and future owners of the land as long as privity of estate lasted between them.

The theory on which our court enjoins violation of restrictive covenants (and their enforcement is mostly through equity) has been that of an easement or property right in the land restricted. Each one affected by the restriction has a corresponding right as against the other to see that it is obeyed. Our equity cases emphasize the intent of the parties and examine the language of the covenant in the light of the attending circumstances.

The authorities have recognized the distinction between real covenants in landlord and tenant relations, and real covenants that are restrictive covenants running with the land and contained in the deed. The contractual aspect of a covenant in a lease, as for instance to pay rent, is never lost sight of; although it runs with the land, the original covenantor is liable even if he has assigned the lease. As to him the covenant subsists, as stated in Washington Natural Gas Co. v. Johnson, 123 Pa. 576.. There are two classes of covenants annexed to land which follow it into the hands of heirs and assigns. The one class, such as the usual covenants for title, affect successively the owners of the land, who are bound by the privity of contract between them. The other class, represented by equitable easements, is attached to the land itself and follows the possession of the land: Norcross v. James, 140 Mass. 188; 1 Smith’s Leading Cases 145; Holmes, The Common Law, 394 et seq. As long ago as Pakenham’s Case, Y. B. 42, Ed. III 3, which is thoroughly discussed and explained by Justice Holmes, the distinction between these two types of covenants was recognized and the subject of argument.

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Bluebook (online)
178 A. 809, 319 Pa. 183, 98 A.L.R. 774, 1935 Pa. LEXIS 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldberg-v-nicola-pa-1935.