Heidorn v. Wright

4 Ohio N.P. 235
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJune 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. 235 (Heidorn v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heidorn v. Wright, 4 Ohio N.P. 235 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

HOLLISTER J. ; HUNT and JACKSON, JJ.,

concurring.

The questions in this case grew out of a covenant in a perpetual lease originally made to one Startzman by the trustees of Lane Seminary of a lot of land situated on Kemper Lane in the Ditv of Cincinnati. This lot was a part of a large tract devised to the trustees for educational purposes. After several intermediate conveyances, the plaintiff in error, Heidorn, became the owner of the leasehold by deed. The covenant giving rise to the litigation reads:

' “And, further, that the said demised premises, or any part thereof, or any build mg thereon, shall not, at any .time hereafter, be used or occupied for manufacturing, keeping or vending ardent spirits, or for keeping a tavern or public house, or for a blacksmith shop, or for the manufacturing of soap or candles, or a livery stable, or for slaughtering animals, or for a butchershop or stable or a tin shop; and, further, that said premises shall not be occupied for any other purpose than private dwelling houses without the consent of said trustees of Lane Seminary; and this lease, however, is made on this condition that if any installments of the rents hereby reserved shall remain unpaid for the space of six months after the same shall have become due, or if any other of the covenants herein contained on that part of Samuel Startzman, his heirs, executors administrators or assigns, to be done and performed, shall be violated and not fully kept, then and in either case this lease and the term hereby created shall cease and determine and be utterly void, and the said trustees of. Lane Seminary, their successors or assigns, may thereupon forthwith re-enter upon the said demised premises, and hold the same as though this lease had never been executed, free and discharged of the same. ”

After the execution of the lease the trustees conveyed the reversion to Charlotte K. Wright, the defendant in error.

Heidorn erected a building on the premises, constructed in such a manner that the upper stories were available for dwelling purposes, and the ground floor was adapted to the business of making horse shoes and shoeing horses. The upper stories were in fact occupied by families, and the ground floor was used as designed. Horse shoes were made there with forge and anvil, with the usual attendant noises. When the building was erected, and the uses to which it would be put became apparent, counsel for defendant in error called Heidorn’s attention to the covenant in the lease, and that such use would be in violation of it.

Heidorn proceeded, notw itbstanding, to carry on or to permit to be carried on, the business for which a part’of the building was designed.

Thereupon the defendant in error brought an action to enjoin Heidorn from putting the property to such use, and after a full hearing, the court entered an order perpetually enjoining Heidorn and his wife,to wi on. he had conveyed the property after the suit and who had been made a defendant, form the use or occupancy of the premises or any part thereof as a blacksmith shop or-for blacksmithing purposes,or for any other than dwelling purposes. To reverse this order Heidorn Bled a petition in error containing several assignments in error, but three of which were presented in argument as grounds for reversal, it is claimed that the-building and the business carried on. in a. part of it did not constitute a blacksmith shop in fact or in contemplation of law, and it is shown that one engaged in shoeing-horses and making horse shoes is properly defined as a farrier. We may dismiss this-claim, however, by the statement that while a blacksmith may not be a farrier, every farrrier who uses bellows, forge and anvil in-making horse shoes is a blacksmith; and this probably accords with the common understanding of that trade.

The second point made is that the owner-of the reversion has waived the violation of the covenant by the acceptance of rent since-the suit was begun. The answer to this claim is, that the owner is not seeking a forfeiture of the lease for a breach of its covenants, which would be waived by the-acceptance of rent, but, on the contrary, she is endeavoring to have the integrity of the lease preserved and its contracts enforced-

The important contention in the case arises on the claim of plaintiffs in error that the covenant is personal in its nature, and does not run with the land, and that, therefore, the assignee of the leasehold is-not bound by it.

Whether or not a covenant runs with the land is often a nice question, but we think that this covenant presents a case not open to doubt.

The covenant was entered into by the-' original lessee in behalf of himself, his heirs, personal representatives and -assigns, with the lessors, their successors and assigns. The agreement positively prohibited the use-of the property for any of the purposes-named. It is true that a way was provided: by which the prohibition might be removed, viz., by obtaining the consent of the trus tees, but that stipulation had nothing to do with the existence or force of the covenant itself; its only office was to relieve the estate-of the restriction. The stipulation was in favor of the lessee and his assigns, and did not change the nature of the prohibition-[237]*237The prohibition exists for all time, unless the trustees voluntarily remove it.

In Spencer’s case. Coke, part 5, 16a, (3 Co., 29,) it was resolved that: “If the lessee'had covenanted for hin and his assigns, that they would make a new wall upon some part of the thing demised, that for as much as it is to be done upon the land demised, that it should bind the assignee ; for although the covenant doth extend to a thing to be newly made, yet it is to be made upon the thing demised, and the assignee is to take the benefit of it, and therefore shall bind the assignee by express words.” This is the second solution. The first, so far as applicable, is: “When the covenant extends to a thing in esse, parcel of the demise, the thing to be done by force of the covenant is quodam modo annexed and appurtenant to the thing demised, and shall go with the land, and shall bind the assignee although he be not bound by express words.” And the sixth resolution determines that a covenant to repair runs with the land.

In Tatem v. Chaplin, 2 H. Bl., 133, there was a covenant that the lessee, his executors and administrators, should constantly reside upon the demised premises during the demise. This was held to be binding on the assignee of the lessee, although he was not named, the court being “clearly of opinion that the covenant in question was quodam modo annexed and appurtenant to the thing demised, according to the first and sixth resolutions in Spencer’s case,” Cockson v. Cock, 2 Cro., Jac., 125, was a case in which the lessee covenanted to leave fifteen acres of the demised premises unploughed and for pasture; his assignee ploughed up all the land. It was held by all the court “that this covenant is to be performed by the assignee, although he be not named, because it is for the benefit of the estate, according to the nature of the soil; but to perform a collateral covenant, or to build de novo, or such like, shall not bind him unless named. ”

It ii3 to be observed that the covenant in question does not require anything to be done by the lessee or his -assignee, such as build a house; but that the “demised premises, or any part thereof, or any building thereon,” shall not be used for a blacksmith shop or for other than dwelling purposes. The lessee took the property with a restriction upon its use.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heidorn-v-wright-ohsuperctcinci-1897.