Hodge v. . Sloan

17 N.E. 835, 107 N.Y. 244, 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 770, 62 Sickels 244, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 1006
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 28, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by84 cases

This text of 17 N.E. 835 (Hodge v. . Sloan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodge v. . Sloan, 17 N.E. 835, 107 N.Y. 244, 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 770, 62 Sickels 244, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 1006 (N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Danforth, J.

The conclusion of the trial court is against our ideas of natural justice, for it takes from one party an advantage which he refused to sell, and secures to the other without price a privilege which his grantor was unable to buy. Nor do we find that this denial of private right is required by any rule of public policy. Assuming with the respondent that the covenant is in restraint of trade, it is still valid if it imposes no restriction upon one party which is not beneficial to the other, and was induced by *249 a consideration which made it reasonable for the parties to enter into it, or in other words, if it was a proper and useful contract, or such as could not be disregarded without injury to a fair contractor. . This is the doctrine of Chappel v. Brockway (21 Wend. 157), and Ross v. Sadgbeer (id. 166), derived by a learned court from the leading case of Mitchel v. Reynolds (1 P. Wms. 181), and an examination of subsequent decisions. It is also so amplified and discussed in a case just decided by this court (Diamond Match Co. v. Roeber), opinion by Andrews, J. (106 N. Y. 473), as to make any elaboration of the general rule quite superfluous.

! The subject of the contract at the bottom of this controversy ,'was a piece of land which Sloan wanted to buy and which the ’ plaintiff was willing to sell provided it should not be made an instrument for the destruction of his means of livelihood or detrimental to his business. The principle which favors freedom of trade requires that every man shall be at liberty to work for himself, and shall not deprive himself or the State of the benefit of his industry by any contract that he enters into. The same principle must justify a party in withholding from market the tools, or instrmnents, or means by which he gains the support of his family, or if, as in the case before us, the instrument or means are susceptible of several uses, one of which will work mischief to himself by the loss or impairment of his livelihood, there is no reason of public policy which requires him upon a sale of the instrument to consent to that use, or prohibits him from binding his vendee against it.

We see nothing unreasonable in the restriction which the grantee imposed upon himself. He was not a dealer in sand. He wanted to buy the land on the best terms and in the most advantageous way, and in order to do this it was necessary that he should preclude himself from so using it as that by its means he should enter into competition with the vendor. I cannot find that such a covenant contravenes any rule of public policy, nor that it is incapable of being enforced in a court of equity. It stands upon a good consideration, and is not *250 larger than is necessary for the protection of the covenantee: in the enjoyment of his business.

But the question presented is, upon the conceded" facts, really one of individual right with which.the question of public-policy has little if anything to do.

Parties competent to contract have contracted, the one to-sell a portion of his land, but only upon such conditions as-will protect himself in the prosecution of business carried on upon the residue, the other agreeing to buy for a consideration affected by that condition, and enabled to do so only by acceding to it, and he therefore binds himself by contract to-limit the nse of the land purchased in a particular manner. There seems no reason why he and his grantee, taking title with notice of the restriction, should not he equally bound. The contract was good between the original parties, and it-should in equity at least bind whoever takes title with notice-"of such covenant. By reason of it the vendor received less-for his land, and the plain and expressed intention of the parties would be defeated if the covenant could not be enforced as well against a purchaser with notice, as against the original covenantor. In order to uphold the liability of the successor in title, it is not necessary that the covenant should be one technically attaching to and concerning the land and so running with the title. It is enough that a purchaser has notice of it. The question in equity being, as is said in Tulk v. Moxhay (11 Beav. 571; 2 Phillips, 774), not whether the: covenant ran with the land, but whether a party shall be permitted to use the land inconsistently with the contract entered into by his vendor, and with notice of which he purchased. This principle was applied in Tallmadge v. East River Bank (26 N. Y. 105), where the equity in regard to the manner of' improvement and occupation of certain land grew out of aparol contract made by the owner with the purchaser, and was held binding upon a subsequent purchaser with notice, although his legal title was absolute and unrestricted.

In Trustees v. Lynch (70 N. Y. 440), the action was brought-to restrain the carrying on of business on certain premises in *251 the city of New 'York, of which the defendant was owner,, upon the ground that the premises were subject to a covenant reserving the property exclusively for dwelling-houses. The' court below held, among other things, that the covenant did not run with the land, and that the restriction against carrying on any business on the premises was liable to conflict with the public welfare, and judgment was given for the defendant. Upon appeal it was reversed, the covenant held to be binding-upon a subsequent grantee with notice as well upon the original covenantor. So the restraint may be against the use of the premises for one or another particular purpose, as that no building thereon “ shall be used for the sale of ale, beer,., spirits,” etc., “or as an inn, public house or beer house.”’ (Carter v. Williams, L. R., 9 Eq. Cas. 678.) And it is said a man may covenant not to erect a mill on his own lands.. (Mitchel v. Reynolds, supra.)

Many other instances of restraint might be referred to, and where it is of such nature as concerns the mode of occupying or dealing with the property purchased in the way of business operations, or even the omission of all business or certain kinds of business, or the erection or non-erection of buildings upon the property, we see no reason to doubt the validity of an agreement fair and valid in other respects, which secures that restraint. Indeed, it seems well settled by authority that a personal obligation so insisted upon by a grantor and assumed by a grantee, which is a restriction as to the use of the land, may be enforced in equity against the grantee and subsequent purchasers with notice. (Parker v. Nightingale, 6 Allen, 341, 344; Burbank v. Pillsbury, 48 N. H. 475.) Nor is it essential that the assignees of the covenantor should be named or referred to. (Morland v. Cook, L. R., 6 Eq. Cases, 252.) In Tulk v. Moxhay (1 Hall & Quell’s Ch. Rep. 105), it was said that the jurisdiction of the court in such cases is not fettered by the question whether the covenant does or does not run with the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 N.E. 835, 107 N.Y. 244, 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 770, 62 Sickels 244, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 1006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodge-v-sloan-ny-1887.