Hotel Taft Associates v. Sommer

34 Misc. 2d 367, 226 N.Y.S.2d 155, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3779
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 34 Misc. 2d 367 (Hotel Taft Associates v. Sommer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hotel Taft Associates v. Sommer, 34 Misc. 2d 367, 226 N.Y.S.2d 155, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3779 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinion

Abraham J. Gtehlihorr, J.

Defendants seek an order pursuant to rule 106 of the Rules of Civil Practice dismissing the three causes of action alleged in the complaint on the ground that none of them states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Plaintiffs sue for an injunction restraining defendants from constructing on their property any building which would violate the terms of a certain agreement or the zoning laws. The area involved is the entire block hounded by 50th Street, Avenue of the Americas, 51st Street and Seventh Avenue.

Plaintiffs, Hotel Taft Associates and Hotel Taft Realty Company, are partnerships. They are, respectively, the owner and lessee of premises known as the Hotel Taft and an Annex thereto (hereinafter referred to as the “Taft property”). Plaintiff, Zeckendorf Hotels Corporation, is the sublessee and operator. The property covers the east side of Seventh Avenue from 50th to 51st Street and extends 200 feet easterly on the [369]*369south side of 51st Street and 100 feet easterly on the north side of 50th Street, with the center line of the block dividing the northerly and southerly portions. The defendants own the land contiguous to that of plaintiffs to a point distant 390 feet east of Seventh Avenue on both 50th and 51st Streets (hereinafter referred to as the 1 ‘ Boxy property”). To the east of defendants’ property, and fronting on Avenue of the Americas, is the Time and Life Building owned by Bock-Time, Inc.

The first cause of action alleges in substance that in 1925 the then owner of the Taft property undertook the construction of the Hotel Taft, and the then owner of the Boxy property prepared plans for the construction of the Boxy Theatre. The complaint alleges that in 1926 the then owners of the Taft property prepared plans for the construction of an Annex to the Hotel Taft. According to the complaint the plans for the Annex contemplated the construction of 19 stories and a penthouse to an elevation of approximately 241 feet, leaving open and unoccupied a 10-foot space between the rear of the Annex building and the rear of its lot line, starting on the roof of the first floor at an elevation of about 12 feet without any additional setbacks, so that the windows of the rear rooms of the Annex would face upon the open and unoccupied area. The complaint also alleges that the plans for the erection of the Boxy Theatre — the theatre had not yet been erected — called for the construction of the theatre flush on the rear lot line of its property and contiguous to the southerly line of the Taft property on which the Annex was to be constructed, the theatre to be constructed up to an elevation of about 71 feet.

The complaint then alleges that, in order to provide additional yard or court area for the Hotel Taft Annex and a permanent easement of light, air and view therefor, Boxy Theatres Corporation which then owned the Boxy property and Carbarn Corporation which then owned the Taft property entered into an agreement, hereinafter referred to as the “ Carbarn-Boxy Agreement ”. The agreement was duly recorded. A copy is annexed to the complaint and its terms incorporated therein as though fully alleged.

Paragraph 1‘ First ’ ’ of the agreement provides in substance that so long as the Boxy Theatre shall stand no building of greater height than the Boxy Theatre shall be erected on the “rear portion” of the Boxy property. The “rear portion” is defined as the area ‘ ‘ north of a line drawn parallel with and distant 50 feet southerly from the center line of the block between 50th and 51st Streets.”

[370]*370Paragraph “ Third ” of the agreement provides in substance that if the Boxy Theatre is demolished, no building shall thereafter be erected on a certain portion of the Boxy property, denominated in the agreement as the “ restricted area ”. The “ restricted area ” — upon which the owners of the Boxy property may not build — is computable and ascertainable according to a formula prescribed in paragraph ‘ ‘ Third ’

The formula is based on the major premise, implicit in paragraphs “ Third ” and “ Fourth” of the agreement, that yard or court space will be required by the zoning laws between the Taft property and a building to be erected on the Boxy property after demolition of the Boxy Theatre; and that so much of the “ restricted area ” as is necessary to provide such a court in compliance with the zoning laws, shall be reserved for that purpose.

Accordingly, the nature, size and extent of the “ restricted area ” is defined in paragraph “ Third ” as an “ area twice the number of square feet, less 1000 square feet, as shall and will be required by law or municipal ordinance for a rear yard or court ” (it being understood that the size of the restricted area “ increases at different levels above the street level ”, because of required setbacks). The northern boundary of the “ restricted ” area is described as the center line of the block; the easterly and westerly boundaries are described as the easterly and westerly lines of the Boxy property; and the southerly boundary is described as a line parallel to the center line of the block enclosing a space sufficient, at various levels, to provide the area required by the zoning laws for a rear yard or court. The agreement provides that its provisions shall bind the. successors and assigns of the respective parties.

In paragraph “Fourth” the agreement provides that, so far as permitted by the municipal authorities, any owner of the Taft property may take “ any advantage ” of the provisions of the agreement so as “ to diminish the yard or court area required [by the zoning laws] for any building” to be erected on the Taft property. Paragraph “ Fourth ” also emphasizes the intent of the parties to assure to the owners of the Taft property a yard or court area that would, at the time of construction on the Taft property, meet the requirements of the zoning laws at the expense of the yard or court area on the Boxy property in excess of that required by its owners to meet the. zoning laws with respect to construction on its property.

The complaint alleges that both the Taft property and the Boxy property are located in a B Area District and a Class Two Height District under the Zoning Besolution of the City of [371]*371New York; that the Boxy Theatre was demolished in December, 1960, and that defendants in the same month acquired title to the Boxy property; that plans for a new 23-story office building with an elevation of about 248 feet were approved by the Department of Buildings; that defendants’ plans show a proposal to construct said building flush on the rear lot line of the Boxy property contiguous with the rear of the Annex up to an elevation of 89 feet; and that above said elevation the setbacks would provide such a small open unoccupied space, that the building would occupy most of the “ restricted area ” as defined in the Carbarn-Boxy Agreement.

Finally the first cause of action alleges that the proposed construction is in violation of the Carbarn-Boxy Agreement, that it would obstruct light, air and view, destroy and diminish rentals and market value, impair use and enjoyment, and cause irreparable damage.

Defendants’ objection amounts to this: that what constitutes the “restricted area” according to the agreed formula does not appear from the complaint inasmuch as the complaint does not state the number of feet “ required by law or municipal ordinance for a rear yard or court ’ ’. What the law requires for a rear yard or court is, in this case, a matter of proof, not pleading.

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Related

Hahn v. Hagar
2017 NY Slip Op 5710 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2017)
Hotel Taft Associates v. Sommer
18 A.D.2d 796 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Misc. 2d 367, 226 N.Y.S.2d 155, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hotel-taft-associates-v-sommer-nysupct-1962.