Jackson v. Lane

59 A.2d 662, 142 N.J. Eq. 193
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 5, 1948
DocketDocket 158/36
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 59 A.2d 662 (Jackson v. Lane) 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
Jackson v. Lane, 59 A.2d 662, 142 N.J. Eq. 193 (N.J. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

By this bill the complainants ask that the defendants be restrained from the violation of certain covenants and restrictions affecting the lands of the parties. The particular restriction which the complainants in their bill of complaint allege the defendants to have violated reads as follows:

"That there shall be but one dwelling house erected upon each lot and that the same shall not be placed within thirty-five feet from the curb line on the front of the lot, and that said dwelling house shall cost not less than Three Thousand Dollars, nor shall there be any *Page 194 public garage nor stores of any kind or description for the sale of merchandise of any kind whatsoever erected or maintained upon said premises."

It is alleged in the bill that the defendants "are now constructing upon the premises acquired by them as aforesaid, a building to be used for a restaurant purpose, and intend to erect additional buildings on the same premises which are also to be used for business purposes." It is further alleged that the erection of this building is in violation of the express covenant which prohibits the erection of stores of any kind or description for the sale of merchandise of any kind whatsoever. It is also alleged in the bill that the covenants and restrictions referred to were imposed pursuant to a community scheme of development of the tract of land of which the lots owned by the complainants and the defendants formed a part.

The bill of complaint was filed April 18th, 1947. By a supplemental bill of complaint, filed on June 20th, 1947, the complainants allege that since the filing of the original bill of complaint the defendants have completed the erection of the building complained of and on the 30th day of May, 1947, commenced "the operation of a restaurant in said building which includes in addition to the sale of meals, refreshments, cigars and cigarettes," c. To this bill of complaint the defendants interpose four defenses:

First. They deny that the restrictions affecting the complainants' and defendants' lots are alike or that there is any uniformity in the restrictions imposed upon the various lots in the tract of which the lots owned by the parties hereto form a part, or that said restrictions were imposed pursuant to any community scheme or plan of development.

Second. They allege that the first floor of the building erected by the defendants is designed for use as a restaurant and the second floor as living quarters and does not violate the restrictions imposed upon defendants' lots.

Third. That since the imposition of the said restrictions the neighborhood has entirely changed and that properties of both complainants and defendants, and adjacent properties, have all now been devoted to business purposes and that the so-called restrictions have been widely violated for many years. *Page 195 Fourth. That the complainants are in laches.

The facts established by the evidence submitted at the final hearing, and as I find them, are as follows:

In 1919 the estate of William Curtis, deceased, owned a tract of land in the Borough of Point Pleasant Beach, about 374 feet in width on the ocean front and 388 feet at the westerly boundary line and extending from the Atlantic Ocean westwardly to St. Louis Avenue a distance of about 3,157 feet on the southerly line and 3,186 feet on the northerly line. This property was entirely undeveloped and consisted of an open field and some marsh or swamp land. In that year J. Edwin Ellor and Sons, a corporation, entered into an agreement with the executors of this estate for the purchase of said lands and thereupon made plans for its development. They had the property surveyed and plotted in lots and blocks, with a street known as Point Pleasant Parkway running through the center of the tract from St. Louis Avenue to Ocean Avenue, a distance of four long blocks. These blocks were subdivided into lots, most of which were approximately 50 feet in width with a depth of about 142 or 143 feet. A few of the corner lots were 50.87 feet in width and the corner lots at the extreme westerly end of the tract and at the end bordering on the west side of Ocean Avenue were a few feet wider. The purchasers of this tract of land then determined upon a plan of development by which it was designed to convert the land so purchased into a modern residential section and with this end in view the property was cleared, the swamp land and marsh land filled in, and a street bisecting the tract was laid out as a parkway, with ornamental islands in the center thereof for its entire length, between St. Louis Avenue on the west and Ocean Avenue on the east, and planned to erect for themselves on the lands lying between the easterly line of Ocean Avenue and the Boardwalk, an amusement pavilion. The sale of lots was then begun, and prior to the consummation of the purchase the developers sold three lots, deeds for which were executed by the executors of the Curtis estate, conveying them directly to the purchasers thereof. Each of these deeds contained the following restrictive covenant: "No part of any building is to be erected nearer the *Page 196 curb line than 35 feet from Point Pleasant Parkway, and one house only to be erected on a 50 foot lot and to cost not less than $3,000.00."

The remaining portion of the tract was conveyed by the executors of the Curtis estate to J. Edwin Ellor Sons, the purchasers, by deed dated January 1st, 1920, and recorded January 27th, 1920, in the Ocean County clerk's office, and that deed contained the same restrictive covenant which was contained in the three deeds last just mentioned. Shortly after J. Edwin Ellor Sons acquired title to this tract, five other deeds for five separate lots were conveyed by J. Edwin Ellor Sons to individual purchasers thereof, subject to the same restrictions. Thereafter, there seems to have been a change in the plan of development and of the community scheme, and the restrictive covenants were somewhat broadened.

The complainants are the owners of Lot No. 29 in Block 100, as shown on the above-mentioned map or plan, which was originally conveyed by J. Edwin Ellor Sons to Mary A. Causbrook, by deed dated July 20th, 1923, and duly recorded in the Ocean County clerk's office. That deed contained the following restriction:

"That there shall be but one dwelling house erected upon the said lot and that the same shall not be placed within thirty-five feet from the curb line on the front of the lot, and that said dwelling house shall cost not less than THREE THOUSAND DOLLARS, nor shall there be any public garage nor stores of any kind or description for the sale of merchandise of any kind whatsoever erected or maintained upon said premises."

By deed dated September 10th, 1943, and duly recorded in the Ocean County clerk's office Mary A. Causbrook conveyed said lot No. 29 to the complainants, subject to the same conditions and restrictions.

The defendants are the owners of Lots 30 and 31 in Block 100, as shown on said map or plan. These lots were conveyed by J. Edwin Ellor Sons to Fred L. Sharpe and Mary Elizabeth Sharpe, his wife, by deed dated September 29th, 1923, and duly recorded in the Ocean County clerk's office. That deed contained the following restrictive covenant: *Page 197

"No part of any building to be nearer than thirty-five feet to the curb line of Point Pleasant Parkway, one house only on a fifty-foot lot and to cost not less than Three Thousand Dollars — and no stores or public garages to be built thereon."

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Related

Maplewood v. Tannenhaus
165 A.2d 300 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
59 A.2d 662, 142 N.J. Eq. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-lane-njch-1948.