Jennings v. Baroff

144 A. 717, 104 N.J. Eq. 132, 60 A.L.R. 1219, 1929 N.J. LEXIS 485
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 4, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 144 A. 717 (Jennings v. Baroff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jennings v. Baroff, 144 A. 717, 104 N.J. Eq. 132, 60 A.L.R. 1219, 1929 N.J. LEXIS 485 (N.J. 1929).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

White, J.

In 1910 one Oliver, being the owner of an entire block of vacant land, bounded by Fortieth street, Avenue 0, Thirty- *133 ninth street and Avenue B, as well as of other adjacent land, conveyed by warranty deed the western end of such block of land having frontages of two hundred feet on Avenue B, two hundred and eighty-five feet on Thirty-ninth street, and one hundred and twenty-five feet on Fortieth street, respectively, to the Bayonne Building Company, reserving a restrictive covenant limiting the buildings which might thereafter be erected upon the land so conveyed to use as “one-family residence, dwelling or church,” requiring them to set twenty feet back from the street line, and fixing a minimum building cost of $2,500 each. The grantor, Oliver, did not covenant to subject his other and adjoining land to like restrictions, nor did it appear that he represented in any way to any one that he would do so. In fact there was no evidence except this one lone covenant itself, that at the time it was imposed it was intended to comprise a part of a neighborhood improvement scheme. Under such circumstances, and in the absence of language indicating that the benefit of such covenant was intended to become appurtenant to and to run with the title to the grantor’s remaining land (in which case not a neighborhood scheme, but a burden in the nature of an equitable easement would result. Hemsley v. Marlborough House Co. (second case), 68 N. J. Eq. 596; Renals v. Cowlishaw, 11 Ch. Div. 866), the covenant must be construed to have been reserved for the personal benefit and convenience of the grantor in his use or disposition of his remaining ground, and to terminate with his death or by virtue of an earlier release by him, or upon an earlier termination of his interest in its performance. Hemsley v. Marlborough Hotel Co. (first case), 62 N. J. Eq. 164; affirmed, 63 N. J. Eq. 804.

The following year (1911), Oliver conveyed a lot in the same block, part of his “remaining land,” fronting one hundred and fifty feet on Thirty-ninth street by one hundred feet on Avenue 0, reserving a similar restrictive covenant, but limiting its duration to thirty years, and the year after (1912), conveyed another portion of his “remaining land” in the same block fronting one hundred and fifty feet on Thirty-ninth street, and one hundred feet on Fortieth street, without reserving any restriction whatsoever. Oliver having died, his *134 widow and devisee in 1916 conveyed a lot also part of said “remaining land” in the same block and immediately adjoining the land granted to Bayonne Building Company, without reserving any restrictive covenant whatsoever, and in 1920 conveyed a lot also part of said “remaining land” fronting fifty feet on Thirty-ninth street and also immediately adjoining the land conveyed to Bayonne Building Company in 1910, reserving the restriction but limiting its duration to ten years. Also in the year 1919 Oliver’s widow and devisee conveyed a lot, part of Oliver’s adjacent land on the other side of Thirty-ninth street having a frontage of twenty-five feet on Avenue B and on Thirty-ninth street of eighty-five feet, and immediately opposite to defendants’ lot, without reserving any restrictive covenants whatsoever.

Such a failure of universality would have been equally fatal to a neighborhood scheme had the first restrictive covenant in the 1910 deed from Oliver to Bayonne Building Company been a part of a neighborhood scheme. De Gray v. Monmouth Beach Club House Co., 50 N. J. Eq. 329; Sanford v. Keer, 80 N. J. Eq. 240; Scull v. Eilenberg, 94 N. J. Eq. 759; Sailer v. Podolski, 82 N. J. Eq. 459.

In this connection it may be here noted that after Oliver’s death his widow and devisee, who as his wife was a party to his deed to the Bayonne Building Company, formally released defendants’ land from the restriction contained in the Oliver deed. It is urged that this release was inoperative as against the rights of complainants because they purchased before the release was executed. We do not agree with this contention. As against a neighborhood scheme there could, of course, be no release in violation of vested rights in the covenant, nor could there be such a release as against a subsequent purchaser of part of the remaining land from the original grantor where the covenant had been made appurtenant to and to run with the title to such remaining land. But where, as here, the covenant was simply a reservation for the personal benefit of the grantor, he might release it whenever he saw fit, and if he did not do so during his lifetime his death would effect the release when that occurred, as would also the ending during his lifetime of his interest in the property for the better *135 enjoyment or disposition of which he reserved his personal right. We do not see, however, under the circumstances here existing, that the release is a material element as against complainants, because, as before pointed out, they have no interest in the restriction so released. We do not find it necessary therefore to pass upon the question of the widow’s interest in this personal benefit reservation resting on her joiner, as his wife, in the deed which Oliver made to the Bayonne company, nor upon the termination of such interest, if it exists, because of the ending of the widow’s interest in the other Oliver lands, the use or disposition of which rendered the performance of the covenant a benefit to him.

In 1913, three years after it took title from Oliver as above noted, the Bayonne Building Company divided up into building lots and conveyed to purchasers the tract of land so acquired by it from Oliver, and in so doing in some of its deeds to lot purchasers, expressly imposed, without time limitation, the same restriction that the Oliver deed had contained; in other deeds the same restriction, but limited in its operation to a period of years; while in yet other deeds (including one or more for lots fronting on Avenue B), constituting nearly half of the entire enterprise, no restriction whatsoever was inserted. Clearly under the authorities last above cited a neighborhood scheme could not be spelled out of this situation.

This brings us to a somewhat novel feature involved in this case and doubtless the one which appealed to the learned vice-chancellor, who advised the injunctive decree which forms the subject of this appeal. This feature results from the fact that a large portion of the lots into which was divided the land conveyed by the Oliver deed to the Bayonne company (including all those on Avenue B and some on Thirty-ninth street) have since had dwellings each costing at least $2,500 built upon them, all setting back twenty feet from the street line, except the lot at the corner of Thirty-ninth street and Avenue B now owned by the defendants, which latter lot remains vacant and upon which the defendants propose to erect a fourteen-family apartment house, four stories high, which proposed house is the subject of the injunction decree now brought up on appeal. The complainants own dwelling houses and lots adjoining *136

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Bluebook (online)
144 A. 717, 104 N.J. Eq. 132, 60 A.L.R. 1219, 1929 N.J. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennings-v-baroff-nj-1929.