Lakeshore Club, Inc. v. Country Club Properties, Inc.

25 Misc. 2d 803, 206 N.Y.S.2d 684, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2582
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 Misc. 2d 803 (Lakeshore Club, Inc. v. Country Club Properties, Inc.) 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
Lakeshore Club, Inc. v. Country Club Properties, Inc., 25 Misc. 2d 803, 206 N.Y.S.2d 684, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2582 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1960).

Opinion

Samuel W. Eager, J.

Plaintiff brings this action pursuant to article 15 of the Real Property Law, seeking an adjudication that certain real property which it owns is free and clear of the encumbrance of certain restrictive covenants; and on this motion, plaintiff seeks summary judgment pursuant to rule 113 of the Rules of Civil Practice. Inasmuch as the material facts clearly appear to be undisputed, the court may, upon the motion here, summarily direct judgment herein.

There were three adjacent parcels of real property in which the parties were or are interested. Prior to November, 1946 one of these parcels was conveyed to defendant Perlman by one Isadore Seven, and the other two parcels were conveyed to the defendant Country Club Properties, Inc., a stock corporation, [804]*804by a different grantor, one Aileen Webb. By deed dated November 1,1946, recorded November 27,1946, the defendant Country Club Properties conveyed one of its two parcels (the subject premises) to plaintiff, Lakeshore Club, Inc., which is a membership corporation. Said parcel conveyed to plaintiff fronts on the shore of Lake Mahopac in Putnam County, and was improved with a clubhouse containing a restaurant • and bar. Simultaneously with the conveyance of such parcel to plaintiff Lakeshore Club, it entere'd into an agreement with defendant, dated November 1, 1946, and recorded November 27, 1946, wherein and whereby the premises conveyed to plaintiff were designated as the “ Club Property ” and wherein and whereby it was “ mutually agreed ” among other things, that “ with the exception of the use of the premises as a public restaurant and bar, the same or any part thereof shall not be used for the conduct of business of any character or description, or as a hotel, boarding or rooming house, tourist house, public bathing pavilion, store or stores, office or offices, multi-family dwelling, shop or shops, garage, factory, boat livery, stables, pound, hospital, clinic or sanitarium, or for any industrial or commercial use. Nothing herein contained shall prohibit or be construed to prohibit the use of the premises as a one- or two-family residence, a clubhouse and for club facilities for a club in which membership is limited to persons residing within the vicinity of Lake Mahopac and who are regular dues-paying members, nor for its use as a place for religious worship nor for the use as a restaurant and bar which latter use need not be confined to club members but may be for use by the general public.”

The agreement contained further covenants as to fencing, landscaping, restricting place of maintenance on premises of a dance pavilion and children’s camp, and restricting nature and place of maintenance of signs.

There was the express provision that ‘ ‘ First Party ’ ’, Country Club Properties, Inc., ‘ ‘ reserves to itself and/or its agents, successors or assigns, and is hereby granted the right to alter, modify or annul any of the restrictions, reservations, conditions, covenants, easements and charges granted by this instrument * * * provided such alteration or modification shall not make the said provisions more restrictive ”.

The agreement also expressly provided that 1 ‘ all of the restrictions, reservations, conditions, covenants, easements, charges and agreements ’ ’ should ‘ ‘ run with the land affected and shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of all of the present and subsequent owners thereof.” There was further [805]*805provision that “First Party ”, Country Club Properties, Inc., ‘ ‘ its agents, successors and assigns, in addition to such other rights as the First Party may have either at law or in equity,” should have the right to re-enter the premises conveyed in the event of violation of the said restrictions by the plaintiff and abate and remove any violating condition; and it was further provided, that the provisions thereof “ shall inure to and be binding upon, apply to, and be enforceable by any party hereto, its agents, successors or assigns, or any party entitled to the benefits hereof.”

By express provisions of the agreement, the defendant Perl-man (who did not execute the agreement as a party), or his assignee if a member of his immediate family, was given until January 1,1957 an option to purchase under certain conditions, the subject premises free of the covenants and restrictions. Such option, however, has expired without being exercised.

The conveyance of the subject premises to plaintiff Lakeshore Club expressly provided that it was “ subject to the said agreement to be recorded simultaneously with the conveyance.” Under the circumstances, there is no question but that the agreement was valid and binding upon plaintiff Lakeshore Club, and it did effectually impose valid restrictions with respect to the use of the subject premises acquired by it. Acceptance of title to the land subject to the restrictive covenants imposed upon the grantee Lakeshore Club a,n obligation which a court of equity may enforce against it and subsequent owners of the subject premises. (Vogeler v. Alwyn Improvement Corp., 247 N. Y. 131, 135.)

In imposing the restrictions with respect to the subject premises, it is to be assumed that the parties, among other things, had in mind the protection of the parcel still held by Country Club Properties and Perlman’s parcel, that is, for the benefit of the corporation, and of Perlman and' the members of his immediate family. The parcel still held by the corporation, though unimproved except for tennis courts thereon, was a lot with a 51-foot frontage on Lake Mahopac and extended therefrom to a depth of over 200 feet. It was contiguous to the subject premises and adjoining this lot was the parcel (a lake front parcel also) which was owned and used by Perlman for residence purposes. His said residence parcel was separated from the subject premises only by the 51-foot lot. Perlman was a principal stockholder and officer of the Country Club Properties, which was a family corporation. He had negotiated the sale of the subject premises to Lakeshore Club with the said 1946 agree[806]*806ment; and the president of the Country Club Properties who signed the agreement was Perlman’s father-in-law. Undoubtedly, Perlman intended to hold title in the corporation to the 51-foot lake front lot for use or sale of the same with his adjoining residence property. And, the restrictions imposed by the agreement were such as would protect and benefit the 51-foot lot and of the Perlman residence parcel. Furthermore, the agreement expressly provided that its provisions ‘1 are applicable to Abram M. Perlman and/or any member or members of his immediate family * * * and likewise enforceable by any of the aforementioned.” Under the circumstances, it is clear that the agreement was exacted on the sale of the subject premises for the protection of the nearby lands in which the corporation and Perlman were interested. See Post v. Weil (115 N. Y. 361, 372) where the court said that “where a restriction is inserted in a deed against undesirable structures or trades [the presumption] is that the insertion was for the purpose of protecting rights, which the grantor had in adjacent property.”

The parcel remaining in the ownership of the defendant Country Club Properties following the conveyance of the one parcel to Lakeshore Club, to wit, the 51-foot lake front lot, was conveyed in 1948 by it to defendant Perlman, and, thereupon, Perl-man immediately conveyed said lot and also his adjoining residence parcel to the defendant Labowitz.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Misc. 2d 803, 206 N.Y.S.2d 684, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakeshore-club-inc-v-country-club-properties-inc-nysupct-1960.