Liberty Bank of Buffalo v. High Park Development Co.

134 Misc. 733, 236 N.Y.S. 194, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1189
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 134 Misc. 733 (Liberty Bank of Buffalo v. High Park Development Co.) 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
Liberty Bank of Buffalo v. High Park Development Co., 134 Misc. 733, 236 N.Y.S. 194, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1189 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

Norton, J.

This action is brought in equity by plaintiff to procure a judgment revoking, barring and declaring ineffective certain restrictions as to the character, cost, location and use of the buildings that may be erected and maintained on certain lands that plaintiff acquired by a deed and under two other mesne conveyances, all of which contained the specific reservations which plaintiff seeks to revoke, bar and make ineffective.

The stipulations of the parties and maps and records in evidence establish that in the fore part of 1914 one Ceriac Lutz owned twenty-eight acres of land on the south side of Main street and abutting thereon, and a short distance east of the Buffalo city line; that about August, 1914, the tract was laid out into sixty building lots, with a street, called High Park boulevard, dividing such lots and extending from Main street south through the tract; that a map thereof was made by Ellsworth Brothers, dated August 5, 1914, which map was filed in the Erie county clerk’s office August 11, 1915; that a deed dated September 26, 1914, recorded October 2, 1914, executed by Lutz, conveyed one of the lots bounding on Main street and the proposed boulevard to Frederick Wolters, in which deed the restrictions in question herein originated, and which deed describes the lot by reference to said map; that by deed dated August 11, 1915, recorded August 24, 1915, Lutz conveyed all the remainder of said twenty-eight-acre tract by metes and bounds, but without reference to said map, except in referring to said proposed boulevard, such deed containing no restrictions, the grantee in such deed being the defendant High Park Development Company; [735]*735that through mesne conveyances, each of which contained the restrictions in question, from Wolters, plaintiff holds title to said lot; that the several defendants, other than the defendant High Park Development Company, have each received title to a lot or lots in said tract by conveyance from said defendant High Park Development Company, each of which conveyances contained restrictions of the same general tenor and purport as those contained in the Wolters deed.

Upon the trial defendants offered parol evidence to show that Wolters was not the actual grantee in the Wolters deed, and that the actual purchaser of the lot procured the deed to be made to Wolters in Ms stead, and that'he, the actual purchaser, was informed at the time of the purchase of the plan to subject all of the lots in the tract to such restrictions for the mutual benefit of all, and that he effected such purchase subject to, and benefited by, such restrictions. Such evidence was objected to by plaintiff as tending to vary and modify the deed by parol evidence and, therefore, incompetent. Ruling thereon was reserved. The objection is sound and well taken, and is sustained. The testimony of the witnesses Burkhart, Lutz, Wolters and Johnson, so far as it relates to or tends to vary, modify or change the Wolters deed, its terms, provisions or parties, is stricken out. An exception is granted to each of the defendants appearing on the trial to such ruling.

Upon the trial defendants also offered parol evidence to show the circumstances surrounding the execution of the Lutz deed of the balance of the twenty-eight acres and the setting up of the restrictions contained in the several grants of the several lots involved in this action; timely objection to such evidence was made by plaintiff, upon the grounds that such evidence was incompetent as tending to vary or modify the provisions of the Lutz deed of the tract, and that defendants holding title to their lots under that deed are estopped from claiming that Lutz did not, by omitting therefrom such or similar restrictions as those set out in the Wolters deed, abandon the general plan or scheme of • restrictions that he had formed to apply to plaintiff’s and all other lots in said tract.

Ruling on such objection was reserved. In support of such objection, plaintiff relies on Tuscarora Club of Millbrook v. Brown (215 N. Y. 543). In that case one Sarah Brown deeded premises to the plaintiff’s grantor, reserving in the deed the right to the defendant, a stranger to the record, to fish on the property granted. To sustain Ms rights under such deed, defendant offered to prove that he was in fact the real grantor and was not a stranger to the deed. The court (supra, 546) says: “The plaintiff insists that such proof on the part of the defendant was wholly inadmissible, and [736]*736that the defendant was estopped from showing a state of facts different from that which the deeds as recorded disclosed. I think the contention of the plaintiff in that respect must prevail.”

And (supra, 547) the court further says: The defendant could not prove that his mother had no title to the land and that he, the defendant, was the real grantor, and that, therefore,' the exception or reservation was to a party, and not to a stranger, to the conveyance. The defendant could not thus defeat the legal purport of the conveyances with reference to the reservation and exception any more than he could defeat the conveyances altogether by showing that his mother had no title. * * * The defendant did not attempt to establish his right in any other way than by showing that the facts were different from what the record reveals. That was not permissible.”

That case, however, differs from the instant case, in that the parol evidence by which the defendant sought to vary and modify the deed therein in question was offered against and objected to by a party who, by a mesne conveyance, took and held title directly under and through such deed.

In the present case the evidence is offered by those who, by the record, through mesne conveyances, take and hold title under and through the deed to be affected by such evidence, and, what constitutes a vital difference, the plaintiff, who is objecting to such evidence, is not a party to, and does not take nor hold title under or through, the deed in question.

Parol evidence to vary the terms of a deed or written instrument may be received as against a stranger to the deed or instrument. (Coleman v. First Nat. Bank of Elmira, 53 N. Y. 388; Folinsbee v. Sawyer, 157 id. 196; Lee v. Carson, 175 App. Div. 104; American Ice Co. v. Meckel, 109 id. 93, 96.)

The objection that such evidence violates the parol evidence rule is not available to the plaintiff. Plaintiff’s objection thereto is overruled, and it is received, to which ruling plaintiff’s exception is noted.

The evidence in the case establishes that Ceriac Lutz, then the owner of the whole twenty-eight-acre tract early in 1914, entered into a valid contract, in writing, with Burkhart, Fox and Penman, to sell to them the whole tract; that shortly thereafter such purchasers procured the whole tract to be divided into lots, and a street to be laid out through the tract, and a map of the tract, showing such street and'lots, to be made, by Ellsworth Brothers, which map was dated August 5, 1914, and is the map referred to in the plaintiff’s deed; such purchasers also formed and adopted a plan of uniform restrictions as to the character, use, cost and location, with reference to the abutting streets, of the buildings to be erected on each of the [737]

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Bluebook (online)
134 Misc. 733, 236 N.Y.S. 194, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liberty-bank-of-buffalo-v-high-park-development-co-nysupct-1929.