Mayor of Baltimore v. Garrett

69 A. 429, 108 Md. 24, 1908 Md. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 1, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 69 A. 429 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Garrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor of Baltimore v. Garrett, 69 A. 429, 108 Md. 24, 1908 Md. LEXIS 62 (Md. 1908).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of Circuit Court No. 2, of Baltimore City, specifically enforcing a contract of sale of a parcel of land in the northeastern section of Baltimore City, containing about twenty-four acres of land, which constituted part of the estate of the late John W. Garrett, and which, in the partition of his estate, was allotted to his daughter, Miss Mary E. Garrett, the present appellee. The bill alleges that on September 28th, 1907, the appellee entered into a written contract with the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore to sell said parcel of land to said Mayor and City Council for a certain stipulated price, to be paid in cash upon the verification of the acreage by the engineer of the Park Board, and the execution and delivery by the appellee to the Mayor and City Council, of a deed, for said parcel of land in fee simple, clear of all incumbrances at the date of said delivery.

The bill further alleges that the acreage has been duly verified, and that the plaintiff’s title to the land is an unincumbered title in fee simple, which she is ready, willing, and able to convey, and has so tendered herself, but the said Mayor and City Council, waiving a formal tender of such deed, assert that she is not vested of said title, because in a certain deed *26 which the plaintiff admits is in her chain of title, and which affects 16 acres, i rood, and 28 perches of said tract, namely, a deed from the executors of John Gibson, deceased, to Henry Grabenhorst, dated October 24th, i860, duly recorded, there is the following covenant:

' “And the said Henry C. Grabenhorst for himself, his heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns, doth hereby covenant with said parties of the first part, and the survivor of them, and the heirs and assigns of the survivor, for the benefit as well of all other purchasers of the remainder of said Chestnut Hill estate, their heirs and assigns, as of the said executors and trustees, and their heirs and assigns, that he will only erect or suffer to be erected a private residence, or residences, of a respectable character thereon, and the necessary outbuildings appurtenant thereto, and that he, his heirs or assigns, will not at any time erect, keep or use thereon any public house or house of amusement or entertainment, or suffer or permit any house upon said premises to be built, or kept, or used for such purpose or any of them, Provided however, that said executors and trustees shall cause to be inserted similar clauses in all other deeds to said purchasers,which they hereby covenant to do." The bill further alleges that the said Mayor and City Council was making the purchase in order to use the land for a city park, and insists that said covenant is so far an incumbrance upon said land as to prevent the city from erecting upon it such structure or structures as are suitable for a public park, and for that reason only is unwilling to accept the title thereto.

The bill further alleges that since said deed was made, the extension of the city limits has brought said land ^within said limits, and that the establishment of a public city park thereon was not in the contemplation of the parties to said deed; that the said restrictive covenant could not have been designed to refer to such a use as a public city park, and that by its true interpretation in the light of conditions existing at the date of the deed, it was only intended to pi'ohibit taverns, or wayside inns, conducted for profit, or houses of amusement or entei' *27 tainment such as usually accompany such places of resort, and which render their immediate neighborhood unsuitáble as places of residence.

. The bill further alleges that the said executors had no power to impose such restrictions, and that even if they had such power, yet by the express terms of said covenant it was in no event to be operative unless the same restrictions should be inserted in the deeds to all the purchasers of any part or parts of the Chestnut Hill estate, of which the land conveyed to said Grabenhorst was a part, and that in fact said covenant was not inserted in all said deeds, towit, ist, a deed from said executors to Gottlieb Engel, his heirs and assigns, dated July 6th, 1866, conveying three and one-third acres, part of Chestnut Hill; and 2nd, a deed from said executors to Georgianna Taylor, her heirs and assigns, dated May 9th, 1868, conveying one-half of an acre, part of Chesnut Hill; and that for that reason said covenant was inoperative; and also because the grantors in said deed to Grabenhorst did not covenant in the first conveyance made of any part of said Chestnut Hill estate, nor in all other conveyances thereof that they would exact such covenants from all other purchasers of parts of said tract, and did not covenant with the said Grabenhorst, or any other purchasers of parts of said tract that they, the said grantors held the remaining parts of said tract subject to said restriction, and did not expressly assign to any other purchaser the benefit of the covenant of said Grabenhorst.

. The bill further alleges that the said Chestnut Hill tract is no longer rural property, but has been for twenty years past within the city limits, and has to a large extent been cut up into small city building lots upon which are built small frame or brick houses fronting on open streets, and that other streets and avenues in various directions are projected through said tract under ordinances of the Mayor and City Council; in consequence of all which things, said tract is no longer suitable for rural residences, and that it would be unsaleable if its use is restricted by said covenant to that of rural residences, and that the enforcement of said covenant now, even if it were *28 ever binding and applicable, .would be contrary to the principles on which Courts of equity deal with such restrictions.

The bill still' further alleges that for more than twenty years continuously an extensive brick yard was operated upon said Grabenhorst parcel, without objection from any of the owners of other parts of the Chestnut Hill tract, and continued in operation until the year 1900, when said establishment was absorbed by the Baltimore Brick Company, and that such continuous use as a brick yard worked an abandonment of said restriction; and that the surrounding land which was not a part of said Chestnut Hill tract was not subject to the same or any similar covenant, and that for this reason it would be inequitable to enforce the said covenant against the plaintiff and so put her said property in competition with other property in the immediate locality which is free from said restriction.

The prayer of the bill is that the Court determine whether the said restrictive covenant is operative at all, and if operative, the true interpretation thereof so far as the rights of the parties to this suit are concerned; and that the contract of sale be- specifically enforced.

The defendant in its answer admits the plaintiff’s title as set forth by her and the contract of sale as charged; also that the acreage has been duly verified, but denies the ability of the plaintiff to convey such a title as the contract requires, because of the covenant heretofore transcribed from the deed to Grabenhorst.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 A. 429, 108 Md. 24, 1908 Md. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-garrett-md-1908.