McComb v. Hanly

26 A.2d 891, 132 N.J. Eq. 182, 144 A.L.R. 912, 1942 N.J. LEXIS 489
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 25, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 26 A.2d 891 (McComb v. Hanly) 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
McComb v. Hanly, 26 A.2d 891, 132 N.J. Eq. 182, 144 A.L.R. 912, 1942 N.J. LEXIS 489 (N.J. 1942).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thompson, J.

This is an appeal from a mandatory injunction of the Court of Chancery compelling the defendants to remove or demolish certain buildings constructed by them in alleged violation of a restriction as to cost, running with the land; or, to bring the true cost thereof up to the amount of the minimum imposed by the restriction.

Complainants and defendants are the owners respectively of certain dwelling plots the title to which is derived from a common predecessor in ownership who originally subdivided a larger tract into streets and building lots, filed a map thereof, and sold from it to individual purchasers by deeds containing a series of restrictions as to use, including one prescribing the minimum of cost for any house or garage that might be erected upon the lot conveyed.

It is claimed that the phrasing of the restriction in question, as used in deeds out of the original grantor, notwithstanding an apparent limitation of its application to the particular lot conveyed by the individual deed, did, nevertheless, when considered with other factors, operate to establish a neighborhood scheme with reference to the entire tract. Defendants’ buildings are alleged to' be in contravention of the scheme so claimed to have been established. The lots owned by the defendants, however, were never conveyed directly by the original common owner; they were purchased by Hermine Kind, one of the complainants, at a sale in execution of a levy under a judgment in a.suit against the corporate owner, Fidelity Corporation of New Jersey; the sheriff’s deed to her contained no restrictions. She subse *184 quently conveyed to Haddon Township, imposing the restrictions in question, and Haddon Township later contracted to sell to the defendants, subject to said restrictions.

The following facts give rise to the issues presented in this case:

Jn 1924 and 1925 Fidelity Corporation of New Jersey developed two tracts of land, known as Plan No. 1 and Plan No. 2, respectively, the descriptive term “Haddon Homesteads” being applied to each tract. Maps of plotted lots and streets had been filed, and sales were made from Plan No. 1, comprising 99 contiguous lots numbered 1 to 99 inclusive, and Plan No. 2 comprising 86 contiguous lots numbered 100 to 185 inclusive. The lands affected by the decree under appeal, and owned by defendants Raymond E. Hanly and Hanly Brothers, Incorporated, are in the Plan No. 2 section, and are Nos. 180 and 181. The lots of the complainants McComb and Kind are Nos. 147 and 111, respectively, in Plan No. 2. The lot of the complainants Goldner is No. 99 in Plan No. 1. Complainants contend that both Plan No. 1 and Plan No. 2 were together the subject of the one general neighborhood scheme alleged. Upon their ownership of the lots named they base their claim of right to enforce against the defendants the said restrictions as'the basis of an alleged general neighborhood scheme.

As the sales were made by the developer corporation, it included in its deed to the purchaser a series of restrictions. OJ: 74 lots conveyed, 56 had identical restrictions, the fourth of which reads, “The house to cost not less than $5,000, and the garage to cost not less than $350.” In all the deeds the restrictions were substantially similar. The preamble in each case reads, “Subject to the following restrictions and conditions applying to -the property hereby conveyed only.” The significance of the word “only” in the preamble is of exceeding importance in the consideration and determination of the rights of the parties herein. In fact, it is the dispositive factor. We are constrained to the opinion that the learned Vice-Chancellor failed to ascribe to it its true weight, and that such failure led to an erroneous conclusion in this particular case.

*185 As was said in the case of Scull v. Eilenberg, 94 N. J. Eq. 759 (at p. 771), there are various rvays by which a neighborhood scheme may be created in the development and sale of real estate, the most complete way being by a reciprocal covenant whereby the grantor covenants to insert like covenants in all deeds out of the common development; or, by selling them upon representations to the individual purchasers that like covenants will be inserted in the seller’s deeds to others, for the common benefit; or, where the seller pursues a course of conduct indicating a neighborhood scheme, leading the several purchasers to assume its adoption and the adherence of all owners to it by such conduct. These principles undoubtedly apply in the consideration of restrictive covenant questions and to the applicability of a neighborhood scheme to a subdivided tract of land, but we are unable to find in any of the cases wherein restrictive covenants have been upheld, and a neighborhood scheme determined, an express delimitation of the extent and effect of the restrictive covenants such as was present in. deeds upon which the complainants rely in the instant case. A restrictive covenant is a contract. Any neighborhood scheme that flows from such restrictive covenant is incident to such contract and has its virtue in the terms of that contract. In the present case the origin of the restrictive covenants was in the deeds out of the Eidelit-y corporation, who took the precaution expressly to provide therein that the restrictions and conditions should apply “to the property hereby conveyed only.” (Italics ours.) Manifestly the preamble in the form quoted negatives an intention of general application of the restrictions on a neighborhood basis, or at least it reserves in the vendor the control of the subsequent course of sales and development so far as burdening its other lands is concerned. Instead of extending to a neighborhood it narrows and restricts to a single property. “Only” is a word of limitation, not of amplification or extension. The vendor had a right to reserve to itself the power to deal freely with restrictive features as it saw fit in succeeding conveyances — to vary, modify or omit altogether. It was a definite notice in the initial conveyance that the grantor was reserving sirch right in itself. It continued to safeguard itself in this respect by repeating the *186 limitation in its subsequent deeds to further purchasers, and it did, indeed, vary its restrictions in several respects in a number of instances as disclosed by the evidence in this case. There is no ambiguity in the language used in the restrictive covenants. It is difficult to conceive in just what fashion it would be possible for an owner of land to impose a covenant on a portion of his property without subjecting the rest of his property to a like burden if the language used in the restrictive covenants under consideration here does not do it. If purchasers of these lots had such notice of the existence of the covenant that they base their claim for relief on having relied on it, then they had notice of the limited terms of that covenant and of the fact that the contiguous and neighboring land was left unbound by it. The fact that the subsequent use of the restrictive covenant in later deeds tended by repetition to create a favorable neighborhood condition does not destroy the substance of the right originally reserved by the common grantor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 A.2d 891, 132 N.J. Eq. 182, 144 A.L.R. 912, 1942 N.J. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccomb-v-hanly-nj-1942.