Meaney v. Stork

83 A. 492, 80 N.J. Eq. 60, 10 Buchanan 60, 1912 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 53
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 9, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 83 A. 492 (Meaney v. Stork) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meaney v. Stork, 83 A. 492, 80 N.J. Eq. 60, 10 Buchanan 60, 1912 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 53 (N.J. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Garrison, V. C.

This is a bill filed to enforce a building restriction. The lands in question lie in a place named Eldorado, at Weehawken, Hudson county, this state.

The complainants and the defendant are owners of adjacent lots at that place, claiming through a common source of title, the complainants’ title having left the common grantor first.

The restriction in question reads as follows:

[62]*62“That neither he nor they will erect or permit to be erected on any lot any building within ten feet of the line of the street, avenue or place upon which said lots front, but shall keep said strip of land open and unencumbered, except that light, open fences, not more than six feet in height, may be built to enclose said strip as a court-yard, if so desired.”

The complainants’ lots are unimproved. Upon the defendant’s lots he has erected a house. The street or avenue in question is called Liberty place, and I am assuming, in favor of the complainants, that the restriction in question obtains throughout Liberty place. T am also assuming that there was a common scheme for building improvement with similar restrictions imposed upon the land by the common grantor, and that the same is enforceable by the complainants b}r reason of the circumstances and the principles of law applicable to the situation.

The proofs show that od Liberty place, to the west of the lots of the complainants, there are other houses, built since they acquired their title, and that in almost, if not every instance, some part of the ten feet back from the street line has projecting over it, or resting on it, eaves of. a house, or a porch, or steps or porticos. To the east of the complainants’ lots there is, I think, at the present time, the proofs show, only the house of the defendant; and the eaves of his house, as completed, project from the front of the house, which is ten feet from the street line, about three feet and eight inches, and the steps that lead up to the front door of his house occupy several feet of the teu-foot strip.

The object of the bill and the supplemental bill is to restrain the continuance of these two alleged violations of the above-quoted covenant.

It appears from the proof that the defendant planned a house with a hay window projecting from the front of it, and that when the male complainant observed this in the course of the building he consulted his counsel, who sent a notice to the defendant notifying the defendant that the erection of this hay window was a violation of the restriction, and if continued would result in the complainants applying for relief. ■

The defendant,, after the receipt of this communication, contemplated moving his house farther hack than it then was (it then being, as above statéd, just a little over ten feet from the street line), so as to he able to erect the bay window and still he [63]*63at least ten feet from the street line. Subseqirently, however, he changed his mind, ancl eliminated the bay window, and continued with the erection of the house.

Since I propose to concede, in behalf of the complainants, for the purposes of this case, all of the principles of law for which they contend, it does not seem to me to he necessary or proper to burden this opinion with citations of authority. I propose, for the purposes of this case, to consider it settled that there was a common building scheme applicable to the lands on Liberty place, and that among the restrictions was the one contained in the above-quoted covenant, and that the complainants were entitled to enforce that covenant against the defendant.

'The defendant argued that the court should find that the complainants were not entitled to relief because of the facts concerning the other alleged violations of the same covenant on the same street. It is the fact, as above mentioned, that on this same street almost every other house had something projecting from it which hangs over the ten feet in question—that is, the ten feet between the front of the house and the street line—or has a porch or steps resting upon part of the ten feet. The answer of the complainants to this argument is that such projections or encroachments of the other houses on the street did not affect him, as they were all to the west of Mm; whereas, the view of the Hudson river and the boulevard from his lots was the desirable and valuable view, and the defendant’s lots lie between the complainants’ property and the Hudson river, and anything erected upon the defendant’s lots which interfered with or obstructed the view was injurious.

The complainants, in respect to the law applicable to this situation, cited those cases which hold that slight and immaterial violations by others in the same neighborhood will not be lield to deprive a complainant peculiarly injured by the violation he is attempting to restrain from being accorded the protection • to which it is found he is entitled with respect to the injurious violation. Under all the circumstances, therefore, I am not content to find, as against the complainants, that their conduct with respect to the alleged violation by others of the same covenant deprives them of the right to enforce it as against the'.defendant. I take it to he perfectly settled in such cases that one who seeks the [64]*64aid of equity must act promptly upon being advised of that which he asserts is or will be a violation of the restriction; and, therefore, I am of opinion that even if the covenant should be construed as prohibiting the projection of the eaves of the defendant’s house over the ten feet mentioned in the covenant, the complainant may not have accorded to him, in a court of equity, injunctive relief under the circumstances disclosed by the proofs in this suit. The bill in this case charges that

“when the cornice (and by this the complainants mean the eaves) was placed on said building, your orators noticed that the same was over the said building line * * * ; that thereafter bay window frames were put up * * * and that on the 11th day of August, 1910, their said solicitor served upon the said (defendant) the notice.”

The notice, as will be recalled, confined itself specifically to the bay window. After receiving this notice the defendant, as I have already stated, seriously contemplated digging a new cellar, or making a new foundation and moving his whole house back a certain distance, so as to be able to preserve the front of it with the bay window, and still not in any way encroach upon or project over the disputed ten feet; but subsequently determined to simply eliminate the hay window to which the complainants had objected, and completed his house in that way.

I am entirely clear that under these circumstances it would be unjust to the defendant for a court of equity by injunction to prevent the'maintenance of the said cornice or e'aves. It appears from the bill and proofs that when the defendant had so far progressed with his building as to show that he intended to place bay windows in ihe front'and to have a cornice or eaves projecting from the said front some three feet and a half, the complainants observed this situation and communicated to the defendant ■their objections to the existing plan of the defendant, and warned him that the hay windows were a violation of the covenant. They did not warn him with respect to, nor in any way call his attention to, the cornice or eaves.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 A. 492, 80 N.J. Eq. 60, 10 Buchanan 60, 1912 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meaney-v-stork-njch-1912.