Moore v. Henderson

99 Misc. 344
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 99 Misc. 344 (Moore v. Henderson) 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
Moore v. Henderson, 99 Misc. 344 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Manning, J.

This action is one in equity and was called for trial at the June, 1916, term, being No. 3264 on the calendar. The parties then stipulated that the case might be marked for submission and that they would take the proofs at their own convenience. The record is now complete and under date of February 17, 1917, it is submitted by the parties with a consent that each and all of the objections stated upon the record are to be considered withdrawn, and that the evidence produced by each side may be considered by the court without passing upon any of such objections, except the objection regarding the admissibility of a resolution of the board of estimate and apportionment, adopted July 25, 1916, and the acts of the legislature authorizing such resolution.

The plaintiffs bring the action pursuant to sections 1638 and 1639 of the Code of Civil Procedure for the purpose of removing what they assert is a cloud upon the title to certain real property owned by them.

The controversy arises out of and concerns certain restrictive covenants affecting the plaintiffs’ lands, which were heretofore, and in the month of April, 1893, conveyed to one John E. Searles, who thereafter imposed the restrictions, the validity of which is now the subject of judicial inquiry in this law suit.

The title of Searles became vested in him by deeds from two grantors; namely, Henrietta Douglas, who on April 20,1893, conveyed to him the plot of land on the north side of Newkirk avenue, being now known as lots 1 to 23 both inclusive, and Charles E. Crehan, [346]*346who on April 26,1893, conveyed to him the plot on the south side of Newkirk avenue, now known as lots 24 to 46 both inclusive. These numbers are taken from a map of the whole property which Searles caused to be made, but this map appears not to have been filed in the engineer’s office in Kings county until December 3, 1914, over twenty-one years after Searles had acquired the title, and in all the sales made by Searles no reference is made to this map, it affirmatively appearing that the various lots sold by him were described by metes and bounds and not by lot numbers.

Searles undoubtedly purchased the property for investment and development purposes, and shortly after he became seized of the fee he divided the plot into sections or blocks and then subdivided each block into lots undoubtedly with care and foresight, and as the blocks were not exactly square in area, and being obliged to allow for certain intersecting streets, his plan resulted in producing forty-six lots, the interior ones twenty-five feet in width, by the depth of the property, which may be termed regular or inside lots, and certain corner lots which are irregular and unequal in size and character. He employed real estate agents to sell the property and the map he concededly had prepared was used and referred to in making some of the various sales. This map contains what is no doubt a carefully plotted survey of the entire tract, and upon the back thereof is printed the following: ‘ ‘ The choicest building sites in Flatbush, with water, sewer and gas, 35 minutes from the Bridge by Flatbush Avenue Electric Cars. Large shade trees on every lot. Carefully Restricted.”

The first sales made by Searles embraced two inside lots numbered 14 and 15, and were sold free of any restrictions, save a general nuisance clause, which was on a portion of the property when Searles bought it. [347]*347These two lots were sold on September 14, 1893, and it appears from the evidence that the sale was merely made to stimulate the enterprise — I take it that the financial part of the transaction was really taken care of by Searles himself. Searles evidently had in mind, so far as the interior lots were concerned, that he would make a form of restriction which would be uniform and beneficial, not only to the interior plots themselves, but in the nature of things would help his corner lots, and so, the proof shows that in every deed, and in fact in the contracts of sale, which he thereafter made affecting any interior lot, there were inserted the following restrictive covenants:

“ That no building to be erected on said plot of ground shall be situated less than twenty feet from Newkirk Avenue;
That no dwelling house shall be erected on said plot of ground of a value less than Five thousand dollars;
That but one building shall be erected on said plot, it being understood, however, that this covenant shall not interfere with reconstruction in case of destruction by fire;
‘ ‘ That no building of any kind shall be erected except a private dwelling, as above covenanted, and a private stable; said stable to be situated on the northerly (or southerly, as the case might be) boundary line of said plot above described. This covenant to be construed as a covenant running with the land, ’ ’ which are known as the Searles covenants, and the various purchasers, including the plaintiffs, took their deeds with full knowledge of the fact that such restrictions were upon the lands purchased by them.

Searles never placed or created any restrictions upon the corner lots and the same are now, and always have been, free and clear of any such restrictions. The [348]*348plaintiff Sarah A. Moore purchased one of the corner lots over twelve years ago, namely, on April 29, 1904, and must then have had personal knowledge that the corner lots were not restricted, for the deed to her does not contain the Searles restrictions, and the proof further shows that nearly sixteen' years have elapsed since Searles made his transfer of the corner lots free from any restrictions, and nearly two years have elapsed since the erection of an apartment house on lot No. 1 without any objection being made by those who would naturally be most concerned.

The plaintiffs now seek to have the so-called Searles restrictions canceled and removed from their property upon the theory that they and their predecessors in title were deceived into believing that Searles intended to restrict the whole property, insidé lots and corner lots too. They contend that the covenants should be discharged for the reason that the oral statements and the representations on the map established this restricted community which has been violated by owners of the corner plots and hence the neighborhood has changed. They attempt to support this contention on the theory that Searles had in mind a general building scheme in regard to the development of his property shown on the map, and to make out of the same a section of single family detached houses costing not less than $5,000 each, set back twenty feet from Newkirk avenue. The further assertion is made that there has been a complete change in the character of the property on the Searles map, surrounding the properties of the plaintiffs, from a residential section of single family dwellings to that of an apartment house section, and that the object of the restrictions which the plaintiffs covenanted to observe has ceased to exist.

The defendant maintains and contends that the [349]*349restrictive covenants in question are valid and existing, and that restrictions could not be placed upon the corner property by oral representations. Further, that the Searles covenants were made for the benefit of the corner plots which he retained, and that plaintiffs took title to their property with knowledge and notice of the conditions and cannot now ask to be relieved.

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Related

Wolff v. Green
199 Misc. 758 (New York Supreme Court, 1950)
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128 Misc. 408 (New York Supreme Court, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
99 Misc. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-henderson-nysupct-1917.