O'Connor v. Bauer

127 A.D. 854, 111 N.Y.S. 869, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4115
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 7, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 127 A.D. 854 (O'Connor v. Bauer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Connor v. Bauer, 127 A.D. 854, 111 N.Y.S. 869, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4115 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Kruse, J.:

The question submitted for our determination is whether the plaintiffs have the right to enjoin the erection of a building by the defendant on his lands, so near the plaintiffs’ building as to obstruct the windows and light thereof. The solution of that question depends upon the effect of a covenant contained in a deed conveying a strip of land nine feet wide adjoining the plaintiffs’ premises upon which the wall of the building is in process of construction.

In 1862 Gabriel Wile and Isaac Butts Were neighbors, each owning and occupying their respective premises as places of residence, situate on the east side of North St. Paul street in the city of Pochester. Butts’ premises were immediately north of Wile’s. On July 23, 1862, Wile and wife conveyed to Butts a strip nine feet wide off the north side of his premises, being the nine-foot strip in question. At the time of the conveyance from Wile to Butts that section of the city was residential.

The nine-foot strip fronted on North St. Paul street and extended easterly a hundred feet to a barn. The south line of the ^nine-foot strip is three feet north of a line in range with the north side of the Wile residence, thus leaving a strip three feet, wide between the Wile residence and the nine-foot strip. In the deed from Wile to Butts a right of egress was also granted over the northerly side of the three-foot strip, extending from the bam to a line in range with the front of the Wile residence.

Within about two years after this conveyance was made, Butts [856]*856sold his entire premises, and the defendant ultimately acquired title to a part thereof, including the nine-fopt strip, by mesne conveyances from Butts. . On September 26, 1883, Wile sold his premises, except the nine-foot strip, to John O’Connor. The plaintiffs are the widow and heirs at law of John O’Connor.

The deed of July, 1862, made by Wile and wife to Butts, con-' tained reciprocal covenants regarding the nine-foot strip and the three-foot strip. Besides granting a right of passage over the three-foot strip, Wile covenanted as follows: “ And the said Gabriel Wile doth hereby covenant and agree to and with the said party of the second part that said last described premises (the tliree-foot strip) shall forever be and remain open and free of all buildings, fences and structures, except the projection of cornice and roof of buildings, and that the same shall be and remain an open yard in connection with the premises first herein described (the nine-foot strip), the. right so. secured hereby, to be appurtenances to, and enjoyed by the party of the second part and by any and all persons who shall succeed him in the ownership of lot number twenty one in the Atwater and Andrews Tract on which said party of the second part now resides.” And as regards the three-foot strip, the deed contained the following covenant, to wit: “ And said party of the second part (Butts) doth hereby covenant and agree that he will not at any time, nor shall his heirs or assigns, obstruct the windows or light of said [parties] of the first part by building or placing any structure on the parcel of ground hereby conveyed (the nine-foot strip), this not to prevent, however, the planting of the fruit or shade trees thereon, but no trees or shrubs shall be planted on said three feet next'north of. said house of said parties of the first part.”

Since the deed was made from Wile and wife to Butts, there has not only been a change in thé ownership of the Wile arid Butts premises, but also in their usé. They are no longer strictly residential, but are devoted to business purposes. The Butts house has" been torn down, and on the northerly twenty feet of the Butts premises a brick block has been erected. The remainder of the lot, including the nine-foot strip, is owned by the defendant. It is vacant, except the building which is now in process of erection, the south wall of which is located upon the nine-foot strip, and is three feet north of the southerly side thereof, thus leaving a space of but six feet [857]*857between the Wile residence and the new building, instead of twelve feet, as was contemplated by the covenant contained in the deed from Wile to Butts. The Wile residence is still standing. The windows on the north side thereof are as they were when the deed was made to Butts, but upon the space between the front of the Wile residence and the margin of North St. Paul street, has been built a building, which extends from the north line of the Wile premises, south for three-fourths of the frontage of the premises. The new building and the old Wile residence are connected and used as a hotel, but the O’Connor family still make their home there.

The deed of conveyance from Wile to O’Connor is an ordinary warranty deed, conveying the premises with the appurtenances and all the estate, title and interest therein of the .grantors therein named, being Wile and his wife.- There is no mention of the easement of light or of the covenants contained in the Wile-Butts deed, nor is there any reference to the nine-foot strip, except that the entire Wile premises are described, and then the nine-foot strip is expressly excepted from the conveyance.

The plaintiffs claim an easement for light over the nine-foot strip, under the covenant contained in the deed from Wile to Butts, while the defendant contends. that the covenant is strictly personal to Wile himself; that whatever right Wile may have acquired thereby it was not transferred to O’Connor and has not inured to the benefit of the plaintiffs, and that in any event the change in the character of the neighborhood from a residential to a business section makes the restrictive covenant no longer operative.

If the covenant relating to the nine-foot strip is personal to Wile only, its operation has been suspended and perhaps entirely lost, unless Wile should reinvest himself with the title to his premises, since at1 present he has no interest therein, and no harm would come to him from obstructing the windows or light to the building thereon. We are, however, of the opinion that it was intended by the covenants in the deed from Wile to Butts to burden the nine-foot strip and the three-foot strip with the respective covenants relating thereto, making them servitudes or easements for the benefit of the adjoining lands and becoming appurtenant thereto, and that the rights and burdens thus created followed the respective [858]*858parcels through the various changes and transmissions- of title. (Doyle v. Lord, 64 N. Y. 432; Dexter v. Beard, 130 id. 549 ; Peck v. Conway, 119 Mass. 546.) Judge Selden says in Auburn & Cato Plank Road Co. v. Douglass (9 N. Y. 444, 446): Every proprietor of. land has a natural right to so much light as falls perpendicularly upon his own soil, and no more. His rights in this respect are defined by the legal maxim, cujus est solum, ejus est usque ad eoelum. Whatever right, therefore,, he may. have to receive light laterally over the land of others is an easement or something equivalent to an easement. It is a right which may be acquired by covenant or by prescription if not by grant, and which, however acquired^ extends beyond the limits of his own land, and rests as a burden or restriction upon the rights of the adjoining proprietor.”

If or do we think that the change from residential to business property of the Wile and Butts premises, and of the premises in the neighborhood thereof, is such.as to make non-effective the covenant relating to the nineTfoot strip.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Perpall v. Gload
116 Misc. 571 (New York Supreme Court, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 A.D. 854, 111 N.Y.S. 869, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnor-v-bauer-nyappdiv-1908.