Rosenblum v. Eisenhauer

280 A.2d 537, 29 Conn. Super. Ct. 216, 29 Conn. Supp. 216, 1971 Conn. Super. LEXIS 122
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJune 9, 1971
DocketFile 166289
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 280 A.2d 537 (Rosenblum v. Eisenhauer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosenblum v. Eisenhauer, 280 A.2d 537, 29 Conn. Super. Ct. 216, 29 Conn. Supp. 216, 1971 Conn. Super. LEXIS 122 (Colo. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Rubinow, J.

On February 8, 1965, the plaintiffs by assignment obtained an option to buy, in Farmington, a tract of land hereinafter referred to as the Barnett tract. The option included the following clause: “The seller agrees to permit the buyer, his heirs or assigns, to remove from the adjacent property of the seller, without cost but at the buyer’s expense a sufficient quantity of fill to bring the herein described property to a level acceptable to the buyer and the Town of Farmington.” By agreement dated March 30, 1965, the option was amended to provide, in effect, that it could be exercised up to September 3,1965.

On June 28, 1965, the Connecticut Sand and Stone Corporation, hereinafter referred to as Connecticut Sand, bought, in Farmington, a traet of land hereinafter referred to as the Connecticut Sand parcel. This parcel was “the adjacent property of the seller” referred to in the plaintiffs’ option. The deed to Connecticut Sand contained a clause “excepting and reserving” from the land conveyed to Connecticut Sand the “parcel of land more particularly described in” the option of the plaintiffs, and a clause stating that the premises conveyed “are subject to: . . . (5) All the terms, conditions, covenants, agreements, drainage rights and rights of way in the aforesaid Option Agreement.” After this conveyance, the date for the exercise of the option was extended by the plaintiffs and the sellers to permit the option to be exercised after September 3, 1965.

On May 6, 1966, in accordance with the option as thus extended, the defendants conveyed the Barnett *218 tract to the plaintiffs by warranty deed containing the usual covenants of title, as follows: “And Also, they the said grantors do for themselves their heirs, executors, administrators, successors and assigns, covenant with the said grantees their heirs, successors and assigns, that at and until the ensealing of these presents, they are well seized of the premises, as a good indefeasible estate in fee simple; and have good right to bargain and sell the same in manner and form as is above written; and that the same is free from all incumbrances whatsoever, except as above stated. And Furthermore, we the said grantors do by these presents bind themselves [sic] and their [sic] heirs, successors and assigns forever to warrant and defend the above granted and bargained premises to themselves the said grantees their heirs, successors and assigns, against all claims and demands whatsoever, except as above stated.”

In the deed of the Barnett tract, the following words appear after the description of that parcel: “Together with ... 4. The right in favor of the grantees herein their heirs and assigns to remove from the adjacent property, formerly of the Farmington River Company on the east (which was conveyed to the Connecticut Sand and Stone Corporation by warranty deed dated June 28, 1965) without cost to the grantors or their heirs and assigns, but at the expense of the grantees herein their heirs and assigns, a sufficient quantity of fill to bring the herein conveyed premises to a level acceptable to the grantees herein their heirs and assigns, and the Town of Farmington.”

On December 5, 1966, a controversy having arisen over the plaintiffs’ right to remove fill from the Connecticut Sand parcel, the plaintiffs instituted an action in the Superior Court against the defendants and Connecticut Sand, seeking, inter alia, a declaratory judgment with respect to that right. *219 Rosenblum v. Chellstrop, 29 Conn. Sup. 210. By judgment rendered on March 3, 1969, the court found that Connecticut Sand acquired its parcel free of any rights of the plaintiffs under any extension of the option agreement beyond September 3, 1965. The basis of the court’s ruling was that September 3, 1965, was the last day for exercising the option in effect on the day Connecticut Sand bought its parcel, and that the option extensions the plaintiffs obtained for a period after September 3, 1965, were not binding on Connecticut Sand because Connecticut Sand “took subject to any previously created servitudes of which it had notice . . . but it did not take subject to any of which it had no notice, much less, any which had not even been created.” 1

On June 13, 1970, the plaintiffs instituted this action against the grantors of the Barnett tract. After pleadings had been filed, the plaintiffs moved for summary judgment on the basis of (a) admissions in the pleadings that established the facts hereinbefore set forth with reference to the options and the conveyances, and (b) an affidavit of the plaintiff Barnett which referred primarily to the decision in Rosenblum v. Chellstrop, supra.

The complaint is in two counts. The first count alleges that the defendants “made it impossible” for the plaintiffs to realize the benefits of the provisions in the option concerning the removal of the fill. On this count, the primary reliance of the plaintiffs is on the decision in Rosenblum v. Chellstrop, supra. The decision in that action, however, does not show ipso facto that there is “no genuine issue as to any material fact” (Practice Book §303) in the first count. To be sure, the judgment establishes that *220 it is impossible for the plaintiffs to have the benefit of the fill rights in the option, but that is not the same as establishing that the defendants brought about that impossibility. The opposing affidavit of April 16, 1971, of the defendant Eisenhauer recites that Connecticut Sand was “fully informed” that certain rights to remove fill, as set forth in the plaintiffs’ option, would be included in the deed of the Connecticut Sand parcel. Furnishing this notice and including in the deed the reference to the option are significant of an intent to protect the rights of the plaintiffs, since the plaintiffs’ option was not then of record. The foregoing considerations, coupled with the absence in either the complaint or the Barnett affidavit of reference to any specific conduct of the defendants that “made . . . impossible” the realization of the plaintiffs’ fill rights in the option, require that the motion for summary judgment be denied with respect to the first count.

The second count states that the defendants have broken the covenants in their deed of May 6, 1966, to the plaintiffs. The usual covenants in a Connecticut warranty deed are four, as in the deed to the plaintiffs: (1) the covenant of seisin; (2) the covenant of the right to convey; (3) the covenant against encumbrances; and (4) the covenant of warranty. Mitchell v. Hazen, 4 Conn. 495, 510. Ordinarily, the covenant of seisin and the covenant of the right to convey are synonymous. Mitchell v. Hazen, supra, 511; C. H. Smith, Survey of the Law of Real Property, p. 187 (1956). They “guarantee to the grantee that the grantor owns the estate which the deed purports to convey.” Smith, loe. cit. The covenant against encumbrances is a guarantee that there is no right or interest in the land conveyed which “may subsist in a third person to the diminution of the value of the land, but consistent with the passing of the fee by the conveyance.” Alling v. *221

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Bluebook (online)
280 A.2d 537, 29 Conn. Super. Ct. 216, 29 Conn. Supp. 216, 1971 Conn. Super. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenblum-v-eisenhauer-connsuperct-1971.