Schermerhorn v. Bedell

163 A.D. 445, 148 N.Y.S. 896, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6998
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 7, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 163 A.D. 445 (Schermerhorn v. Bedell) 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
Schermerhorn v. Bedell, 163 A.D. 445, 148 N.Y.S. 896, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6998 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Merrell, J.:

The plaintiffs seek a mandatory injunction against the defendant, requiring him to remove that portion of the building which he has erected on lot 1 of block 4 of the Ballard tract (so called), in the city of Syracuse, N. Y., from that portion of the lot which is within twenty-two feet of McKinley avenue. The plaintiffs are the owners in fee simple of four lots, situate in the Ballard tract (so called), in the city of Syracuse, and are lot 1 of block 1, and lots 6, 7 and 8 in block 4 of the Ballard tract. The defendant is the owner of lot 1 of block 4 of the Ballard tract, and has recently erected an apartment house upon said lot, the walls of which extend to a point one foot from the sidewalk line on McKinley avenue, and face South Salina street. The plaintiffs have each constructed dwellings upon their respective lots. The tract upon which these lots are located was originally owned by one William Ballard, who died in the year 1881, leaving a last will and testament in which he devised the tract of land to his widow, Harriet Ballard, for life, and after her death to his children, William J. Ballard, Stephen Ballard, Alfred Ballard and Jennie Ballard. The said Alfred Ballard is the defendant’s grantor. After the death of William Ballard his widow and devisees divided the tract into four blocks, known as blocks 1, 2, 3 and 4, and are intersected by McKinley avenue, State street and South Salina street. The tract was evidently laid out for residential purposes and a map was filed in the Onondaga county clerk’s office, setting forth the division of the tract into lots and giving their dimensions, on or about March 13, 1896. After such division into lots the same were sold to various grantees, and, with the exception of lot 7 in block 1, lot 3 in block 1, and lot 1 in block 4, all of the deeds contained a restrictive covenant in substantially the following form: The party of the second part agrees to place all buildings on said lot 22 feet from street line; he also agrees to erect no buildings on this lot to be used for store, saloon, hotel or factory purposes.”

Hone of the deeds contained any covenant on the part of the grantor or grantors that the remainder of the tract should be governed by and be subject to the same restrictions in respect to buildings as were contained in the several deeds to the indi[448]*448vidual grantees. All of these restrictive covenants are persona! in nature, and there is nothing upon the récord to show that any building restrictions of any kind or nature were ever imposed upon lot 1 of block 4 now owned by the defendant.

The plaintiffs claim that certain representations were made at the time of several of the sales to the now owners of lots upon the Ballard tract, to the end that the whole tract was subject to the same building restrictions set forth in their deeds, and the learned trial court has found that such representations were made to certain of the grantees, and from the evidence and the situation of the property and the nature of the deeds given to nearly all of the lot owners, it is apparent that it was the original plan of the Ballard heirs to restrict the erection of buildings upon the whole tract within twenty-two feet of the street line, and that such plan was uniform in respect to the frontage on all of the streets intersecting said tract.

The various purchasers, including the plaintiffs, have erected dwellings upon all of the Ballard lots, with the exception of lot 1 of block 1, lot 1T of block 2, lots 2 and 3 of block 4, and lot 15 of block 3. The main walls of all of the dwellings facing upon McKinley avenue are substantially twenty-two feet from the margin of the avenue, with the exception of the dwellings erected upon the lots cornering upon State street and McKinley avenue. The main portion of the building on the southeast comer is thirteen and four-tenths feet and the bay window is eleven and four-tenths feet from the street line of McKinley avenue; the main portion of the building on the northeast corner is eighteen and seven-tenths feet and the bay .window is seventeen and two-tenths feet from the street line of McKinley avenue; the main portion of the building on the southwest corner is seventeen and nine-tenths feet and the bay window is fifteen and four-tenths feet from the street line of McKinley avenue; and the main portion of the building on the northwest comer, owned by the plaintiff Tennant, is eleven feet and the bay is nine feet distant from the street line of McKinley avenue. The trial court has held that in front of each house on McKinley avenue was a porch which was constructed in connection with the house and averages between thirteen and fifteen feet from the street line. While steps or [449]*449ornamental portions might be considered mere incidental encroachments, a porch in the nature of those erected in front of each house on McKinley avenue is a substantial part of the house and is a building within the terms of the restriction. So that it is evident that each of the owners of lots on the Ballard tract facing McKinley avenue, including the plaintiffs, have themselves violated the terms of the restrictive covenants contained in their respective deeds, and that the plaintiff Tennant has built substantially eleven feet over the restricted line. Whether these encroachments were the result of a general understanding or deliberate violations of the covenants contained in the respective deeds of the lot owners does not clearly appear.

The plaintiffs claim that, before purchasing his lot, it was the duty of defendant to search all the titles growing out of the division of the Ballard tract, and that he should be presumed to have knowledge of the restrictive covenants contained in all the deeds from the Ballard heirs, and that by reason of these covenants and the general location of the dwellings on McKinley avenue, he should be presumed to have had notice that the entire tract, including defendant’s lot, was subject to the same building restrictions contained in the plaintiffs’ deeds and the deeds of other lot owners, and that the court should hold that the defendant, at the time he purchased the premises, had constructive notice of those facts.

The trial court has held that the defendant had no actual notice of any restrictions until after he had begun the construction of his building; that there was no restriction in the immediate chain of title to defendant’s lot, or in any of the conveyances or maps which passed title to defendant’s lot, and these findings seem to be in conformity with the evidence in the case. Alfred H. Ballard, who was the defendant’s grantor, testified that the building restrictions did not cover the corner lots, and the most that can be claimed is that to some of the grantees representations were made by the grantors and their agents that the entire tract would be sold subject to the same building restrictions contained in the plaintiffs’ deeds. If the plaintiffs were induced to purchase their respective lots by such representations, equity would protect them against the grantors and also against [450]*450subsequent purchasers having knowledge that plaintiffs were so induced to purchase and that the whole tract was subject to the same building restrictions contained in plaintiffs’ deeds. (Tallmadge v. East River Bank, 26 N. Y. 105.)

As against the grantor in such case, it would not matter whether the covenants ran with the land or not.

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Bluebook (online)
163 A.D. 445, 148 N.Y.S. 896, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schermerhorn-v-bedell-nyappdiv-1914.