Williams v. Robert M. Silverman Realty & Construction Co.

111 A.D. 679, 97 N.Y.S. 945, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 236
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 9, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 A.D. 679 (Williams v. Robert M. Silverman Realty & Construction Co.) 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
Williams v. Robert M. Silverman Realty & Construction Co., 111 A.D. 679, 97 N.Y.S. 945, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 236 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Clarke, J.:

The plaintiff and defendant are owers of the entire front of a block on the west side of Morningside avenue, West, in the city of [680]*680New. Yorkj running from the northwest corner of One Hundred and Seventeenth street to the southwest corner of One Hundred and Eighteenth street. ' The plaintiff owns from One Hundred and Eighteenth street running south 100 feet 11 inches, and the defendant owns from that point south 100 feet 11 inches to One Hundred ¡and Seventeenth street. The plots are both located within 350 feet of Morningside. Park, and hence, for certain purposes, are within the jurisdiction of the park department. (See Greater N. Y. charter [Laws of 1901, chap, 466], § 612, as amd. b,y Laws of 1901, chap. 723.) The defendant’s, premises aré 120 feet deep and the plaintiff’s premises are 125 feet deep. The plaintiff’s preniises are vacant. The defendant’s premises new have thereon in course'of construction a building covering in width the 100 feet 11 inches on the west side -of Morningside avenue, West, with a depth of 100 feet, the intended structure being a six-story high-class elevator apartment, house. On the 3d day of June, 1890, certain owners of property in that locality, for valuable consideration,' for themselves, their heirs, successors and assigns, executed and delivered an instrument under seal, called ’ a set back agreement.” Among, those who executed said agreement were former grantors of both the plaintiff and- the defendant. The said agreement recited:' '

Whereas, the Department of Public Parks in said City propose that the whole of the Westerly'sidewalk of said Morningside Avenue between One hundred and Tenth Street and said Amsterdam Avepue, late Tenth Avenue, being fifteen feet in width as now laid out, shall forever hereafter be kept unencumbered from buildings and open‘and free for public use and ornamentations, and the 'under-; signed as such owners are willing to co-operate in. carrying out such improvement,” those- signing covenanted that- thereafter the line parallel with the Westerly side of said Morningside Avenue, as now laid out and. distant 10 feet Westerly therefrom between said 110th Street and said Amsterdam Avenue, late l:0th Avenue, shall constitute the exterior building.-, line of all buildings or structures to he erected oi* constructed upon said land of said respective parties, and that the Westerly side of Morningside Avenue as now laid out shall • constitute "the exteripr area or stoop line of all such buildings and structures. And also that neither "said parties- wjio shall sign and [681]*681execute this' agreement, their respective heirs, successors and assigns, nor any of them, shall or will at any time hereafter, build or erect or cause or suffer to be built or erected upon any of said land owned by them respectively within 10' feet- of the Westerly line of said Morningside Avenue as laid out between said 110th Street and said Amsterdam Avenue, late 10th Avenue, any building or structure other than such as now is or hereafter may be permitted by law to be built-or erected in said City between what is known as the exterior building or house line and the exterior area or stoop line. And also that the said parties who shall sign and execute this agreement, shall and will consent to the adoption by the Board of Aldermen of said City of an ordinance proper or necessary to carry this agreement into effect, and also that any such party or the heirs, successors, or assigns, of any such party shall be entitled as a matter of right to an injunction order, or decree from any Court having jurisdiction in the premises, to restrain any other party hereto, or the heirs, successors or assigns, of any such party from the violation of this agreement.”

The purpose of this covenant is plain. The sidewalk was to be widened ten feet, this set-back line was to take the place and stead of the building line established by the city, and beyond this set-back line nothing was to be built or erected other than such as was permitted by law to be built between the exterior building or house line, and the exterior area or stoop line. This is an action for an injunction to prevent the erection proposed by the defendant beyond that set-back line. If the proposed structure would be lawful if the setback line was, in fact, the building line established by the city, the action will not lie. If under such circumstances it would be unlawful, the action is well brought. The complaint alleges — and there is no dispute of fact in the case: “ That the main front line of the said building, except the projections herein described, does not extend beyond the set-back line mentioned in the aforesaid agreement. That, beginning at point on said set-back line distant respectively fourteen (14) feet ten (10) inches and fifty-one (51) feet ten (10) inches northerly from the intersection of said set-back line and the northerly side of West 117th Street, defendant has commenced the erection of two several projections in front of said building. The said projections consist of permanent stone and [682]*682masonry walls, after the ordinary pattern or form of .a bay window, said structure resting upon and being supported by the ground, and ' extending in front and to the east of said set-baclc line, from two (2) feet nine and one-hálí (9-J) inches to two (2) feet eleven (11) inches, and encumbering the space in front of said set-back line by such buildings, so as to prevent open and free public use: thereof and access to the same, and the defendant is. also about to erect or cause to be erected a p.ortico having the width of fifteen (15) feet and extending eleven (11) feet eight (8) inches above the sidewalk level and extending easterly beyond the set-back line a distance o;f three (3) feet four (4) inches, the same being supported by two columns and two pilasters.”

The defendant concedes that these so-called bay wiiidows-are part óf the permanent front of the building; that they are built of masonry and extend from the foundation to the roof;. that one of them has a frontage of eighteen feet eight inches, and the other .nineteen feet three inches. Their walls are part of tile walls of the front of the building, of the same material and the same^construction, and the same thickness-, as solid, substantial and permanent. ■ In' short, thirty-seven feet eleven inches of the said front wall of this building is built about three feet, beyond the building line in the street, while the rest of it is built on the "line. The defendant concedes the fact and claims that such construction is lawful.It claims that section 4 of general ordinance 1303 of the board of aldermen, in-force on May 1, 1904, which provides that “ Bay windows may be hereafter erected with a projection of not more than three feet beyond the building line, provided that, when the projection exceeds one foot beyond the building line the total number of feet'in width occupied by all the bay windows on the same frontage óf the same building shall not'exceed seventy-five per cent of the. width of. the frontage of the building,” and the provisions mf section 1 of said ordinance, * * the park commissioners *' *.. * shall issue . permits for -the erection of bay windows projecting beyond the "building, line provided in the opinion of the • officer having jurisdiction no injury will come to the public thereby. * * * Bor the purposes of this ordinance a £bay window’shall be taken to mean and include all projections on the face of the building in the nature-of windows, such as are commonly called bay win[683]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 A.D. 679, 97 N.Y.S. 945, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-robert-m-silverman-realty-construction-co-nyappdiv-1906.