Winslow v. Newcomb

100 A. 613, 87 N.J. Eq. 480, 2 Stock. 480, 1917 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 82
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 27, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 100 A. 613 (Winslow v. Newcomb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winslow v. Newcomb, 100 A. 613, 87 N.J. Eq. 480, 2 Stock. 480, 1917 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 82 (N.J. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Backes, V. C.

This bill prays for a mandatory injimction to remove buildings erected in violation of a building restriction. In the early sixties, Charles K. Landis, the owner of the “Great Vineland Tract,” in Cumberland county, laid out what is now the borough of Vineland, plotted the same into streets and building lots,- and adopted a uniform and general building scheme requiring, inter alia, all houses to be set back twenty feet from the street line. The lots were conveyed by deeds of general warranty, in which no mention or reference was made to the restriction. Landis had his own peculiar methods. When he sold lots on the installment plan, he entered into what he termed a “Bond of Agreement,” with the purchasers, wherein for the stated consideration price, and the purchaser “complying with the covenants hereinafter stipulated,” he agreed to sell the described lot, and the purchaser on his part agreed to plant shade trees, erect on the lot a habitation within one year, fence the lot (if at all) with a certain kind, and whitewash or paint it, and keep the sidewalk clear of underbrush and rubbish, “houses to be at least twenty feet from the side of the road,” the side of the road to be plowed and seeded within two years. Contemporaneously, [482]*482with the delivery of the deed, upon fulfilling the terms of the bond of agreement, or when a sale was not upon deferred payments, Landis exacted a written contract from the grantees, wherein the latter stipulated that the property had been purchased with the understanding, as part of the consideration of 'said purchase, that' they would observe the general improvement scheme, each item of which was repeated substantially in the language of the bond of agreement. The papers are crude and inartificial, but, nevertheless, record unmistakably the community scheme. The documents were kept by Landis and those wh.o succeeded liim-until the enterprise came to an end, when they were lodged in the archives of the Vineland Historical Society—some one thousand five hundred in all. The borough now contains, approximately, two thousand buildings, chiefly residential, and all except five or six are erected in conformity with the regulation. In two or three instances the invasions were accidental. Compliance with the tree planting and other requirements has added much to the tone of the town Landis avenue is the main thoroughfare, part of which is devoted to business. The defendant, Newcomb, owns the piece of land at the southwest corner of Landis avenue and Seventh street, on which is, and for years has been, erected a store building, set back from the streets the required distance. The complainant, Winslow, owns the lot facing on Seventh street, immediately adjoining the defendant’s in the rear, on which his-home is built, and which, like all others on that street, sets back twenty feet. Adjoining his store building, and between it and Seventh street, the defendant, at a cost of $1,500, has erected a one-story glass enclosed building, twelve feet wide, by thirty-eight feet in depth, with a second-story extension in the roar, of the same width and sixteen feet in length, enclosed and windowed, reaching almost the height of the adjacent building. This structure shelters an outside stairway leading to the second floor of the store building, the upper portion of which is used as a landing for the stairway and the lower portion usable for a fruit stand, or like occupation. Eliminating the second-story extension, it is somewhat similar to a stand erected on the opposite corner and one at the corner of Sixth and Landis, the difference being [483]*483that this'one has a concrete foundation and is more substantial and of a permanent character. On the rear portion of his lot, eleven feet from the complainant’s dwelling and within fifteen feet of the street line, the.defendant put up an unsightly one-story enclosed shed, twelve feet wide by twenty-six feet iu length, completely shutting off the complainant’s view to the northward. The restricted area includes the twenty feet from the side of Seventh street, as well as that given space on-Landis avenue. Chelsea Land and Improvement Co. v. Adams, 71 N. J. Eq. 771; Henderson v. Champion, 83 N. J. Eq. 554. Both structures are, undoubtedly, infractions of the common scheme and of the covenant entered into by the defendant’s predecessor in title, Mrs. Gifford, the original grantee of Landis. Samuel Gifford purchased lots 11 and 12 of block 26 of the easterly district of the town plot of Vineland (defendant’s lots), November 3d, 1863, for $200, payable in installments, and executed a “Bond of Agreement” on that day. On May 21st, 1864, Landis conveyed the lots to Hannah M. Gifford, who on that day executed the agreement demanded by him of all purchasers, as already related. It is observed that neither Samuel nor Hannah M. Gifford personally executed the agreements. They were signed “per C. Chester Gifford,” the husband of Hannah.. What relation Samuel bore to either does not appear, but I assume- that the purchase was made in his name for Hannah, her husband acting as agent in the transaction, and that she took the title subject to the burdens entailed by the agreements.

. The- covenants, in so far as they concern the location of buildings as a part- of the community scheme, created an implied equitable servitude on her lots in favor of the other lot owners, binding upon her grantees, direct and remote, who took with notice and enforceable upon the principle of preventing one having knowledge of the just rights of another from defeating such rights. Brewer v. Marshall, 19 N. J. Eq. 537. As part of a general improvement scheme, such agreements have been repeatedly enforced in this court at tire instance of other lot owners. DeGray v. Monmouth Beach Club House Co., 50 N. J. Eq. 329, and the line of authorities citing this case in Shepard’s Annotations.

[484]*484The agreement is not a whit less enforceable because the restriction was not incorporated in the deed. The practical utility of embodying it in the eonvej'ance naturally Commends itself, but it is not essential if notice is otherwise brought home to the parties sought to be bound.- Kirkpatrick v. Peshine, 24 N. J. Eq. 206; Wootton & Dynes v. Seltzer, 83 N. J. Eq. 163; affirmed, 84 N. J. Eq. 207. Nor, as was suggested, rather than argued, was the “Bond'of Agreement” necessarily merged in the deed. 13 Cyc. 617. But'that point need not be decided, because the restriction was reiterated in the agreement made contemporaneously with the deed.

The question to be determined then is: Did the defendant purchase with notice, actual or of such circumstances which upon reasonable inquiry would have informed him of the situation? He denied having any knowledge or information whatever of the agreements and, admitting that he made no .inquiry, explained that he assumed that section 17 of the act establishing the township of Landis (P. L. 186k p. 180), which provides, among other things, that it shall be within the power of the township committee to make it unlawful “to build any house, barn or other out house nearer than twenty feet of the side of any street or avenue in the town plot of Vineland as recorded in the clerk’s office at Bridgeton,” was responsible for the rigid adherence to the twenty-foot line by the inhabitants of the borough. His positive denial is not at all satisfactory,; nor does his explanation appeal to me as sincere. Nearly fifty years ago, when the town was in its infancy, the defendant moved to Vine-land, studied law in the office of Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 A. 613, 87 N.J. Eq. 480, 2 Stock. 480, 1917 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winslow-v-newcomb-njch-1917.