Winston v. 524 West End Ave., Inc.

233 A.D. 5, 251 N.Y.S. 96, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11181
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 24, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 233 A.D. 5 (Winston v. 524 West End Ave., Inc.) 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
Winston v. 524 West End Ave., Inc., 233 A.D. 5, 251 N.Y.S. 96, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11181 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Merrell, J.

Plaintiff is the owner in fee of a parcel of real property situate on the northeasterly corner of West End avenue and Eighty-fifth street, borough of Manhattan, New York city, and was in possession thereof for more than one year prior to the commencement of the present action. Plaintiff’s said real property has a frontage of twenty-seven feet two inches on West End avenue, and extends easterly on Eighty-fifth street a distance of one hundred feet, and is rectangular in form. Plaintiff has owned this real property since 1909, the same being known as 520 West End avenue. The lot is improved with a five-story and basement building, originally designed as a private residence. In 1918 plaintiff, with full knowledge of and without objection of defendant, respondent, or its predecessor in title, converted his building into an apartment house of nine apartments, at a cost of $22,150. Plaintiff received title to the real property in question through various mesne conveyances from November 16, 1891, when Robert Gordon and Joseph Gordon, who then owned said real property, conveyed same to Richard Goodman Platt. In connection with the conveyance of said real property from the Gordons to Platt and on November 14, 1891, the Gordons, as parties of the first part, entered into an agreement with said Platt and other owners of real property in the vicinity of the premises aforesaid, wherein it was agreed between the parties thereto, their heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, that the parties shall not erect, or cause or procure, permit, or suffer to be erected upon the premises above described, or any part thereof, any building other than of brick or stone, with roofs of slate or metal, nor at any time hereafter erect or cause or procure or permit or suffer to be erected upon said lot, or any part thereof, other than one or two (but not more [7]*7than two) private dwelling houses each designed for the use and occupation of but one family.” It was also expressly agreed therein that the covenants therein contained should run with the land and apply to and bind the personal representatives, heirs and assigns of the respective parties thereto. Through the mesne conveyances whereby plaintiff derived title to said real property, the same was conveyed subject to all incumbrances thereon.

Plaintiff brings the present action, pursuant to the provisions of sections 500 and 501 of the Real Property Law (added by Laws of 1920, chap. 930, as amd. by Laws of 1925, chap. 565; since amd. by Laws of 1929, chap. 639), to compel the determination of any claim asserted adverse to that of plaintiff which defendants, or either of them, may make, or any claim which appears from the public records either defendant might make of any estate in plaintiff’s real property, including any claim in the nature of an easement therein. Plaintiff brings the present action against the several defendants who claim or might claim an easement or interest in plaintiff’s property by virtue of mesne conveyances from the owners of neighboring real property affected by the agreement aforesaid. None of the defendants have answered in the present action or seek to deny the relief sought by plaintiff, except defendant, respondent, 524 West End Avenue, Inc., the present owner of the three lots lying northerly of plaintiff’s premises on the easterly side of West End avenue. These three lots have been assembled by defendant, respondent, and its predecessors in title and there has been erected thereon a fifteen-story apartment house, the southerly line of which abuts upon the property of plaintiff for its entire depth. In the southerly side of this fifteen-story apartment house of defendant, respondent, above the five-story apartment house now upon plaintiff’s premises, windows have been placed looking out over plaintiff's building to the south. It is the contention of the respondent that if plaintiff be granted the relief sought herein, plaintiff will be enabled to erect such a structure on his premises as will effectually cut off the easement which defendant insists it has of fight and air. An examination of the restrictive covenant contained in the agreement entered into by plaintiff’s predecessors in title discloses that no easement of fight and air was ever granted to defendant, respondent. At most, the premises now owned by plaintiff were, by the agreement, subjected to a restrictive covenant against the erection of , any buildings thereon except one or two one-family residences. No easement of fight and air was ever granted to defendant, respondent, or either of its predecessors in title. Defendant, respondent, has, in effect, by the judgment appealed from, been granted a perpetual easement of fight and air in the real property of plaintiff. [8]*8We do not think defendant, respondent, was entitled to such adjudication.

At the time of the imposition of the restrictive covenant in question, all the real property in the vicinity was occupied by private residences not exceeding five stories in height. In 1891, when the restriction was imposed, the present-day lofty apartment houses were unknown in that vicinity. It was clearly the intent of the parties, in imposing the restriction, that on the property now owned by plaintiff, in keeping with other buildings of the neighborhood, there should only be erected a building of brick or stone to be occupied by not exceeding two dwelling houses, each designed for the use and occupation of but one family. The parties thereby intended to maintain the locality as a purely residential one and to prevent the erection of any house for the use of more than two families. Since that time the character of the neighborhood has entirely changed. As shown by the photographs introduced in evidence, West End avenue is now almost completely built up with apartment houses of twelve or more stories in height. The five-story apartment house to which plaintiff has thus far been confined is in striking contrast with the towering apartment houses on all sides. Defendant, respondent, herein and its predecessor in title, by the erection of the fifteen-story apartment house adjacent to the property of plaintiff on the north, has clearly destroyed all reason for the continuance of the restriction on plaintiff’s property. Undoubtedly, had the neighborhood remained in the condition in which it was at the time the restriction was imposed, plaintiff would not be entitled to the relief which he seeks in the present action. The right to restrict plaintiff from erecting upon his own land such building as he desires must be governed by the conditions existing at the time the restriction was imposed. In Johnson v. Hahne (61 N. J. Eq. 438, at p. 443) the New Jersey court held that The right to restrict an owner of adjoining land from building on his own land, whether gained by use or grant, must be confined to the subject-matter of the use or grant, and the restriction on the owner of the servient tenement must be substantially the same. The reason, as stated by Mr. Justice Patterson, in an opinion in Blanchard v. Bridges, 4 Adolph. & E. 176, 191 (1835), a leading case, is that the act of the owner of the adjoining land, from which the right of unobstructed access of light and air over the land flows, must have reference to the state of things at the time when it is supposed to have taken place, and, as the act of the one is inferred from the enjoyment of the other owner, it must be measured by that enjoyment * *

In Norris v. Hoffman (133 App. Div. 596; affd., 197 N. Y. 578) [9]*9this court said (at p.

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Bluebook (online)
233 A.D. 5, 251 N.Y.S. 96, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winston-v-524-west-end-ave-inc-nyappdiv-1931.