15 N.Y.S. 721 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
The plaintiff brings this action to restrain the defendant from erecting six apartment houses on the north side of Eighty-Second street, between Ninth and Tenth avenues, and asks for a preliminary injunction until the trial. In the year 1860 the owners,of the property between Seventy-Ninth street, Eighty-Third street, Ninth avenue, and Bloomingdale road, entered into an agreement which provided “that no building whatever shall be erected within forty feet of the front of any of the lots situated within the boundaries aforesaid, except of brick, stone, or iron, with roofs of slate or metal. Also that there shall not be erected or allowed upon any of their said lots any brewery, distillery, slaughter-house, smith’s shop, forge, furnace, steam-engine; brass foundry, nail or other iron factory, sugar bakery, livery stable, or any soap, candle, starch, varnish, vitriol, glue, ink, or turpentine factory, or any factory for tanning, dressing, or preparing hides, skin, or leather, or any other dangerous, noxious, or offensive establishment, trade, or business whatsoever, nor any house of the character or description usually known as a ‘tenement-house.’” The defendant has begun the erection of six five-story flats or apartment houses, and this motion for a preliminary injunction is made upon the claim by the plaintiff that the erection of these buildings by the defendant is a violation of the above covenant. The question involved, therefore, is whether houses of the character about being erected by the defendant are tenement-houses, within the meaning of the covenant. In this connection it must be remembered that apartment or flat houses had no existence prior to 1860, in this city. We had two classes of houses which were, designated as “private dwellings” and “tenements.” Since then there has grown up a class of houses which are now designated as “flats” or “apartolent houses.” It is conceded by all that the term “flat” or “apartment house,” as generally known, was not used in building in the city of New York prior to the past 25 years. It is claimed, however, by the plaintiff, and as positively denied by the defendant, that buildings which are called “flats” or “apartment houses” were formerly known as “tenements,” and that the word “tenement” was the only word applicable to such buildings. Webster defines “tenement” to be “a dwelling-house or an apartment in a building used by one family; often, in modern usage, an inferior dwelling-house, rented to poor persons, or a dwelling erected for the purpose of being rented, called also a ‘ tenement-house.’”
In Musgrave v. Sherwood, 23 Hun, 674, note, it is said: “The word ‘ tenement,’ in its ordinary acceptation, is applied to houses and other buildings, yet in its proper legal sense it signifies everything that may be holden. It not only includes land, but rents and other interests.” In that case it was held that a covenant in the deed against the use of premises as a “tenement-house” was not violated by the use for a family hotel or apartment house. It is true that the court in that case, at special term, in discussing the question as to what was a tenement-house, refers to the following definition, given in chapter 908 of the Laws of 1867, being an act for the regulation of
In Myers v. Sterne, at special term, (not reported,)
NOTE.
Myers et al. v. Sterne et al., referred to above, was decided in the supreme court, special term, New York county, February 28, 1890. Mr. Justice Andrews filed the following opinion: “The brief submitted by plaintiffs’ attorney con tains the following statement : * Upon the claim made by the defendant Sterne,—that is, that the total change of the character of this neighborhood since 1870 was not within the contemplation of the parties when they executed the restriction, and that the covenant should therefore (so far as the word “ tenement-house ” is concerned) be declared no longer in force,—we have been unable to find any testimony substantially contradicting the facts proven by the defendant. If the court is satisfied that that entire section of the city has so changed since 1870 that the purposes for which the land was restricted are impracticable, within the principles laid down in the case of Columbia College v. Lynch, 70 N. Y. 440, and Columbia College v. Thacher, 87 N. Y. 312, we submit that this should only be granted at the cost of the defendant Sterne.’ The law applicable to the case was settled by the decision above cited. The evidence as to the change in the character of the neighborhood was very full and convincing, and, as plaintiffs’ attorneys admit that they can find no evidence substantially contradicting it, it appears to me that the above statement
See note at end of case.