175 N.E. 649 | NY | 1931
The plaintiff entered into a contract in writing with the defendant, whereby the former agreed to purchase and the latter agreed to sell certain premises, "free from all encumbrances" except as stated in the contract. The contract specified certain mortgages and restrictive agreements to which the transfer was expressly made subject. It further provided that the transfer was to be "subject to restrictions and easements of record." On the law day the plaintiff refused to take title on the ground that the premises had been subjected to covenants, constituting incumbrances not specified in the contract, which were neither "restrictions" nor "easements." This action was subsequently instituted by the plaintiff to recover the down payment made.
The Edgemere Ocean Front Improvement Company, Inc., the defendant's predecessor in title, had been the owner of a rectangular tract of land, about one thousand feet long and two hundred feet wide, reaching from Bay avenue on the north to Ocean promenade on the south. The northern six hundred feet had been designated parcel B; the southern four hundred feet parcel A. The Edgemere Company sold all of parcel A to Kaplan and Miller. Contemporaneously, seller and buyer entered into written covenants, expressed to be binding upon their successors and assigns, and to constitute "covenants running with the land." The seller, the Edgemere Company, having *133 retained title to parcel B, covenanted to lay out through the center of that parcel a roadway, thirty feet wide, from the north line of parcel A, on the south, to Bay avenue on the north, and to maintain the road at its own cost and expense. It also covenanted to lay a sewer through the entire length of parcel B, giving to the owners of A the privilege of connecting therewith, each of the parties "agreeing to maintain in proper repair the sewer laid across the land owned by each respectively." Kaplan and Miller, the purchasers, on their side covenanted to lay out a private road, thirty feet wide, continuing the road on parcel B from the south line thereof through the center of parcel A to Ocean promenade, and thereafter to maintain the road. The contract contained this clause, "the rights of way to be laid out as aforesaid to be and forever remain for the common use of the parties hereto, their successors and assigns, the tenants and occupants of parcels A and B." Thereafter the private road was laid out through parcels A and B, and termed Marvin street. Subsequently, the Edgemere Company conveyed to the defendant that lot of land in parcel B which the defendant contracted to sell to the plaintiff. The lot is bounded on the east by Marvin street, easements of passage in which are appurtenant to the lot. Do the covenants, entered into by the Edgemere Company and Kaplan and Miller, run with the land, to subject the lot in parcel B, which the plaintiff contracted to buy, to charges for the maintenance of the roadway and sewer pipe so far as they traverse the length of parcel B? If so, are the burdens imposed by the covenant either "restrictions" or "easements?"
It has been held that the burdens and benefits of covenants to maintain fences on boundary lines between railroad rights of way and lands adjoining run with the land. (Blain v. Taylor, 19 Abb. Pr. 228; Moxley v. N.J. N.Y.R.R. Co.,
21 N.Y. Supp. 347;
No easement imposes upon the owner of a servient tenement other than a passive duty; an obligation to maintain a wall, a fence or a private road is not an easement. (Goddard, The Law of Easements, p. 24; Jones on Easements, § 822; Gale on Easements, p. 426; Brill v. Brill, *135
That a covenant to repair a right of way, which runs with the land, is not strictly an easement clearly appears from the foregoing authorities. Nevertheless, that such a covenant relates to and concerns an easement is no less clear. Indeed, in such a situation as we have in this instance, the covenant may seem so incidental and requisite to the easement that a purchaser warned by his contract of the latter might be deemed to have been fully advised of the former. We have here a private park one thousand feet long by two hundred feet wide; a roadway laid out lengthwise through its center; a subdivision of the park into small lots to which there would be no access except by the private road; a reference to a recorded grant of an easement, presumably giving legal status to a right of way, of which the laid out roadway was an outward and visible sign. Aware of these matters, a prospective purchaser might well reflect that, when all the lots were sold, none but lot owners would remain to repair and maintain the roadway; that lot owners must necessarily provide for its upkeep; that the burden of *136
making repairs could not be more equitably distributed than through a requirement that each lot owner should maintain that part of the roadway which marked the frontage of his particular lot. Is it not, then, a reasonable interpretation of the phrase "subject to restrictions and easements of record," contained in the contract of sale to the plaintiff, that the conveyance agreed upon was subordinated not only to easements of record, but to such covenants in aid of easements and incidental thereto as the records might disclose? Under the circumstances known to the plaintiff did not the phrase convey this meaning to his mind? We think that these questions must be answered in the affirmative, and that the plaintiff contracted to take subject to the incumbrances of such covenants. In Blanck v. Sadlier
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The judgment should be affirmed, with costs. (See
CARDOZO, Ch. J., POUND, CRANE, LEHMAN, O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.