156 N.E. 621 | NY | 1927
Plaintiff and defendant made a contract for the purchase and sale of real property located at Lawrence, Nassau county, New York. The sale was to be subject to the restrictions of a zoning ordinance, and to building encroachments, if any, upon street or highway. With those exceptions the title was to be free *80 of all incumbrances. The buyer, searching the title, found restrictive covenants, running with the land, and limiting its use. The seller had acquired title from one Lawrence in April, 1895, by a deed which provided in the habendum that the title of the grantee, his heirs and assigns should be forever subject to the same covenants and restrictions in respect of the use of the premises as were contained in a recorded deed, covering neighboring property, made by Lawrence to one Murray in June, 1891. The covenants thus incorporated by reference are the following:
"And the said party of the second part for herself, her heirs and assigns does hereby and by the acceptance of these presents covenant and agree to and with the said party of the first part his successors and assigns that neither the said party of the second part nor her heirs or assigns shall at any time hereafter permit or suffer any wine or malt or spirituous liquor to be sold upon the said premises or any part thereof or erect suffer or permit on the premises hereby granted or in any part thereof any building for the carrying on of any noxious trade or business or permit any noxious trade or business to be carried on upon said premises nor suffer any nuisances to be placed thereon. And it is understood and agreed between the parties hereto that this covenant is attached to and shall run with the land and it shall be lawful not only for the said party of the first part and his successors but also for the owner or owners of any lot or lots of land adjoining or in the neighborhood of the premises hereby conveyed deriving title through the said Newbold Lawrence, deceased or his devisees to institute and prosecute any proceedings at law or in equity against the person or persons violating or threatening to violate the same, it being understood however that this covenant shall not be enforced personally for damages against the said party of the second part her heirs or assigns unless she or they be the owners of that portion of the said premises upon *81 which the violation of this covenant is done at the time of such violation."
The plaintiff, having rejected title because of these restrictions, has sued to recover the down payment, $20,000, and $800 for services of counsel. The defendant has counterclaimed for the reformation of the contract so as to provide for the acceptance of title subject to restrictive covenants, and for specific performance of the contract as reformed. On plaintiff's motion for summary judgment under Civil Practice rule 113, the court severed the action (there being a contest as to the value of the services of counsel), and ordered judgment for the amount of the deposit, with interest and costs. The Appellate Division held by a divided court that the counterclaim though loosely pleaded, might be held, if liberally construed, to state a case for reformation. The reversal of the judgment was followed by the allowance of an appeal to this court with questions duly certified.
We find no case for reformation in the allegations of the answer and the supporting affidavits. In substance they amount to this: The seller was not represented by counsel at the making of the contract. The terms having been settled, the contract was drawn by counsel for the buyer. Before this was done, there was handed to counsel the deed from Lawrence to defendant which contained a description of the land to be conveyed. The fact that there was a restrictive covenant in this deed had gone out of defendant's mind. Defendant did remember that there was a like restriction in a deed of his own to one Holmes, and stated to the buyer that this restriction would be canceled. If he had remembered the earlier deed, he would have asked that the contract be made subject to its covenants. Counsel, having possession of the deed, had notice thereby that a restriction of some kind had been imposed. His failure to mention it is said to charge the buyer with a duty to accept the burden of the restriction whatever it may be. *82
We find nothing in this recital to sustain the claim for reformation. At no time was there any agreement between buyer and seller that the land should be conveyed with the incumbrance of restrictive covenants. On the contrary, the understanding was that the only restriction then outstanding was the one in the later deed to Holmes, and that this would be extinguished. Even if the buyer's counsel, examining the defendant's deed, had observed a reference to some earlier restriction in the deed from Lawrence to Murray, he would have failed in his duty to his client if he had written into the contract a covenant to assume it. He did not know what it was, its extent, its duration, or anything else about it. The defendant is not asking for the cancellation of the contract on the basis of unilateral mistake. What he seeks is reformation. For this his own mistake will not avail unless shared in by the buyer or induced by the buyer's fraud. There is no charge of fraud. There is none of mutual mistake, or of discrepancy between the terms as settled by preliminary treaty and those embodied in the writing (Born v.Schrenkeisen,
The question remains whether the restriction is of such a nature as to rank as an incumbrance, or one sufficiently substantial to affect the quality of the title. By one branch of the restriction the land is subjected to a covenant that no "wine or malt or spirituous liquor" shall "be sold upon the premises." The Eighteenth Amendment and the National Prohibition Act forbid the sale of intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes. If the covenant did no more, its existence would not serve to make the title to the land unmarketable (Clement v. Burtis,
Later legislation, nearly, though not quite, contemporaneous with the covenant, preserves a like conception of the nature of the traffic. By the Liquor Tax Law of 1896 (L. 1896, ch. 112; Cons. Laws, ch. 34), excise taxes are divided into four grades. One tax is upon the business of trafficking in liquors to be drunk upon the premises where sold. A second is upon the business of trafficking in liquors in quantities less than five gallons, no part of which shall be drunk upon the premises where sold. Such a certificate may be issued to a duly licensed pharmacist as well as to other storekeepers (§ 11, subd. 3). A third is upon the business of trafficking in liquors by a duly licensed pharmacist, subject to the additional restriction that the liquor shall not be sold except upon the written prescription of a duly licensed physician, to be preserved by the vendor. The same statute makes provision for a system of local option, and prescribes the form of questions to be submitted to the electors (§ 16). One of the questions is this: Shall any corporation, association, copartnership or person be authorized to traffic in liquor under subdivision three of section eleven of the Liquor Tax Law, which provides for the sale of liquor as a pharmacist on a physician's prescription? Even a sale for medicine was thus recognized as a form of traffic to be excluded altogether at the will of the electors (cf. L. 1909, ch. 39). It was so recognized long before in the act of 1845 (L. 1845, ch. 300, § 5).
We think the conclusion is inevitable that the sale of liquor for any purpose was within the range of this covenant *85
at the time of its creation. There was no exception in favor of wholesale dealers or of pharmacists or physicians. If this is so, we may not say that the range of the covenant has been narrowed by the adoption of the Eighteenth Amendment and the statutes passed thereunder. No doubt the primary object of the covenant was to prevent the unrestricted sale of liquor as a beverage. Such a restriction might be useful in tending to reduce intemperance and in improving the quality of the neighborhood and hence the value of the property (cf. Plumb v. Tubbs, supra). On the other hand, the opportunity for evasion is at hand so long as sales are made at all, even by wholesalers or pharmacists, a fact notorious today and sufficiently attested by the exaction of a license. Judicial notice of these conditions has been taken by our highest court. "The opportunity to manufacture, sell and prescribe intoxicating malt liquors for `medicinal purposes,' opens many doors to clandestine traffic in them as beverages under the guise of medicines," and "facilitates many frauds, subterfuges and artifices" (Everard's Breweries v. Day,
The plaintiff, if coerced into the acceptance of this title, will thus be subject to a covenant whereby a business otherwise lawful is to be kept from off her land. This is clearly an incumbrance (Bull v. Burton,
The conclusion thus reached makes it unnecessary to determine the effect of the restriction against noxious forms of business. Such a covenant approaches closely to a covenant against nuisances, even if somewhat broader (McCarty v. NaturalCarbonic Gas Co.,
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the judgment of the Special Term affirmed, with costs in the Appellate Division and in this court. The first and second questions are answered in the negative and the third and fourth in the affirmative.
POUND, CRANE, ANDREWS, LEHMAN, KELLOGG and O'BRIEN, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly.