16 N.Y.S. 421 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
The action was brought upon a contract for the sale and conveyance of real estate known as “527 West Forty-Fifth Street” in the city of New York. By the contract the defendant covenanted to execute and deliver to the plaintiff “a proper deed containing a general warranty and the usual full covenants for the conveying and assuring to her or them the fee-simple of the said premises free from all incumbrance except as aforesaid,” which exception included a mortgage upon the property, amounting to the sum of $5,000. A deed was tendered for the performance of the agreement, which was refused by the plaintiff. This refusal was placed upon several grounds, including what was alleged to have been a defective foreclosure of a mortgage, through which a portion of the title to the property was acquired; and also concerning a covenant contained in two deeds, through which the title passed, by which the grantees in such deeds were made to covenant with the grantor “that neither the said parties of the second part nor their heirs shall or will at any time hereafter erect or permit upon any part of the lots of land above described any slaughter-house, tallow chandlery, glue factory, bone factory, or factory for the boiling or grinding of bones, varnish factory, vitriol factory, distillery, brewery, or factory for tanning or dressing hides or skins, or any noxious or dangerous trade or business; and that in every conveyance of the said premises, or of any part thereof, by the said parties of the second part or their heirs, they shall insert or cause to be inserted a covenant on the part of their grantee or grantees that the said grantee or grantees or his or their heirs will not erect or permit upon any part of the premises conveyed to him or them any slaughter-house, tallow-chandlery, glue factory, bone factory, or factory for the boiling or grinding of bones, varnish factory, vitriol factory, distillery, brewery, or factory for tanning or dressing hides or skins, or any noxious or dangerous trade or business; and it is agreed that these covenants shall run with the land. ” The court at the trial did not definitely pass upon the objection raised to the title arising upon this covenant, and it was made to appear in answer to the objection that the property in the vicinity of that which is now in controversy had been devoted to the carrying on and transaction of various descriptions of business, and not as residence property, and it may be from the evidence in the case that this covenant might be held to have become obsolete and inoperative. Trustees v. Thacher, 87 N. Y. 311. But that was not so surely established as a matter of fact as to exclude the probability of future litigation for the purpose of maintaining or contesting the continued force and validity of this covenant. The ease in this respect differs from that of Clement v. Burtis, 121 N. Y. 708, 24 N. E. Rep. 1013, where the covenant related alone to what would probably be a nuisance upon the property, while the covenant in the present case included all such uses of the property as were inconsistent with private residences; and if it shall be continued and maintained, it constituted an incumbrance upon this land. Wetmore v. Bruce, 118 N. Y. 319, 23 N. E. Rep. 303.
The particular objection upon which it was held that the plaintiff was not bound to accept this title was that the interests of Austin and James Steele
It has been urged that these defects in the foreclosure proceedings have been substantially avoided or removed by the subsequent possession of this property, and for that purpose it was shown that the land had been in the possession of Timothy Oleary, and that before his possession there had been erected and maintained a blacksmith shop upon a part of the property, and that there were sheds standing upon its rear; but how much of the land was covered in this manner he was unable to say, but according to his recollection