79 A.D. 1 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This is a controversy submitted pursuant to the Code of Civil Procedure. The plaintiff perforce of a covenant seeks to restrain the defendant from building a certain tenement house. The premises are part of a piece of land 72 feet on Sumner avenue and 175 feet on Willoughby avenue, in the borough of Brooklyn, conveyed in 1858 to one Longhi, and at that time made subject to the following covenant: “And the said party of the second part by accepting this deed hereby covenants and agrees for himself, his heirs and assigns that- no store or grocery shall be erected or kept on said" premises, nor any workshop, manufactory or stable, nor any erection or .building that is usually deemed, a nuisance. or that shall be offensive in a neighborhood occupied for residences, and that only dwelling houses shall be built upon said premises (except that neat greenhouses or graperies may be built thereon), and further, that no dwelling houses shall be erected thereon to cost less than twenty-five hundred dollars, and that any house or erection that shall be placed upon said premises shall be set or placed back at least twenty feet from the line of the street on which the same shall be placed, and so as to leave a yard of at least twenty feet between any such house or erection and either and each of said avenues.”
The plaintiff acquired this land in 1901, and conveyed a part of it to the defendant in 1902, “ subject to the covenants and restrictions contained in former deeds.” The defendant is now seized of a lot of land at the northeast intersection of Sumner and Willoughby avenues in the borough of Brooklyn, one hundred feet on Sumner avenue and thirty-four feet on Willoughby avenue; and the plaintiff now seeks to enjoin him from the building of a tenement house thirty-four feet wide on Willoughby avenue and ninety feet deep on Sumner avenue, four stories high, designed to receive eight families, and located on the building lines of the respective streets, or any other fabric which shall not strictly conform in character and relative location to the terms of the. covenant.
This is a covenant in negative terms, and the sole violation-charged is of the clause “ only dwelling houses shall be built upon
The purpose of that part of the covenant that is pertinent is clear enough. The dwelling houses were to be semi-detached with twenty feet of yard space between them and the adjoining streets. Such requirement was entirely proper for suburban quarters, and might well now be enforced if a departure from it would result in the erection of houses on lines out of harmony with the general character of the neighborhood. But if, on the other hand, an enforcement would make a departure, with reference to the building lines, from the general location of the surrounding buildings erected since the covenant of 1858, and if it would deprive the owner of an opportunity to improve his land as the adjacent lands have been improved, then a court of equity will not interfere. The following facts are established: The said avenues are public streets. In 1880 two surface car tracks were laid on Sumner avenue by these premises, whereon cars were drawn by horses until 1893, and ever since 1893 and at the present time by an overhead trolley system. In 1873 an asylum for female orphans acquired the block of land bounded on'the south by Willoughby avenue and on the west by Sumner avenue, and thereafter put up buildings thereon which it now occupies as a home for orphans. And on the Sumner avenue side it has built a stone and brick fence fifteen feet high extending the entire block. On the northeast corner of Vernon avenue,.
Goodrich, P. J., Bartlett, Woodward and Hirschberg, JJ., concurred.
Judgment for the defendant upon the submission, without costs.