This is an action to quiet title to real property, the purpose being to obtain a judicial determination that the land of the plaintiff is free of certain restrictions as to its *177 use contained in a deed to a previous owner through whom the plaintiff claims. The land consists of one of the lots of a considerable tract and the defendants are other lot owners within the same tract. The judgment of the lower court was that the plaintiff’s title was as to all the defendants, subject to the restrictions in question, and from this judgment the plaintiff appeals.
It appears that one Marshall was, in 1902, the owner of the whole tract, which was at that time unimproved and in that year he subdivided it into blocks and lots and filed of record a map of the tract as so subdivided. This map showed no building lines or anything else to indicate any purpose of restricting in any way the manner ip which the different lots might be built upon or otherwise improved or the uses to which they might be put. Immediately following the recording of the map Marshall began to sell and convey the lots. There were 132 lots in all and by October 21, 1905, he had sold and conveyed 116 of them, including the lot now owned by the plaintiff. In all of the deeds from Marshall appear restrictive provisions, which, while differing slightly in some instances, dependent upon the location of the particular lot, as, for instance," upon its facing east or west, are yet so uniform and consistent in character as to indicate unmistakably that Marshall had in mind a general and common plan which he was following. The restrictions in the deed by Marshall conveying the plaintiff’s lot are typical and read:
“Provided, however, that this conveyance is made upon and shall be subject to the following express conditions, to wit: That no building to be used as a saloon, or tenement houses known as flats, or livery stable, or store of any kind or nature ■whatever shall be erected or, placed on said premises or any part thereof, nor shall any such business be conducted on said premises or any part thereof at any time within thirty (30) years from the date hereof; that no derrick for boring any oil well shall be erected or placed, nor shall oil be produced in any manner whatsoever, on said premises or any part thereof at any time within fifty (50) years from the date hereof; and also that any buildings to be used as dwelling houses which may be erected or placed upon said premises or any part thereof at any time within twenty-five (25) years from the date hereof, shall be located and placed as follows:
*178 “On lots numbered thirty-four (34), thirty-five (35), seventy-eight (78), seventy-nine (79), one hundred and twenty-two (122) and one hundred and twenty-three (123) facing east, and on lots numbered seventy-six (76), seventy-seven (77), one hundred and twenty (120) and one hundred and twenty-one (121) facing west. And the reasonable cost thereof shall not be less than three thousand ($3,000.00) dollars; and said dwelling and its appurtenances shall be located not less than forty (40) feet from the front property line pf said premises; and not more than one house and its appurienances shall be built ór placed on each lot herein conveyed. If the said party of the second part, his heirs, assigns or successors in estate, shall in any way fail to keep or perform the conditions above specified, or any one of them, in any respect whatsoever, then any and all right, title, interest and estate hereby granted or conveyed shall revert to and become vested in the said parties of the first part, their heirs or assigns.
“The said party of the second part accepts this deed and conveyance upon and subject to each and all of the said conditions herein set forth. It is further understood and agreed that each and all of said conditions and covenants shall fun with said premises and shall be binding upon the heirs, assigns and all successors in estate of the said party of the second part.”
Some of the conveyances so made by Marshall were prior to his conveyance of the plaintiff’s lot and some of the defendants are now the owners of lots so previously conveyed. The larger number of conveyances were made subsequent to the deed through which the plaintiff claims title, and others of the defendants are now the owners of lots so subsequently conveyed.
On October 21, 1905, when, as we have said, Marshall had sold 116 out of a total of 132 lots in the tract, Marshall quitclaimed to the then owner of the plaintiff’s lot any interest in it.
After the giving of this quitclaim deed Marshall continued to sell lots until he had disposed of them all. The deeds for these lots likewise contain the restrictive provisions. It does not'-appear clearly whether or not any of the defendants are *179 the present owners of lots conveyed by Marshall subsequent to his quitclaim deed, but we assume some of them are.
It also appears in evidence that in selling the lots Marshall represented to the respective purchasers that he was exacting the same restrictive provisions from all purchasers. Residences were built upon the tract from time to time by purchasers of lots, and the tract became, and has remained, an exclusively residence district of the better sort.
It should also be mentioned that the immediate deed by which the plaintiff acquired title contained no restrictions. It is claimed by the defendants that he nevertheless had actual notice that all of the lots in the tract were subject to uniform restrictions according to a general and common plan. This the plaintiff denies, but in view of the conclusion we have reached it is of no importance whether he had such notice or not.
It should also be noted that the restrictions are cast in the form of conditions and not of covenants, that is, the conveyance by its terms is made upon the condition that so and so shall not be done, and if it is done the property conveyed shall revert. In the last paragraph of the restrictive provisions they are referred to as “conditions and covenants,” but this single expression is the only language of obligation, as distinguished from that of condition, and essentially the form is one of condition and not of covenant.
*180 Likewise there is no privity of estate between the plaintiff and the defendants, at least in the usual sense of the word. The plaintiff does not hold under or through any of the defendants, nor any of them under or through him. It follows that the covenants are not covenants recognized by the common law as running with the land, such as covenants between lessor and lessee, or between grantor and grantee for the benefit of the estate conveyed, as, for instance, warranties of title, for all of which a privity of estate is required. Furthermore, the covenants here involved are manifestly not for the benefit of the estate conveyed, but to its detriment.
If, then, these covenants are to be given force, as between the plaintiff and the defendants, it clearly must be because: (a) The burden imposed by them was one upon the land conveyed and incident to its ownership, so that the plaintiff, when he acquired his lot, acquired it subject to such burden; and (b) the benefit of the covenants was an incident of the ownership of the other lots in the tract, so that when Marshall parted with them the benefit of the covenants passed with them as an incident of their ownership and the defendants are now entitled to such benefit as the present owners of the lots.
Viewing the facts of the present case in the light of what has just been said, and leaving out of consideration for the time being the element of a general and uniform plan of restriction, it is quickly evident that as to those lots which Marshall had parted with prior to his conveyance of the plaintiff’s lot, there is no equitable servitude. Marshall was no longer interested in those lots and by no possibility can it be said that the covenants in the deed to the plaintiff’s loti were exacted by him for the benefit of lots which he did not own.
In like fashion it is plain that there is no servitude over the plaintiff’s lot in favor of those lots which Marshall still retained when he gave the quitclaim deed of 1905 and with which he parted subsequently. If a servitude had previously existed in favor of those lots, he, as their owner, had the right to surrender it and undoubtedly did so by his quitclaim deed.
The remaining question is as to the existence of a servitude in favor of those lots which Marshall still owned when he sold the plaintiff’s lot and with which he parted before he gave his quitclaim deed. This is purely a question of the construction and consequent effect of the deed by Marshall parting with the plaintiff’s lot.
It is also in line with section 1468 of the Civil Code, which reads: “A covenant made by the owner of land with the owner of other land to do or refrain from doing some act on his own land, which doing or refraining is expressed to be for the benefit of the land of the covenantee, and which is made by the covenantor expressly for his assigns or to the assigns of the covenantee, runs with both of such parcels of land.”
The restrictive provisions under consideration here are not, as required by this section, “expressed to be for the benefit of the land of the covenantee.” The section was not adopted until 1905, after the deed in question was given, and is, therefore, not controlling, but it is an expression of what the necessary requirements should be in order that covenants of this character may run with the land.
So far the case has been considered without reference to the fact that Marshall in all his deeds exacted similar restrictions and clearly had in mind a uniform plan of restrictions which he intended to impose, and actually did impose, upon all the lots in the tract as he sold them. Does the addition of this element make any difference?
There is likewise authority to the contrary.
(Mulligan
v.
Jordan,
50 N. J. Eq. 363, [
An analysis of such a ease, however, leaves, we believe, no reasonable doubt as to which line of authorities is correct. The intent of the common grantor—the original owner—is clear enough. He had a general plan of restrictions in mind. But it is not his intent that governs. It is the joint intent of himself and his grantees, and as between him and each of his grantees the instrument or instruments between them, in this case the deed, constitute the final and exclusive memorial of such intent. It is also apparent that each deed
*185
must be construed as of the time it is given.- It cannot be construed as of a later date, and in partieulargits construction and effect cannot be varied because of deeds -which the grantor may subsequently give to other parties. Yet that is exactly what is done in the decisions holding that mutual servitudes exist in cases where all the deeds taken together evidence a common plan of restrictions, although no single deed by itself evidences anything more than an intent to put particular restrictions on a particular lot. As a concrete instance, take the first deed given by Marshall. At that time there was nothing to evidence any general plan of restrictions, and if the question as to the effect of the deed had arisen, then it must necessarily have been construed as if no such general plan existed. If it must have been so construed at that time ■ it must be so construed now. Whatever rights were created by the deed were created and vested then, and the fact that it later appears that Marshall was pursuing a general plan common to all the lots in the tract cannot vary those rights. The same is true of each deed as it was given. Nor does it make any difference that, as claimed by the defendants, Marshall gave each grantee to understand, and each grantee did understand,' that the restrictions were exacted as part of a general scheme. Such understanding was not incorporated in the deeds, and as we have said, the deeds in this case constitute the final and exclusive memorials of the understandings between the parties. Any understanding not incorporated in them is wholly immaterial in the absence of a reformation.
(Long
v.
Cramer etc. Co.,
It follows that the additional element mentioned—that Marshall exacted similar restrictive covenants from all the grantees of lots in the tract—does not affect the matter and cannot change the conclusion reached without it. That conclusion, as before expressed, is that the restrictions in the deed *186 by Marshall to the plaintiff’s predecessor in interest ran personally to Marshall and not to the other lots in the tract, and that the defendants, who claim wholly.as lot owners, did not acquire the right to insist upon those restrictions.
But however this may be, the ruleo relied upon by the defendants has no application here. It may be very unneighborly and unfriendly for the plaintiff to put his lot to uses which will impair the residential character of the tract, but that is a very different thing from his seeking to clear his title of restrictions which are asserted against it, but which do not in fact exist, and which, so far as the defendants are concerned, never did exist, and that is all the plaintiff is seeking to do in this action.
The lower court found the substantial facts in the case. Upon those facts as found judgment should have been given for the plaintiff. The judgment is, therefore, reversed, with directions to the lower court to enter judgment for the plaintiff quieting his title as against the defendants.
Shaw, J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.
