81 N.Y.S. 434 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The plaintiffs entered into a contract with the defendant whereby the plaintiffs, in consideration of $87,500, purchased from the defendant and the defendant agreed to convey to the plaintiffs certain property in the city of New York upon the payment of $87,500. The objection to the title is based upon a covenant in a deed by which the premises in question were conveyed to the plaintiffs’ predecessor in title by the executors of Jacob Harsen in the year 1873. That covenant is as follows: “ And the said party of the second part, for himself, his heirs and assigns, doth hereby covenant to and with the said parties of the first part, their successors and assigns, and with the owners for the time being of the adjacent lots, jointly and severally, that neither the said party of the second part, nor his heirs nor assigns, shall or will at any time hereafter erect any buildings within forty feet of the front of said premises, except of brick or stone with roofs of slate or metal,' and will not erect or permit upon any part of said premises any stable of any kind, * * * railroad depot, railroad stable, car, engine or tenement house or any other trade, manufactory, business or calling which may be in any way dangerous, noxious or offensive to the neighboring inhabitants, and that no building shall be erected upon said lands, or any of them, which shall contain any alley or entrance running through them for ingress or egress to rear buildings, and it is declared that this covenant is a lien and runs with said lands, and binds the persons seized thereof for the time being.”
It is stated in the submission that in the agreement of August 12, Í902, by which the defendant agreed to purchase the property- it
In considering this covenant we are to ascertain the intention of the parties to the conveyances of which the covenant is a part and give it due effect. Particular words in such a covenant are to be given the meaning that was commonly given to them at the time the instrument containing the covenant was executed. In ascertaining the intention of the. parties the whole instrument must be considered; and when the various uses of the property which were prohibited are considered it becomes apparent that what was intended was to prevent the use of the premises in any way that would be a nuisance to the adjoining property. A great number of uses are prohibited, all of them of a kind that produce disagreeable odors or noises, or attract to the neighborhood large crowds or undesirable persons. Thus there is prohibited any stable, slaughter house, meat shop, tallow chandlery, manufactory of glass, which would tend to produce disagreeable odors and make the neighborhood undesirable for residence; and steam engine, smith shop, forge, furnace, brass foundry, which tend to create smoke and noises; drinking or lager beer establishments, circus, menagerie or public show, which tend to attract to the neighborhood people that are
Comparing this statement of the definition of a tenement house as existing in 1873 with the definition of an apartment house when that term came into common use, and the description of the building that the defendant intends to erect; considering the object for which this covenant was intended and the nature of the various uses that were prohibited, it must be apparent that the building that the defendant proposes to erect is not a tenement house within the meaning of the covenant and was not in the contemplation of the parties when the instrument containing the covenant was executed. An apartment house, the erection of which is contemplated by the defendant, would clearly not be a use of the property which would be dangerous, noxious or offensive to the neighboring inhabitants. What was clearly contemplated was that a tenement house as then known and in use in the city of New York should not be erected upon the property. The erection of a hotel was not prohibited, nor was the use of the property restricted to dwelling houses so com structed that one dwelling should be under each roof. The restriction was confined to one particular residential use, viz., a tenement house. The fact that hotels, boarding houses or houses of that character which were then common in New York were not prohibited would seem to show that the parties did not intend to restrict the premises to residences'of a particular kind ; what was contemplated was that the building of a tenement house as then understood in New York should not be allowed, but the modern apartment house is a building, entirely distinct from what was then understood as a tenement house. To designate a modern apartment house as a tenement house would be a misuse of the word, as it would be to call the building that the defendant intends to erect a tenement house. Such a building is not now and never has been known by such a name in common use, and to extend this covenant beyond what was clearly intended at the time, so as to exclude a use which was at that time unknown in New York, but which since has become common in this portion of the city, and which does not tend
As was said by the presiding justice in Clark v. Jammes (87 Hun, 215), “ In the construction of restrictive covenants of this hind it must be borne in mind that they are to be construed most strictly against the covenant; ” and by Justice Hatch in Sonn y. Heilberg (38 App. Div. 515), “ That is, the covenant being in derogation of the right of unrestricted use of the land for all lawful purposes, shall not be incumbered by any restrictive clause unless the same be plainly within the intent of the parties as gathered from the language used in the covenant and from surrounding circumstances.” Applying this test, it seems to me quite clear that neither of the parties intended to prevent the use of the property for what is now called an apartment house.
It is insisted, however, that the definition . of a tenement house contained in chapter 908 of the Laws of 1867, which was in force at the time this instrument was executed, as any house which is erected, leased or hired to be kept or occupied as a home or residence for more than three families, living independent of one another and doing their cooking upon the premises, must be applied to this covenant. That definition of a tenement house, however, is expressly restricted to that particular act. Provision was there made for the regulation of tenement and lodging houses in the cities of New York and Brooklyn, and that statute was passed at a time when, according to the submission, apartment houses and houses of the character that the defendant intends to build were unknown in New York. It regulated the construction of sleeping rooms, provided for proper ventilation, for fire escapes, proper roofs,drainage and proper water closets and plumbing, and contained stringent provisions for the removal of garbage and filth from the houses and yards and for proper inspection by the public authorities. The nature of the buildings to which these provisions were to apply was designated in the act as tenement houses, and a tenement house for the purposes of that act was given a general definition which would include the houses, of that kind then commonly constructed. It may be that an apartment house would be required to comply
W e think that the erection of a building as contemplated by the defendant is not a tenement house within the meaning of the restrictive clause contained in this conveyance, and that, under the submission, the plaintiffs are entitled to judgment. As the submission requests that no costs should be granted to either party as against .the other, no costs are awarded.
Patterson, O’Brien and Hatch, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., dissented.
Judgment ordered for plaintiffs, witnout costs.