45 N.Y.S. 32 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
This is an action for the specific performance of a contract by which, in consideration that the defendant would convey to the plaintiff certain premises in the city of Mt. Vernon, Westchester
The defendant Set up as a counterclaim that the title to the Eighth avenue premises offered him by the plaintiff was defective, and that the plaintiff could not convey a good title to those prem-' ises, and asked judgment against the plaintiff for money paid by the defendant, and for certain expenses the defendant had been put to in the examination of the title. Issue was joined by reply. Upon these pleadings the case came to trial, with the result that the counterclaim of the defendant was dismissed and the plaintiff had judgment for the amount of the expenses incurred in his attempt to perform the contract, and for his costs. From that judgment the defendant takes this appeal.
The first question presented is whether tlie title offered by the plaintiff to the defendant was good. Two objections were taken to that title which will be considered in their order. The first one arises from this state of facts, which was not disputed. The premises the plaintiff agreed to convey to the defendant were situated on the southwest corner of One Hundred and Forty-eighth street and Eighth avenue. They consisted of a lot of land twenty-five feet on Eighth avenue and seventy-five feet on One Hundred and Forty-eighth street. In 1881" this lot, with considerable other property in the same vicinity, including, among other lots, one on One Hundred and Forty-eighth street and immediately in the rear of the corner lot above mentioned, belonged to one Harry Graham. The lot on One Hundred and Forty-eighth street in the rear of the premises of the plaintiff was twenty-five feet in front and extended back some sixty-five feet southerly, and the corner lot abutted upon it for its whole width. Graham had erected upon the One Hundred and Forty-eighth street lot a house which he proposed to use for a tenement house. He had built the house up to the line of his lot,
The meaning of this contract is somewhat doubtful. Just what it is that is not to be erected upon the land is not made to appear, but it is fair to assume for the purposes of this case that the contract forbade the erection of any building upon a strip two feet wide, running across the rear end of the corner lot. Of course, if by the operation of that contract no subsequent owner of the land could build upon that two feet, it was a considerable incumbrance upon the land and might cause a great diminution in its value. But we do not think that this contract between the board of health and Graham was any incumbrance upon the corner lot after it had passed out of the ownership of Graham. The law did not permit Graham to occupy his house on One Hundred and Forty-eighth street for a tenement house unless there was a space between it and the adjoining house, and it was the duty of the board of health to see that that law was obeyed. But the law did not forbid Graham from discontinuing the
But it is said that, by express contract between the parties, the agreement was to be construed as a covenant running with the land. That, however, is a matter of no importance. The covenant runs with the land as the necessary result of the relation of the parties who make the covenant at the time it is made, and because the parties making .the covenant have interests in the lands which are the "subject of it. The contracting parties may, by the express terms of their contract, provide that the covenant shall.not run with the land, although if nothing was said about it, it would so run; but however clearly and strongly expressed may be the intent and agreement of the parties that the covenant shall run with the land, yet if it be of such a character that the law does not permit it 'to be attached, it cannot be attached by agreement of the parties, and the assignee will take the estate clear of any such covenant. (Masury v. Southworth, 9 Ohio St. 340, 348.) So far as the two pieces of land were concerned, this covenant had no effect whatever,, except that it was the expression upon paper of what may have been at that time the intention of Graham, the owner of both .pieces, to create an easement in favor of his tenement house property over' the lots fronting upon Eighth avenue, one of which was the corner lot, subsequently owned by the plaintiff. "While he was the owner of both pieces of land, he undoubtedly had a right to create such an easement over one in favor of the other, and if he had conveyed the tenement house property to be used for that purpose, it may be that under the rule laid down in the case of Lampman v. Milks (21 N. Y. 505) and other cases of that kind an easement would have been implied in favor of the property he sold and against the property the title to which he -retained. But, as he sold the property which would have been the servient tenement without making any reservation of an easement in favor of the property he retained, there was no implied reservation of an easement in favor of his own property against the property which he conveyed.
It was for a long time in dispute both in this country and in England whether if a man owned two pieces of property, one of which was subject to a continuous and apparent easement in favor
The defendant further objected that the plaintiff did not comply with his contract, because by the terms of the contract the mortgage on the lot he was to convey was to have been $15,000 only, whereas, in fact, the original amount of the mortgage was $17,000. It appeared, however, that the plaintiff produced upon the closing of the contract, a certificate of the owner of the mortgage that the mortgage which was originally $17,000 had been reduced $2,000 by payments. There was no question that the person who made this certificate was actually the owner of the mortgage at the time and that the certificate was true in all respects. There- was, therefore, no valid objection to be made to the property on account of the amount due on the mortgage. ■
But 'the defendant says that, even conceding that he was wrong in his claim that this contract with the board of health was an incumbrance upon tile property, still, that the question was a doubtful one, and within well-settled rules of law lie would not be required to take a doubtful title. The rule which he lays down is well established, and while the question of doubt in regard to any title usually arises only where the facts are doubtful, and all persons interested in the title are hot made parties to the action so that they can be estopped by the adjudication, yet there is no question but there are some cases in this State which hold that a title may be doubtful because-of the existence of a close question of law. with regard to it, where all the persons interested in raising the question are not made parties to the action. (Fleming v. Burnham, 100 N. Y. 1; Abbott v. James, 111 id. 673.) It is rather difficult to see how a question of law which has been decided upon careful examination and under such circumstances as to make it practically a rule of property, can ever be said to he a doubtful question. At least, a conclusion formed under those circumstances is an authoritative statement of the law. Yet it must be conceded that where the facts are doubtful and such a conclusion may be questioned by persons who are not parties to the action, the court will not compel a person to take a title which he may not he able to enforce. But we do not think this is one of those cases. There is no dispute about the facts of this case, and the rule of law which is applied to it is?
The defendant claims that, upon the papers shown, his title to the Mt. "Vernon property was a good one. It- was made to appear that-there was outstanding and upon file in the county clerk’s office a complaint at the suit of one Charles Ilervan against the defendant to. compel the specific! performance of a contract which it was alleged that the defendant; had made with Kervan to sell him the identical property he subsequently agreed to sell to the plaintiff. With this complaint there had been filed the notice of pendency of action, and the action, so far as appears, was pending at.the time fixed for ■ closing the contract! When this state of facts appeared it was sufficient, we think, t<j> authorize the plaintiff to reject thé contract,, unless the defendatit showed that- there was no foundation in fact-for the apparent incumbrance which came to exist by the filing of this Us pendens. ' All that appeared to the plaintiff .was that a person claiming a right had taken steps to establish that right, and had filed such papers as would make the title of every subsequent grantee-of the premises subject to his right. So long as that existed it was-quite clear that it was the duty of the defendant, who was in possession of all the facts, and who, if anybody, was able to explain this, lien and show, that /the apparent lien was no lien, to do so; and, in the absence of proof which ought to have satisfied the plaintiff that. Kervan had no right in fact to the performance of his contract, we-think that the plaintiff was justified in insisting upon the incumbrance, and in refusing to perform the contract until that incumbrance was-removed. The objections to the contract between Kervan and the-defendant do not seem to be of a sufficient importance to show that the contract was not a valid one.
For these reasons we think that the judgment' of the court below was correct and should "be affirmed, with costs to the respondent.
Van Brunt, P.; J., Williams, Patterson and Parker, JJ.,; concurred. i
Judgment affirmed, with costs.