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Coudert v. Sayre

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Jan 4, 1890
46 N.J. Eq. 386 (Ch. Div. 1890)

Summary

In Coudert v. Sayre, 46 N.J. Eq. 386, 19 A. 190, 191, where the complainant brought a suit in chancery seeking relief from the binding obligations of a restrictive covenant on the ground that conditions had changed, the court said: "The case which the complainant lays before the court as the foundation for the relief he seeks is one of extreme novelty.

Summary of this case from Kenealy v. Chevy Chase Land Co.

Opinion

01-04-1890

COUDERT v. SAYRE.

Robert L. Lawrence, for complainant. Thomas N. McCarter, for defendant.


(Syllabus by the Court.)

On final hearing on bill and answer, and proofs taken in open court.

Robert L. Lawrence, for complainant. Thomas N. McCarter, for defendant.

VAN FLEET, V. C. The case which the complainant lays before the court as the foundation for the relief he seeks is one of extreme novelty. Stated generally, it must be said that the complainant is before the court asking to be relieved, as against the defendant, from the obligation of a covenant which he made voluntarily, fully understanding what he was doing, entirely uninfluenced by fraud, and without the least mixture of accident or mistake. To present his case so that it may be easily understood, it will be necessary to state the facts out of which it arises somewhat in detail.

The covenant which the complainant asks to have nullified is contained in a deed made by John G. Vose and wife to the complainant, bearing date the 15th day of May, 1867. The deed conveys four acres of land. The land is described in the deed as "being part of the estate called 'Montrose,'"the different parts of which, the deed says, were conveyed to Mr. Vose by 10 different conveyances, the dates of which, together with the names of the grantors and the dates and places of registry, are all recited. Immediately following the description of the land conveyed, the deed says the premises conveyed by it are shown on the map of Montrose, dated January 1, 1867, which is filed in the office of the register of Essex county, and consist of a portion of lot No. 16 on said map. By this deed the complainant, for himself, his heirs, and assigns, covenanted with his grantor, his heirs and assigns, that the land conveyed by the deed should not at any time thereafter be used or occupied for the erection or maintenance of any slaughter-house. The covenant then designates by name almost every kind of building which may be used for trade or manufacture, and then says, "or for any other purpose whatsoever which can or may be unwholesome or offensive to the neighboring inhabitants, or for the erection of any buildings of any kind or description, excepting one dwelling-house, with the appropriate gardener's cottage." The covenant then designates a number of other buildings, and concludes with these words: "And other buildings and offices appropriate for a gentleman's country residence." The complainant further covenanted for himself, his heirs and assigns, that the covenant he had just made, restricting the uses to which the land conveyed to him could be appropriated, should attach to the land, and run with its title, and that the covenant should be inserted in all future conveyances and other instruments whereby the title to his land should be transferred or affected, and that the covenant should forever thereafter be recognized, sustained, and upheld, and that it should not only be lawful for the complainant's grantor, his legal representatives or assigns, but also for the owner or owners of any of the property mentioned in the deeds thereinbefore recited,—meaning the 10 deeds by which the land called the "Montrose Estate" had been conveyed to the complainant's grantor,—to institute and prosecute any suit or proceeding, at law or in equity, for a violation, or threatened violation, of the covenant; it being understood, as the covenant declares, that the covenant should not be enforced personally against the complainant unless he was the owner of land to which it related, when its violation was threatened or committed.

These are the restrictions which the complainant voluntarily consented should be put upon the uses to which the land conveyed to him might be appropriated when he accepted its title. It is not claimed or pretended that the deed to him does not in every respect conform precisely to his contract of purchase, and give him just such a title as by his contract he was entitled to receive; nor is it pretended that the deed puts a single restriction on the use of the land which the complainant did not deliberately agree to by his contract of purchase. Hence, in the discussion of this case, it must be regarded as a fact entirely free from dispute that every fetter or restriction which these covenants place upon the land in question was placed there with the complainant's full consent, and, in addition, that he bargained for a title thus clogged, and only paid such price for the land as he believed it to be fairly worth, subject to a perpetual restriction as to the purposes for which it could be used. There can be no doubt that the dominion which the law gives every landowner over his land, who owns it in fee, invests him with good right and full power, when he conveys a part, to impose such limitations upon its use as will prevent his grantee, and those claiming under him, from making such use of the part conveyed as may impair or diminish the value of the part which he retains. As was said by Mr. Justice BIGELOW, afterwards chief justice of the supreme court of Massachusetts, in Whitney v. Railway Co., 11 Gray, 359-363: "Every owner of real property has the right so to deal with it as to restrain its use by his grantees within such limits as to prevent its appropriation to purposes which will impair the value, or diminish the pleasure of the enjoyment, of the land which he retains. The only restriction on this right is that it shall be exercised reasonably, with a due regard to public policy, and without creating any unlawful restraint of trade."

So far nothing has been said respecting the defendant's position in the case. His connection with the complainant arose in this way: The complainant's grantor, on the 1st day of June, 1868, conveyed to Samuel Schoch two tracts adjoining the four acres conveyed to the complainant the previous year. These two tracts lie adjacent to each other, and form one body. One of the tracts contains 1 75-100 acres, and the other, 1 59-100 acres. The deed to Mr. Schoch states that these two tracts are shown as lots Nos. 9 and 10 on a map of property at Montrose, dated April, 1868, and filed in the office of the register of Essex county. They were conveyed subject to a restriction, respecting the uses to whichthey could be appropriated, precisely similar to that contained in the deed to the complainant, except that their owner has a right to erect two dwellings, such as would be suitable for a gentleman's country residence, on each tract. These two tracts were on the 23d day of October, 1877, conveyed by Mr. Schoch to the defendant, who, soon after his purchase, expended in the erection of a large and handsome dwelling, and other buildings, and in improving and beautifying the whole surface of the tracts, over $35,000. The proofs show that the defendant made his purchase after he had examined the complainant's deed. The defendant swears that the complainant's covenant restricting the uses to which his land could be appropriated operated as a strong inducement to him to purchase. It was by means of the conveyances from the complainant's grantor to Mr. Schoch, and from Mr. Schoch to the defendant, that the defendant has acquired whatever right he now has to the benefit of the complainant's covenant.

The complainant does not ask for a decree declaring that the whole of his covenant is without force in favor of the defendant, but merely that such declaration be made so far as his covenant restricts the number of dwellings which may be erected on his land. As to the other parts of his covenant, he asks no declaration, or other aid. The reason it has become important to the complainant to get the declaration he asks, if he can, is this: In 1881, he conveyed one acre of his four to another person, who subsequently erected a dwelling on it. He still retains the title to the other three. So that it will be perceived, if the defendant is entitled to the benefit of the complainant's covenant, and will have a right to seek redress against him if he violates it, that the complainant has by his own act placed the three acres which he still retains in a position where his right to use them as a site for a dwelling may always be challenged by the owner of the defendant's land. This is the situation which has induces the complainant to attempt to free himself from his obligation.

The validity of the covenant between the original parties is not disputed. No claim is made that the covenant was originally without force because against public policy, or beyond the capacity of the contracting parties. Covenants of this kind, which either add to the value or desirability of the land retained or conveyed, and which do not in any way impose an unreasonable restraint upon trade or industry, have, as I think an examination of the authorities clearly shows, uniformly been upheld and enforced. The purpose of the covenant in question is manifest. There can be no doubt that its purpose was to confer a benefit on the grantor's adjacent land, by restricting the number of habitations which should be erected on the four acres, thus securing forever to the grantor's adjacent land full protection against the discomfort and danger resulting from being surrounded by a dense population, and also the advantages arising from an attractive prospect, and an almost unobstructed view over the four acres, together with the benefit that would flow from a free and unobstructed passage of light and air over the four acres. The benefits which the grantor intended by the covenant to confer on his adjacent land are in all material respects substantially like those which would be conferred by a giant of land abutting on other laud of the grantor, which he by his grant covenants shall forever remain open as a park or garden. It is well settled that a covenant of the kind just mentioned will, whether it runs with the land or not, be enforced, not only against the covenantor, but also against any person claiming under the covenantor with notice of the covenant. The principle laid down by Lord COTTENHAM on this subject in Tulk v. Moxhay, 2 Phil. Ch. 774, has been followed by this court, and also by the court of errors and appeals. Kirkpatrick v. Peshine, 24 N. J. Eq. 206-213; Brewer v. Marshall, 19 N. J. Eq. 537-543. The following is Lord COTTENHAM'S statement of the principle, (page 777:) "That this court has jurisdiction to enforce a contract between the owner of land, and his neighbor purchasing a part of it, that the latter shall either use or abstain from using the land purchased in a particular way, is what I never knew disputed. Here * * * the owner of certain houses in the square sells the land adjoining, with a covenant from the purchaser not to use it for any other purpose than as a square garden; and it is now contended, not that the vendee could violate that contract, but that he might sell the piece of land, and that the purchaser from him may violate it, without this court having any power to interfere. If that were so, it would be impossible for an owner of land to sell part of it without incurring the risk of rendering what he retains worthless. It is said that, the covenant being one which does not run with the land, this court cannot enforce it; but the question is not whether the covenant runs with the land, but whether a party shall be permitted to use the land in a manner inconsistent with the contract entered into by his vendor, and with notice of which he purchased. Of course, the price would be affected by the covenant; and nothing could be more inequitable than that the original purchaser should be able to sell the property the next day for a greater price, in consideration of the assignee being allowed to escape from the liability which he had himself undertaken." The same principle controlled the decision of Chancellor WALWORTH in Hills v. Miller, 3 Paige, 254, and also in Trustees v. Cowen, 4 Paige, 510. It would appear, then, to be entirely clear that the validity of the covenant under consideration, both as against the complainant and any person who may succeed to his title with notice of the covenant, is free from the least doubt. It follows, necessarily, that the making of the covenant was effectual in putting a burdenon the land conveyed for the benefit of the land retained. This being so, it would seem to follow, as a logical sequence, that the defendant, by the acquisition of a part of the land benefited by the covenant, has succeeded, in respect to that land, to the covenantee's lights under the covenant. The covenant, it will be remembered, expressly declares that it shall be lawful for any person who shall become the owner of any of the land described in the 10 deeds recited in the conveyance to the complainant to maintain an action for a violation of the covenant against such person as may be the owner of complainant's land when the violation is committed. The language of the covenant makes it certain, beyond all doubt, that the parties mutually intended that the restrictions put upon the land conveyed should have the effect to confer an important benefit on the grantor's adjacent land. This benefit consisted, as already shown, in protection against a dense population, and in securing to the ower of the adjacent land an attractive prospect, an unobstructed view, and a free passage for light and air. These are things which, according to long-established principles of law, may be annexed to land, so as to be made an essential and valuable part of it, and to pass with a transfer of its title. If this were not so, it will be seen at a glance that such covenants, instead of being the means by which parties can give effect to their mutual purpose, would be without effect except to mislead and deceive. But that is not the law. On the contrary, the law is well settled that the rights created by such covenants are transferable as part of the land to which they are attached; and where, as in this case, a grantor restricts the use of the land which he conveys for the benefit of land which he retains, his subsequent conveyance of the land retained will pass such benefit to his grantee.

Indeed, under the principle established by the decision of the supreme court in Bank v. Segur, 39 X. J. Law, 173, I think it must be held that the covenant in question runs with the land held by the defendant, so that if it shall be broken, while he still retains the title, he may maintain an action at law for its breach. The action in that case grew out of the following facts: Segur was doing business at Dover as a private banker. He had commenced the erection of a banking-house on a lot he owned there. While the building was in course of erection, he agreed to sell the building and lot to one Hoagland. The contract stated that Hoagland's object in making the purchase was to form a banking corporation, and then convey the property to such corporation. Segur agreed that when the corporation commenced business he would withdraw from business, and not re-engage in business as a private banker in the borough of Dover at any time within 10 years thereafter. He also agreed that his covenant to withdraw and abstain from business should run with the land he had agreed to convey, and that in case he broke it the owner of the land at the time the breach was committed should have a right to maintain an action at law against him for its breach. After the property had been conveyed to the bank, Segur violated his covenant, and the bank sued him. Segur demurred to the declaration filed in the case, and the question thus presented was whether Segur's covenant was so annexed to the land as to pass with its title, and confer upon the holder of the title a right to maintain an action at law for its breach. The distinction between the two covenants, in respect to their affinity to the title to land, it will be observed, is plain and wide. Segur's covenant simply put a restraint upon his future personal conduct. It is true that the restraint would, if observed, result in benefit to the owner or occupier of the land on the sale of which the covenant was made; but the benefit was to How exclusively from Segur's pursuing a particular line of personal conduct, while in the case in hand the covenant restricts the uses to which land shall be put, and it is clear, beyond question, on the face of the covenant itself, that the well-understood purpose of the parties in laying the restriction on the land conveyed was to confer a perpetual benefit on the land retained. This being so, it is impossible for me to discover any reason of either justice or policy why the benefit conferred by covenant on the land retained should not, on a grant of any part of it, pass to its grantee. That it will pass so as to give its grantee a right to maintain an action at law for its breach seems to be definitely settled by the decision in the case last cited. Chief Justice BEASLEY, in pronouncing the opinion of the court in that case, said, (page 184:) "It is not easy to see why any contract which is of a nature to attach to the land, and which has a beneficial tendency, should not be considered assignable by act of law, as against the convenantor, with the title. In every instance where the question in this form is presented, the suit being between the original covenantor and the alienee of the covenantee, if the making of the covenant be not denied, the sole point for solution would seem to be whether such covenant, in the legal sense, relates to or concerns the land; for, if not by its quality, it passes as an incident to the property, and is enforceable in the name of the person who is the owner at the time of its breach. When the covenantor has been the party sued, and the covenant admittedly related to the land, the alienee of the covenantee being the plaintiff, I think no considered case has held that such action was not maintainable."

But, as I understand the authorities, the defendant's right to the benefit of the complainant's covenant does not at all depend upon the defendant's ability to maintain an action at law against the complainant for its breach. The doctrine now in force on this subject I understand to be this: that when it appears by the true construction of the termsof a grant that it was the well-understood purpose of the parties to create or reserve a right, in the nature of a servitude or easement, in the property granted, for the benefit of other land owned by the grantor, no matter in what form such purpose may be expressed, whether it be in the form of a condition or covenant or reservation or exception, such right, if not against public policy, will be held to be appurtenant to the land of the grantor, and binding on that conveyed to the grantee, and the right and burden thus created and imposed will pass with the lands to all subsequent grantees; and any grantee of the land to which such right is appurtenant acquires by his grant a right to have the servitude or easement, or "right of amenity," as it is sometimes called, protected in equity, notwithstanding that his right may not rest on a covenant which, as a matter of law, runs with the title to his land, and notwithstanding that it may also be true that he may not be able to maintain an action at law for the vindication of his right. The cases in which this doctrine has been recognized and enforced are quite numerous, but only a few will be cited. Brewer v. Marshall, 19 N. J. Eq. 537; Kirkpatrick v. Peshine, 24 N. J. Eq. 206; Gawtry v. Leland, 31 N. J. Eq. 385; Whitney v. Railway Co., 11 Gray, 359; Parker v. Nightingale, 6 Allen, 341; Schwoerer v. Association, 99 Mass. 285; Hills v. Miller, 3 Paige, 254; Coles v. Sims, 5 De Gex, M. & G. 1; Western v. Macdermot, L. R. 1 Eq. 499, on appeal, L. R. 2 Ch. 72.

The discussion thus far has, I think, demonstrated that two things may be considered settled: Fust, that the covenant under consideration was originally valid; and, second, that so long as the covenant shall remain in force any grantee of the land benefited by the covenant will take with the land the benefit conferred on it by the covenant. This brings us to the point where it becomes necessary to examine the grounds on which the complainant rests his right to relief. He alleges two. He says first that his grantor has released or canceled the covenant in question. This is true to this extent: that the complainant's grantor in November, 1869, executed a writing by which he so far modified the covenant as to permit the complainant to erect more than one dwelling on the four acres, without, however, saying how many, provided each house was of a designated class or kind. But this modification, it will be observed, was made more than a year after the land now held by the defendant had been conveyed to Mr. Schoch. It certainly requires no argument to show that the complainant's grantor was without the least shred of authority or right to release or modify the covenant so far as it operated to confer a benefit on land which he had previously conveyed. One person is without the least power or capacity, in the absence of a delegation of power, to release or change the rights of another in land. For a principle so elementary no authority need be cited, yet it appears that Lord ROMILLY, as master of the rolls, passed upon this very question in Western v. Macdermot, L. R. 1 Eq. 499-506.

It is more difficult to describe the other ground. The deed to the complainant, it will be remembered, states that the four acres conveyed by it consist of a portion of lot No. 16, shown on a map of Montrose, dated January 1, 1867, and filed in the register's office. No map of that date was ever filed. No map was filed until November, 1869; and the one then filed, the proofs show, was made in the spring of 1868. The complainant says that his purchase was made under the map of 1867, and that his grantor, between the date of the conveyance to him, in May, 1867, and the conveyance to Mr. Schoch, in June, 1868, caused a new map of Montrose to be made, by which the land composing that estate was entirely changed in its arrangement and division from the arrangement and division originally made and appearing on the map of 1867. These changes consisted in laying out new roads, where none appeared on the map of 1867, and also in subdividing the tracts laid down on the map of 1867, and thus reducing their size. The complainant further says that in consequence of these changes, and subsequent conveyances made in conformity to them, the character of the whole neighborhood has been completely changed, and that now, after a lapse of more than 20 years, instead of Montrose being divided into tracts or plots suitable for gentletlemen's country residences, it is divided into small lots, upon many of which dwellings have been erected, which are occupied, and that now, instead of the land being an open country, with here and there a large and handsome dwelling, surrounded by beautiful grounds, as it was laid out on the map of 1867, it has become a populous village. These alterations in the arrangement and division of the land composing the estate of Montrose, and the changes which in consequence have taken place, both in the manner in which the land is used, and in the characacter of its occupants, have, the complainant claims, absolved him from all duty to keep his covenant, and that he is consequently entitled to a judicial declaration that it is without force. The argument by which it is attempted to maintain this claim is this: That the complainant's grantor, by referring to the map of 1867 in the deed by which the four acres were conveyed, made the map a part of the deed, and that when the deed and map are read together it must be seen that one of the promises made by implication to the complainant, when he purchased, was that the arrangement and division of the land composing the estate of Montrose, delineated on the map of 1867, should be maintained forever for the common benefit of the owners of the land. From this condition of affairs, it is contended that it results, as a matter of law, that the complainant's grantor became subject to an implied covenant tomaintain inviolate the arrangement and division then existing, which if broken would extinguish the complainant's covenant. It cannot be disputed that where the owner of a tract of land cuts it up or divides it in such manner as to give one part an additional value because of rights which, under the division, are given to it in the other part, and then causes a map or plan of his division, showing such rights, to be made, and afterwards makes sale, by the map or plan, of the part increased in value by rights given to it in the other part, and the part sold is subsequently conveyed by a deed which describes the land by reference to the map or plan, that such rights will pass to the grantee, although no express grant of them is made. The law on this subject is settled. The latest exposition of it will be found in Lennig v. Association, 41 N. J. Eq. 606, 7 Atl. Rep. 491. The rights in the other land are held in such cases to pass by implied covenant or grant; that is, the court, upon a full and careful consideration of all the facts leading up to the transfer of the title, which it may lawfully consider, and after reading the instrument by which the title is transferred, with the aid of the map or plan, finds that it was the intention of the grantor to grant a particular right not embraced within the words of the grant, and that the grantee had a right to understand that such right would pass to him by the grant. The whole doctrine of implied covenants and grants rests on the presumed intention of the parties. It can have no other rational foundation. This being so, it seems to me to be clear that the complainant's case is without foundation. His claim is that the court, on looking at his deed, and the map to which it refers, must see that it was the mutual understanding of his grantor and himself, at the time the four acres were conveyed to him, that the arrangement and division of the land in question, appearing on the map of 1867, should be maintained forever. On the facts now before the court, I do not think it is possible to see anything of the kind. It is true that the complainant's deed refers to the map of 1867, but there is not a word of proof in the case from which it can be inferred that the complainant made his purchase by that map, or that it was exhibited to him at any time prior to the delivery of his deed, or when his deed was delivered. The complainant was not examined as a witness, and there is nothing before the court as evidence which would support even a suspicion that the complainant, in acquiring the title to the four acres, was in the slightest degree controlled or influenced by the map. But more: The complainant's deed furnishes conclusive evidence that he knew when he accepted it that the arrangement and division of the land shown on the map of 1867 would not be maintained or preserved. Lot No. 16, shown on that map, contained 7 80-100 acres. He accepted a conveyance of 4 of the 7 acres by a deed describing the 4 as part of a larger tract, as laid down on the map. So that it would seem to be well-nigh undeniable that the reference to the map of 1867, made in the deed to the complainant, instead of indicating an intention on the part of his grantor to abide by the scheme of division laid down on that map, evinced, on the contrary, a purpose to depart so radically from it as to give the complainant plain notice that he would not in his future conveyances pay the slightest regard to it. The complainant certainly had no right to understand or believe that his grantor would in his future conveyances abide by a plan of division which he had utterly disregarded in his conveyance to him. To raise a covenant by implication, under such circumstances, it would be necessary to make an implication, not in accordance with what the fact probably was, but in defiance of what the fact was known to be. The foundation, therefore, on which it has been attempted to place the complainant's case, does not exist.

But, had the opposite conclusion on this point been reached, I would still be of opinion that no case had been shown which entitled the complainant to the decree he asks. The proposition on which he rests his right to relief is that where two persons become bound to each other by different covenants, made at the same time, that a breach by one party of his covenant extinguishes the covenant of the other. I know of no such rule of law. The complainant, it is important to remember, is not before the court resisting an attempt by the defendant to compel him to abide by the strict letter of his covenant. In such a posture of affairs, it would undoubtedly be the right of the court, as well as its duty, to look at the conduct of the parties to the litigation, and also at the conduct of their predecessors in right and duty, to see how they had dealt with each other in respect to the covenant, and also to contrast the condition of the property when the litigation arose with its condition when the covenant was made, and then either decree or deny specific performance, as should appear to be most in accordance with justice and right under all the circumstances of the case. This is the utmost length to which the decisions in Duke of Bedford v. Museum, 2 Mylne & K. 552, and in College v. Thacher, 87 N. Y. 311, the cases mainly relied on by the complainant, will permit the court to go. Neither of these cases, nor any other that has come under my notice, goes to the extreme length of holding that, because reasons exist which might induce a court of equity to decline to specifically enforce a covenant, the covenant should for that reason, and in advance of a breach, be declared to be a nullity in a suit instituted by the covenantor.

Under the form of action adopted in this case, the defendant is entitled to a decree adjudging that the complainant's covenant is valid, and that the defendant, as the owner of land lying adjacent to that owned by the complainant, is entitled to the benefit of thecomplainant's covenant. The question whether, if the complainant should hereafter commit a breach of his covenant, the defendant would be entitled to a decree for specific performance, in view of the facts now before the court, has not, of course, received the slightest consideration. The defendant is entitled to costs.


Summaries of

Coudert v. Sayre

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Jan 4, 1890
46 N.J. Eq. 386 (Ch. Div. 1890)

In Coudert v. Sayre, 46 N.J. Eq. 386, 19 A. 190, 191, where the complainant brought a suit in chancery seeking relief from the binding obligations of a restrictive covenant on the ground that conditions had changed, the court said: "The case which the complainant lays before the court as the foundation for the relief he seeks is one of extreme novelty.

Summary of this case from Kenealy v. Chevy Chase Land Co.

In Coudert v. Sayre,supra, it was held that the common grantor of lots subject to restrictive covenants "was without the least shred of authority or right to release or modify the covenant so far as it operated to confer a benefit on lands which he had previously conveyed."

Summary of this case from Polhemus v. De Lisle
Case details for

Coudert v. Sayre

Case Details

Full title:COUDERT v. SAYRE.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: Jan 4, 1890

Citations

46 N.J. Eq. 386 (Ch. Div. 1890)
46 N.J. Eq. 386

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