DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 280
Citation Numbers: 280 Pa. 424, 124 A. 684, 1924 Pa. LEXIS 530
Judges: Frazer, Kephart, Moschzisker, Sadler, Schaffer, Simpson, Walling
Filed Date: 5/12/1924
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Opinion by
In this proceeding the chancellor sustained demurrers to complainants’ bill and they have appealed. The bill sets forth that they are the owners of land on the southeast side of Gowen Avenue in the 22d Ward of the City of Philadelphia and that they are either directly, or in some instances by mesne conveyances, grantees of Francis I. Gowen and James E. Hood, trustees under the will
The defendants, William H. Wilson and James Harker Chadwick, are described as real estate brokers, agents of the Gowen Estate, and J. Franklin Moss is alleged to have entered into a contract of purchase with them of part of the property belonging to that estate. The bill sets forth that the trustees, being seized in fee simple of a tract of land, caused a portion of it to be laid out and plotted and had a plan of lots prepared by John H. Dye in 1885, which plan was attached to the bill. It was set forth that this plan had been confirmed by the department of surveys of the City of Philadelphia on April 19, 1886, the department having been authorized to revise the lines of a certain city plan, including the tract in question, by ordinance of councils. This confirmation of the plan was prior to any conveyances being made by the Gowen Estate. Among the streets marked and plotted on the plan was one called Wads-worth Avenue, which was laid out 450 feet south of Gowen Avenue, on which latter street the properties of the plaintiffs front.
By deed dated September 25, 1888, and recorded, the trustees of the Gowen Estate granted to the City of Philadelphia the ground over which Wadsworth Avenue was located as a public street or highway and dedicated it to public use. This dedication was accepted by the board of surveyors October 2,1888, as they had the right to do under the Act of June 6, 1871, P. L. 1353, which provides: “Section 1. That the board of surveyors of the City of Philadelphia, as elected and constituted under acts of assembly, be and the same are hereby invested with full authority to examine and finally confirm or reject all plans of surveys or revisions of plans of
It was further set forth that, in violation of the complainants’ rights, the defendants have adopted, and are about to carry into effect, a new plan of development for the tract, which has been submitted to the board of surveyors of the City of Philadelphia for its approval; that, in pursuance of the new plan, part of Wadsworth Avenue will be vacated and two other streets will be created, which will have the effect of lessening the size of the lots in the rear of complainants’ properties; that this new plan includes the purpose to erect a row of small houses on each side of the submitted streets, which are to be constructed at a cost considerably less than the value of complainants’ properties. It was averred that the adoption of the proposed plan will be a breach of the covenants between plaintiffs and the trustees of the Gowen Estate, and that the building of the small houses on the two new streets will be a continuing trespass on complainants’ rights, will seriously damage their properties for residential purposes and greatly depreciate their value.
The relief prayed for was, that by injunction the trustees of the Gowen Estate should be compelled to record the original plan, that the defendant be enjoined from proceeding to vacate Wadsworth Avenue or changing the location thereof, or in any manner hindering or interfering with the public use of it by plaintiffs, and by other persons having the right to use it, that defendants be enjoined from carrying out the new plan, and that no development be permitted except in accordance with the original one.
We think the disposition of the case by the court below was correct. “As a general rule a deed made in full execution of a contract of sale of land merges the provisions of the contract therein, and this rule extends to and includes all prior negotiations and agreements leading up to the execution of the deed, all prior purposes, stipulations and oral agreements, all collateral promises including promises made contemporaneously with the execution of the deed”: Titus v. Poland Coal Co., 263 Pa. 24, 33; Dobkin v. Landsberg, 273 Pa. 174, 182.
Appellants argue that the words in two of the deeds “the premises being described according to a survey made thereof by John H. Dye, surveyor, in December, 1885” and “all that certain lot or piece of ground described according to survey made thereof by John H. Dye, surveyor, in December, 1885,” in effect incorporate the plan in the deed because the plan has on it the words “Plan of Estate of James Gowen, Dec’d., John H. Dye, surveyor, Dec.,-1885,” but it .is obvious the words in the deed cannot be given the sweeping effect which would be given was the plan actually referred to and cannot be made to import more than they say, that Dye surveyed
When a plan of the owner’s private development of his property is referred to in a deed “there is not only an implied covenant by him to the owner of each lot that the streets and alleys, as they appear upon his plan, shall be forever open to the use of the public, but a dedication by him of the same as highways to the use of the public forever, and the municipality itself cannot extinguish the easement which each lot owner thus acquires by private contract with the owner of the plotted ground”: Tesson v. Porter, 238 Pa. 504. We are not, however, dealing with private streets appearing upon an owner’s plan, but, according to complainants’ bill, with a street, Wadsworth Avenue, which by deed, recorded preceding the conveyances to plaintiffs, the trustees of the Gowen Estate had granted to the City of Philadelphia “for a public street or highway......and thus dedicated the street to the public use” which “dedication was accepted by the board of surveyors October 2, 1888,” also previous to the vesting of title to the lots in any of complainants or their predecessors. Therefore, it appears, from complainants own pleading, that when the Gowen Estate sold the lots (and conceding for the purposes of the proposition that the purchasers were given the plan and the assurances claimed in connection with it) they
Appellants endeavor to meet the bar which Wads-worth Avenue as a public street raises against them, with the assumption that its acceptance by the board of surveyors was not by proper authority of the city, and, therefore, the sale of lots to them, or those through whom they claim, after dedication, but prior to complete and lawful acceptance, creates a covenant to carry out the plan in the further development of the tract, — binding on the grantors and subsequent purchasers from them with notice of the plan. In their printed brief they argue: “The land lying within the limits of the streets was conveyed to the city for use as a public highway by deed and the deed was accepted by the board of surveyors. Beyond this the city has done nothing with refer
The cases from a very early date have drawn the distinction between the sales of lands bordering on a street that before the conveyance was public and those sales of lands bordering on a thoroughfare, rights in which became vested in the grantees by virtue of the grantor’s plan and conveyance. “It would be a novel legal doctrine to broach over the broad lands of the state, that if one sold land bounded by a public highway, he might be sued for a covenant broken, if the public, in any time to come, should vacate the highway”: Bellinger v. Union Burial-Ground Society, 10 Pa. 135. In re Opening of Brooklyn Street, 118 Pa. 640, Mr. Justice Green said: “If it be a public street laid out by municipal authority, the grantee is presumed to know that fact, and takes his title subject to the municipal control as to the time and circumstances of opening it for use. If it be a street laid out by the grantor himself over land which he sells in lots, there is necessarily an implied covenant that he will open it at least for the use of his grantees.” There is no difference so far as any covenant on the part of the
It may not be inappropriate to add, that the real complaint of appellants would seem to be that, in the new development contemplated by the defendant, Moss, who has bought the part of the Gowen Estate tract lying south of appellants’ properties, he proposes to divide it into smaller lots than those provided for on the original plan. Even had that plan been recited in the deeds, there would, from this circumstance alone, have been no implied covenant that the lots should not be changed in size, and that smaller houses should not be built on them —to accomplish this, there would have been required a building restriction in the deeds to plaintiffs of clear and unmistakable import. An injunction will not be granted restraining an owner of land from subdividing or selling lots of smaller dimensions than those indicated on a plan made by him, in the absence of an express agreement or covenant that the land embraced in the map shall not be sold in lots smaller in area than those shown thereon, and no such covenant is implied from the mere making of the map and sale of lots with reference thereto: Herold v. Columbia Investment & Real Estate Co., 72 N. J. Equity 857, 67 Atlantic 607, 16 Ann. Cases 580.
The decree is affirmed at the cost of appellants.