Court Opinion

ID: 9723369
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-26 10:12:47.321353+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:24:47.701581
License: Public Domain

OPINION OF THE COURT
Ciparick, J.
The issue in this case is whether land use restrictions as set forth in article 16 of the General Municipal Law and referenced in the recitals of a deed to real property can be enforced against a successor grantee. We hold that under the circumstances presented here, they can.
The subject property, located at 330 West 86th Street in Manhattan, came into municipal ownership through an in rem tax foreclosure proceeding. The property consists of a five-story townhouse, constructed around 1900, which serves as an eight-unit multiple dwelling. The building, upon entering the City’s inventory, had many municipal code violations and “was in deteriorated condition and in need of rehabilitation.” The City, through the Asset Sales Program of the Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD),1 determined that the status of the building “tended to impair or arrest the sound growth and development of the municipality” and that its *376otherwise marketable condition rendered it ripe for disposition as an Urban Development Action Area Project (UDAAP) as governed by the Urban Development Action Area Act (UDAAA), article 16 of the General Municipal Law.
When HPD seeks to sell one of its properties under this program, it offers the occupant tenants the right of first refusal to purchase the property at an appraised value, as it did here. This is contingent on the tenants agreeing to remove all city code violations and hazardous conditions, and maintaining the existing tenants’ rent at its current amount for two years. If the tenants are unwilling or unable to purchase the property, HPD places the property on the open market, generally selling the premises to the highest bidder.
The subject property was appraised at $340,000 based on the capitalization of its income. Thus, HPD sent letters to each of the building’s tenants giving them an option, through June 30, 1998, to submit an offer to purchase the premises. The letters informed the tenants that negotiation of the sale was subject to various other conditions, including that the prospective purchasers could not have previously owned the building and that “[t]he sale of the Building is subject to approval by the City Council and the Mayor, and to all other applicable requirements of law.”2 On June 29, 1998, the tenants submitted a letter to HPD offering to purchase the premises, complete with supporting documentation indicating that they were able to meet HPD’s additional requirements. By correspondence dated December 28, 1998, HPD notified the tenants that it was prepared to enter into negotiations. The tenants then formed a corporation, 330 West 86 Oaks Corp. (Oaks Corp) for the purpose of taking title to the property.
In the interim, on January 26, 1999, HPD requested that the City Council make the necessary findings for conveyance of the property as an accelerated UDAAP pursuant to General Municipal Law § 695 (2) (b) and (6) (d). That same day, HPD also submitted a request for authorization of the disposition of the property from the Office of the Mayor. Attached to each request was a copy of the “Project Summary” that described the type of project as “Conservation.”
Specifically, HPD asked that the City Council:
*377“Find that the present status of the Disposition Area tends to impair or arrest the sound growth and development of the municipality and that the proposed [UDAAP] is consistent with the policy and purposes of Section 691 of the General Municipal Law; . . .
“Waive the area designation requirement of Section 693 of the General Municipal Law pursuant to Section 693 of the General Municipal Law; . . .
“Waive the requirements of Sections 197-c and 197-d of the Charter pursuant to Section 694 of the General Municipal Law; and . . .
“Approve the project as an [UDAAP] pursuant to Section 694 of the General Municipal Law.”
In making these requests, HPD confirmed that “the Project . . . consists solely of the rehabilitation or conservation of existing private or multiple dwellings or the construction of one to four unit dwellings, and does not require any change in land use permitted under the New York City Zoning Resolution” (Council of City of NY Resolution No. 673 [Mar. 16, 1999]).
In order to approve a proposal, the City Council must find that the current status of the building “tends to impair or arrest the sound growth and development of the municipality,” and that the proposed UDAAP is “consistent with the policy and purposes stated in section six hundred ninety-one”3 (General Municipal Law § 694 [4] [a], [c]). Although generally, any City Council approval must be made “in conformance with the standards and procedures required for all land use determinations pursuant to general, special or local law or charter,” the land use review procedures, as well as the area designation requirement (General Municipal Law § 693), can be waived “if the proposed urban development action area project consists solely *378of the rehabilitation or conservation of existing private or multiple dwellings or the construction of one to four unit dwellings without any change in land use permitted by local zoning” (General Municipal Law § 694 [5]). Here, HPD sought such waiver from the provisions of New York City Charter §§ 197-c and 197-d, which would have otherwise required compliance with the Uniform Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP) and additional City Council review.
After a public hearing in March 1999, the City Council made the requisite findings, approved HPD’s requests and directed that the “Project shall be disposed of and developed upon the terms and conditions in the Project Summary that HPD has submitted to the Council.” Shortly thereafter, the Mayor approved the designation of Oaks Corp as a qualified and eligible sponsor and authorized the conveyance of the subject premises to Oaks Corp based on the City Council Resolution. On June 22, 1999, the City sold the subject premises to Oaks Corp for $340,000.
The deed conveying the property includes several recitals, a granting and a habendum clause. Referenced in and made a part of the deed is a description of the disposition area, the City Council Resolution approving the UDAAP (including the Project Summary) and the Mayoral approval. The deed, in its entirety, contains numerous references in the recitals to the property’s UDAAP designation, and to the parties’ required compliance with the UDAAA’s requirements. It states that the City Council has waived the General Municipal Law § 693 area designation as well as City Charter § 197-c’s requirements under General Municipal Law § 694, and approved the project as an UDAAP In addition, the deed recites:
“WHEREAS, the project to be undertaken by Sponsor (‘Project’) consists solely of the rehabilitation or conservation of existing private or multiple dwellings or the construction of one to four unit dwellings without any change in land use permitted by existing zoning . . . .”
However, the language employed in the habendum clause of the deed is not as precise. It fails to explicitly reference the above use restriction on the property but rather states that the project sponsor accepts “the Disposition Area [the property conveyed] subject to . . . [t]he provisions of all laws, codes, statutes, ordinances, acts, rules and regulations of any local, *379state or federal government . . . existing at the time of delivery of this deed.” It additionally sets forth two affirmative obligations on the part of the sponsor: the duty to remedy all building violations of record within six months, and to maintain existing tenants’ rents at a fixed rate for two years. The habendum clause also declares that:
“The agreements and covenants set forth in this Deed shall run with the land and shall be binding to the fullest extent permitted by law and equity. Such covenants shall inure to the benefit of the City and shall bind and be enforceable against Sponsor and its successors and assigns.”
Significantly, Oaks Corp never corrected the code violations. Rather, on February 13, 2001, it sold the premises to 330 West 86th Street, LLC (330 West) for $1 million.4 This new owner allegedly plans to demolish the building and develop a high-rise “sliver” apartment building in its place. In anticipation of the sale to 330 West, plaintiff 328 Owners Corp. — the owners of an adjacent building which shares a party wall — filed a summons and complaint, naming Oaks Corp and the City as defendants, challenging the pending conveyance. It also filed a lis pendens against the property. The new owner, 330 West, purchased the property with notice of the pending lawsuit and the Us pendens. After the sale, plaintiff amended its complaint to name 330 West as an additional defendant. The first two causes of action sought a declaratory judgment that the deed restricts the use of the land and that the new owner and any successors or assigns must act within those constraints and also sought injunctive relief. A third cause of action sought to declare the City’s conveyance to Oaks Corp null and void.
Supreme Court dismissed the third cause of action as barred by the statute of limitations. The City then asserted two cross claims. The first sought a declaration that under the deed and related statutory requirements, the subject premises could only be used for conservation purposes, or in the alternative, for the rehabilitation or conservation of existing private or multiple dwellings or construction of one to four unit multiple dwellings. *380The second cross claim sought to permanently enjoin the owner and any successors from using the premises except in compliance with the above-referenced uses. 330 West also filed a counterclaim against plaintiff regarding its filing of a notice of pendency against the subject premises. The parties all moved for summaiy judgment.
Supreme Court dismissed all claims against Oaks Corp. The court denied 330 West’s motion for summary judgment and partially granted the City and plaintiffs motions for summary judgment against 330 West, declaring that the subject property “may not be used other than for (a) rehabilitation or conservation of the existing building thereon, or (b) construction of one to four unit dwellings without any change in land use.” All aggrieved parties appealed.
In the interim, the City sought leave to reargue alleging that Supreme Court overlooked the City’s contention that the use of the property should be limited to conservation only. The City further asked that the order be resettled to reflect that the use restrictions should run with the land. 328 Owners Corp. joined in support of the motion. Supreme Court denied reargument but granted the resettlement application and declared that the use restrictions run with the land.
The Appellate Division, in a divided opinion, reversed and granted summary judgment to 330 West holding that there was no intent by the original parties to the deed that the covenant run with the land nor did it touch and concern the land. The dissenting justices voted to affirm Supreme Court, reasoning that the parties’ intent, in light of the UDAAA, was clear, and that to read the deed otherwise would undermine the purpose of the UDAAA. The City and 328 Owners Corp. both appeal as of right pursuant to CPLR 5601 (a). Both appellants ask this Court to hold that the deed be read in conjunction with article 16 of the General Municipal Law and to enforce the land use restrictions as running with the land. The City also requests that we further limit the use of the property to conservation purposes. We now reverse and reinstate the amended order and judgment of Supreme Court.
Defendant, 330 West, in support of its claim that it is not subject to the land use restrictions of article 16 of the General Municipal Law, places great emphasis on the covenants restricting the property’s use being located in the recital provisions of the deed rather than the habendum clause. While it is true that *381the habendum clause is generally the best depiction of an interest conveyed, the inquiry is not that narrow (see e.g. Phoenix Ins. Co. v Continental Ins. Co., 87 NY 400, 407 [1882] [placement of a restrictive covenant outside the habendum clause did not undermine its enforceability]; Suffolk Bus. Ctr. v Applied Digital Data Sys., 78 NY2d 383, 388 [1991] [no particular words are determinative to give meaning to a condition of conveyance]; Wasil v Realty Dealership Co., 87 AD2d 931, 932 [3d Dept 1982] [it may be necessary to examine the “interrelationship between the recital and operative clauses” to be sure that the “intent is evidenced from a reading of the whole instrument”]). Rather, “[e]very instrument creating [or] transferring ... an estate or interest in real property must be construed according to the intent of the parties, so far as such intent can be gathered from the whole instrument, and is consistent with the rules of law” (Real Property Law § 240 [3]; cf. Post v Weil, 115 NY 361, 369-372 [1889]; see also 4 Warren’s Weed, New York Real Property, Deeds § 37.02 [5th ed] [“Courts today de-emphasize the formal parts of a deed and hold, in the construction of deeds, that the language of a deed must be so interpreted and applied as to be meaningful and valid, and the intent of the parties, as evidenced by the deed and the circumstances surrounding the making thereof, must be given expression wherever it is possible to do so without violating law and reason”]).
Looking to the whole instrument, inclusive of the City Council and Mayoral approvals as well as the Project Summary, there are 28 references to the project being governed by its UDAAP status. The deed and City Council and Mayoral approvals all make reference to the sale of the property as an accelerated UDAAP — a designation permissible only when the property’s use is restricted by the limitations set forth in General Municipal Law §§ 693 and 694 (5) — the very restriction that is spelled out in the recital provisions on the first page of the deed limiting the land’s use to conservation, rehabilitation or construction of one to four unit multiple dwellings. These references are consistent with General Municipal Law § 695 (5)’s requirement that the deed “shall contain provisions insuring the use of such real property for purposes consistent with such [UDAAP].” The habendum clause further states:
“The agreements and covenants set forth in this Deed shall run with the land and shall be binding to the fullest extent permitted by law and equity. Such *382covenants shall inure to the benefit of the City and shall bind and be enforceable against Sponsor and its successors and assigns.”
This clause is not limited to covenants that are set forth in the habendum clause but covers any such covenants discernible from the deed in its entirety and further dictates that they shall “run with the land” and “inure to the benefit of the City.”
Although the deed is by no means a model of draftsmanship, in this case the land use restrictions can be recognized by viewing the instrument as a whole. Furthermore, since the deed “derives all its validity” from article 16 of the General Municipal Law, its provisions must “be construed into and with the deed” (Matter of Lade v Abbott, 185 Misc 501, 507 [Sup Ct, Onondaga County 1945]; see also United States v City of New York, 233 F2d 307, 310 [2d Cir 1956]). The City had no authority to convey the property in this manner without imposing statutory use restrictions.5
Our analysis, however, does not end here as, even when a deed declares that a restrictive covenant will run with the land, it must still comply with certain legal requisites to be enforceable against successors in interest (see Neponsit Prop. Owners’ Assn. v Emigrant Indus. Sav. Bank, 278 NY 248 [1938]; cf. Witter v Taggart, 78 NY2d 234, 237-238 [1991] [“the law has long favored free and unencumbered use of real property, and covenants restricting use are strictly construed against those seeking to enforce them”]). In Neponsit, we articulated three conditions that must be met in order for a covenant to run with the land:
“(1) it must appear that grantor and grantee intended that the covenant should run with the land; (2) it must appear that the covenant is one *383‘touching’ or ‘concerning’ the land with which it runs; (3) it must appear that there is ‘privity of estate’ between the promisee or party claiming the benefit of the covenant and the right to enforce it, and the promisor or party who rests under the burden of the covenant” (278 NY at 255 [citation omitted]).
These three conditions will be addressed in turn.
First, the parties’ intent to restrict the use of the property is clear from the deed’s multiple references to the UDAAP requirements and from the inclusion, within the habendum clause, of an explicit provision stating that “agreements and covenants . . . shall run with the land.” This intent is equally apparent from the circumstances surrounding the transaction (see Jennings Beach Assn. v Kaiser, 145 AD2d 607, 608 [2d Dept 1988]). Here, the sponsor must have understood that the benefits it received — low appraisal value and exemption from both competitive bidding and a time-consuming land use review — were directly related to the City’s intent to restrict the use of the land for the purposes of the completion of the project. The purchase price alone is indicative of the parties’ intent. HPD appraised the property’s value based on its current income in its current state. It did not calculate the potential income stream for a possible use of the land with a high-rise building, which HPD could have realized had it sold the building on the open market without restriction.
Furthermore, the benefits received by the sponsor/tenants came at a price (cf. Medical Coll. Lab. v New York Univ., 178 NY 153, 163 [1904] [“defendant cannot retain what is beneficial in the transaction, while disclaiming what is onerous”]). Oaks Corp was able to purchase the premises without a cumbersome land use review and without competitive bidding. In exchange, it was required to remove code violations within six months, which it never did, offer two year leases without rent increases to the current tenants and comply with the accelerated UDAAP’s land use restrictions. To allow Oaks Corp to circumvent the conditions by promptly selling the premises is clearly antithetical to the purpose of article 16 of the General Municipal Law (cf. Granada Bldgs. v City of Kingston, 58 NY2d 705, 708 [1982] [“Municipal contracts which violate express statutory provisions are invalid”]). Furthermore, to view the parties’ intent otherwise disregards the language of the deed as a whole. It also permits the sponsor’s subsequent sale to result in an uncontemplated windfall to the detriment of the municipality.
*384The second Neponsit condition, that the covenant touches and concerns the land, is likewise met here. Although the requirements of offering renewal leases and correcting code violations are finite in nature, they also are relevant to the economic development of the property as declared by the City Council under article 16 of the General Municipal Law. The durational restraint of General Municipal Law § 695 — that the project be completed within a reasonable time — appears to be “merely a reflection of prudent business practices” and is not meant to restrain the ongoing duty to conserve, rehabilitate or reconstruct within the constraints of the deed and UDAAA (City of New York v Delafield 246 Corp., 236 AD2d 11, 25 [1st Dept 1997]).
Thus, we cannot agree with 330 West that, even if Oaks Corp defaulted in its obligations to the City, 330 West is not responsible for breaches of its predecessor with respect to the duty to rehabilitate the blighted property. Rather, the land use restrictions on the property are rooted in the unchallenged finding that the “status of the [property] tends to impair or arrest the sound growth and development of the municipality” and, as such, the duty is not extinguished when the property is so readily transferred, as it was here. Moreover, the new owner was on notice of this responsibility prior to taking title, both from the clear language of the deed between the City and Oaks Corp describing the property’s UDAAP status, and from the filed lawsuit and lis pendens.
Lastly, the third Neponsit factor, privity of estate, has been met as there exists a direct chain of title running from the City to Oaks Corp to 330 West. Whether such privity exists as to 328 Owners Corp. is immaterial, as 328 Owners Corp. has sought the identical relief being granted to the City.6
Under the circumstances presented here and the integrated statutory authority for the sale of this property, we hold that the land use restrictions included in the language of the deed and mandated by statute run with the land. Certainly, this need not be “in perpetuity” (see dissenting op at 385, 387). If the project identified in the deed recitals is accomplished, the restrictions may expire by their own terms (see Booth v Knipe, 225 NY 390, 396 [1919] [recognizing that a covenant running with the land “may not last forever”]). In any event, the current or any *385future owner may seek extinguishment of the land use restrictions under RPAPL 1951 to the extent it desires to make different use of the property.7
As for the City’s request to limit the property use to conservation purposes only, we find little merit to its argument. References in the deed to article 16 of the General Municipal Law— other than a single reference in the project summary — do not make such a limiting distinction. The parties’ remaining contentions are also without merit.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and the amended order and judgment of Supreme Court reinstated.

. HPD’s Asset Sales Program is part of its Division of Alternative Management Programs (DAMP). The Asset Sales Program is charged, in part, to help meet HPD’s goal of “returning the City’s housing stock to private tax-paying ownership, while maintaining it as affordable housing” (Rules of City of NY Dept of Hous Preserv and Dev [28 RCNY] § 21-22 [a]). Buildings that are marketable “as is” are placed in the Asset Sales Program while buildings that need city funding are placed in one of the other DAMP programs.

. Additionally, HPD required that the tenants meet its asking price of $340,000, that the majority of the units be in support of submitting the offer and that rent collections from March 1998 through July 1998 average at least 50%.

. General Municipal Law § 691 sets forth the “policy and purposes” behind the UDAAA. In part, it states that because deteriorated buildings have an adverse impact on neighborhoods and the growth of municipalities:
“it is necessary to provide incentives for the correction of such substandard, insanitary, blighted, deteriorated or deteriorating conditions, factors, and characteristics by the clearance, replanning, reconstruction, redevelopment, rehabilitation, restoration or conservation of such areas, the undertaking of public and private improvement programs related thereto and the encouragement and participation in these programs by private enterprise.”

. Plaintiff alleges that the sale price was at least $1 million based on the transfer tax for the property that was recorded on March 15, 2001. However, a recent New York Times article states that the residents sold the property to developers for $2.25 million in March 2001 (see Mindlin, For a Brownstone Lot, Tall Dreams and Troubled Neighbors, New York Times, Mar. 4, 2007). The sales contract was not made part of the record.

. This is consistent with the general policy statements of General Municipal Law § 691 as well as HPD’s mission statement that:
“Using a variety of preservation, development and enforcement strategies, HPD strives to improve the availability, affordability and quality of housing in New York City. As the nation’s largest municipal housing agency, HPD works with private, public and community partners to strengthen neighborhoods and enable more New Yorkers to become homeowners or to rent well-maintained, affordable housing” (HPD Mission Statement, <http://www.nyc.gov/html/hpd/html/about/mission.shtml> [last accessed Mar. 21, 2007], cached at <http://www.courts.state.ny. us/reporter/webdocs/about_HPD_description_of_services_and _mission.htm>).

. Both Supreme Court and the Appellate Division found that plaintiff, 328 Owners Corp., has standing as an adjacent property owner, to bring this lawsuit.

. RPAPL 1951 provides a mechanism for extinguishing land use restrictions when “the purpose of the restriction has already been accomplished or, by reason of changed conditions or other cause, its purpose is not capable of accomplishment, or for any other reason.”