The plaintiff appeals from a judgment dismissing his complaint. The action is to recover back moneys paid upon a purchase of real estate at auction. The. property was advertised for sale- by .the defendant Kennedy, an auctioneer. Títere were- a number of lots to be sold, and a few days before the sale plaintiff procured from the'auctioneer a map and description of the property. This paper, although read in evidence, is not printed in the record, but it is testified to that it stated that' the property was restricted against nuisances, but contained no statement as to any other restrictions. Late in the afternoon plaintiff bid upon and bought two. lots. He gave the. auctioneer 1ns check for ten per cent of his bid, and the auctioneer’s fees, and signed the terms of sale. He then discovered for the first time that the terms of sale stated that the property was sold “with restrictions as to buildings and against nuisances,” these words being interlined' with a pen in a printed' form. Up to this time, as he testified* he had no knowledge or notice that there were any restrictions as to buildings. The auctioneer’s clerk says that he read the terms of sale containing a statement'as to these restriction's, but plaintiff says he did not hear this. Plaintiff thereupon employed a lawyer to ascertain what the restrictions were and found that they prohibited the erection of any house less than two stories in height or costing less than $2,500, or any house known as a tenement, or any house with a flat roof, or any stores for the sale of merchandise. All buildings were required to stand back at least twenty feet from the street line, and all stables or outbuildings must stand back sixty feet* and no fence or hedge should be more than four feet in height, and then must be of a kind approved by the Bankers’ Eealty and Security Company,- a former owner of the property. There was the ustial covenant against nuisances.
It was provided that the foregoing covenants should run with the land until January 1, 1920, when they should cease and determine,' "but there was a clause by which any or all of the covenants (ineluding that against nuisances) might be annulled at any time by written ■agreement between the Bankers’1 Eealty and Security Company, its successors or assigns, and the owner of any of the lots without the consent of the owner of any other lot. Upon discovering the nature *719of the restrictions plaintiff refused to complete the purchase and brought this action. His complaint has been dismissed upon the authority of Schnitzer v. Bernstein (119 App. Div. 47), which is one of several cases sustaining the following rule i “ The general rule respecting the purchase of land subject to incumbrances is that, if the purchaser has notice of the existence of the incumbrance and its general nature, he is chargeable with knowledge of the contents, terms and conditions thereof, and cannot avoid his purchase, no deceit or fraud having been exercised, because he did not acquaint himself with the particular terms of the incumbrance, and finds them to be different from what he supposed.” (Feltenstein v. Ernst, 49 Misc. Rep. 262; affd., 113 App. Div. 903; Feisty. Block, 115 id. 211.) All these were cases of sales by contract which as a rule are entered into much more deliberately than are purchases in an auction room. Even if plaintiff was advised before he signed the terms of sale that there were restrictions. as to buildings, he had neither time nor opportunity to ascertain what these restrictions were. He was called upon at once, and in complete'ignorance as to the character of the restrictions, either to take the property blindly, or to lose the benefit of his bargain. We do not consider that the rule laid down in the cases above cited should apply to such a case. Having called upon the auctioneer before the sale and received a deselection which made no reference to any restrictions as to buildings, the plaintiff was justified- in bidding upon the assumption that there were no such restrictions. When he found that there were, he was entitled to a reasonable opportunity to ascertain what the restrictions were. Mor is it entirely clear that the statement that the property would bo sold subject to restrictions as to nuisances was not misleading. The advantage to a purchaser of real estate from a covenant against nuisances is not that his own property is restricted, but that his neighbor’s property is. The covenant in the present case gave no assurance to a purchaser that he would be protected against nuisances on neighboring or adjacent land, because under the terms of the covenant such lands might, against his will, be released from the covenant at any time. We think that under the circumstances plaintiff was under no obligation to complete the sale, and is entitled to recover back the money he paid, his other damages being limited to a moderate counsel fee, if he paid one or incurred an obligation *720.to. pay it, sufficient to cover the cost of ascertaining what the restriction's Upon the property were.
It follows that the judgment must he reversed and a new trial granted, with c'osts to appellant to abide the event..
Ingkaham, Laughlin and Houghton, JJ., concurred'; McLaughlin; J,, dissented. '