220-228 Brook Avenue Corp. v. Zaft
This text of 151 Misc. 231 (220-228 Brook Avenue Corp. v. Zaft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In this summary proceeding for non-payment of rent and for judgment against the lessee and assignee the trial judge dismissed as against Zaft, the lessee, and directed judgment in his favor against the landlord.
[232]*232The theory of the ruling appealed from is that as Zaft, the lessee, had assigned the lease and was not in possession at the time of the beginning of the proceeding, his joinder as a party was unauthorized.
To hold that a lessee who has assigned his lease may not be a party to a dispossess proceeding because he is not in actual possession would impair the summary remedy and conduce to further litigation. Whether the arrangement between the tenant and the third party in possession in a given case amounts to an assignment or a subletting may present a material issue and be decided adversely to the landlord, and thus require another lawsuit. Of course a person in possession is presumably assignee of the lease, but the presumption may be rebutted on the trial, and if rebutted a new proceeding must be brought unless the lessee is in the case. It may also be desirable to make the lessee a party to obviate any question as to the conclusiveness of the final order. Although after assignment the privity of estate .is terminated as between the lessor and lessee, the privity. of contract remains, and in the absence of a release, express or implied, the lessee continues for all practical purposes to be a tenant, and he may have an interest in the preservation of the lease apart from any right of redemption under section 1437 of the Civil Practice Act. WThere the effect of a sublease of the whole term reserving rent to the lessee, as landlord, is an assignment of the term with respect to the head landlord (Stewart v. Long Island R. R. Co., 102 N. Y. 601; O’Connell v. Sugar Products Co., 114 Misc. 540; Keogh Landl. & Ten. Summary Proceedings, 184), or where an assignment is contrary to the stipulations of the lease, there are additional reasons for the lessee being suable in the proceeding. Further, in a proceeding for non-payment of rent, costs awarded the landlord upon a recovery are merely nominal, while in an action, to which the landlord has been remitted in this instance, the amounts recoverable are substantial.
It seems to me that the lessee although not a necessary party, in a proceeding where, as in this instance, he has not been released from his contractual obligation, although the landlord assented to the assignment, is a proper party, and the dismissal was error. (Matter of Balducci v. Preston, 126 Misc. 356.)
So much of the final order as dismisses the petition against the lessee Zaft reversed, with thirty dollars costs, and final order modified by awarding possession also against said lessee and directing judgment accordingly, with costs. Appeal from judgment dismissed.
All concur; present, Hammer, Callahan and Frankenthaler, JJ.
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151 Misc. 231, 271 N.Y.S. 133, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/220-228-brook-avenue-corp-v-zaft-nyappterm-1934.