Adler v. Miles

69 Misc. 601, 126 N.Y.S. 135
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 69 Misc. 601 (Adler v. Miles) 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.

Bluebook
Adler v. Miles, 69 Misc. 601, 126 N.Y.S. 135 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinions

Seabury, J.

The defendant guaranteed tbe payment of rent’ under a lease entered into between tbe plaintiff as landlord and tbe Hub and Comedy Theatre Company as tenant. The plaintiff sues to recover five months’ rent alleged to be due under tbe lease. Tbe lease provided tbat tbe premises were leased “ to be used and occupied for tbe purpose of a place of amusement for tbe exhibition of moving pictures and no other purposes whatsoever.”

Tbe defendant, as bis sole defense to tbe action, claims tbat tbe premises demised was and is a tenement bouse and tbat,'under a ruling duly made by the mayor of tbe city of Hew York, under ordinances regularly passed by tbe board of aldermen, it was provided, prior to tbe time of tbe accrual of tbe rent sued for, tbat no license for a moving picture show should be granted when tbe premises in which tbe show [603]*603was located, solely or in part, were a building Imo-wn or de scribed as a tenement house; and that, under the ordinances of the city of Eew York, no moving picture show could be lawfully given without a license.

Upon a statement being made of the alleged defense, the court below, upon motion of the plaintiff, directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. From the judgment entered upon such direction the defendant appeals to this court. In view of the manner in which the verdict was directed, the facts stated in the alleged defense must, for the purpose of this appeal, be accepted as true. It was conceded, upon the trial, that the lease was valid when made; but that, through the order of the mayor, the use to which the demised premises were restricted by the lease became unlawful.

We think that the learned court below was in error in directing a verdict for the plaintiff. It is evident that the defendant cannot be held as surety unless his principal is liable upon the lease. Jewett v. Griesheimer, 100 App. Div. 210.

The inquiry to be made, therefore, must relate to ascertaining whether the lessee was liable for the rent named in the lease after the public authorities had prohibited the use of the premises for the sole purpose for which the premises had been leased.

The general rule was declared in the old case of Paradine v. Jane, Aléyn, 26, 27: “ that where the law creates a duty or charge, and the party is disabled to perform it without any default in him, -and hath no remedy over, there the law will excuse him. * * * but where the party by his own contract creates a duty or charge upon himself, he is bound to make it good, if he may, notwithstanding any accident by inevitable necessity, because he might have provided against it by his contract.”

This general rule does not apply where performance becomes impossible by a change in the law or by reason of action taken under governmental authority. In such a case the reason for the general rule does not exist.

The parties to the lease contracted with a view to the law as it existed at the time the lease was made. To hold them bound to anticipate future legislation would be equivalent [604]*604to making them obligate themselves to the performance of conditions prescribed by others which, in the nature of things, could not have been within the contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was made.

The parties to the lease contracted to do a thing which at the time the lease was made was lawful. Public authority, in accordance with law, has provided that the very thing, which the parties in their lease contemplated, should not be done. To carry out the lease according to its terms has now become unlawful. It follows, therefore, that the lease cannot be performed according to its terms; and under such circumstances the obligation of the lessee to pay rent is discharged.

In Brick Presbyterian Church v. City of New York, 5 Cow. 538, Savage, Ch. J., in considering the effect of a covenant, the performance of which subsequent public action had made illegal, notes a variance in the earlier authorities. He points out that in Brason v. Dean, 3 Mod. 39, it was held that such a covenant was not repealed and refers with approval to Brewster v. Kitchin, 1 Salk. 198, where “ a different and more rational doctrine is established.”

In the case last referred to the rule is stated as follows: “When H. covenants not to do an act or thing which was lawful to do, and an act of parliament comes after and compels him to do it, the statute repeals the covenant. So if H. covenants to do a thing which is lawful, and an act of parliament comes in and hinders him from doing it, the covenant is repealed.”

In Baily v. De Crespigny, L. R. (4 Q. B.) 180, Hannen, J"., referring to the rule laid down in Brewster v. Kitchin, supra, says that: “ It rests upon this ground, that it is not reasonable to suppose that the legislature, while altering the condition of things with reference to which the covenanter contracted, intended that he should remain liable on a covenant which the legislature itself prevented his fulfilling.”

In his opinion in that case, Hannen, J., says: “ The substantial question, therefore, raised on this record is whether the defendant is discharged from his covenant by the subsequent act nf parliament, which put it out of his power to perform it. We are of opinion that he is so discharged on the [605]*605principle expressed in the maxim lex non cogit ad impossibilia.’ ”

After commenting upon a case where the act of God, so-called, excuses performance, the learned judge says: “ This is the explanation of the case put by Lord Coke in Shelley’s Case (1 Rep. at p. 98-a) ‘ If a lessee covenants to leave a wood in as good a plight as the wood was at the time of the lease, and afterwards the trees are blown down by tempest, he is discharged of his covenant ’ because it was thought that the covenant was intended to relate only to the tenant’s own acts, and not to an event beyond his control, producing effects not in his power to remedy. (See Shep. Touch. 173.) It is on this principle that it has been held that an impossibility arising from an act of the legislature subsequent to the contract, discharges the contractor from liability. Again, to quote an observation of Maulé, J., in Mayor of Berwick v. Oswald (3 E. & B. at page 665) there is nothing ' to prevent parties, if they choose by apt words to express an intention so to do, from binding themselves by a contract as to any future state of the law, * * * but people in general must always be considered as contracting with reference to the law as existing at the time of the contract * * * and the words showing a contrary intention ought to be pretty clear to rebut that presumption.’ To hold a man liable by words, in a sense affixed to them by legislation subsequent to the contract,'is to impose on him a contract he never made.”

The rule so clearly enunciated by Hannen, J., was applied in this State in Brick Presbyterian Church v. City of New York, supra. In that case it appeared that the corporation of the city of Mew York conveyed lands for the purpose of a church and cemetery with a covenant for quiet enjoyment, and afterwards, pursuant to a power granted by the Legislature, passed a law prohibiting the use of these lands as a cemetery. The court held that such, action was not a breach of the covenant, but that the covenant itself was repealed.

In Baker v. Johnson, 42 N. Y. 126, the court recognized the rule that one is discharged from the obligation of a contract when his performance is made impossible by act of

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69 Misc. 601, 126 N.Y.S. 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adler-v-miles-nyappterm-1910.