Bien v. Bixby

22 Misc. 126, 48 N.Y.S. 810
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 22 Misc. 126 (Bien v. Bixby) 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
Bien v. Bixby, 22 Misc. 126, 48 N.Y.S. 810 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Bischoff, J.

Both parties to the proceeding appeal from the final order made by the'justice, .fixing the sum which should be paid by the tenant-petitioner to. the landlord, as á condition to repossession, each party claiming that too much has been credited to the other and too little to himself in certain instances, .the petti tioner’s most strenuous objection being taken to the allowance to the landlord of sums expended by the latter in rendering the building fire proof, at the direction of the department of buildings, and in remodelling the building for use as a theatre, instead of as a concert hall, in which condition it-hád been left by the tenant when dispossessed.

The merits of the case were considered at some length in the opinion delivered upon the last appeal to this court (Bien v. Bixby, 18 Misc. Rep. 415), and the justice below has followed, in general, the principles applicable to the matter, so far as were there outlined.

We have held that, while the petitioner’s-tender to the landlord of the amount of rent actually due, together with the costs and charges of the summary proceedings, was sufficient, as forming the statutory basis of these redemption proceedings (Code Civ. Pro., § 2256), the final adjustment of the amount to be paid was not dependent upon the claim for rent, but was to proceed upon general principles of equity, and any construction of our former opinion, whereby the petitioner contends that the adjustment was held to be strictly limited by the covenants of the lease, must result from a misconception of what was decided. Rights of the parties, founded upon circumstances arising during the period when the premises were placed in the landlord’s custody, intermediate the tenant’s dispossession and his petition for repossession, are not, in their nature, to be measured by the lease, which purports only to express the agreement governing the tenancy, and which cannot be construed as looking toward the tenant’s summary removal and happenings attendant upon it. The execution of the warrant in summary proceedings brought the agreement to an end, and, when dealing with the premises thereafter, the landlord could certainly not be bound to follow the strict terms, of that agreement at the peril that the tenant, electing to redeem the lease, should be entitled to the benefit of all expenditures, not covered by the instrument, which the landlord found it necessary or expedient to undergo. Were the contrary held, the result would.be to place the landlord at the mercy of the dispossessed tenant, since he would be [129]*129forced to the alternative of receiving an inadequate rental for his failure to place the building in a desirable condition, or of mating alterations which would inure wholly to the benefit of the former tenant should he elect to redeem, which election would probably be induced by the enhanced value of the building and yet might well* be unavailed of had the landlord failed to make the improvements, trusting to the chance that there would be a redemption and the subsequent receipt of the rent reserved by the lease. If this were the situation, the order to be made by the trial court would certainly not be such “ as justice requires ” (Code Civ. Pro., § 2259), and we have no hesitation in holding that the petitioner’s contention does not accord with the intention of the legislature. Therefore, although there may not have been charges of which the payment was .expressly assumed by the tenant, under the precise terms of the lease, the landlord may still be allowed the items of expense undergone by him in. compliance with the orders of the building department, and in mating alterations which were essential to the successful management of the property if, upon, general principles of justice and equity, the tenant should be charged with the expense, and it accordingly becomes expedient to consider the situation of the parties existing by virtue of the lease, the dispossess proceedings and the tenant’s proposal to redeem.

The landlord owned the ground, and the tenant the building, the lease of the ground having been made for a term of ten years, with an agreement by the landlord to purchase the building at the expiration of the term at a price measured by its reasonable value, but not to exceed $50,000. The lease has still an unexpired term of over five years, if reinstated, and all improvements to the building will belong exclusively to the tenant for that period; but if, at the expiration of the term, the building is found to be worth more than $50,000, the landlord would be the gainer to the extent of the excess, and it might be that the improvements in question would suffice to make the value of the structure greater than this sum, even after five years’ use by the tenant. Accordingly this case is not wholly analogous to that of a mortgagee in possession of property, who makes improvements which inure to the benefit of the redeeming mortgagor, as suggested by the landlord-appellant, since here the improving party had a possible interest in the property, which might be a valuable interest, and while we can have no doubt that the landlord should be allowed the expense of all reasonable [130]*130alterations, repairs and additions to the premises which' .would wholly benefit the redeeming tenant, there still might remain á question as to whether some of the expense Would not be found, at the end of the term, to have been for the landlord’s own benefit. The matter must be considered only as of the time when the lease shall expire, because the past benefit from the improvements, pending the tenant’s repossession, is covered by the rent obtained by the landlord from new tenants, during the period of dispossession, and credited to this tenant upon the rent due under the lease.

It appears from the evidence, however, that the landlord caused the building to be appraised in the year 1896, in order that he might make application for the proper amount of fire insurance to cover its value, and this appraisal resulted in the value being found to be $50,000, at a period after all these alterations had been made.

There is no reason to assume that the landlord sought to have the value fixed at less than wfiat the building was re'ally worth; on the contrary, his desire and interest at the time was apparently to have the full value reached, in order that the insurance effected might be adequate, and that this was the full value the tenant did not attempt to dispute upon the trial, nor was any other evidence adduced by either party upon this subject.

Thus the justice was, we think, well- authorized in charging the petitioner with the expense of these alterations, under the circumstances," since the work done, both in compliance with the orders of the building department and in remodelling the theatre in order that it might bé made to produce .revenue, were wholly for the benefit of the building itself, the petitioner’s property, and, so far as "they resulted in enhancing the value of the premises when out of his possession, he obtains the benefit of this when credited with the rental yielded through the leasing of the property during that period. If, at the expiration of the lease, these alterations shall have benefited the building, the agreement between the parties re- ' quires that the landlord shall pay their then value when purchasing the structure, and if he pays the upset price of $50,000 as the reasonable value, should it be such, it cannot be assumed that the payment would be inadequate, since the building was worth no greater "sum when the alterations were newly made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Misc. 126, 48 N.Y.S. 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bien-v-bixby-nyappterm-1897.