Billig v. Nelson Properties, Inc.

166 Misc. 301, 2 N.Y.S.2d 364, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1294
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 166 Misc. 301 (Billig v. Nelson Properties, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Billig v. Nelson Properties, Inc., 166 Misc. 301, 2 N.Y.S.2d 364, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1294 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1938).

Opinion

Levy, J.

The defendant is the owner of a certain residential apartment building. By written lease it rented an apartment therein to the plaintiff. The agreed rent was seventy-five dollars monthly, payable on the first of each month. The lease expired September 30, 1937.

In July, 1937, the plaintiff notified the defendant that the lease would not be renewed upon its expiration. Also in July the plaintiff moved from the premises, leaving some few articles there. These were shortly thereafter removed, but the plaintiff left the keys with a neighbor for the double purpose of permitting the defendant access to the apartment for rental purposes (in accordance with the terms of the lease) and of permitting the neighbor to keep some of her belongings in the vacated apartment. In July, 1937, the defendant let the premises to a new tenant for a term to begin the following October 1, 1937.

The new tenant wanted the apartment painted and renovated before he moved in on October first. This the defendant agreed with the new tenant to do. The old tenant, the plaintiff, refused to surrender possession until September thirtieth, which he had a right to do, and this even though the plaintiff did not occupy the apartment himself in August or September.

The plaintiff, in July, had offered to pay the defendant $100 to be released from the lease for the months of August and September. This the defendant refused, knowing that it would be able to collect the full rent of $150 from the plaintiff. The plaintiff [303]*303did pay the defendant the rent for these two months in due course, , the September rent being paid during the first week of that month.

Early in September, 1937, defendant asked the plaintiff to permit entry into the apartment so that it might, prior to October first, be painted and renovated for the new occupant. The plaintiff refused this permission unless the defendant paid for the privilege. This the defendant refused to do.

Instead, on September fourteenth, and after the apartment had been rented to the new tenant, the defendant procured the keys from the plaintiff’s neighbor, and, without the knowledge or permission of the plaintiff, had duplicate keys made, and probably changed the lock, so that when the plaintiff sought to enter the apartment on Septenber fifteenth he could not open it; and the superintendent of the building would not allow the plaintiff to go in without being accompanied by the superintendent. The defendant then proceeded, beginning September fifteenth, and for several days thereafter, to paint and renovate the apartment.

This action was then instituted to recover (1) $75 as damages, for breach by the defendant of the lease, being the amount of the rent for the month of September, which had previously been paid • by the plaintiff to the defendant; (2) $225 damages allegedly sustained by reason of defendant’s trespass upon plaintiff’s apartment and eviction therefrom; and (3) $225 damages, representing treble damages for alleged forcible entry or detainer.

The case was first tried before another justice of this court in December of 1937, and the complaint was dismissed upon motion at the close of the plaintiff’s case. Thereafter the plaintiff duly moved for a new trial upon the alleged grounds that the court “ misapprehended and misconstrued the facts ” and erred in its decision on the law.” This motion was granted by my colleague over the defendant’s opposition, the judgment was vacated and the trial set down de novo.

Section 535 of the Real Property Law provides for an “ action for forcible entry or detainer,” and entitles the successful plaintiff in such an action to treble damages. The plaintiff’s cause of action to “ recover $225, damages for forcible entry or detainer,” was intended to invoke this statute.

This court clearly has jurisdiction to entertain an action under this section. The contrary decision of the City Court in Mandel v. Fertig (65 Misc. 310) may be disregarded in view of the determination of the Appellate Term in this department in the case of Bierman v. Werstein (72 Misc. 29). The statute, however, is inapplicable to the facts in the ease at bar.

[304]*304Section 535 of the Real Property Law provides: “ Action for forcible entry or detainer; treble damages. If a person is disseized, ejected, or put out of real property, in a forcible manner; or after he has been put out, is held and kept out, by force, or by putting him in fear of personal violence, he is entitled to recover treble damages, in an action therefor against the wrong-doer.”

The Legislature has thus penalized one who resorts to force in order to obtain possession of real property peacefully occupied by another. (Isaacs v. Washougal Clothing Co., Inc., 233 App. Div. 568.) No such penalty has been provided by statute for surreptitious trespass as distinguished from forcible ejection. This statute, formerly section 1669 of the Code of Civil Procedure, applies only where the force is unusual, tends to bring about a breach of the peace, and the entry is with a strong hand, or a multitude of people, orina riotous manner, or with personal violence, or with threat and menace to life and limb, or under circumstances which would naturally inspire fear and lead one to apprehend danger of personal injury if he stood up in defense of his possession.” (Arout v. Azar, 219 App. Div. 260. See, also, Gulish v. Johnston, 206 id. 625; Lewis v. Veen, 222 id. 706.)

None of such conditions was present here.

That the plaintiff is entitled to some damages I have no doubt. A landlord has no right to enter upon demised premises without the tenant’s permission. If the landlord does enter, and, as in this case, effectively ousts the tenant, and uses the premises for the landlord’s own benefit, he cannot have his conduct sanctified by judicial determination. Tenants as well as owners are protected by the ancient maxim that a man’s home is his castle. For the purposes of the present controversy, this apartment is none the less entitled to judicial protection because the tenant did not occupy it; he had paid the landlord for its occupancy for the entire month of September and was entitled to use it as he saw fit, or not to use it at all. The landlord was not, without the tenant’s consent, entitled to make duplicate keys, to put on a new lock, to paint or renovate the apartment during that month.

The tenant did not give his consent. On the contrary, he refused it. Nor can permission be gleaned from the lease between the parties. That document, by its terms, as is usual, authorized the landlord to enter upon the demised premises to show the same to prospective new tenants or to make necessary repairs. The defendant’s entry here, in September, was for neither purpose. The apartment had already been rerented the preceding July; and the painting for the new tenant was not a repair within the meaning of this clause in the lease.

[305]*305That the defendant wanted to give possession to the new tenant on October first of a completely renovated apartment so that the defendant might comply with his agreement with the new tenant is no justification for this deprivation of the plaintiff’s property. The only way in which the landlord in this case could have gone into the leased premises for this purpose was to pay the plaintiff for the privilege; and pay it now must.

In Tinton Building Corp. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 Misc. 301, 2 N.Y.S.2d 364, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billig-v-nelson-properties-inc-nynyccityct-1938.