Capet v. Parker

3 Sandf. 662
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJune 24, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 3 Sandf. 662 (Capet v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capet v. Parker, 3 Sandf. 662 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1850).

Opinion

Mason, J.

The complaint, which on the motion to vacate or modify the injunction, must be taken as true, clearly shows that the justice had no jurisdiction in the matter. He has power, under the statute, authorising summary proceedings to recover the possession of land, upon the application of a landlord, to .¡remove a tenant from premises occupied by him in certain speci[664]*664fied cases; but it is essential to the exercise of this power, that the relation of landlord and tenant should have existed, and that the tenant holds over without permission, either after the expiration of the term, or after default in the payment of rent, or after he had been discharged under an insolvent act. There is only one case in which this power is conferred on him, as to parties, between whom the relation of landlord and tenant has not subsisted, and that is where a person holds over, and continues in the possession of real estate which has been sold and conveyed by virtue of an execution against him. In all other cases, the party proceeded against must be a tenant who wrongfully holds the possession against the landlord. If the party in possession has himself become the owner of the premises, he cannot be turned out under this act, even though the party seeking to do so has previously borne towards him the relation of landlord. Under such circumstances, the justice would have no jurisdiction, and all his proceedings would be coram non judice and void. ¡Now, in the present case, it distinctly appears by the complainant, that although the plaintiff, Caroline Capet, before her intermarriage, had hired the premises from the defendant for a term which expired on the 1st of May last, yet that in the month of February last, she received from him a written agreement for the sale of the premises to her, which she accepted, and with the terms of which she complied, by the payment of the whole purchase-money in the manner and to the person designated by the defendant for that purpose, long before the commencement of the proceedings, to dispossess her, and as early as the middle of April last. Having thus purchased the premises, the relation of tenant was merged in that of owner, and her right of possession for a limited and definite timé was changed into one which was absolute and unlimited. She became the equitable, if not the legal owner of the property, and was entitled to a conveyance thereof from the defendant. It will not be pretended, that if the defendant had fulfilled his contract, by the execution and delivery of the conveyance, he would have had any right to have instituted these proceedings, and under them, as landlord, to tarn the plaintiffs out of possession. Surely then he cannot, by a refusal to comply with his contract, acquire greater rights [665]*665than he would have had, if he had acted up to its letter and spirit. The pretence, that the plaintiff held over after the expiration of this term, while it would exonerate the justice from any wrong intention, and might justify him in commencing the proceedings, yet would not authorise him in continuing them, after he had notice of the trué state of the case, or in holding cognizance of a controversy in which the real question was the title to the land, and not merely the right of possession, as between landlord and tenant.

Admitting, then, that the counsel for the defendant is right in proposing that the Pith section of the act, which declares that the proceedings on the application of the landlord shall not be stayed or suspended by certiorari, or by any other writ or order of any court or officer, applied to injunctions out of courts of equity, as well as to proceedings at law,

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Bluebook (online)
3 Sandf. 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capet-v-parker-nysuperctnyc-1850.