Collyer v. . Collyer

21 N.E. 114, 113 N.Y. 442, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 723, 68 Sickels 442, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 963
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 114 (Collyer v. . Collyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collyer v. . Collyer, 21 N.E. 114, 113 N.Y. 442, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 723, 68 Sickels 442, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 963 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Earl, J.

Elizabeth Oollyer, a sister of the plaintiff, died March 4, 1883, intestate. At the time of her death she was ■about sixty years of age and had never been married. She left personal estate which was inventoried at about $70,000. The defendant was appointed her administrator and thereafter the plaintiff presented to him a claim against her estate for rent of a house in the city of Mew York, known as Mo. 81 Lexington avenue, and for rent of a house in Sing Sing, and for board and other matters, amounting in all to $9,547.91. The claim was disputed by the defendant and was referred by consent of the surrogate. It was thereafter brought to trial before the referee and he allowed for rent of the Lexington avenue house, with interest, $4,457.48, and for rent of the house at Sing Sing, with interest, $660.40, and for board and other items, amounting in all to $5,948.70. The report of the referee was confirmed and judgment entered thereon, and that judgment, upon appeal to the General Term, has been affirmed.

The largest share of the claim allowed was made up of the rent of the two houses mentioned. The claim of the defendant is that his intestate occupied them under such circumstances that she never- became liable for any rent, and whether or not that claim is well founded is the principle question to be determined upon this appeal.

The plaintiff and the intestate and their mother lived together as one family in the Lexington avenue house until the decease of the mother in 1865, after which time the plaintiff and the intestate resided alone there, she attending to the household duties without the aid of a domestic, while the plaintiff furnished and paid for all needed supplies. In 1873 the plaintiff married a lady much his junior. Some months after that he and his wife ceased to live in the house, and the intestate .resided there alone. The house contained much old furniture, *445 some of which formerly belonged to plaintiffs mother, and some of it belonged to him and some to the intestate. The furniture was piled up in some of the rooms of the house, and the intestate used but a small portion of it, and occupied but. a small portion of the house. The plaintiffs wife was a witness for him and gave the following description of the Lexington avenue house as she found it in October, 1873, when she-went there with her husband to live:

“ When I first went to stay at all at the Lexington avenue-house, after I was married, there was no furniture visible,, except a few broken chairs, and everything else compared, with them. The basement had no furniture in it. When I remained there over Saturday night and Sunday we ate in the? kitchen in the back basement. That had a very little furniture: in it. * * * The front basement had no furniture in it at all; it had no carpet on; a few old broken chairs stowed away. That is all there was on that floor, that I have described, the basement floor. The parlor floor was furnished with three, cane-bottomed chairs and an old carpet and a hair-settee-There were two rooms on the parlor floor. I can’t say anything about the- front room ; the front room was locked.. I had no sight of that whatever. * * * The back parlor-contained an old rocking-chair, a hair-settee, a mirror, a few pictures; I guess that is all; I only know of one room being-furnished on the floor above the parlor. That is the only room on the second floor that I was ever in. It contained a small desk, an apology for a writing-desk, used not very often, occasionally by Mr. Collyer. It also contained a bed and three chairs, no bureau, an old broken washstand—this is the back room. The front room on the second floor was locked all the time I was there. I saw through the door of it a promismious gathering of everything — beds, chairs — a sort of junk-shop. I would not say positively there was a bureau; there might have been. When I passed by I could see the things piled up to the ceiling at one end of it. I can’t say about the entire room, because I didn’t see. I merely saw. through a chink. The door stood ajar about six inches. This room, in which the *446 furniture was piled, was occupied by Miss Gollyer. She slept in that room.”

Whenever the plaintiff had occasion to go to the city on business of his own he would stop at the Lexington avenue house with his sister. He paid for her groceries and the supplies furnished to the house. She kept no servant and lived in the most parsimonious and penurious way. She occasionally rented some of the rooms in the house, as she said, for the ■purpose of getting-some money. She continued to live in the house, after the marriage of George, until the spring of 1879. There was never any talk between her and him about ■rent. It does not appear that she requested .permission to occupy the house, or that the plaintiff gave her express permission, or that any arrangement whatever was made about it. The plaintiff" gave proof, showing, beyond all question, that she did not suspect that she was there as his tenant, under obligation to pay rent, and the circumstances were such that he must have known how she understood it. If he allowed . her to continue in the occupancy of the house, knowing that she ■did so with the understanding on her part that she was to pay no rent, the laxy will not raise in his favor an implied promise ■ on her part to pay it. Before the plaintiff can recover for the use and occupation of the house, he must show that the ■ conventional relation of landlord and tenant existed between him and his sister. (Benjamin v. Benjamin, 5 N. Y. 383; Prestons. Hawley, 101 id. 586.) There must be proof, . either that such relation was created by express contract, or there must be proof of circumstances from which the law will raise an implied contract. But the law will not imply a contract contrary to the intention of the parties. There is not an atom of proof in this case that the plaintiff ever expected any rent, or that the intestate ever expected to pay any. The irresistible inference from all the proof is that she occupied and had the use of the house, or so much of it as she desired for her manner of living, free of rent. It is entirely clear, that if she had supposed that she was occupying ■ the entire house, consisting of three stories, as a tenant, and *447 that she was expected to pay at the rate of $1,000 a year for the rent thereof,- she would not have remained there a day. Although the intestate lived four years after she left that' house, always abundantly able to pay, it does not appear that the plaintiff ever claimed any rent of her, or even mentioned the matter of rent to her.

Hot only did the evidence not warrant a finding that the conventional relation of landlord and tenant existed between the plaintiff and the intestate, or that she ever agreed or expected to pay any rent, or that the plaintiff ever expected to receive any, but there is no finding of any of these facts, except that the intestate had the use and occupation of the house during the time mentioned. Upon such evidence, we think, there was no warrant for a finding that the intestate ever became obligated to pay the plaintiff any rent. He gave her the use of the house; he allowed her to live there, and to rent a portion of it without any expectation of compensation on his part; and, hence there was error of law in ordering a recovery in his favor for the rent and interest thereon.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 114, 113 N.Y. 442, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 723, 68 Sickels 442, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collyer-v-collyer-ny-1889.