Cottle v. Sullivan

8 Misc. 184, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 477
CourtSuperior Court of Buffalo
DecidedMay 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 8 Misc. 184 (Cottle v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Buffalo primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cottle v. Sullivan, 8 Misc. 184, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 477 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Smith, J.

After issue joined upon the appellants’ petition and the respondent’s answer, and a jury had been impaneled to try the issue in the court below, the judge, upon respond[185]*185ent’s motion, refused to hear any evidence, though the petitioners offered to prove every allegation of their petition, and rendered judgment in favor of the respondent dismissing the petition with costs. The return shows that the judgment was rendered upon the sole ground that the petition did not show any termination or expiration of the term created by the lease,, from the petitioners to the respondent.

For the purposes of this appeal, we may assume that the petition contained all the other allegations that were necessary under the statute to entitle the petitioners to the final order of removal asked for; a copy of the lease between the parties is annexed to and made a part of the petition. It contains a covenant (among others) that if the lessee (the respondent here) should use the demised premises, or any part thereof, for any other purpose than living rooms for herself and family, to be kept in a respectable manner, then the lessors should have the right at their election to terminate the lease by giving to the lessee three days notice of such election, to be served ■ personally, and that the term created by the lease should “ thereupon cease at the expiration of the said three days in the same manner and to the same effect as if that were the expiration of the original term of this lease.” The petition by apt and proper allegations shows that during the term and prior to September 11, 1884, the respondent committed a breach of the covenant above set forth; that on the day last named the appellants served upon the respondent personally a notice in writing that they elected to terminate the lease at the end of three days from the service of the notice because of the breach of said covenant, and that the respondent held over and continued in possession of the premises after the expiration of the term thus produced without the permission of the petitioners. The petition was verified and presented to the court below, and the precept in this proceeding issued thereon on the 16th of September, 1884. There can be no doubt, therefore, that, according to the express terms of the covenant and agreement contained in the lease, the term created thereby expired on the fourteenth of September, two [186]*186days before the precept issued, if the allegations of the petition were true, and the decision of the court below was clearly erroneous, unless it can be upheld by a construction of the statute that excludes this and like cases from its operation.

Section 2231 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that a tenant or lessee holding under such a lease as that in question may be removed by summary proceedings “ where he holds over and continues in possession of the demised premises, or any portion thereof, after the expiration of his term without the permission of the landlord.” The language of the section is essentially the same as that of the Bevised Statutes under which the causes to which I am about to refer arose.

In Oakley v. Schoonmaker, 15 Wend. 226, the Supreme Court decided, that the breach of a covenant or agreement in a lease to cut no wood or timber on the premises except for fencing, and to carry off no wood or timber, does not create such an expiration of the term as will authorize summary proceedings under the statute to remove the tenant.

And in Beach v. Nixon, 9 N. Y. 35, the Court of Appeals held that the breach of a covenant by the lessee that he will not permit the premises to be used for a purpose deemed extra hazardous, and that in case of such use the lease shall cease and determine at the option of the lessor, and that he may thereupon recover immediate possession under the statute in question, does not create such an expiration of the lease as the statute contemplates and intends.

In the two cases above cited the theory upon which the landlord proceeded was that the tenant’s breach of his covenant worked a forfeiture of the term so that the landlord might at any time re-enter and put the tenant out, and, therefore, the term had, in contemplation of the law, expired, and the tenant was holding over. But the courts held that the covenants in the lease created a condition merely and not a conditional limitation of the term. The relation of landlord and tenant did not cease, nor, of course, did the term cease upon the breach of the covenant, but only when the landlord [187]*187elected to treat the breach as having created a forfeiture; and there was but one way in which in law he could manifest such election, and that was by an actual re-entry. 2 Greenl. Cruise Real Prop. chap. 2, tit. 13, § 39; Wash. Real Prop. 473; Duryee v. Mayor, etc., 96 N. Y. 477, 496, 497. Until such re-entry the term continued and the tenant did not hold over. And section 2135 of Crabb’s Law of Real Property was quoted with approbation, as follows: “ Where an estate is so expressly limited by the words of its creation that it cannot endure for any longer time than until the contingency happens upon which the estate is to fail, this is a limitation. On the other hand, where an estate is expressly granted upon condition in deed, the law permits it to endure beyond the time of the contingency happening unless the grantor takes advantage of the breach of condition by making entry.” What will constitute a conditional limitation of the term is illustrated by the case of Miller v. Levi, 44 N. Y. 489, which, in its essential features, is not to be distinguished from the one now under consideration. The lease from Miller, the landlord, to Levi, the tenant, was of a store on Main street in this city for the term of four years from May 1, 1862, but with a condition in these words, with the privilege reserved to terminate this lease at the end of any year by giving sixty days previous notice, in case the landlord should sell or desire to rebuild.” Miller sold the demised premises in January, 1864, and on February 12, 1864, gave notice that he had sold the premises and should terminate the lease on May 1,1864, pursuant to the right so reserved in the lease; Levi held over and continued in possession of the premises without the permission of Miller, who, on May 2, 1864, instituted proceedings for the removal of Levi under the statute we are considering. After trial, upon issues joined before the officer who issued the summons, and an order made for the removal of the tenant, the case was removed into this court by certiorari, and the order was affirmed by the General Term, and thereupon an appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals, where the judgment of this court was affirmed. The courts held that the agreement in [188]*188the lease that the lessor might, in case of a sale, terminate the lease by a notice of sixty days was a conditional limitation of the term, and when the notice was given and the time specified therein had run, the term, ipso facto, expired. The limitation operated to extinguish the term without entry or any further act by the landlord. And that is precisely the operation of the agreement in the lease in the case now before us. The petitioners did not, as did the lessors in the cases of Beach v. Nixon, 9 N. Y. 35, and Oakley v. Schoonmaker, 15 Wend.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Misc. 184, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cottle-v-sullivan-nysuperctbuf-1894.