De Lancet v. Ga Nun

12 Barb. 120
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 Barb. 120 (De Lancet v. Ga Nun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Lancet v. Ga Nun, 12 Barb. 120 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1861).

Opinion

By the Court,

Barculo, J.

At the circuit, where we must rely upon principles rather than upon cases, the plaintiff was nonsuited, on the ground that the evidence did not show a forfeiture of the lease.

It appeared that the lease under which the defendant held, was made in 1775, for a term of ninety-nine years. The lease did not contain any express conditions, nor provide for any forfeiture. [122]*122The ground upon which the plaintiff claimed to recover, was, that the defendant had denied the landlord’s title. I was unable to discover any principle by which the oral declarations of the tenant as to the landlord’s title, should be construed into a forfeiture of the written lease.

Upon looking through the authorities we are satisfied- that the decision- at the circuit was correct, although it must be admitted that some of the cases are a little ambiguous on the subject. The case which seems to be chiefly relied on by the plaintiff, and by which she has probably been misled, is that of Jackson ex dem. Van Schaick v. Vincent, (4 Wend. 633.) There the court is said to have held that “ a tenant for years forfeits his term by a refusal in pais to pay rent, by denying the title of his landlord, and by accepting title from a hostile source.” But it is apparent, from the reasoning in that case, that the lease contained a clause of forfeiture for non-payment of rent, although the terms of the instrument are not set forth by the reporter; and the only real question at issue there, ivas whether a parol disclaimer waived the necessity of a technical demand of the rent. For Chief Justice Savage, in delivering the opinion of the court relies mainly upon the case of Jackson ex dem. Van Rensselaer v. Collins, (11 John. 1,) which had been denied to be law by the defendant’s counsel, who insisted that there must be a regular demand, blow, on looking into Jackson ex dem. Van Rensselaer v. Collins, we find that it was a case where the lease provided for a forfeiture on the rent remaining unpaid forty days after it became due ; and the sole argument urged by Mr. Van Burén for the defendant, was, that the plaintiff could not recover in ejectment, because he had not shown, “ that he had proceeded according to the common law, by which it is required that there should be a demand of the precise rent due, precisely on the day when it is made payable, at a convenient time before sunset, and at the most notorious place on the land.” And the court expressly decided that the objection thus made was overcome by proof that the defendant disclaimed holding under the lease, and asserted that he held under a warranty deed, and had agreed to accept a lease for a [123]*123part of the premises, from a stranger. This was considered to he a waiver “ of a regular demand of the rent with all the nicety, and precision required by the rules of the common law.” But the court did not intend to decide that the disclaimer itself, was a forfeiture. For Chief Justice Kent says, “ the disclaimer by parol might not have been sufficient in this case to amount of itself to a forfeiture of the lease. That is not the point in the case. But it is sufficient to excuse the plaintiff from the necessity of a regular formal'demand of the rent.”

These two decisions, thus explained, are of the same import, and establish a rule of which we fully approve, and the principle of which we frequently apply at the circuit, by holding that a disclaimer dispenses with proof of a notice to quit. For it is manifestly inconsistent to permit a tenant to say that he is not a tenant, and, at the same time, require proof of notice or demand, which a tenant only is entitled to. But it. is to be carefully observed that, in these cases, and in all the cases on this subject, the recovery is had upon the ground of a condition broken, and not by reason of the disclaimer ; which affects, not the rights of the parties, but only the rule of evidence. Proving a disclaimer dispenses with proof of a demand, upon the same principle that a refusal to receive money supersedes the necessity of a formal tender; or that proof of some other fact is deemed tantamount to evidence of notice of non-payment, to charge an indorser; and the numerous cases, familiar to every lawyer, where proof of one fact dispenses with another.

It is not to be denied that some of the remarks of Judge Savage in Jackson ex dem. Van Schaick et al. v. Vincent, give countenance to the idea that a parol denial of the landlord’s title may work a forfeiture of a term for years. He quotes Cruise as an authority for such a doctrine, and seems to give it his sanction, although the case, as before shown, did not require it: for, if the forfeiture was worked by the disclaimer, why lay so much stress upon the non-payment of rent, which could not strengthen the other ?

But Cruise does not lay down any such doctrine. Hor have we been able to find the language which purports ,io be quoted [124]*124from him by the learned judge,

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Related

Tyler v. Heidorn
46 Barb. 439 (New York Supreme Court, 1866)
De Lancey v. Ganong
1 Seld. Notes 169 (New York Court of Appeals, 1853)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Barb. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-lancet-v-ga-nun-nysupct-1861.