Doyle v. Hamilton Fish Co.

144 A.D. 131, 128 N.Y.S. 898, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1639
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 7, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 144 A.D. 131 (Doyle v. Hamilton Fish Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doyle v. Hamilton Fish Co., 144 A.D. 131, 128 N.Y.S. 898, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1639 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Scott, J. :

Appeal from judgment for defendant. The controversy relates to the rights of the parties, as tenant and landlord respectively, under a lease which by its terms expired oh November 1, 1907. At its inception this controversy involved only a small sum of money, insignificant in amount compared to the value of the property involved. Neither party, however, was willing to give way to the other, and as a result the controversy has how attained larger proportions. It arose over the landlord’s covenant to renew the lease of the land, or to pay for the buildings erected thereon, which covenant was contained in a lease dated October 29, 1886, made between Hamilton Fish as landlord and Eliza A. Clark, executrix, as tenant, plaintiff being the successor in interest of said Clark, and defendant being the successor in title oi said. Fish. The lease provided that the landlord, at the expiration of the term of twenty-one years, should have the option either to renew the lease for a further term of twenty-one years at such annual rent as might be agreed upon, or to pay to the tenant the value of the building erected thereon. In the event of a failure to agree upon the rent for the new term each party was to appoint a disinterested appraiser to value the lot and also to separately value the building without reference to the value of the lot, and five per cent upon such valuation of the lot was to be the annual rent of the lot for the new term if the landlord elected to renew the. lease. Provision was made for the appointment of a third appraiser in case those originally appointed should fail to agree. The landlord covenanted on his part, in default of giving such renewal, to pay to the tenant the appraised value of the building. It was further stipulated that in case the parties failed to agree so that it became necessary to appoint appraisers they should be so appointed at least one month before the expiration of the term, which in this case meant October 1, 1907. ' There was nothing in the lease to prevent the parties, if they saw fit, from agreeing upon the terms of a new lease or appointing appraisers any time before October 1, 1907. The plaintiff having sublet the premises and being anxious to know what disposition was to be made of the property frequently requested the landlord, commencing in the [134]*134autumn of 1906, to determine how.it would exercise its option, and at what-figure it Valued the lot. He'mét only with refusals until September 17, 1907, when the landlord informed him that it valued the lot| for' the purposes of renewing the lease, at $20,000. This ¿rice the plaintiff corisidered excessive, and in fact it exceeded tjy $5,000 the value afterwards agreed on by the appraisers. | The parties having thus failed to agree,' the plaintiff, on September 26, 1907, appointed an appraiser on his behalf, and on the following day defendant appointed an appraiser on its behalf. A few days later plaintiff found that the appraiser whom he had appointed was not qualified to act under the terms of the lease because he was not the owner, in fee, of real estate in the neighborhood. Accordingly, on October 11, 1907, with defendant’s acquiescence, plaintiff appointed a' substituted appraiser who was duly qualified. On November 8, 1907, the appraisers agreed-upon'a sworn written appraisement fixing the value of the lot at $15,000 and the valuej of the building at $5,000. The trial court has found “that said appraisal was duly authorized and was duly accepted by the' parties to this action as a full compliance with the terms'of said lease of October 29, 1886,.providing for an appraisal of said, lot and buildings.” On November thirteenth, a Mr. Hodel, whose relation to the defendant is not disclosed, bujt whose letter appears to have been written on the letter he:ad of the defendant, wrote to plaintiff that: “The directors have decided to renew your ground lease. * * * The matter has been placed in the hands of our attorney, * * * who will communicate further with you.” At this point the controversy arose which has resulted in this action. The defendant claimed that the plaintiff must accept - the new lease as of November 1, 1907, at the new and increased rent from that date, and before receiving the lease should pay the sum of $36 stated to jbe the expense of renewing the léase. This amount included the sum of $25 said to have been paid by defendant to the appraiser appointed by it. The plaintiff insisted that the new lease should either be dated'as of November 13, 1907, the day on jwhich the landlord notified him of its election to renew, or, if it was dated November first, that the rent from November first to thirteenth should be rebated. He [135]*135also objected to paying the appraiser’s fee. Although the defendant made several propositions looking to an adjustment of the matter of rent, it persistently adhered to its claims to be paid $36 for the expenses of renewing the lease, treating it as a condition precedent to the granting of a new lease, and, when it undertook to tender a lease with a view to putting plaintiff in default, imposed as a condition of such tender that plaintiff should pay the $36. This demand was without justification . and vitiated the tender. The provision of the lease was that if •the landlord elected to grant a renewal of the lease it should be at the expense of ” the tenant. It is not provided that the payment of this expense should be a condition precedent to such a grant, and the only provision on the subject amounts to creating, if a new grant be made, a simple debt from the tenant to the landlord. Furthermore, the amount demanded was too large. It was conceded that $10 was a reasonable fee for preparing the lease, and the statutory notary’s fee for taking the acknowledgment would also be properly included in such expense; for although the election of the landlord to - renew fixed the rights of the parties, the original lease evidently contemplated, as was reasonable, that the renewal should be evidenced by a properly executed lease. We can see no justification for the insistence upon imposing upon the tenant the fee paid to the landlord’s appraiser. That was not, properly speaking, an expense of the renewal, but an expense incurred by the landlord in order to enable it to determine how it would exercise its option to renew the lease or to purchase the building. The defendant, therefore, never made a valid tender of a new lease, because such tender as it attempted to make was always accompanied by an unlawful condition. But, in our opinion, the question whether or not a new lease was validly tendered is not controlling. The rights of the parties were fixed on November 13, 1907, when the landlord exercised its option and elected to renew the lease. The court found that on that date the defendant notified the plaintiff that it elected to renew the ground lease, and the accuracy of this finding is not challenged. From that date the mutual rights of the parties were established, each being entitled to insist that the other should execute a proper formal grant. After that date the landlord’s election, [136]*136which- was not dependent upon acceptance or rejection by the tenant, became irrevocable, except by the mutual agreement of ■ the parties, of which theije is no evidence.. As to the amount of rent between the expiration of the former lease on November 1, 1907, arid the date ¡of the landlord’s' election to renew, neither party'seems to have been guided in his or its demands by the strict letter of the; rule which is that the" tenant is entitled to remain in possession of the premises after the expiration of the lease until the landlord has performed his covenant, and elected whether to' renew or to purchase, and during the .

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Bluebook (online)
144 A.D. 131, 128 N.Y.S. 898, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-v-hamilton-fish-co-nyappdiv-1911.