Giles v. Austin

6 Jones & S. 215
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedDecember 9, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Jones & S. 215 (Giles v. Austin) 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
Giles v. Austin, 6 Jones & S. 215 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinion

Van Vorst, J.

Equitable relief, in cases of penalties and forfeitures, is limited to such cases as admit of compensation, according to the original intent of the parties.

In cases where the penalty or forfeiture is designed to secure the payment of a certain sum of money, a court of equity will afford relief on payment of the money secured, with interest.

As to the covenants in question contained in the lease, the principal end to be attained was the payment to the landlord of the rent reserved, and the discharge of the estate from the taxes and assessments which might be imposed during the term. The right of reentry reserved to the landlord is the ultimate sanction operating to secure the performance of the tenant’s obligations under the lease. ’

If this was a re-entry sought to be enforced on account of the non-payment of rent to the landlord, there would be no difficulty in determining whether equitable relief could be afforded the tenant, and he be relieved from the forfeiture occasioned by his breach of the covenants in the lease, as compensation could yet be made to the landlord, by ordering the payment to him of the amount, with interest, and by the imposition of such other terms as would be just and equitable.

Although the obligation is in his favor, yet the taxes and assessments, which the tenant failed to meet when due and payable, do not go directly to the landlord, but to the municipal government. The omission to pay them at the time appointed subjects the land, upon which they are lien and burden, to sale, and the landlord’s title to jeopardy.

Yet I can not but conclude that when the taxes are [236]*236actually paid by the tenant, whether at the time they became due, or subsequently, the real object and intent of the parties, the discharge of the land from the lien, is substantially attained. Especially would this be so, if no steps had been taken, during the period of default, for the sale of the land on account of their non-payment.

The object of the landlord in demanding the covenant from the tenant was to shift from himself, the owner, upon the tenant, who was to occupy the land, these legal burdens. In view of this assumption by the tenant of the payment of taxes and assessments, the amount of rent to be paid by the tenant was doubtless adjusted.

In the case of Rector, &c. of Trinity Church v. Higgins (48 N. Y. 532), it was held that the covenant of a tenant to pay taxes and assessments is an obligation in favor of the landlord, which the latter might enforce by action, in which he might recover the amount of the taxes and assessments from the tenant, although he had not himself actually paid them.

The Court says:—“The covenant is broken when the defendants neglect to pay taxes and assessments duly imposed. The defendant is not at liberty to say that it is the debt of the plaintiffs. Let them first pay it, and I will pay them. It is his own debt, made so by the terms of his covenant.”

If this be so, and the obligation be a debt created by the tenant, there is no more difficulty in ascertaining the amount of compensation to be paid by the tenant to be relieved from the legal consequences of his default, than if it was the result of a failure promptly to pay his rent.

The amount of taxes and assessments is definitely fixed and limited when imposed, and the.time of their payment unalterably regulated by law, and the amount [237]*237of interest to be paid in case of delay is also clearly established by authority.

3f the landlord had himself paid these taxes and assessments, the amount he would be entitled to receive, as a condition to the tenant’s relief (if redress was proper), could be accurately measured, and full compensation made him. In the case of Garner v. Hannah (6 Duer, 262), it was. substantially held, that the clause of re-entry, as applicable to covenants for the payment of rent or taxes, or any other sum certain, is in equity treated as a security for the payment of money, and precise compensation can be made for their breach, and that a forfeiture for the non-payment of which is relievable in equity.

Such obligations possess elements of certainty and fixedness, as to amounts- and time of payment, which generally apply neither to covenant to repair nor insure.

But it is claimed by the defendants that the conduct of the plaintiff has been such as to disentitle him to equitable relief. That his laches can not be excused. That he has been willful in his default, and has exposed the reversion to danger.

These objections can be urged to some extent to all cases of default for non-payment of rent, but as a consequence the tenant must, if he would have equitable relief from a forfeiture, inevitably make compensation in damages.

I am not satisfied that the conduct of the plaintiff has been “willful,” in such sense as to deprive him of equitable consideration and relief.

The plaintiff constitutionally and by habit depended upon others. The person to whom he intrusted the liquidation of these taxes, and to whom he gave the means for this purpose, neglected his duties. For years the plaintiff supposed the taxes and assessments had been paid, and when spoken to by defendant on the subject, said they were paid.

[238]*238There is nothing in the case which tends in the slightest degree to show that he ever denied his obligations under the lease, or that he sought to evade them. And when, in ¡November, 1867, his attention was definitely called to their non-payment, and when, after examination, he found them to be outstanding, he expressed his willingness and his intention to discharge these liens.

Ignorant of the consequences of his default, he supposed the penalty which he would incur was the payment of increased interest. That the loss was on him alone.

He was doubtless lulled into a mistaken feeling of security by the fact, as he was advised, that his landlord had allowed assessments, considerable in amount, to remain as a charge and lien upon the premises for many years, without any apparent danger or hazard to the property.

I could, by no adjudication, give any license or encouragement to the neglect or willful postponement of legal obligations. The law demands that they should be promptly met. But in the case of a person of slender capacity, as the plaintiff is shown to be, who, through ignorance of the consequences of his default in promptly meeting his obligations, the binding force of which he does not willfully dispute, although he negligently postpones, and who blindly relies upon the mistaken advice of others, in whom he was justified in confiding, and when an adequate compensation for the default can be ascertained and made in money, the severe consequences of the default being the forfeiture of a considerable property upon which he is greatly dependent, the benign principles of equity should interfere to shield him from the strictly legal consequences.

I can not think but that the plaintiff should have [239]*239relief, if it can be made, upon principles which ordinarily apply to cases of this nature.

But it is objected by the defendant, that if the plaintiff is entitled to any relief, he should have sought it in the ejectment suit. That this action is wholly unnecessary, and its commencement, under the circumstances, itself a breach of equity.

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Related

Rector, Etc., of Trinity Church v. . Higgins
48 N.Y. 532 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)
Tibbs v. Morris
44 Barb. 138 (New York Supreme Court, 1865)
Morel v. Garelly
16 Abb. Pr. 269 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1863)
Garner v. Hannah
6 Duer 262 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1857)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Jones & S. 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giles-v-austin-nysuperctnyc-1874.