Gilsey v. Lancaster

164 A.D. 663, 150 N.Y.S. 178, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8462
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 4, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 A.D. 663 (Gilsey v. Lancaster) 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
Gilsey v. Lancaster, 164 A.D. 663, 150 N.Y.S. 178, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8462 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

On the 1st day of March, 1904, the heirs and executors of Peter Gilsey, deceased, executed a lease of the premises at the [664]*664northeasterly corner of Broadway and Twenty-ninth street, including the building thereon known as the G-ilsey House, to one Keen for the period of seven years and two months from that day at the yearly rental of $75,000, payable in equal' monthly installments, in advance, and Henry Gilsey and others of the lessors executed and delivered to Keen an agreement for the sale and delivery of the furniture and furnishings in the hotel. At the same time the defendant executed and delivered to the lessors an agreement in writing reciting that in consideration of the execution and delivery of said lease by them and of said agreement for the sale and delivery of the furniture and furnishings, he guaranteed and made himself responsible to the lessors and vendors “for the prompt and faithful performance of all the terms, covenants and conditions in said lease to be kept and performed by said Keen and his assigns, and also for the prompt and punctual payment of the eight (8) certain promissory notes of three thousand one hundred and twenty-five dollars ($3125), each given by said Keen in part payment for said furniture, goods and chattels, and I do hereby waive notice of default or demand.”

It was' further recited in the agreement executed by the defendant that after the expiration of forty-five days from default in the payment of any of said notes, all of the other notes then unpaid were to become due and payable, but that his total liability should not exceed the sum of $37,500. This action is based on that guaranty of the defendant and is brought to recover the sum of $37,500, together with interest thereon from the 3d day of December, 1904, on the ground that Keen defaulted in the payment of the rent due on the 1st of May, June, July, August, September, October, November and December, 1904.

At the time of the execution and delivery of the lease to Keen, one Roessle was in possession of the premises under lease from Keen’s lessors for the term of eleven years from May 1,1900, which provided for the payment of an annual rental of $75,000, in equal monthly installments, and was secured by a deposit of'$50,000 in cash and two notes each for $12,500 with the Knickerbocker Trust Company. Keen was an experienced hotel manager.. He had managed the Hotel Marie [665]*665Antoinette for eight years and a half, the Manhasset House at Shelter Island for two years, and the Hotel Edgemere for one year, and had severed his connection with the Marie Antoinette in the latter part of the year 1903 owing to the fact that there was a change in the ownership thereof. The defendant was president of the Lancaster Sea Beach Improvement Company, which conducted a hotel at Edgemere during the year 1903 under the management of Keen. Keen was living at the Hew Hoffman House four blocks below the Grilsey House and was frequently in the Grilsey House, and he says he had been there “hundreds of times” and had observed that Roessle had closed the Broadway entrance, leaving an entrance only from Twenty-ninth street, which appeared to him and to others whom he had heard discuss it to be a mistake, and he was informed, but he did not remember from whom he obtained the information, that the Grilsey House could be leased. On the 15th of December, 1903, Keen wrote Grilsey Bros. & Co., which was a firm of real estate brokers and agents composed of Fred and Peter Grilsey, two of the heirs, stating that he had managed the Marie Antoinette for eight years and had a large “following” and was a “thoroughly up-to-date hardworking Hotel man,” and requested that they advise him confidentially whether the Grilsey House could be leased. The lessors were dissatisfied with the changes made in the hotel by Roessle in closing the Broadway entrance and other incidental changes, and that matter and the rent reserved had been- the subject of negotiations between them which resulted in a written modification of the lease on the 29th of May, 1903, by which the lessors agreed to allow a deduction of $6,000 per annum from the rent for two years from March 1, 1903, at the rate of not to exceed $1,500 per quarter, and they agreed to paint the outside of the building at their own expense during the year 1903, and üo put in at their own expense revolving doors at the Broadway and Twenty-ninth street entrances, and Roessle agreed to remove a row of tables from the café, so as to allow and maintain during the balance of the term, free and uninterrupted passage from the Broadway entrance to the lobby, and to remove from the Twenty-ninth street entrance telephone booths and desks for stenographers and carriagemen, so as to allow [666]*666and maintain for the balance of the term, free and uninterrupted passage from the Twenty-ninth street entrance to the lobby. Roessle paid the rent in accordance with the lease as modified until the end of May, 1903, and in July he gave a note for part of the rent, and gave other notes for rent during the summer of 1903, but apparently paid cash in the fall and paid the December rent in full, the last payment having been made on the twenty-fourth of December, but he failed to pay any rent after that date and notified the lessors in January, 1904, that he could not and would not pay any more rent. On the 1st of March, 1904, when the lease to Keen was made, Roessle was in arrears for the payment of rent in about the sum of $29,000, which, on or about that day, and evidently when he surrendered the lease, was taken out of the moneys deposited with the Knickerbocker Trust Company as security. Prior to the time Keen wrote the letter asking if the hotel could be leased, there had been no negotiations between the lessors and Roessle for any further change in the terms of the lease or for the cancellation thereof, and Roessle testified that he made no effort to vacate the premises orto surrender the lease until the surrender thereof was negotiated in connection with the negotiations which resulted from Keen’s letter by which the lease was made to Keen; but Roessle testified that he told “the Gilseys, the business could not stand such a rent; the house could not be made to pay that rent.” There is other testimony, however, tending to show that early in January, 1904, Roessle opened negotiations with plaintiffs through his attorney for a reduction of rent or the surrender of the lease.

The defendant admitted the allegations of the complaint, and pleaded as a separate defense that prior to the execution of the guaranty by him the Gilseys knowingly, falsely and fraudulently and with the intention of deceiving him and of inducing him to execute the guaranty, made false representations as follows:

“ (a) That the reason why the said Gilseys were willing to release their tenant Elwood 0. Roessle was because they did not like him personally.
“(b) That the reason why said Roessle was willing to surrender his lease and the possession of the Gilsey House was [667]*667because he had an opportunity of acquiring a valuable interest in the Arlington Hotel at Washington, D. C.
“ (c) That the rent of the said G-ilsey House demanded from said Keen, viz., Seventy-five thousand dollars per annum, was the same rent as was then being paid by the said Roessle.
“(d) That the business of the said G-ilsey House during said Roessle’s tenancy had been and was successful and very profitable.
“ (e) That said Roessle has always paid his rent promptly.

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Related

Gilsey v. Lancaster
153 N.Y.S. 1116 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
164 A.D. 663, 150 N.Y.S. 178, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilsey-v-lancaster-nyappdiv-1914.