Greaton v. Smith

1 Daly 380
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMay 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 Daly 380 (Greaton v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greaton v. Smith, 1 Daly 380 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1860).

Opinion

By the Court.

Brady, J.

The defendants were in possession of the premises mentioned in the complaint as the tenants of the plaintiff, down to the 1st of May, 1854. Pri or to that day the plaintiff agreed by paroi to give the defendants a lease for ten years from the 1st of May, 1854, for the same premises atibe rental of $275 per annum, payable quarterly, on the usual quarter days. The defendants continued in possession of the premises after the 1st of May, 1854,.and until the 31st of October following, when they quit them.' They paid the quarter’s rent due on the 1st of August", 1854, at the rate of $275 per annum. The plaintiff refused to give the defendants the lease [384]*384promised by him, and put a bill on the house, in October 1854, containing a notice that the premises were to let,' or that some premises were to lei, and, on application to him, he stated that the defendants’ apartments were to let,- and that he would give possession of them on the 1st of November, 1854. As to the fact of the attempted letting, the evidence was conflicting, but the jury having found for the defendants, we must intend that that issue was found by them in the defendants’ favor. The presiding Judge charged the jury that, if the plaintiff suffered the defendants to go into possession of the premises under a verbal agreement that they should have a lease for ten years, and then refused to give such a lease as he had agreed to give, the defendants were justified in abandoning them at the time they did, and were not liable for the period during which they occupied. To this the plaintiff excepted, but if the rule thus stated was correct, then the application for a new trial must be denied. It must be borne in mind that this was not a holding over after the expiration of the defendants’ term merely, and without any new agreement, and that the closing or final event in reference to the lease promised, occurred in October, 1854, on the last day of which month the defendants left the premises. The continuance of the defendants in possession being under an agreement for a lease, there was no holding over within the meaning of the common law or of our statute upon that subject. (1 Rev. Stat, 744, § 1; Conway v. Starkweather, 1 Denio, 113 ; Smith v. Stewart, 6 John., 46 ; Bancroft v. Wardwell, 13 Id., 489 ; Jennings v. Alexander, 1 Hilt., 154; Jackson v. Salmon, 4 Wend., 327). -The agreement for the lease being void by the statute of frauds, it- would, under some circumstances, operate or enure as" an agreement or tenancy from year to year. The language of the cases is, that it creates a tenancy from year to year, but an examination of them will show that the doctrine is by no. means unqualified. (Schuyler v. Leggett, 2 Cowen, 660 ; The People v. Rickert, 8 Cowen, 226; Edwards v. Clemons, 24 Wend., 480 ; Hegan v. Johnson, 2 Taunton, 148 ; Clayton v. Blakely, 8 Term R., 3 ; Knight v. Benett, 3 Bing., 361; Cox v. Bent, 5 Bing., 185 ; Braythwayte v. Hitchcock, 10 Meeson & Wellsby, 494).

In all these cases, however, the defendant occupied for a year, or admitted that. he. was to account to..the plaintiff as his [385]*385.landlord. In Hegan v. Johnson, (supra), the defendant entered under an agreement from the landlord to give him a lease for 'fourteen ^roars and occupied for three quarters of a year, and it was held that under such an agreement the landlord could not distrain. The Court said “ that the defendant certainly did not become tenant from year to year at the beginning of the first month or first three months, for clearly at any time before the end of the first year, if a lease had been tendered to him and he had refused to execute it, the leasor might have ejected him without notice to quit, and if he had executed it, he would henceforth have held, not under the supposed demise, but under the lease.” And in Braithewaite v. Hitchcock, (supra), Parke, B. said “ although the law is clearly settled that when there is an agreement for a lease and an occupation without payment of rent, the occupier is a mere tenant at will; yet it has been held that if he subsequently pays rent under that agreement he thereby becomes a tenant from year to year.” Payment of rent must be understood to mean a payment with reference to a yearly holding, for in Richardson v. Landgridge, 4 Taun. 128, a party who had paid rent under an agreement of this description, but had not paid it with reference to a year or any aliquot part of a year, was held nevertheless a tenant at will (see also Hull v. Wood, 14 M. & W., 687). And in Edwards v. Clemons (supra), Ooweit J., said “ the lease was-in itself void as being a paroi one for four years, but the plaintiffs actually entered .and enjoyed for one year. The entry and enjoyment would alone have made them liable for use and occupation, and the paroi agreement would have shown the amount to be recovered. It has also often been held that under such circumstances, the lease is in effect but for one year, or from year to year, according to the time of enjoyment.” Hone of these features exist in this case. The defendants did not occupy the premises for a year, and did not pay any rent in reference to a yearly holding. They paid the rent winch, accrued on the first of August, 1854, according to the terms of the promised lease, and which might subsequently have been given, but they removed from the premises before the next quarter became due, the plaintiff and landlord having, in the meantime, refused absolutely to execute the lease agreed, upon.

[386]*386It is deducible from the cases referred to, that there must he some act of the parties from which the law implies an agreement to occupy for the year, to create a yearly tenancy, and that unless such acts can be shown, the law will not make a contract for them. The defendants quitting the plaintiff’s premises under the circumstances disclosed, proved conclusively that it was their intention either to hold as lessees or not at all, and the conduct of the plaintiff in attempting to lot the premises as stated by the witness, McPherson, was inconsistent with any intention on his part to regard the occupation as a tenancy from year to year. It is true that this testimony was objected to and admitted under exception, and the plaintiff’s counsel seems to have regarded it as evidence of eviction. It was important and admissible as an act of the plaintiff hearing upon the question of the plaintiff’s intention not to give the lease promised, and from which it might also have been inferred that he did not intend to permit the defendants to occupy for the year upon their refusal to accept the lease submitted. It is also true that the defendants occupied the premises for nearly six months, but it was upon the promise of the plaintiff to give them a lease which he refused to carry out, and having paid one quarter’s rent according to the terms of the lease con- . templated, the defendants before the quarter became due, and after the plaintiff’s refusal to give the lease and after he had posted the notice to let, left the premises. From such a possession, attended by such circumstances, no agreement to pay for the premises for a whole year could fairly be implied. Although the plaintiff’s promise was void, he was not entitled to any particular consideration. The law will not labor to give him the advantage of his own wrong, but leave him to the consequences of an act, which, if injurious, might have been avoided.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Daly 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greaton-v-smith-nyctcompl-1860.