Haber v. Schonzeit
This text of 159 N.Y.S. 68 (Haber v. Schonzeit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Plaintiff, formerly a tenant of defendant, brought the action to recover $389.59, balance claimed to be due out of a deposit of $1,000 made by him under a written lease with the landlord. The demised premises were a tenement house, and the plaintiff admitted that he owed the rent for the last month of the term, amounting to $477.33, that there were various balances for previous months, and that at the time he left the premises there were outstanding against them 22 violations under notices served by the tenement house department, with which he had not complied, and that he collected rent from various tenants beyond the term of his lease.
“The party of the second part has this day deposited with the party of the first part the sum of one thousand ($1,000) dollars, as security for the [69]*69faithful performance of all terms, covenants, and conditions in the within lease contained, it being expressly understood and agreed that, if the party of the second part surrenders said premises or is dispossessed therefrom prior to the expiration of this lease, then in that event the said sum of one thousand (§1,000) dollars shall' belong to the party of the first part as liquidated and stipulated damages, and the parties hereto stipulate to treat said deposit as such liquidated damages, because they cannot ascertain the exact amount of damage which the party of the first part would sustain in the event of any breach or violation hereunder. If, however, all terms, covenants, and conditions are fully complied with, then in that event the said security shall be returned to the party of the second part at the expiration of this-lease. The landlord agrees to pay 3% per cent, interest on said security annually.”
A reading of this clause shows that, while the $1,000 deposit was security for the faithful performance of “all terms, covenants, and conditions in the within lease,” it was expressly stipulated that, in the event that the lessee surrendered possession or was dispossessed from the premises during the term, the $1,000 “shall belong to the party of the first part [the landlord] as liquidated and stipulated damages, because they cannot ascertain the exact amount of damage which the party of the first part would sustain in the event of any breach or violation hereunder.”
In Hochman v. Bollt (Sup.) 152 N. Y. Supp. 1031, an action by a dispossessed tenant against his landlord to recover back a portion of his deposit under a clause identical with the one in question, it was held by this court that the deposit, in that case $753.22, was liquidated damages, and the complaint was dismissed. As the court there said (152 N. Y. Supp. 1033):
“Where the tenant breaks his lease, so that the landlord is forced to take proceedings to regain possession, payment of past-due rent and damages for failure to keep the covenant to repair is obviously not full compensation for the tenant’s breach, for the landlord is thereby deprived of the benefit which he would have received in the future, if the lease had continued in full force and effect. The very difficulty, not to say impossibility, of proving such damages, is in itself a good reason for the parties agreeing in advance to fix the amount of such damages.”
In this case, however, the tenant had not surrendered the premises or been dispossessed during the term, and there was no difficulty in ascertaining the damage occasioned by the tenant’s failure to pay rent, keep the premises in repair, and comply with the requirements of the municipal departments; so that the defendant must be deemed to have held the deposit as security for the performance by plaintiff of the obligations imposed upon him by the lease. It is true that the parties stipulated that the $1,000 should be liquidated damages in the event of “any breach”; but in that particular respect the agreement must be construed as providing for a penalty. Caesar v. Rubinson, 174 N. Y. 492, 67 N. E. 58.
Plaintiff testified that he “allowed” $25 for the violations, but gave no competent evidence tending to show the cost of removing the violations from the property. The theory of the action being that plaintiff was entitled to recover the difference between the amount of the deposit and the sums chargeable against the same by reason of the conceded breaches of the covenants in the lease, including tire covenant [70]*70to remove all violations, it follows, from plaintiff’s failure to introduce evidence showing what it would cost to comply with the requirements of the tenement house department, that no cause of action was proven against the defendant, and the landlord’s motion- to dismiss the complaint, made at the close of the plaintiff’s case, should have been granted.
The defendant introduced testimony to establish the cost of complying with the requirements of the tenement house department; but the amount of the recovery shows that the jury virtually ignored defendant’s proof in that respect, and the verdict for the sum awarded was clearly against the weight of the evidence.
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered, with $30 costs to appellant to abide the event.
WHITAKER, J., concurs. COHALAN, J., concurs in result.
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159 N.Y.S. 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haber-v-schonzeit-nyappterm-1916.