Hand v. Knaul

116 Misc. 714
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedNovember 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 116 Misc. 714 (Hand v. Knaul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hand v. Knaul, 116 Misc. 714 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Senn, J.

This -is an appeal from a judgment of fifty dollars and costs rendered in the Municipal Court of the city of Syracuse, in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, on the 24th day of January, 1921.

The facts are briefly as follows: For about six years the defendant was a tenant of plaintiff’s, occupying an apartment in a building owned by her known as the Sylvester Flats in the city of Syracuse. There was no written lease and it does not appear from the evidence just when the tenancy began, nor how long it was agreed that it was to run, nor any of the terms of the lease,. except that the rent was payable in advance monthly. At first defendant occupied an apartment for which he paid twenty dollars or twenty-two dollars per month. Later he occupied an apartment for which he paid thirty-five dollars per month, and this was so until some time in May, 1920, when the plaintiff sent the defendant a written notice that beginning in June following, the rent would be fifty dollars per month. Thereupon the defendant continued in the apartment until some time about the end of June, when he moved out, having paid the plaintiff fifty dollars rent for that month.

Defendant gave plaintiff no notice of his intention to vacate the premises except that on June twenty-seventh he informed the janitor that he was about to vacate the premises and caused the key to be left at plaintiff’s home while she was out. This was about [716]*716the last of June. It was not very satisfactorily shown that the notice to the janitor was hy him communicated to the plaintiff, still there was testimony which would warrant a finding that it was. On July first plaintiff called on the defendant and tendered him back the key, at the same time demanding rent for the month of July, which defendant refused to pay, claiming that the tenancy was terminated. Plaintiff then brought action for one month’s rent. On the trial there was a jury and at the close of the evidence the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of fifty dollars, holding that the tenant could not terminate the tenancy except by a notice of thirty days and that the necessary notice was not given.

The question to be here determined is whether the court was justified in directing that verdict.

The first thing to be considered is whether a notice of thirty days is necessary to terminate such a tenancy. Upon this proposition the cases are not entirely in harmony and there is at least a seeming conflict of authority. Usually a distinction is made between a “ monthly ” hiring and a hiring “from month to month. ’ ’ Schneider v. Amendola, 113 N. Y. Supp. 517; Mandel v. Koerner, 152 id. 847, 850. In some of the cases hereafter cited, it will be seen that this distinction in terms was not recognized, which may account for some of the apparent disagreement in the opinions. Where the distinction is recognized, a monthly hiring or tenancy is where the premises are actually or by necessary implication hired for the single term of one month and the tenancy automatically expires at the end of each month, and is renewed for another month whenever the tenant holds over into the next month. Such a tenancy requires no notice for its termination. The tenant may remove during that month without notice to the landlord and is not liable for rent for the [717]*717ensuing month. Or the landlord may, at the end of the month, without previous notice, treat the tenancy as terminated and, if necessary, may have summary proceedings against the tenant as one holding over at the expiration of his term. The tenancy from month to month is where the tenant’s term is indefinite and uncertain although the rent is paid monthly and is described in some of the cases as an “ indefinite tenancy from month to month.” Witherbee, S. & Co. v. Wykes, 159 App. Div. 24, 26. Such a tenancy requires a notice of thirty days for its termination. This is' not under any statute but is probably due to its analogy to a tenancy at will or by sufferance which is for an indefinite term (Banks v. Carter, 7 Daly, 417), and requires a notice of thirty days to terminate. Real Prop. Law, § 228. Likewise, it is somewhat analogous to the common law tenancy from month to month, which required a month’s notice to terminate. Anderson v. Prindle, 23 Wend. 616. Where there is an obligation to give notice, other than statutory, it is binding on both parties, their rights and duties being correlative and reciprocal. Adams v. City of Cohoes, 127 N. Y. 175, 184.

There are cases where the tenancy partakes somewhat of the nature of a monthly tenancy, but where its duration is nevertheless uncertain, where the authorities have intimated, if not held, that a reasonable notice of termination is required (Ludington v. Garlock, 9 N. Y. Supp. 24), and this phase of the matter I will discuss later.

In O’Brien v. Clement, 160 N. Y. Supp. 975, it was held that where a defendant is a tenant from month to month he was required to give a month’s notice of intention to quit, but in that case the defendant was a tenant from month to month by reason of the lease under which he occupied being void which would make [718]*718him a common law tenant from month to month as in Anderson v. Prindle, 23 Wend. 616, which was a case of a lease void under the Statute of Frauds and the court held that the legal construction of the acts of the parties in accepting and paying rent monthly was to create a tenancy from month to month, entitling the tenant to a month’s notice to quit at the end of some month from the commencement of the tenancy. See, also, Bent v. Renken, 86 N. Y. Supp. 110.

In Gilfoyle v. Cahill, 18 Misc. Rep. 68, the defendant tenant had agreed to execute- a written lease for five years, six and a half months, but after taking possession refused to execute the lease. He paid rent monthly in advance as orally agreed. The court held that the facts sustained a finding of a letting by the month or from month to month.” The question of the necessity for notice was not really at issue because the tenant was held liable for one month’s rent on the ground of holding over, but Judge McAdam wrote that the tenancy was a definite one by the month, expiring at the end of any month the tenant saw fit to move or the landlord chose to eject him, and notice to quit was unnecessary.

In People ex rel. Botsford v. Darling, 47 N. Y. 666, it was held that a tenant in possession under an agreement void under the Statute of Frauds, but paying rent monthly, was a tenant from month to month ” and the tenancy could not be terminated except by a month’s notice.

In Geiger v. Braun, 6 Daly, 506, upon substantially the same kind of facts it was held, citing Botsford v. Darling, supra, that it was a tenancy from month to month, requiring a month’s notice to terminate. Judge Joseph F. Daly dissented, holding that no notice was necessary. The same doctrine was held by the New [719]*719York Appellate Term in the case of Israelson v. Wollenberg, 63 Misc. Rep. 293.

In Klingenstein v. Goldwasser, 27 Misc. Rep. 536, where the landlord! said the tenant could have the premises “ as long as he paid rent or until we sell out,” this was held to be a lease for an indefinite term, requiring thirty days ’ notice to terminate; The same was held in

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Bluebook (online)
116 Misc. 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hand-v-knaul-nycountyct-1921.