Hausauer v. Dahlman

18 A.D. 475, 45 N.Y.S. 1088
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 18 A.D. 475 (Hausauer v. Dahlman) 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
Hausauer v. Dahlman, 18 A.D. 475, 45 N.Y.S. 1088 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Follett, J.:

This action was. begun April 27, 1893, to restrain the defenaants from prosecuting summary proceedings against the plaintiffs to remove them from the possession of certain premises, the plaintiffs alleging that they were lessees and entitled to the possession of ' the premises until May 1, 1895.

The defendants alleged, by way of defense and counterclaim, that the plaintiffs’ term as. lessees expired May 1, 1892, and that since that date they had wrongfully withheld possession of the leased premises to the defendants’ damage in the. sum of $1,000 for each year..

The defendants also alleged, by way ;of counterclaim, that the plaintiffs by wrongfully holding over .were liable for “ double the yearly value of the lands or .tenements so detained,” pursuant to statute. (R. S. pt. 2, chap. 1, tit. 4, § 11; 5 R. S. [9th ed.] 3575, § 200.)

The plaintiffs retained possession until May 1, 1895., This action was tried May 7, 1896, was decided July 11, 1896, and judgment was entered July 29, 1896.

By reason of the discontinuance of the summary proceedings to dispossess the plaintiffs and by the expiration of the term during .which they claimed to hold before this action was tried, the only question involved herein 'is whether the plaintiffs wrongfully withheld from the defendants the premises from May 1, T892, to May 1, 1895.

The defendants insisted on the trial and on this appeal that the plaintiffs’ term was not extended beyond May 1, 1892, because (1) the defendants’ lease from the owner of the fee was never extended [477]*477beyond May 1, 1891, but a new and different lease was taken ; and (2) because the plaintiffs failed to give on or before February 1,1891, the defendants written notice of their election to have their lease extended for four years from May 1, 1891.

From May 1, 1865, to May 1, 1885, the defendants were lessees in possession, under a written lease under seal, of a piece of real estate situate on the west side of Main street in the city of Buffalo, which is forty-three and one-half feet wide north and south on said street and eighty feet deep east and west. By contract, under seal, executed June 18, 1884, between the owner of. the fee and the defendants, said lease was extended for five years, until May 1,1890, at the annual rental of $3,500, payable in equal quarterly payments. By the lease it, was provided that the lessor, at the end of the term, should pay the lessees the value of the buildings then standing on the premises, to be determined, in case the parties disagreed, by the assessors of the city of Buffalo. By contract, under seal, dated March 13, 1890, said lease was extended until the 1st day of May, 1891.

On the premises was a building erected by the defendants, which was divided into two stores, numbered 388 and 390 Main street.

March 12, 1890, the litigants entered into a contract, under their hands and seals, by which the defendants leased to the plaintiffs “ the store known as. number 390 Main street, with basement, for the term of one year, to commence on the first day of May, 1890, and to end on the first day of May, 1891, at eight o’clock in the forenoon. The said party of the second part (plaintiffs) agrees to pay to the said party of the first part (defendants) the annual rent of twenty-five hundred dollars ($2,500), in monthly payments, with the privilege of renewing this lease, at its termination, for four years longer, at the same annual rent and on the same conditions, provided that the said party of the first part (defendants) will receive an extension of their lease, at its termination, and that the said party of the second part (plaintiffs) shall, at least three months before the expiration of this lease, notify the parties of the first part (defendants), in writing, of his intention of renting said premises, for such additional term.” '

It will be observed that the lease from the owner of the fee under which the defendants held, and the lease under which the plaintiffs held from the defendants, both expired May 1-, 1891.

[478]*478The defendants were unable to obtain an extension of their old lease, or a new lease, from the owner of the fee during 1891,/by Teason of a disagreement which arose between them. Nevertheless . the defendants continued in possession 'and paid to the owner of the fee the rent stipulated, in the old lease until May 1, '1892, and the plaintiffs held possession under their lease from the defendant's until. May 1, 1892, paying the stipulated rent..

During the year ending May 1, 1892, the defendants gave, and " the plaintiffs received, receipts for rent paid by which the plaintiffs ¡acknowledged that they occupied “ said premises as tenants at will ■or- by sufferance.” The purpose of these receipts was evidently to protect the defendants from a claim fo.r damages in case they and their sub-lessees should be evicted by the owner of - the fee because ■a .new lease, or an extension of the old one, had not been granted by ¡such owner. '

Negotiations were had during 1891 between the owner of the fee ¡and the defendants, in respect to a new lease, which resulted in the ■execution and delivery,.on or about February 12, 1892, of a new lease by which the owner of the fee leased to the defendants the premises for ten. years from May 1, 1891, at an annual rent of '$3,590 for the first five years and at an annual rent of $4,000 for the last five years of the term, payable in equal quarterly payments, -and at the expiration of the term the buildings on the premises, were to belong to the owner of the fee.

By .a lease executed February 12j 1892, the. defendants leased the entire, building,.Nos. 388 and 3.90 Main street, to the C. M. "Clapp Company, for nine years from May 1, 1892, at an annual rent of $9,000 for the -first four years and at.an annual rent of; :$9j500 for the last five years of said term.

March 29, 1892, the defendants served a written notice xtpon the plaintiffs, requiring them'• to quit and surrender possession of No. 390 Main -street on May 1, 1892. The plaintiffs refused to quit,, ¡and November 18,1892, the defendants began summary proceedings in the Municipal Coiirt of Buffalo to dispossess the plaintiffs on the .ground that their term had expired. Thereupon this action was-begun and a temporary injunction granted, restraining the prosecution of the summary proceedings in the.Municipal Court. A motion to vacate the injunction was denied at. Special Term,, but on appeal [479]*479the order was reversed and the injunction vacated. (72 Hun, 607.)

By a stipulation entered into "between the litigants it was agreed that the plaintiffs should pay, and the defendants receive, monthly payments on account of rent at the rate stipulated in the lease, without- prejudice to the rights or claims involved in this action, under which the plaintiffs paid, and the defendants received, rent at the rate of $2,500 per year until May 1, 1895, when the plaintiffs surrendered possession of the leasfed premises to the defendants.

At tire date of the lease between the litigants the defendants were holding under a lease from the owner of the fee for a year, which expired May 1, 1892, and on the same date that the lease between the litigants expired; and the defendants contend that, because they did not secure a renewal of their outstanding lease, they were not bound by the renewal clause in the lease between the litigants to renew that lease.

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Bluebook (online)
18 A.D. 475, 45 N.Y.S. 1088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hausauer-v-dahlman-nyappdiv-1897.