Kuenzli v. Stone

112 Misc. 125
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 112 Misc. 125 (Kuenzli v. Stone) 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.

Bluebook
Kuenzli v. Stone, 112 Misc. 125 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Kelby, J.

The trial court found that the defendant was a monthly tenant, and that he held over his term after service of due and timely notice to quit the premises. The order appealed from bears date the 19th day of April, 1920, and contains the following recitals: “After a hearing, it appearing to the court that the premises are used for dwelling purposes and that the applicant cannot secure suitable premises for himself and family within the neighborhood similar to those occupied and that he has used due and reasonable effort to secure such other premises and sufficient .facts having been shown to warrant the granting of a stay, and the said tenant having stipulated that he will abide by and comply with the terms and provisions to be prescribed by the court, * *

These recitals are followed by an order directing that the issuance of the warrant be stayed until October 31, 1920, upon condition that the tenant deposit [127]*127with the clerk, within twelve days from the date of the order and on the first day of each month during the continuance of the stay, the sum of forty-one dollars and fifty cents, said sum being the aggregate of thirty-five dollars, the rent for which the tenant was liable for the month immediately prior to the expiration of his term, and of six dollars and fifty cents, being the additional sum determined by the court to be reasonable. The order then contains a provision that, upon failure of the tenant to comply with any of the conditions, the stay shall terminate and that either party may, on two days ’ notice, apply to the court for a modification of the order.

The testimony recited in the order does not appear in the return to this court. There does appear in the return the minutes taken on the trial of the special proceeding itself. From this last-mentioned testimony, it appears that the plaintiff, the owner of the property, had contracted to sell the property in question, agreeing to give title on the first day of April.The court below properly held that the tenant’s term expired on the first day of April, and that he was holding over the said term without the permission of the landlord. It further appears from the record that the plaintiff’s agent had told the tenant that plaintiff had purchased the property in February and had sold it in the same month of February, and that the owner desired the tenant to remove from the premises because a sale could be more readily effected without there being any tenants in possession. And it further appeared that the plaintiff had bought the property as a speculative enterprise.

The appellant urges two points for the reversal of the order; first, that chapter 137 of the Laws of 1920, under which the stay was granted, is unconstitutional in that it impaired the obligation of a pre-existing con[128]*128tract; and, secondly, that the granting of a stay of such length was an abuse of discretion by the trial judge.

Chapter 137 of the Laws of 1920 is entitled: “An act in relation to summary proceedings to recover the possession of real property in cities of the first class or in cities in a county adjoining a city of the first class during the existing emergency.” It is limited in its scope to recover the possession of premises occupied for dwelling purposes, and it is affirmatively recited that: ‘ ‘ The relief hereby provided shall be in addition to relief provided by any other act, the provisions of which are not inconsistent herewith. This act being emergéncy legislation, its provisions shall be liberally construed to carry out the intent thereof.”

Section 3 of that act reads as follows:

“ Discretionary stay. Where the final order in such a proceeding establishes that the occupant is holding over and continuing in possession of the demised premises, after the expiration of his term, without permission of the landlord, the court, judge or justice making such order, on application of the occupant, may, in its or his discretion and subject to the conditions prescribed by this act, stay the issuance of a warrant and also stay any execution to collect the costs of the proceeding, for such period, not more than twelve months, as the court, judge or justice, in its or. his discretion, may deem proper.”

The act then, in section 4, provides that the trial judge shall hear the parties upon the application for a stay, and, if it appears that the premises are used for dwelling purposes, and that the applicant cannot secure suitable premises for himself and family within the neighborhood similar to those occupied, that he has used due and reasonable effort to secure such premises; that his application is made in good faith, [129]*129end that he will abide by and comply with the terms and provisions prescribed by the court, judge or justice, the act then provides for the tenant making a deposit in court as the judge may direct for the occupation of the premises for the period of the stay at the rate to which he was liable as rent for the month immediately prior to the expiration of his term, plus such additional amount as the judge may determine to be reasonable.

Summary proceedings to recover the possession of land were first brought into existence in this state by chapter 194 of the Laws of 1820, and were limited to two cases: first, expiration of the tenant’s term; second, default in the payment of rent. In the latter case they could be maintained only if there was not sufficient distress on the premises to satisfy the rent. It was not eo-extensive with the landlord’s right to maintain ejectment, and could not be maintained for breach of any other covenant of the lease than that to pay the rent. See Oakley v. Schoonmaker, 15 Wend. 226; Beach v. Nixon, 9 N. Y. 35.

In 1846 distress for rent was abolished, and in 1849 the provision requiring the absence of sufficient distress as a condition for the maintenance of summary proceedings was repealed.

Previous to the act of 1820, above referred to, the only remedy the law furnished to the landlords for the recovery of lands upon the expiration of the tenant’s term was the action of ejectment. This proceeding was expensive and dilatory as against a tenant litigiously inclined. The statute of 1820 was designed to remedy this condition by providing the landlord with a simple, speedy and inexpensive summary method of regaining the possession of his premises. See 3 McAdam Landl. & Ten. 3.

I It thus appears that the act relating to summary [130]*130proceedings was a remedy first created by the legislature. Ordinarily, a remedy created by the legislature may be repealed by the legislature. The various acts passed by the legislature in 1920, at the instance of the joint legislative committee on housing, do not abolish the remedy, but considerably modify the practice and procedure heretofore existing.

The legislature has made a declaration of fact of the existence of an emergency and has declared in effect that congested housing conditions have seriously affected and endangered the public welfare, health and morals. It must be presumed that the legislature had before it, when the statute in question was passed, any evidence that was required to enable it to act; and if any special finding of fact was needed in order to warrant the passage of this particular act, the passage of the act itself was to be treated as the equivalent of such finding. See Grainger v. Douglas Park Jockey Club, 148 Fed. Repr. 513; 6 R. C.

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Bluebook (online)
112 Misc. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuenzli-v-stone-nyappterm-1920.