Moffat v. Strongs

9 Bosw. 57
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedDecember 28, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 9 Bosw. 57 (Moffat v. Strongs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moffat v. Strongs, 9 Bosw. 57 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1861).

Opinion

By the Court—Woodruff, J.

The action is brought by the plaintiff as lessor of the lot and buildings known as Eo. 371, in Broadway, in the City of Eew York, against the defendant, as the assignee of the lease, to recover one quarter’s rent, accruing while the defendant is averred to have been in possession, to wit, on the 1st day of February, 1860, to the amount of $1,375.

The defendant, by his answer, admitted the lease to his assignor, (one Kirker,) the assignment to himself, his entry and possession of the premises, as assignee, but in trust for [61]*61the payment of the debts of Kirker, who had become insolvent.

The answer then proceeded to set up what was claimed to be a breach of the implied covenant for quiet enjoyment, by the acts of one Myers, the owner of the adjoining lot, (No. 373,) who, as the answer alleged, was the actual owner of a strip of land from five to eight and one-quarter inches in width, extending from the rear of the lot, sixty feet in length, towards Broadway, whereon the north wall of the demised premises in part rested., On the trial the presiding Justice, on the objection of the plaintiff’s counsel, having ruled that the facts alleged in the answer constituted no defense, excluded all evidence offered by the defendant in support thereof. Thereupon the defendant, by leave of the Court, amended his answer, and offered to prove the facts alleged in such answer, as amended; but, on objection, all evidence was excluded, on the ground that if the facts were proven, they constitute no defense to the action.

On the part of the defendant it is claimed that the facts alleged in the answer, as amended, constitute an eviction of the tenant from a part of demised premises, under paramount title, and so operated as a suspension of a part of the rent. They were further claimed to constitute a breach of a covenant for quiet enjoyment implied in the demise, and to entitle the defendant to damages by way of counterclaim.

Though inartificially framed, the answer, as amended, in substance avers: That the defendant being in the possession of the demised premises, Myers, who was the owner of the lot next adjoining, including a portion of the demised premises, that is to say, of the strip of land above mentioned, whereon the north wall of the demised building rested, notified the defendant of the encroachment upon his lot, and of his title to said strip of land, and that he was about to excavate and build upon his lot, and required the defendant to remove the said wall therefrom. That the defendant thereupon gave written notice to the plaintiff [62]*62of Myers’ claim, and of his requirement that the wall Be removed, and demanded that the plaintiff take such measures as he might be advised, to defend his rights and protect the premises, and notified him that the defendant would hold him responsible for all expenses caused by a removal of the wall, and for all loss and injury to his business, for any eviction by the plaintiff or others from any portion of the demised premises. That the plaintiff wholly disregarded such notice, and neglected to shore up the wall or to claim or enforce any right to have it remain where it stood. That Myers proceeded to excavate for the foundation of his building, and the said north wall was in danger and would have fallen as such excavation proceeded, which would have occasioned the fall of the building itself, the destruction of a large amount of the defendant’s property, and possible loss of life; and the removal and reconstruction of such wall was a necessity to prevent such damage and danger; and the defendant, to prevent the fall of the building, did cause the floors to be supported, and such north wall to be taken down and rebuilt on the line of the plaintiff’s lot.

That such disturbance of the defendant’s quiet enjoyment of the said premises was occasioned by the paramount title of Myers, in and to the said strip of land encroached upon by the said wall and which was not owned by the plaintiff, which paramount title existed before and at the time of such disturbance, and the defendant was evicted, by reason thereof and of such excavation, from the possession of so much of the demised premises as stood upon the said strip of land, and from the quiet use and enjoyment of all the demised premises.

I. The question we propose first to consider is, whether the facts constitute an eviction from a part of the demised premises, entitling the defendant to an apportionment of the rent and an abatement according to the relative value of the part from which he is evicted.

That if the facts constitute an eviction, such a consequence follows, we do not .understand the plaintiff to deny. [63]*63An eviction by the landlord from either the whole or a part of the demised premises suspends the whole rent. An eviction by another under paramount title, if of the whole, suspends the whole rent; if of a part of the demised premises, it entitles the defendant to an apportionment.

The answer distinctly avers a paramount title in Myers to the strip of land which it alleges formed a part of the demised premises. This must be taken to be admitted for the purposes of the appeal; since otherwise, if material, the defendant should have been permitted to prove it.

The defendant yielded, under the pressure of danger that the building would be thrown down, to Myers’ paramount title, and so lost the possession of a part of the demised premises. This is a view of the answer as favorable to the plaintiff as the allegations will permit. He gave full notice to the plaintiff, and at - length yielded the possession, and his so yielding must be taken to have been in good faith, compelled by the alleged necessity, else evidence of this should have been received to be submitted to the Jury.

The question is, therefore, reduced to this: Can the dispossession of a tenant, by a third person having a title paramount to the lessor, amount to an eviction, unless it be a dispossession by virtue of a judgment' at law or decree in equity? or in the alternative, must the tenant resist the true owner and defend the possession, by force if need be, at his peril until, by some judgment or legal process, he is ousted ?

The plaintiff here insists that the tenant is bound to maintain his possession and that of his-landlord, until he is dispossessed by virtue of such judgment or decree; and that nothing less than this will constitute eviction under paramount title suspending the rent or excusing the tenant from its payment, however true it be, that such paramount title is in the disseisor, and however ready the tenant is to take the burden of establishing it.

This view of the duty of the tenant calls upon him to resist the lawful demands of one who has a perfect legal [64]*64right to enter the premises. In this sense, it calls upon him to do what is illegal.

It subjects him to damages in favor of the true owner.

It places him in a situation in which, if by artifice or accident the true' owner can obtain peaceable possession, the tenant must still pay rent to his lessor although he cannot recover possession by action against such owner.

And aside from the provisions of the statutes against forcible entry and detainer, if by any force or compulsion, the owner can obtain actual possession, the tenant is remediless, for he can maintain no action to recover possession against the owner, and yet he must pay the rent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Bosw. 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moffat-v-strongs-nysuperctnyc-1861.