Myers v. Sea Beach Railway Co.

43 A.D. 573, 60 N.Y.S. 284
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 43 A.D. 573 (Myers v. Sea Beach Railway Co.) 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
Myers v. Sea Beach Railway Co., 43 A.D. 573, 60 N.Y.S. 284 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Goodrich, P. J.:

The plaintiff sues to recover damages occasioned by his eviction from premises at West Brighton, Coney Island, of which he claims to have been' tenant under a lease from the Hew.York and Sea-Beach Railway Company, dated July 8,.1895, for a term ending October, 1899, at the annual rental of $>1,000. The lease describes the premises as The premises at northerly end of the Sea Beach Palace, which were formerly leased to party of second part by Lease No. 332.” Lease 332 was dated January 22, 1892, and [574]*574described the premises as; “ The room at North end of waiting room in the Sea Beach Palace, which was rented- by party of second part during Season'of 1891, for a Bar Room.” -The rental was $1,000. . -In 1891 the plaintiff had. a,lease from the company of premises therein described as “ the Bar Room in. the north end of the Sea Beach Palace.” . The rental was $600.

•The defendants offered in evidence the three several applications on which' the leases were granted. The application for the lease of 1895 describes the premises as “ Bar Room in Sea Beach Palace waiting room.” The one for the lease of 1892 described them as “ Sea Beach. Palace Bar, being same premises leased by me".in Season 1891.”' The one for the original lease' of 1891 read “Sea Beach Palace waiting room bar.” In March, 1898, the new structures which the plaintiff had erected, including the ice box, were torn down by the defendants, and the plaintiff was evicted therefrom, although, he was left in-possession of the bar room which lie originally occupied. He sued to recover, as damages the value-; of the’ destroyed’ property arid the profits which he would have made during the remainder of the term of his lease,

. The controversy on this appeal arises out of the construction to-be placed on the description of the premises, in. the lease of 1895. The defendants contend that the lease covered only the bar room .which the plaintiff leased and occupied in 1891. The plaintiff contends that certain transactions other than and outside of the written leases must be considered, and offered parol evidence to .show what premises were intended' to be the subject of the lease of 1895. The evidence was admitted on the ground that there was an ambiguity in the description.

There was evidence tending, to show that, under the lease of 1891 the plaintiff occupied a bar room at the north end of the building known -as the Sea Beach Palace and outside and in the rear of this bar-room- an-ice box, about eight feet-long,-over which’was'a-storm ' house, the entrance to which was on the outside of the bar room. It will be observed that this lease refers only to a bar room.

Before the lease of -1892 was made, the plaintiff applied to Mr. Nelson, the manager of the company, for.more room than he had been occupying. Mr. Nelson called Mr. Lark, an -employee of the company, who staked out a plot of adjacent ‘ground for the use of [575]*575the plaintiff upon which the latter erected certain structures, viz., a house forty-five by fifty feet in size; a toilet, a dining room and a kitchen in the rear. There was also a garden surrounded by a picket fence, and a platform. These structures were brected and occupied by the plaintiff with the consent of the company. After the land had been staked out, but before the structures were erected, the lease of 1892 was executed for an increased rental. The kitchen was, equipped with a range and other cooking utensils. Some of the materials for the buildings were supplied to the plaintiff by Mr. Nelson from a lot of old materials owned by the company. Other parts were purchased by the plaintiff, who paid for the erections, the value of which he testified was about a thousand dollars.” The plaintiff also made pipe connections between the bar room and thé ice box for drawing beer. He occupied the premises as thus constructed and was in possession when the lease of 1895 was executed.

The defendants objected to this evidence on the ground that it varied'the terms of the léase, but we think the objection untenable. There was no such definite description of the prermses in the lease as would enable a court or jury to say exactly what premises were included in the lease of 1892 or 1895, and the court properly admitted the evidence to explain, but not to vary, the terms of the lease. This view is not shaken by the fact that the ■ lease describes, the premises as those which were formerly demised by the lease No. 328, executed in 1892, which generally described the premises as the bar room in the north end of the Sea Beach Palace. ■ It is apparent from the transactions between the plaintiff and Mr. Nelson and Mr. Lark that the premises for which the lease of 1892 was given included the additional ground staked out by them and upon which, with their knowledge and consent, the plaintiff erected and occupied the new structures; and we might well hold, if it were necessary, that the erection and occupancy under this permission constituted an estoppel against the company.

In Pettit v. Shepard (32 N. Y. 97) it was held that where the . description of land conveyed by deed is vague and uncertain, parol evidence of the intention of the parties as to the real boundaries is admissible, not to contradict or vary the deed, but to identify the subject matter. The deed in that case read “the west part of lot No. 76, lying .on the easterly side of Niagara river, containing [576]*576eighty-five acres, be the same more or less.” The court held that the' description was vague and uncertain, and admitted parol evidence to show what part of lot 76 was intended.

Sanders v. Cooper (115 N. Y. 279) was an. action on a policy of fire-insurance. There was a question of the identity of the premises named in the policy which accurately described one building which was not burned, while the plaintiff claimed that,it was intended to cover another building which was burned. The court said (p. 285): "The subject of' the insurance is to be ascertained from the description in the policy and such extrinsic evidence as may be necessary to. identify the property- described.”

In Hathaway v. Power (6 Hill, 453) Beardsley, J., cites the following with approval (pi 456):. "‘All ambiguity of words within the deed,’ as Lord Bacon exjpresses it, ‘ may be helped by construction: (1 Phil. Ev. 538); andl courts will labor diligently to. malee deeds effectual between parties, rather than reject them as unintelligible and nugatory. ‘ I do exceedingly commend the judges,’ says Lord Hobart (Earl of Clanrickard’s Case, Hob. 277), ‘that are. curious and almost subtile, ast-uti, to invent reasons and means to make acts according to the just intent of thé parties, and to. avoid wrong and itijury which by rigid rujies might be wrought out of the act’ — a sentiment which- has received the approval of the wisest sages of the la.w. (1 Vent. 141; 2 Wils. 78.)”

A similar question arose in Sargent v. Adams (3 Gray, 72), where: the lease- described the premises as “The Adams House and the court admitted evidence to describe the subject-matter of the lease, because the description was so meagre, even though the lease was not. ambiguous on its faice; The question was whether the term "The Adams House ” included' only such part of the building as was fitted u.p as a hotel’ and not the stores on the first, floor.

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Bluebook (online)
43 A.D. 573, 60 N.Y.S. 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-sea-beach-railway-co-nyappdiv-1899.