Paddell v. Janes

84 Misc. 212, 145 N.Y.S. 868
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 84 Misc. 212 (Paddell v. Janes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paddell v. Janes, 84 Misc. 212, 145 N.Y.S. 868 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Davis, J.

This is an action for specific performance founded upon a covenant in a lease which gives the tenant, who is the plaintiff here, an option to purchase the demised premises for $60,000. By an instrument made the 17th day of May, 1901, Jane M. Janes, now deceased, leased to plaintiff certain premises in the city of New York on the southerly side of Forty-second street, distant about eig'hty feet westerly from Seventh avenue, and known as No. 208 West Forty-[215]*215second street, for the term of twenty-one years," commencing on the 1st day of May, 1901, .and ending on the 13th day of April, 1922, at an annual rental of $2,400 per annum for the first five years, $3,000 per year for the next six years and $3,300 per year for the remaining six years of said term, payable in equal monthly installments in advance on the first day of each and every month of said term. The lease contained a covenant that the lessee would not at any time or times thereafter assign, transfer or set over said lease to any person or persons whomsoever without the assent of the lessor in writing under her seal first had and obtained. It was also provided in said lease that the lessee should have the privilege and option at any time after May 1, 1911, and prior to February 1,1922, to purchase the said leased premises upon payment of the sum of $60,000, three months’ written notice to exercise such option to be given to the lessor and payment to be made not later than one month after the service of the notice, upon which payment the said lease should cease and determine; provided, however, that at the time of the exercise of such option the lessee should have duly kept all the terms, covenants and conditions on his part to be kept and performed as provided in the lease. It was also provided that if any default be made in the payment of the rent or in the performance of any of the covenants or conditions in the lease contained on the part of the lessee to be kept and performed by him, then the said hiring and the relation of landlord and tenant, at the option of said lessor, should wholly cease and determine, and the said lessor could re-enter the said premises. It was also further provided that the receipt of any rent, whether the same be that originally reserved or be that termed additional, future or contingent rent, or of any portion of any rent of any [216]*216kind, should not he deemed to operate as a waiver of the right of the lessor to enforce the payment of any rent of any kind already due or to the forfeiture-of such lease by such remedy as may be appropriate, and also that a waiver by the said lessor to enforce any covenant by reason of the breach by said lessee should not be deemed to avoid the right of the lessor to enforce such covenant or condition on the occasion of a subsequent breach or default. The plaintiff entered into possession of the premises and continued to occupy the same and paid the rent up to November 23, 1906, when he made a general assignment for the benefit of creditors to Boudinot Keith. The deed of assignment purported to convey all the property of the plaintiff, both real and personal, but this leasehold property is not specifically mentioned. Keith, the assignee, accepted the deed of assignment and went into possession of the leasehold premises, though the plaintiff continued to occupy the premises. On the first of the month next following the date of the assignment Keith, the assignee, paid the rent by a check signed Boudinot Keith, trustee. He continued to pay the rent in this manner up to and including May, 1909. About May 17,1909, a composition was arranged with the creditors by which the plaintiff gave composition notes to his creditors and Keith conveyed to Buschsbaum & Bishop the properties that had been transferred to him as assignee. The lease was included in such deed. At the same time Buschsbaum & Bishop made -a declaration of trust that they held the said deed as trustee to secure the plaintiff’s creditors, and also at the same time Buschsbaum & Bishop executed a deed of such properties to the plaintiff and delivered it to the West Side Bank, which bank executed an escrow agreement for the holding of said deed, the same to be delivered to plaintiff upon certain condi[217]*217tions, one of which was the payment of the composition notes in full on or before June 1, 1914. The plaintiff had complied with the terms of the escrow agreement up to the time of the trial. After -May, 1909, Keith, the assignee, ceased paying the rent, and such rent for the months of June, July and August, 19091, was paid by the checks of plaintiff. During the month of August, 1909:, Mrs. Janes, the lessor, claimed for the first time to have had knowledge of the assignment from plaintiff to Keith and from Keith to Buschsbaum & Bishop, though it is admitted that the checks signed by the trustee in the manner as aforesaid had been received by her. She claimed, however, that she thought the word ‘ ‘ trustee ’ ’ related to some troubles of the plaintiff with other property which was at that time under foreclosure. When the check for the month of September, 1909, rent was tendered by the plaintiff it was returned, and on September 2, 1909, the lessor commenced summary proceedings to dispossess the plaintiff on the ground that the said assignment of plaintiff for the benefit of creditors and the said assignment to Buschsbaum & Bishop, each having been made without her consent, were a violation of the covenant against assignment of the lease. This proceeding resulted in a final order in favor of this plaintiff, the lessee, which was affirmed on appeal in May, 1910. This proceeding was disposed of in favor of the plaintiff for the reason that under the terms of the lease a breach by the plaintiff created not a conditional limitation of the lease for which summary proceedings would lie, but merely a condition giving to the landlord upon her election the right to enforce forfeiture by ejectment. See Janes v. Paddell, 67 Misc. Rep. 420. On September 1,1909, and October 1, 1909, the plaintiff tendered to the lessor the rent for the months of September and October, 1909, re[218]*218spectively, but the lessor refused to receive it on the ground that she had already been paid the rent. After the termination of the summary proceedings, and in 1910, the ■ lessor commenced an action in ejectment against the plaintiff on the ground that the plaintiff had violated the covenants of the lease by reason of the assignments heretofore mentioned, previous notice having been served upon plaintiff of the lessor’s election to terminate the lease upon these grounds. The latter action is now pending and undetermined. In June, 1911, the lessor commenced another summary proceeding against the plaintiff. This proceeding was based upon the ground that the plaintiff was the tenant of the landlord and that he had failed to pay the rent for the months of October, November and December, 1909, and for the entire year of 1910 and for the months of January, February, March, April, May and June, 1911, the said rent having been demanded from said tenant and a default made in the payment thereof. The plaintiff answered in that proceeding, admitting that he was the. tenant, and alleged that ho had paid or offered to pay the rent due as alleged in said petition and had performed all the covenants and agreements on his part, and also sets up the pendency of the said ejectment suit. This proceeding resulted in a determination in favor of the lessor, which determination was reversed and the proceeding dismissed by the Appellate Term on December 15, 1911. See Janes v. Paddell, 74 Misc. Rep. 409.

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Bluebook (online)
84 Misc. 212, 145 N.Y.S. 868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paddell-v-janes-nysupct-1914.