Raleigh Associates, Inc. v. Henry

99 N.E.2d 289, 302 N.Y. 467
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 99 N.E.2d 289 (Raleigh Associates, Inc. v. Henry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raleigh Associates, Inc. v. Henry, 99 N.E.2d 289, 302 N.Y. 467 (N.Y. 1951).

Opinions

Fuld, J.

This action was brought by plaintiff-tenant to obtain a judgment (1) declaring its right to exercise an option to renew a lease for a further term of twenty-one years and (2) fixing its total annual rental upon such renewal at $12,000, with no obligation to pay real estate taxes or other charges.

In 1927, Henry Gluck as tenant and Emily Jackson as landlord entered into a twenty-one-year lease for the land and building at 556 Madison Avenue, New York City. The lease prescribed a fixed annual rental of $25,000, the tenant being required to pay, as “ additional rents ”, all taxes, assessments and other charges on the property. The lease gave the tenant, if not in any default, an option to renew for two further twenty-one-year terms. If the tenant exercised the option, the parties were to execute a new lease containing substantially similar terms “ except as to the regular net annual rental which is hereinafter provided for ”.

[472]*472As to such rental, the lease recited that, if the parties should not agree upon the amount, within ten months before the expiration of the current term, then, “ the net annual rent to be provided in the said renewal leases shall be six (6) per centum per annum on the value of said land,” such value to be fixed by arbitration. Next followed a clause, focal upon this appeal, to the effect that in no event was the “ net annual rent ” for the renewal term to be less than the net annual rent reserved for the last year of the then current term.” In all cases, the lease continued, the tenant under the renewal lease was to pay taxes, assessments and other charges upon the property.

In 1928, Gluck assigned the original lease to Hops Building, Inc., a family corporation of which Gluck — who remained personally liable on the lease — was president and virtually sole stockholder. The rent provisions of the lease gave way in 1942 to a superseding agreement in writing which incorporated a rental arrangement under which the parties had been informally operating for many years. Executed while the original lease still had some six years to run, that agreement not only eliminated the tenant’s obligation to pay taxes and other charges for the duration of the original term, but reduced the fixed rental. Specifically, as to the latter item, it altered the “ provisions for the payment of fixed annual rent contained ” in the original lease “ so as to provide * * * rent at the rate of $12,000.00 per year during the said term instead of $25,000.00 per year, effective as of July 1, 1942.” The agreement — signed by the party to be charged, in this instance, the landlord, and adequately describing and identifying both parties to the agreement, a landlord and a tenant — satisfied the requirements of the Statute of Frauds and effectively reduced the rent reserved under it. (See, e.g., Irvmor Corp. v. Rodewald, 253 N. Y. 472, 475; cf. Lerand Corp. v. Meltzer, 267 N. Y. 343, 346; Real Property Law, § 279, subd. 1.)

By virtue of an assignment for which it paid upwards of $22,000, plaintiff became tenant of the premises in February of 1946, more than two years before the expiration of the original term. For fully five months after the assignment, from February to August, 1946, plaintiff paid the landlord each month at the rate of an annual gross rental of $12,000, [473]*473and the landlord accepted each payment “ without reservation.”

Meanwhile, in July of 1946, plaintiff notified the landlord that it elected to exercise the option to renew the lease, “ as modified ” by the 1942 agreement, for the renewal term of twenty-one years. Thereafter, in a letter dated September 9, 1946, more than four years after execution of the modifying agreement, the landlord informed plaintiff that the agreement was “ineffective”; that the rent had never validly been reduced from $25,000 a year plus taxes; that plaintiff owed over $200,000 in rent and tax arrears and that “ In view of the defaults mentioned above and the terms of the lease,” plaintiff’s election to renew the lease was “ of no effect.”

Arbitration proceedings, stipulated to be without prejudice, were then held to determine the value of the land, as a step in computing the possible renewal rent in accordance with the formula specified in the lease. Arbitrators placed the value of the land at $200,000. Accordingly, the rent for the renewal term — 6% of that figure — amounted to $12,000 a year, unless “ the net annual rent reserved for the last year of the then current term ” should exceed that figure, in which event the renewal lease was to provide for payment of the higher rental.

The modification agreement having validly and effectively reduced the rental for the duration of the original term and that rental having been paid in full, the tenant was privileged to exercise the option to renew and the landlord could not demur thereto or avoid the consequences of that election. Consequently, the prime question before us is whether the net annual rental to be paid upon renewal is the $25,000 specified in the original lease or the amount of $12,000, representing 6% of the land value.

In resolving that question, we concern ourselves with what the parties intended, but only to the extent that they evidenced what they intended by what they wrote (see, e.g., Brainard v. New York Central R. R. Co., 242 N. Y. 125, 133; 455 Seventh Ave. v. Hussey Realty Corp., 295 N. Y. 166,172), and this is what they wrote: upon the tenant’s exercising the option to renew the lease for a further twenty-one-year term, the renewal rental to be paid each year was either (a) a rental agreed upon in writing or (b) 6% of the value of the land as fixed by arbitration — unless the latter amount should fall below the “net [474]*474annual rental reserved for the last year of the then current term.” In addition, the renewal lease was to obligate the tenant — and the requirement was not affected by any term of the modification agreement — to pay all taxes and other charges on the property.

The parties failed to agree upon the amount to be paid, as the first alternative contemplated. Therefore, argues the landlord, the rent upon renewal becomes the rental actually set forth and provided in the original lease for the last year of the term. If that were indeed what the parties intended, the language which they chose concealed most successfully that thought. The amount of rent reserved for the last year of the term at the time when the original lease was written was $25,000 a year, a fact, of course, well known to the parties. If they had purposed to do what the landlord now claims, several methods were at hand to express that design. They would have provided in the original lease that the net annual rental would be “at least $25,000” upon the first renewal or they would have specified — as in the Hussey case (supra, 295 N. Y. 166), upon which the landlord heavily relies — that the'renewal rent would in no event be fixed at a less sum than “ herein provided ” to be paid or they would have signified in the modification agreement itself that the reduced rental was not to be used in measuring or determining the minimum rent for the renewal term. In short, if the parties had desired the $25,000 figure to continue as the minimum renewal rental in the face of any modification of the rent for the last year of the term, if they had intended the rent reserved for such last year not to control the renewal rent, they could very easily, by the use of two or three words, have so provided.

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Bluebook (online)
99 N.E.2d 289, 302 N.Y. 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raleigh-associates-inc-v-henry-ny-1951.