Times Square Improvement Co. v. James McCreery Realty Corp.

182 A.D. 653, 169 N.Y.S. 536, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7899

This text of 182 A.D. 653 (Times Square Improvement Co. v. James McCreery Realty Corp.) 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
Times Square Improvement Co. v. James McCreery Realty Corp., 182 A.D. 653, 169 N.Y.S. 536, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7899 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Davis, J.:

The action is brought to set aside and annul certain leases and agreements made between the several parties to the action and relating to the premises 803, 805 and 807 Broadway, New. York city, and for other relief.

On December 15, 1906, the defendant James McCreery Realty • Corporation, as owner, leased to the defendant Fleischmann’s Vienna Model Bakery, Inc., the ground floor of the buildings 803, 805 and 807 Broadway, New York city, together with the basement thereunder, for a term of ten years and three months, beginning on February 1, 1908, and ending April 30, 1918. The premises' in question consist of two stores and the basement on the northwest corner of Broadway and Eleventh street, with a frontage on Broadway of 76 feet and 7 inches and on Eleventh street of 221 feet, 9 inches. The demised premises were to be used exclusively as a bakery, café and restaurant. The lease reserved a monthly rental of $875 for the months of February, March and April, 1908, and a yearly rental of $21,000 thereafter. Contiguous to the space directly under these stores there was a vault built in 1868 underneath the sidewalk of Broadway and of Eleventh street. It extended from the building line to the curb line and was used under a license from the city.

After the Fleischmann Company had used the premises for more than a year as a restaurant and rathskeller, the McCreery Corporation entered into a lease with defendant Sadowsky, dated October 20, 1909, leasing the entire building to Sadowsky for a term of ten years from February 1, 1910, to January 31, 1920. The lease to Sadowsky is made subject to the lease to the Fleischmann Company and Sadowsky agrees to comply with each of the covenants and conditions [655]*655of the Fleischmann lease, to be performed by the McCreery Corporation, and the Fleischmann lease was assigned to Sadowsky by the McCreery Corporation October 22, 1909. The assignment, plaintiff’s Exhibit 10, also provides that Sadowsky shall comply with each of the covenants to be performed by the McCreery Corporation in its lease to Fleischmann.

Sadowsky, in order to have the Fleischmann term expire with the expiration of his own term, required that another lease be made extending Fleischmann’s term, so that it would end January 31, 1920. Accordingly, Sadowsky made a lease to the Fleischmann Company for a term beginning May 1, 1918, and ending January 31, 1920. The letter which Sadowsky gave the Fleischmann Company at the time of the making of the lease indicates that the premises which Sadowsky intended to lease to the Fleischmann Company were the same as those which the latter was then occupying.

On August 5, 1913, Sadowsky leased all of the premises, including the basement, to the plaintiff, Times Square Improvement Company, Inc., subject to all the covenants and conditions in all of the preceding leases. In this lease the plaintiff expressly assumed the covenants and conditions of the preceding leases. The "term of the lease began February 1, 1914, and ended January 31, 1920. Fleischmann thereafter attorned and paid rent to the plaintiff.

On October 1, 1914, and while the plaintiff was in possession under its sublease from Sadowsky, the city reclaimed for subway purposes a substantial part of the vault space occupied by the Fleischmann Company contiguous to these premises under the sidewalk of Broadway. The court at Special Term has found that the plaintiff and the defendants have been evicted from 780 square feet of the vault space in question; that such space was a substantial and material part of the entire space theretofore occupied by the defendant Fleischmann and was of special value to it in the profitable conduct of its business. * * * ” The court also found that by

reason of the aforesaid eviction, defendant Fleischmann lost the use of twenty-two out of the thirty-three tables theretofore constituting the ‘ rathskeller ’ maintained by it.”

Down to October 1, 1914, the date when the city reclaimed [656]*656this part of the vault space, the plaintiff received from the Fleischmann Company the full amount of the rent reserved in the lease of the basement and vault space from the McCreery Corporation. Thereafter, because of the partial eviction of the Fleischmann Company by the city, the Fleischmann Company refused to pay the full amount of the rent. In an action in the City Court brought against the Fleischmann Company by this plaintiff, the Times Square Improvement Company, Inc., the defendant Fleischmann Company obtained a judgment upon its counterclaim reducing the amount of the rent to be paid because of the partial eviction by the city. On appeal to this court the judgment of the City Court was affirmed. (Times Square Improvement Co. v. Fleischmann Vienna Model Bakery, Inc., 173 App. Div. 633.)

In substance, the complaint alleges the making of a lease on the' 15th of December, 1906, between the defendant McCreery Corporation and the Fleischmann Company, by which the McCreery Corporation leased to the Fleischmann Company the stores and basement thereunder at 803, 805 and 807 Broadway, New York city, for a term of ten years and three months, commencing on the 1st of February, 1908, and ending on the 30th of April, 1918; that at the time of the execution and delivery of the last-mentioned lease there was a vault built underneath the sidewalk of Broadway and Eleventh street, which, by the intention of the parties to the lease, formed an integral part of the basement, and was appurtenant to and was to be a part of the premises mentioned and described in the lease; that the lease contained a covenant of quiet enjoyment; that thereafter the Fleischmann Company entered into possession of said premises and occupied them as a bakery, café and restaurant. The complaint further alleges that at the time of the execution and delivery of the said lease, the McCreery Corporation knew that it was not the owner of the land and space occupied by said vault, and that it had no right to lease any part of said space, and that all the said space was then owned by the city of New York, and that the right to use the space was subject to be revoked at the will of the city of New York.

. It is further alleged that on or about the 20th of October, 1909, the McCreery Corporation, in order to induce the [657]*657defendant Sadowsky to hire the whole of said building and accept from the McCreery Corporation a lease thereof subject to the tenancy of the Fleischmann Company, represented to Sadowsky that the said written lease between the McCreery Corporation and the Fleischmann Company was the only lease and agreement made between them. It is also alleged that, as a further inducement to the defendant Sadowsky, the McCreery Corporation also represented that the Fleischmann Company was ready, able and willing to enter into a written agreement with Sadowsky in the same form and upon the same terms and conditions as contained in the lease between the McCreery Corporation and the Fleischmann Company, except that said Fleischmann Company would hire from said Sadows'ky the premises in said lease described for an additional term commencing on the 20th day of April, 19Í8, and ending on the 31st of January, 1920, at the same rental of $21,000 per annum; that the McCreery Corporation, for the purpose of enabling Sadowsky to collect the rent from the Fleischmann Company, .would assign to Sadowsky its interest in the McCreery-Fleischmann lease.

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Related

Leske v. Wolf
154 A.D. 233 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1912)
Times Square Improvement Co. v. Fleischmann Vienna Model Bakery, Inc.
173 A.D. 633 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
182 A.D. 653, 169 N.Y.S. 536, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/times-square-improvement-co-v-james-mccreery-realty-corp-nyappdiv-1918.