W. Trans. Co. of Buffalo v. . Lansing

49 N.Y. 499, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 198
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 49 N.Y. 499 (W. Trans. Co. of Buffalo v. . Lansing) 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
W. Trans. Co. of Buffalo v. . Lansing, 49 N.Y. 499, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 198 (N.Y. 1872).

Opinion

Folger, J.

This is an action on the equity side of the court to restrain the defendants from interfering with or dis *502 turbing the possession of the plaintiff of certain premises in West Troy; and asking that the court adjudge the specific ■ performance of an alleged covenant, to execute a second lease thereof, so as to carry into effect that certain covenant, claimed to be contained in a lease heretofore executed.

The lease was executed on or about the 30th of August, 1853, between Levinus A. Lansing, from whom the defendants derive their title, and Erastus S. Prosser, who is the assignor of the plaintiff. Lansing was the lessor and Prosser was the lessee. The lease began on the 1st of September, 1853, and, being for a term of fifteen years, it ended on the 1st of September, 1868. The rent was thirty dollars yearly, payable on the 1st of September in each and every year during the term. The lessee was also to pay all taxes that might be assessed on the premises. The lease contained this further clause: “With privilege of keeping and occupying said lots for such further time, after the expiration of said term, as said party of the second part (the lessee) shall choose or elect, yielding and paying therefor the same rent and all taxes as aforesaid.” The lessee expressly covenanted to pay to the lessor the yearly rent as in the -lease specified, and upon the days thereinbefore specified of fifteen years, or at the expiration of such farther time as the lessee may choose or elect, as aforesaid, to hold the same. And the lessor did covenant that the lessee, on paying the yearly rent and performing his covenants, should hold the premises for the term aforesaid, and for any extension thereof, as before provided for. The lessor died before the 30th of December, 1867; and on or .about that day his devisee conveyed the premises. to the defendant Wager, subject to- all‘the covenants and conditions of the lease, so far as obligatory, with the right reserved to Wager to dispute the obligation of them. The plaintiff, on the 28th of August, 1868, demanded of Wager a lease for a term of fifteen years longer.

If this provision, giving the lessee the privilege of keeping and occupying the premises demised for such further time as he shall choose or elect, connected with the other clauses of *503 the lease relating thereto, be treated as a covenant running with the land; it is the most which in that respect can be claimed for it by the plaintiff.

If it were simply a covenant to renew, it would imply a renewal for the same term and for the same rent. (Tracy v. Albany Each. Co., 7 N. Y., 474.) But it is not such; nor is there any room left for implication. The same rent for the period of further occupation, as was reserved for the specified term of fifteen years, is expressly provided for. It is expressly provided that the taxes shall be paid by the lessee through the period of further occupation. Nor can it be implied-that the same term is provided for; as it is expressed that the further occupation shall continue as long as the lessee shall choose or elect. Nor can it be implied that the rent is to be paid on the same annually recurring day of payment, as was the rent for the specified term of fifteen years. The special clause, providing for the further occupation, is silent as to the day of payment of the rent. In the covenant of the lessee to pay the rent however, he binds himself to pay the yearly rent in the lease specified, upon the days therein specified of fifteen years, or at the expiration of such further time as the lessee might choose or elect to hold the premises. The use of the disjunctive “or” might be held, on a literal construction of solely the covenant of the lessee, to give to him the alternative of paying rent in installments on the 1st of September in each year, or in gross on the expiration of the further term for which he might choose to occupy. But this could not have been the intention of the parties. It is not to be supposed that the lessor could have intended to wait for his rent until the term of fifteen years had run out, and also for such further time of occupancy as the lessee should choose to take. And besides, in the former part of the lease the days for the payment of the rent for the specified term are fixed; being the 1st of September in each year during the same. So that the clause in the lessee’s covenant for payment of rent, fixing the time therefor at the expiration of the further time of occupancy chosen by him, must *504 be referred solely to the rent accruing during such further time. Thus considered, we have a provision for further occupation, which by its terms definitely settles the amount of the rent, and, to an extent, the time for the payment of it; but by placing the length of time of such further occupation in the choice or election of the lessee, leaves it, a priori, entirely uncertain and indeterminate; and which precludes the implication from the provisions of the lease of anything as to these matters.

If these provisions which have been referred to, and which are relied upon by the plaintiff, do constitute a covenant on the part of the lessor, the covenant made is not one for a renewal of the lease. There is no coincidence with that, but in the premises to be enjoyed, and in the amount of rent to be paid therefor.

If we treat these provisions as a covenant on the part of the lessor for a new lease, the question arises, is it valid and enforceable, or is it void for uncertainty; specific performance of which may not be adjudged? It has been held that where no term is fixed by the covenant, it is void for uncertainty. (Abeel v. Radcliff, 13 J. R., 296.) The covenant in that case was that the lessors should take the buildings on the lot at an appraisal of three indifferent men, to be chosen by the parties, or let the lot at a yearly rent to be thus fixed. The court held that the covenant was void for uncertainty as to the term. And the decision is put upon the requirements of the statute of frauds. The agreement is condemned, inasmuch as being one which is required to be in writing, and hence to be certain in itself, or capable of being made so by a reference to something else whereby the terms can be ascertained with reasonable precision, it does not come up to the requirement. It would have been practicable in that ease, for the lessors to have chosen or elected for what term they would have let the lot; there being no term specified, and they agreeing generally to let. And they did afterward offer to give a lease for a term not exceeding ten years. But no consideration is given to this fact in the opinion of the *505 court; and the decision seems put upon the ground alone that the agreement is not in itself certain, and does not refer to something else which is. The subsequent determination of the lessor was not noticed. (See Wright v. Weeks, 25 N. Y., 153; Lawson v. Mead, Lalor’s Supp., 158.) In Rutgers v. Hunter (6 J. C. R., 215) an agreement to redemise the premises at such rent and upon such terms as might be agreed upon was said by the chancellor to be quite analogous to the covenant in Abeel v.

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.Y. 499, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-trans-co-of-buffalo-v-lansing-ny-1872.