Walker v. 18th Street Holding Corp.

267 A.D. 141, 44 N.Y.S.2d 866, 1943 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5993
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 26, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 267 A.D. 141 (Walker v. 18th Street Holding 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
Walker v. 18th Street Holding Corp., 267 A.D. 141, 44 N.Y.S.2d 866, 1943 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5993 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Callahan, J.

The problem presented on this submission of controversy concerns the construction of a certain sublease, and the rights and obligations of the plaintiff and defendant thereunder as successors, respectively, to the original landlord and tenant.

It appears that by an agreement dated March 30,1923, Donald S. Walker and another, as trustees under the will of John U. Brookman, deceased, as landlords, leased to one Ida Kinsey, as tenant, certain vacant property in the city of New York for twenty-one years from July 1, 1923, at a graduated rental com- \ mencing at $6,000 per annum. Ida Kinsey erected a garage on1 the property, and subleased the premises to W. & L. Auto Garage ¡ [143]*143Co., Inc., at an annual rent of $16,400. The fifteenth clause of that sublease contained the following provisions: 15th. The tenant agrees to deposit as security with the landlord herein the sum of $3,500 on the signing of this lease, and the sum of $3,500 when certificate of occupancy is issued, which said sum of $7,000 shall be held by the landlord as security for the full and faithful performance by the tenant of all the terms and conditions of this lease upon its part to be performed, which said sum shall be applied by the tenant as hereinafter provided, provided the tenant has fully and faithfully carried out all of the terms, covenants and conditions on its part to be performed. Said security to bear interest at 3% per annum, to be deducted from the last year’s rent hereunder. Said security to be applied to payment of last 12 months rent in monthly installments.”

After the whole of the security had been paid to Kinsey by W. & L. Auto Garage Co., Inc., the latter assigned the sublease to another. Subsequently, by mesne assignments, the tenant’s estate, as well as its interest in the security, was transferred to defendant, 18th Street Holding Corporation. Ever since 1931 defendant has been in possession as tenant under said sublease.

On May 12, 1933, by an instrument in writing, the tenant, Kinsey, surrendered her main lease to Donald S. Walker, as surviving trustee of the Brookman estate. That surrender was expressly made subject to the sublease referred to above. At the same time Kinsey assigned to Walker, as such trustee, all her rights as landlord under the sublease. This assignment provided that it was subject to the covenants and provisions contained in the sublease. However, Kinsey did not turn over to her assignee the security deposited with her, nor did she return same to her tenant, nor give the notice required to be given by her under section 1302-a of the Penal Law.

The fee of the premises was thereafter conveyed by Walker, as trustee of the Brookman estate, to Brookman Realty, Inc., a domestic corporation, which, in turn, conveyed same to plaintiff, who is now the owner of the leased premises.

The submission does not identify the estate of which plaintiff is presently acting as trustee. He is merely named in the title of the submission as “ Trustee under Agreement dated December 18th, 1942.” We do not have the provisions of that agreement before us. The submission does state, however, that plaintiff is the successor to the trustee of the Brookman estate, and to Brookman Realty, Inc., as former owners of the leased premises.

[144]*144It is further stipulated that at various times during the term of the sublease involved, the rent reserved was reduced below $16,400 per annum for stated periods. The last reduction was from January 1, 1938, to June 30, 1943, the sum fixed being $10,000 per year, or $833.33 a month. Each month during that period plaintiff, or his predecessors, as landlords, accepted $833.33 per month from defendant, as tenant, after rendering bills which stated: “ The acceptance by Brookman Realty, Inc. of $...... for such month shall not be construed» to waive or modify the lease. For any future month during the tenant’s occupancy, irrespective of the acceptance of less than the rate stipulated in the lease for the preceding month, the landlord shall have the right to collect the rent stipulated in the lease, and upon any default in its payment, the landlord shall have the right to take such steps, actions or proceedings as the lease or the law permit.”

On July 1, 1943, plaintiff sent a bill for $833.33 to the tenant containing the foregoing stipulation. Defendant in response, tendered the sum of $433.33, claiming that for the last year of the lease it had the right to apply against the monthly installments of the $16,400 rent reserved in the lease, one twelfth of $11,200, which latter sum represented the $7,000 security, plus accumulated interest thereon at three per cent per annum. The difference between the sums mentioned amounted to $5,200 per annum, or $433.33 a month.

Plaintiff asks judgment under the lease for the $833.33 for which it billed the defendant for the month of July, 1943. He thereby seeks an adjudication that the security deposited need not be credited against the last twelve months’ rent. His position is that the covenant concerning the security was a personal covenant and did not run with the land. He asserts that the obligation to pay rent, and that created by paragraph 15th ” of the lease concerning the security are separate and distinct obligations. Plaintiff further contends that without an actual assignment of the security to plaintiff, and a specific assumption by him of the covenant concerning same, he was under no obligation with respect thereto.

Defendant contends that plaintiff stands in the shoes of, and is bound by the provisions contained in, the assignment of May 12, 1933, from Kinsey to Walker, as trustee of the Brook-man estate, which assignment was expressly made subject to the covenants, conditions and provisions of the assigned lease.

Irrespective of the effect of the assignment, the defendant is a tenant in possession under a lease, the terms of which were [145]*145known to plaintiff. The latter, therefore, took the property subject to that lease and to the tenant’s rights thereunder. (Phelan v. Brady, 119 N. Y. 587.)

The “ 15th ” clause of the lease does not contain any express covenant for the repayment of the deposit even by the original landlord, Kinsey, and thus we are not concerned with any question as to whether plaintiff is bound to comply with any personal covenant to repay. The 15th ” clause provides that the $7,000 and interest will be applied by the tenant to the payment of the last twelve months’ rent in monthly installments, provided the tenant has previously performed all of the other terms and conditions on its part to be performed.

The parties have stipulated that, except for the failure to pay the full sum of $16,400 per annum, all of the tenants during their occupancy fully complied with the terms and conditions of the lease.

As we read the 15th ” clause, it says, in effect, that the difference between the rent reserved and a sum measured by one twelfth of the security, plus interest, will be the rent for each month during the last year of the term. There was to be no obligation on the part of the tenant to make any further payment if it kept its other agreements. In other words, its rent was the difference between the full rent and the deposit, on the performance of the other conditions.

A clause of the present nature is not controlled by the rule that a covenant to return a deposit does not run with the land. This was indicated by our decision in Shenk v. Brewster

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Bluebook (online)
267 A.D. 141, 44 N.Y.S.2d 866, 1943 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-18th-street-holding-corp-nyappdiv-1943.