Wray v. Rhinelander

52 Barb. 553, 1868 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 127
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1868
StatusPublished

This text of 52 Barb. 553 (Wray v. Rhinelander) 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
Wray v. Rhinelander, 52 Barb. 553, 1868 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 127 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1868).

Opinion

By the Court, Daniels, J.

The plaintiff brought this action for the purpose of procuring-the specific performance of a covenant made by the defendant for the execution of a new lease of certain premises previously demised to him as the assignee of Ward B. Howard. It appeared by the evidence, as well as the conclusion of fact found by the court to be proved by it, that the defendant’s [565]*565testator, (William Rhinelander, deceased,) executed and delivered to Ward B. Howard a lease of the premises in controversy, for the term of twenty-one years from the 1st day of May, 1824. This lease contained a covenant on the part of the lessor for a new lease at the expiration of the term, for another period of twenty-one years. And on the 1st day of March, 1844, a lease was executed and delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff, for the second term of twenty-one years. This lease contained a covenant for a third, for a similar term, after the expiration of that created by the second, in case the defendant should not elect to pay for certain buildings erected and at that time standing upon the demised premises. What buildings these were that the defendant agreed to pay for in case he declined to give a third lease for twenty-one years, constitutes the substantial point in the present controversy. The plaintiff insists that they are all the brick and stone buildings erected upon the demised premises at any time during the tenancy created by the first and second leases, and standing thereon at the expiration of the second term. While the defendant insists that they are only such buildings as have been erected by the plaintiff. And as he has created none, the defendant in that view, would be bound to pay for none.

The defendant’s position in this respect is taken under the language used in the second lease, which was given to the plaintiff) for the purpose of designating the buildings which were to be made the subject of the payment. This language, taken in its literal sense, will readily sustain that position. For the terms used are that the defendant shall pay the value “ of all such stone and brick buildings as may have been erected by the ” plaintiff, who was “ the party of the second part.”

On the 21st of February, 1866, the defendant gave the plaintiff notice that he had made his election not to grant a new lease of the premises, but to pay the value of any [566]*566stone or brick buildings which had been erected, thereon “ by the- lessee or his assigns during' the term of said lease.”

The object to be attained in construing agreements, is to ascertain from them- what was the intention of the parties to them. And that is commonly done by giving the words used by them, their ordinary and popular meaning. For where nothing is found manifesting any different conclusion, it is properly presumed that the parties made use of them, in that manner. But as language is often carelessly, and inadvertently made use of, even in instruments of the most deliberate and solemn character, that presumption is not to be followed, where from an examination of the entire agreement, it becomes apparent that by following it, a result will be produced not within the contemplation of the parties. In this case the plain import of this clause, standing and considered by itself, is that the defendant will pay for such buildings only as the plaintiff erected upon the premises. But other clauses are contained in the lease to the plaintiff, as well as in the preceding lease given to Howard, indicating that a different construction should be given to that clause. And as the second lease was given for the purpose of continuing and extending the term created by the first, the latter should be considered, so far as it may be applicable, in ascertaining the construction which must be placed upon the clause in controversy.

The buildings for which payment was demanded by the plaintiff, were erected by Howard, the tenant to whom the first lease was executed and delivered. By the express terms of that lease, the estate demised to him was assignable. For the demise was to him, his executors, administrators and assigns. And in case of an assignment of the lease, the obligation of the lessor to pay for the buildings, in case of a refusal to „ execute a second lease, afterwards existed in favor of the assignee. That was clearly im[567]*567ported by the language contained in the first lease. This lease was afterwards assigned by the lessee named in it, and the plaintiff became the owner of it, as assignee.

"When, therefore, the time arrived for the lessor to elect whether he would give a new lease for the further term of twenty-one'years, or pay for the buildings erected by the lessee upon the land, that election was to be exercised exclusively in the plaintiff's favor. If the defendant, who had then become the executor of the lessor in the first lease, had elected not to give the second lease, he would have been legally bound to pay the plaintiff the value of the buildings, which Howard had erected on the demised premises. So that, practically and legally, the plaintiff was at that time the owner of these buildings, and the only way in which the defendant could have acquired title to them, would have been by paying the plaintiff for them. Instead, however, of doing that, the defendant gave the second lease. And that was done before the term expired, which had been created by the first lease. But no attempt was made, in the second lease, to divest the plaintiff of the title which he had, under the assignment to him of the first lease, to the buildings. On the contrary, the second lease expressly declared that the plaintiff should continue to be the owner of these buildings, and should remain owner of them, even though a third lease should not be given to him. And the privilege was secured to him of taking them away, provided he did so within ten days after the expiration of the term created by the second lease.

It is clear, therefore, that these buildings were not only the plaintiff’s property, as assignee of the first and lessee in the second lease, but beyond that he was to remain owner of them, even though the defendant should conclude not to give the third lease, at the expiration of the term created by the second lease. It could not for that "reason have been intended by the parties, that the defend[568]*568ant should become the owner of the buildings by reason of the giving of the second lease. In* addition to that, there is nothing contained either in the first or the second lease, in any manner indicating that the defendant could lawfully become the owner of these buildings, at any time, in any other way than by paying the plaintiff, or his representatives or assigns, for them. This conclusion is sustained by the clause already mentioned, contained in the second lease under which the defendant claims these buildings. For, by the literal reading of that clause, Howard, the first tenant, would have been entitled to be paid • for those buildings, if the second lease had been assigned by the plaintiff to him, before the term created in it had expired. And this would not have been the case if it had been intended that the defendant was to become the owner of the buildings when the second lease expired, without making any payment at all for them. Neither could it have been intended that the plaintiff should be divested of his title which he had acquired to the buildings under the assignment of the first lease, without, some consideration or equivalent being secured to him for the loss of his title.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Barb. 553, 1868 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wray-v-rhinelander-nysupct-1868.