5 Lans. 280 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1871
By the Court
The claim of the plaintiff in this action is based upon the ground that James J. Allen, the tenant in possession, had, in violation of the terms and conditions of the lease under which he held and occupied the premises, committed waste upon the same, by reason whereof the said lease became forfeited, and the representative of the lessor entitled to the possession of the same ; and that after such waste was committed, the premises were surrendered by said Allen to said representative, who took possession and leased the same to the plaintiff, who also took possession of the premises and now claims to hold the same under and by virtue of the last mentioned lease.
The main question to be determined in this case is, whether a leasehold estate, where the lease contained a condition against waste, can be surrendered as against a mortgagee by an arrangement between the tenant and landlord for an alleged breach of the condition, without a re-entry by a suit at law for the forfeiture claimed.
In Jackson v. Elsworth (20 Johns., 180), a lease for lives contained a clause of re-entry for non-payment of rent, &c. The tenant left the premises and the landlord executed another lease to the defendant, who took possession of the premises, and the first lessee, who had paid no rent after the first of May, 1809, brought an action of ejectment, in 1821, against the defendant. It was held that the right of the first
yor can I agree with the plaintiff’s counsel that the dictum of the judge is inapplicable to such a case, or that there is no analogy between the two cases. Although it is said that the case has never been cited as authority, there is no case cited to show that it has ever been questioned. It is also argued that a directly contrary doctrine has been held in many eases in this State.
In Jackson v. Stansbury (9 Wend., 201) it was held that a defendant who entered forcibly into the possession of premi
In Jackson v. Haviland (13 Johns., 229) a question of adverse possession arose, and there was no alleged forfeiture, for similar reasons. Hyatt v. Wood, 4 John., 150; 1 Lansing, 222, 239, 242, and the authorities there cited, are not in point. These eases uphold the general principle, that a party having title may assert his right, provided he commits no actual violence; but not one of them holds that a forfeiture can be enforced without a legal proceeding for such a purpose.
It is said that the English cases sustain the doctrine con-i' tended for by the plaintiff’s counsel. In Baylis v. Le Gros et al. (93 Eng. C. L. R., 536), the lease was for twenty-one years, and contained a covenant to keep the premises in repair, and a condition that if the tenant should not perform that, it should be lawful for the landlord to re-enter, &c. The landlord, finding the premises in a dilapidated condition, came upon them and entered into an agreement with a person in possession to become his tenant, and it was held that, in an action of ejectment by the tenant who had abandoned the premises, the landlord was entitled to the possession. It will be seen that there is a wide distinction between the case cited and this one at bar. The whole question as to the forfeiture was on trial there, while in this case it is anticipated by an action to restrain the process of the court. But independently of this view, the lease was for a term of years, and not for life, which we will see presently makes an essential difference. The covenant also was conceded to be broken by the abandonment of the tenant, and he had thus acknowledged its breach and virtually given up his lease.
It may also be observed that the only case cited by the judges to sustain the decision is Baker v, Coombes (67 Eng. C. L., 714), which has no application to the question now
There is no reported case in the books which holds that where there is a condition in a lease that a party shall not commit waste, that the lease becomes forfeited without a trial and a judgment at law in favor of the party claiming the forfeiture.
As before remarked, there is a difference between leases for lives and for years.
In Woodfall’s Land, and T., p. 271, it is said: “In cases of conditions of re-entry, there is a difference between leases for lives and leases for yea/t's.” * * * * “As to leases for lives, it is held that if the tenant neglect or refuse to pay his rent after a regular demand, or is guilty of any other breach, of the, condition of a re-entry, the lease is only voidable, and, therefore, not determined until the lessor re-enters; that is, brings an ejectment for the forfeiture/ and this, though the clause of the condition should be that, for nonpayment of rent, or the like, the lease shall cease and be void; for it is a rule that where an estate commences by livery, it cannot be determined before entry.” .
Applying the rule laid down, there can be no question that the plaintiff’s action cannot be maintained. The authority' quoted is cited in Jackson v. Elsworth (20 John. 180, supra), and there is no case referred to which disturbs the doctrine there laid down. It must, therefore, be considered as decisive, and the question as res adjudicata.
I am also inclined to think that a forfeiture and re-entry on account of waste is a condition and not a limitation of an estate, and, therefore, waste of itself, without the institution of legal proceedings, does not terminate the estate. The condition does not defeat the estate, although it be broken, until entry by the grantor, or his heirs or representatives. The landlord may terminate the estate, if he chooses, by a proper proceeding, and take advantage of a breach of the condition, If he fails to do this, the estate continues the same as if there
There is another difficulty, I think, in the way of the plaintiff and this action. James J. Allen, the owner. of the leasehold estate, having conveyed his interest in the same by way of mortgage, I am strongly inclined to think that he could not make or execute a valid surrender of the premises as against the mortgagee, and thus defeat him from holding under the mortgage. The mortgage purports to convey the premises to the mortgagee, . subject to be defeated upon the performance of the condition contained in the mortgage. The mortgagor parts with an interest in the mortgaged premises, by the execution of the mortgage, and if he can surrender the premises in despite of the obligations he has incurred, it would open the dooi to collusion and the grossest fraud and injustice. A surrender is only a conveyance of the estate which the lessee has, and if it be subject to a mortgage, then the landlord can receive no greater estate than could be conveyed to any other person, and such as the tenant had, subject to the incumbrance thereon. There is eminent justice and equity in such a rule, and I can discover no good reason why it should not be applied. The lease is executed with knowledge that the property may be incumbered by mortgage, and no rights are lost if the incumbrance is recognized, without injury to the land1 lord, to prevent a forfeiture which must destroy the claim of the mortgage, and which the law abhors. (See Keech v. Hall, 1 Douglass, 21; 1 Smith Leading Cases, 293.)
In this case such a rule could not operate unjustly, as the landlord had notice of the mortgage, it being alleged in the complaint that foreclosure was commenced on the 6th of February, 1869, and Allen occupied to May 1, 1869, when the lease was executed to the plaintiff, and the possession was surrendered.
If the views last stated are erroneous, yet upon the grounds
Potter and Parker, JJ., concurred in the result. Judgment affirmed.