69 N.Y.S. 636 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1901
This action in equity becomes necessary because the defendant, now having the title to the premises, No. 1 Jackson street, and No. 338 Henry street, in the borough of Manhattan, seeks to evict the plaintiff and to destroy a building occupied by the plaintiff and used by him in his business.
The defendant is maintaining eviction proceedings in the Municipal Court, which has not the jurisdiction to reach nonresident witnesses whose testimony is essential to the maintenance of plaintiff’s rights;
The defendant’s counsel, in his brief, clearly states the issue in controversy thus: “ The main question involved is as to whether or not the lease referred to in the complaint is valid aá between the parties hereto.”
Eannie M. Constable was the owner of the premises, she conveying them to the defendant on the 15th of August, 1899, by deed containing the clause that it was “ subject, nevertheless, to the rights of the present tenants all of which expire on or before May 1st, 1902.”
One of the leases so referred to was made March 9, 1897, by William Constable, the husband of Eannie M. Constable, who had acted for her in the management of the premises for thirty years, and was signed in the name of William Constable, by Thomas F. Leahy, agent, to Patrick McCullagh, for five years, which lease was assigned February 26, 1898, by McOullagh to Auerbach-, with the written consent signed by William Constable by Thomas F. Leahy, agent, and, on the 1st of July, 1898, was assigned by Auerbach to the plaintiff, with a similar consent attached thereto. On the 29th of July, 1898, Leahy, as agent,
The defendant, finding that the possession of the plaintiff until May 1, 1902, interfered with his ability to make an advantageous sale and deliver possession, relies upon the Statute of Frauds to end the tenancy of plaintiff, and make it simply a holding year by year. Pie asserts that under the Beal Property Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 547, § 207), the authority of the agent must be evidenced by a writing duly subscribed, and that there is no lease executed by the former owner herself, which is essential to a leasing for more than one year.
I am inclined to believe that section 224 of the same chapter applies. That section provides: “A contract for the leasing for a longer period than one year * * * is void unless the contract or some note or memorandum thereof expressing the consideration is in writing subscribed by the lessor or by his lawful authorized agent.” If this be correct, the authority may be oral. Moody v. Smith, 70 N. Y. 598; Miller v. Ball, 64 id. 286.
But a broader view may well be taken of the reasons for preventing a technical rule of law defeating substantial justice. The owner, Fannie M. Constable, knew that her husband was habitually acting for her, and that he must necessarily act for her through a local agent the most of the time, because they were traveling in Europe frequently at the periods when leasings were required. She was informed of this lease for five years, expressed her approbation of it, regularly received the rent, not only assented to, but induced the tenant to take possession and make business arrangements for his occupancy for a term of years, and also, in conveying the premises after more than two years from the time of the original leasing with full knowledge of the circumstances, ratified the tenancy in the deed she gave to the
Her ratification could have been by parol. Newton v. Bronson, 13 N. Y. 587.
Even were the principal undisclosed. Dykers v. Townsend, 24 N. Y. 57.
The purchaser, this defendant, having full notice of the claims of the plaintiff, has no better right of eviction than Mrs. Constable herself would have had.
It would be a perversion of the commonest rules of justice to allow her, in case she had not conveyed, to repudiate the act of her husband and Leahy. Had she only signed the deed with the recognition of the plaintiff’s rights, and never delivered it, stilli the ratification would have been complete by her signature. It does not require a delivered contract to comply with the requirement of a subscribed note or memorandum. Welford v. Beazely, 3 Atk. 503, Lord Hardwicke.
Let judgment go in favor of the plaintiff for an injunction withl $500 damages for the disturbance and interference with the plaintiff’s possession, in which damages are not included any allowed for the proceedings in the Municipal Court; with costs, also, to plaintiff. .......
Ordered accordingly.