106 Misc. 489 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1919
The plaintiff lessee sues the defendant lessor to recover two items of damage claimed to be due to the defendant’s failure to give her possession of the leased premises, an apartment in a tenement house in the city of New York; and she has had judgment for the entire amount claimed, one hundred and thirty dollars. Of that sum, the defendant admits liability for ten dollars, being the amount of a deposit or part payment made by plaintiff on account of the rent. The balance, one hundred and twenty dollars, represents the plaintiff’s loss of her alleged bargain, her proofs having been intended to show, and they were accepted as showing, that whereas she agreed to pay twenty dollars a month rent for a year, the demised premises had a rental value of thirty dollars a month. The finding that the plaintiff was improperly deprived of her right to enter into possession was amply justified by the evidence, but we think the learned trial judge incorrectly held that a valid lease for a year had been made, and improperly received evidence offered to prove the rental value of the leased premises.
The lease was negotiated for the plaintiff by her daughter, who, on August second, after a conversation with the defendant, paid a deposit of five dollars (subsequently increased to ten dollars) and wrote out the following paper, which was signed by the defendant only:
“Aug. Sept. 1918.
“ Received from Mrs. Berkowitz 10 $5 00/100 Received for deposit 1st flat 1 flight, 1 yr. lease & privilege $5 00/100
10
Nick Iorizzo.”
The defendant, who claims to be unable to read or write English, testified that there was no talk of a lease for a longer period than a month, and that he
“ Duration of certain agreements in New York. An agreement for the occupation of real estate in the city of New York, shall create a tenancy from month to month, unless the duration of the occupation shall be specified in writing by the parties thereto or by their lawful agents.”
It will be noted that the act does not in terms require that both, or where there are more than two, all, the parties to the lease agreement, shall sign the writing in which the duration of the term is to be specified; but we are unable to give to it any construction that appears to us to be reasonable, that does not involve the holding that all parties to the writing shall evidence their assent by means of their respective signatures. The act (as stated in section 1 thereof) is an amendment of section 232 of the Real Property Law (Cons. Laws, chap. 50) which provides that “An agreement for the occupation of real property in the city of New York, which shall not particularly specify the duration of the occupation, shall be deemed to continue until the first, day of May next after the possession commences under the agreement; and rent thereunder is payable at the usual quarter days, for the payment of rent in that city, unless otherwise expressed in the agreement.”
It was quite evidently the legislative purpose in
The trial court incorrectly permitted the plaintiff to testify to the rental value of the leased premises. She was, very plainly, not qualified to act as an expert upon the subject. It also was error to permit her to testify concerning the rent paid by her for the apartment she hired when denied possession of the apartment leased to her by the defendant. The proper measure of damage in' such a case is the difference between the agreed rent, twenty dollars a month, and the rental value (if it exceed the agreed rent), the latter to be fixed by one qualified to testify as an expert upon rental values of premises of the kind leased, in that general vicinity. We regret that the case must go back for the ascertainment of the damage under that rule, upon the basis of a deprivation of possession from the demised premises under a lease for one month.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with thirty dollars costs to appellant to abide the event.
Gut and Bijur, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with thirty dollars costs to appellant to abide event.