15 N.Y.S. 662 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1891
The lease, dated November 4,1889, was made by McCreery, as lessor, and respondents, as lessees, and demised the premises for one year, from February 1, 1890, to February 1, 1891, and contained the following provision: “And the said tenants have the privilege of remaining for one year more, viz., from February 1, 1891, to February 1, 1892, provided the owner does not desire possession of the premises for building purposes.” When the lease was entered into, Mr. McCreery was the owner of the premises therein described, and it does not appear that at that time the lessees were aware of any contemplated change of ownership, or of any project of building upon the premises by persons other than the owner. The only reasonable interpretation, therefore, which could be given the language quoted, is that it comprehended a possible desire on the part of McCreery to resume possession for the purpose of erecting buildings, then remotely contemplated by him. This is its plain and obvious import,- the sense in which it is most favorable to the lessees, and therefore the sense which must be held to control. Lowber v. Le Roy, 2 Sandf. 202; Dwight v. Insurance Co., 103 N. Y. 341, 8 N. E. Rep. 654; Hoffman v. Insurance Co., 32 N. Y. 405; White v. Hoyt, 73 N. Y. 505; Johnson v. Hathorn, 2 Abb. Dec. 469. McCreery’s desire to gain possession, not for himself, but for a third person, as his subsequent lessee, who has covenanted to erect buildings which, upon the expiration of his lease, are to revert to the lessor, cannot be regarded as having been in the contemplation of the parties at the time when the lease between McCreery and the respondents was entered into, except upon a distorted process of reasoning, and is not within the operation of the clause above mentioned. That McCreery did not desire possession for himself to enable him to carry out his own building projects was made conclusively apparent upon the trial from the lease introduced in evidence, by which he granted a leasehold estate therein to the appellant for the term of 42 years, commencing immediately upon the expiration of the term originally demised to the respondents, thus depriving
If Louis Phillips was authorized to receive notice for his employers, oral notice was sufficient, as no particular form of notice was prescribed by the lease. McEwen v. Insurance Co., 5 Hill, 101. But appellant contends that this notice was ineffectual—First, because L. J. & I. Phillips could not delegate their authority to receive it to a clerk; and, second, that, though the power to delegate be conceded, it does not appear that Louis Phillips was authorized by his employers to receive such notice. Both grounds are erroneous. The giving of notice by the respondents at once extended the existing lease over the additional year; no further lease was needed; no assent on the part of the lessor or his agents to the extension was required; and the refusal by the lessor or his agents to receive notice could not have impaired the respondents’right to the extended term. House v. Burr, 24 Barb. 525. The receipt of respondents’ notice of election was thus an act purely mechanical, requiring the exercise of neither judgment nor discretion, and it is well settled by authority that the performance of such acts may be delegated by an agent to another. Grinnell v. Buchanan, 1 Daly, 538; Bank v. Norton, 1 Hill, 501; Weaver v. Carnall, 35 Ark. 198; Bodine v. Insurance Co., 51 N. Y. 117, 123; Powell v. Tuttle, 3 N. Y. 396; Lewis v. Ingersoll, 3 Abb. Dec. 60; Story, Ag. § 14 etseq. The law does not fail to recognize the fact that in the great variety of human affairs and the complex nature of business enterprises the execution of matters of detail must, in a great measure, rest upon persons employed in subordinate capacities, and the rule delegatus non potest delegare is therefore never extended to the employment of servants in the performance of merely ministerial or mechanical duties, (Smith, Mast. & S. 299;) and a “clerk” is a servant whose authority to act for his master is to be measured and ascertained by the law generally applicable to the relation of master and servant, (Wood, Mast. & S. § 2.)
The evidence was abundant to show that Louis Phillips was authorized by his employers to receive respondents’ notice of election to extend their lease for the additional year. It was not necessary to establish that fact by specific instructions to Louis Phillips to receive the particular notice under consideration, but his authority to receive it can be inferred from the extent of his employment. Smith, Mast. & S. 275; Wood, Mast. & S. § 267; Story, Ag. § 56. Louis Phillips, examined as a witness for appellant, says that in part performance of his duties he assumed “general charge” of the particular premises occupied by the respondents, and this implies that he was authorized to represent his employers in all matters connected with the premises, to the extent to which they could lawfully delegate their own authority to him, including, as above shown, the receipt of respondents’ notice. Again, the course of business dealings between L. J. & I. Phillips and the respondents clothed Louis Phillips with apparent general authority to represent his employers in all matters connected with the demised premises which could be lawfully delegated to him. In all their transactions concerning the demised premises, and until some time alter the oral notice to Louis Phillips, the re