123 N.Y.S. 160 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
Plaintiff was building a loft building on West Eighteenth street. One Kohn, the general office manager in charge of the renting department for plaintiff, on September IT, 1907, had an interview with defendants, who were manufacturers of cloaks and suits, at their place of business, in reference to renting two lofts, in the new building. After the interview he telephoned to plaintiff telling him that defendants would not pay over $8,375 a year. Kohn testified : “ I wanted to make sure before closing the lease that that was satisfactory, and he told me that if I could not do any better I should not lose them, as tenants, but should accept the agreement; ” whereupon the following paper was prepared :
“ Beegmann & Turkel,
“ Manufacturers of Ladies’ and Misses’ Cloaks and Suits,
“ 725 & 727 Broadway, Telephone 3973 Spring.
“Hew York, Sept. VUh, 1907.
“ Mr. Henry Coen :
“ Dear Sir.— We hereby lease from you the fifth and sixth floors in the building now being erected by you at 32, 34 and 36 West 18th Street, New York City, for the term of five years, beginning Feby. 1st, 1908, at the annual rental of $8,375 — (eight thousand, three hundred and seventy-five dollars). The leases for same to be drawn in the usual form employed by you and to be executed as soon as presented to us.
“Yours truly,
“ SAMUEL BEBG-MAHH,
“D. TURKEL.”
Kohn testified that he presented the paper to Mr. Corn on the same day and Mr. Com wrote on it- the same day, “ Accepted, Henry Corn.” The leases were prepared- and signed - by Corn on the 19th of September, 1907, in the usual form used by him and on the twentieth Kohn took them to the defendants at about one o’clock," Their bookkeeper said they were not in, and told Kohn to
There is a' letter of the defendants to Kohn dated September twentieth which he swears he did not receive until the twenty-fourth, as follows: “ Considering that you were not satisfied with ' our application for premises situated at 32-36 West 18th St., and since you failed to call on us this day, as per your agreement with us — we, therefore, consider that we are forced to obtain anothei location.” There is also another letter of September twenty-first, • from the defendants, “ Our only reasons for refusing to accept the lease of 32, 31 and 36 W. 18th St. are, that you failed to keep up to your agreement. You were to advise us not later than Thursday, 9/19/07, and you failed to do so. We, therefore, considered all propositions off. Trusting that you will not feel offended and that you will consider our act a fair one according to business principles, we are,” etc. ■
On September twentieth plaintiff wrote, “ Referring to your agreement dated' Sept. 17th, 1907, for the leasing of the fifth and sixth floors in the building now being erected by me at 32, 31
Bergmann testified : “ I did not make any objection to these two lofts in Mr. Corn’s building after I signed the first paper. The only objection I made is because he did not come up in his time.”
Corn himself went to see defendant on the twenty-first; the •lease was again tendered and refused. Upon the motion to dismiss the court said : “ There is no evidence that any copy of this paper signed by the plaintiff was ever delivered to the defendants, and there is no evidence that the defendants were notified that the plaintiff had signed or placed his signature on this paper. The paper, therefore, as a contract to lease, is void under the Statute of •Frauds, because of the fact that there was no delivery or notification to the defendants that the plaintiff, Henry Corn, had signed or accepted this paper. It might be claimed that the tender of the leases was a performance by him such as would take the contract out of the statute, as he presented the leases or tendered them within a few days thereafter, but it is to be noted that the lease Avas not to commence until February 1st, 1908, and that the contract or paper provided that they at ere to be executed when presented to the defendants; that to give this contract such a construction as is claimed by the plaintiff would mean that he retained the option of entering into a lease until a day before the 1st of February, 1908,
A stipulation was entered into between the parties, the lofts having been subsequently rented for a less price,, that the complaint might he amended and the damage placed at $9,875, the difference in' the rent for the full term of the lease, preserving the defenses as originally set up. The answer setup the Statute of Frauds and the sole question presented is whether the case comes within the statute.
Section 224 of the Beal Property Law (Gen. Laws, chap. 46; Laws of 1896, chap. 547), which is now section 259. of the Beal Property Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 50; Laws of 1909, chap. 52), provides that “A contract for the leasing' for & longer period than one year, or for the sale, of any real property, or an interest therein, is void, unless the contract, or some note or memorandum thereof, expressing the consideration, is in writing, subscribed by the lessor or grantor, or by his lawfully authorized agent.”
In Pelletreau, v. Brennan (113 App, Div. 806), reversing a judgment dismissing the complaint in an action to‘enforce specific performance of a contract for the sale of real estate, Gaynor, J., said : “ The contract contains every essential, i. e., it gives the námes of the seller and the buyer, expresses the consideration and describes the land to be conveyed by the defendants. * * * That the land to be conveyed'by the plaintiff as part consideration is not identified by the contract does not matter; it is only the seller who can raise the question of no written contract (Torres v. Thompson, 29 Misc. Rep. 526); and the plaintiff 'tendered performance. That the contract provides for the execution of a more formal contract does not detract from it; it is enforcible. (Pratt v. Hudson River R. R. Co., 21 N. Y. 305; Sanders v. Pottlitzer Bros. Fruit Co., 144 id. 209).”
In Sanders v. Pottlitzer Bros. Fruit Co. (144 N. Y. 209) the court quoted Selden, J., in Pratt v. Hudson River R. R. Co. (21 N. Y. 305): “ A contract to make and execute a certain written agreement, the terms of which are specific and mutually understood,
In Quinto v. Alexander (123 App. Div. 1) the court said: “ This-action is to recover back $50 paid by the plaintiff to the defendant as a deposit on a contract’for the purchase by the former of the latter of a lot of land. The defendant did not refuse performance, but the plaintiff claims the right to recover on the ground that the contract was not sufficiently expressed in writing to satisfy the Statute of Frauds. But this is wholly irrelevant. It is only the vendor who can raise that question. Even if the contract be oral, the vendee has to carry it out or forfeit the amount which he has paid, on a tender of performance by the vendor. The statute only requires that the contract of sale be reduced to writing and signed by the vendor; the vendee does not need to sign it.”
Upon the evidence it stands uncontradicted that on September seventeenth, the very day of the signing by the defendants of the ’ agreement to lease, it was accepted in writing by the plaintiff; that two days thereafter, the lease contemplated by the ' agreement was drawn and executed by the plaintiff and presented to the defendants
Under the circumstances disclosed we think that the written memorandum when accepted in writing by the lessor as it was upon the day upon which it was signed by the defendants, satisfies the Statute of Frauds and became effective when so signed; that it was not necessary tó deliver the said paper to the defendants. ( Ward v. Hasbrouck, 44 App. Div. 32; citing Peabody v. Speyers, 56 N. Y. 230, and Gibson v. Holland, L. R. 1 C. P. i.) The General Term of Common Pleas, in Kittel v. Stueve (10 Misc. Rep. 696) said : “ It was merely the note or memorandum of the contract on the part of the vendor required by the statute. It was' not material that the owner did not • subscribe at the time of the sale. * * * The note or memorandum if signed by the vendor alone, at anytime' after the sale, satisfies the statute. * * * As originally executed by the purchaser it was insufficient, because it did not contain the name of the vendor. * ' * * The paper became of no effect whatever until the vendor subscribed it, and it then became his note or memorandum of the contract and as such satisfied the statute.”
As the memorandum which was accepted provided that the.leases should be executed “ as soon as presented to us ” and as. they were presented within a reasonable timé thereafter, to wit, three days, we think the provisions of the statute were complied with. It follows
Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Scott and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.